The evening world. Newspaper, October 27, 1919, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

' ae - _ nounced thas 8,571 Growing. ‘ Garver Fond - SSe Harvard Endowment Fund Com. Waites im this city at noon to-day an- 723 had been scribed un) total # 83,816,884, while New ¥ second with $2,050,186. ————— still of City stands | | Adjusted Jewelled <i 10-2 else 1) nay will be" nied rommtly at ifference in. pri “ a to penne of ing. mailing. in~ ‘Only watch to a We reserve the right to refuse her Special Bargains GUTTER&SON MONDE, WATCHES, JEWELRY [ZO NASSAU SU orscers iver NEW YORK! CITY HALL ESTABLISHED 1679 GRANp Rapibs FURNITURE | Magistrate Cobb Orders Prison for |'* ## lone Solid 14-K. Gold COLUMBUS AVE BET. 103 & 104"ST 2 E. 125th St.|169 E. 34th St. RCo, vying BL phan 740 Lexington Ave. S. W. Cor, 59th ore seers Bame +o P.M, . to 1B, ee ad THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1919. |While Warden Hall was telephoning f FINES ON EAST SIDE|'iesstretediat was.tetaztening, te |Mrs, Moyer, the matron, went outside pi = lto buy them cookie Rachael informed the court attendants she they could Sidewalk Offender; Woman GOV. COX ousTS MAYOR, Chooses Jail. Porsistent east side violators of the city ordinances received a Jolt in Essex Market Court to-day when Magistrate W. Bruce Cobb declared that in many [to-day suspended Mayor cases, fines did mo good, and that | Inet ag taste of the fron bars was more ef-|riota in. that fective, When Jacob Klein, a merchant |committee of ‘ally. around Vice-Mayor of 174 Attorney Street amilingly pleaded |M1F, WtoUnd Vion ae A im Handling Canton Hots. COLUMBUS, 0., Oct 7.—Gov. Charles B, ing of the steel strike guilty to obstructing the sidewalk, His|gram to Poorman, mying Honor fined him $10 and sent him to | would be discussed at 1 morning in the Governor the city prison for the rest of the day. |iiving ‘that Poorman. be Tite oMeer said Jacob was one of the| Mayor did not answer the telegram. best little sidewalk obstructors in his enema _ precinct Herbert Hoover to Speak Here Rachael Uran, another “regular” at] ‘To-Night. Eesex Market, was given the choice of $3 fine or a duy in fail, She assert that she had $3, but was “gee-whi Lord & Taylor —FIFTH AV 39th Street Herbert Hoover, former food dictator. has arrived in New York for a speech be fore the Rocky Mountain Club to-night a’ 38th Street Store Hours, 9 A.M. to 5 P. The Little Shaver Doll Family Has Just Arrived You'll find them in the Toy Department, Seventh Floor. Quaint, comical and smiling, awaiting the little ones to assist in welcoming them to this big city, where everything seems so strange to them, They are from Olie-Ke-Wob, the Land That ver Wuz, a far-off country where strange and pleasing little eople exist, just to bring happiness to the little folks who fove real lovable dolls. The “grown-ups” will smile, too, when they see the Little Shaver Family. Many will laugh right out loud, just like the little girls will do with they come to see these tiny tots from Olie-Ke-Wob. My goodness! We forgot to introduce you to the Little Shaver Family. First, permit us to present the Little Princess. She is from a royal family, and we must, of course, introduce her first. So bow low and meet the Princess Olie-Ke-Wob, who has wobbed all the way from the Land That Never Wuz to hob-nob with you. Once upon a time in Olie-Ke-Wob a real Princess had a beautiful sofa pillow. One night, when all was still and there was no one looking, the Princess’s pillow began to jump about and soon out popped a little head; then next night, two feet kicked out of the bottom of the pillow; the third night two arms began to wave and a little voice began to gurgle gleefully, and so the Princess of Olie-Ke-Wob came to be. Now you know the Princess, so let us introduce you to sy Piper. She's almost scared to death, You can tell that by looking at her eyes, but, perhaps, she will get over that when she gets used to her new home. Now here is Patsy Doola. He thinks everybody is a funny “goola,” who does not like him, so you must like him because you would not want to be called a “goola”’ even if nobody knows what a “‘goola” means except Patsy. We want you also to know Thomas Squeelix, who has no mother Phelix or Daddy Delix. He’s just Thomas Squeelix, but, between ourselves, he’s a roguish little chap whom the Princess must watch all the time. Of course, this is not all of the Little Shaver Family. O my, no! We will introduce them all to you when you come. They are going to mect Santa Claus for the first time this Christmas, and they have come early—and My! How anxious they are! It will not be long until Santa Claus will be here, Master Thomas Squeelix! Seventh Floor POLITICAL. Be MASS MEETING By the Democracy of New York County, for the Purpose of Ratifying the Democratic Nominations IN TAMMANY HALL AT 8 O'CLOCK Hon. George Gordon Battle Will Preside THE SPEAKERS WILL INCLUDE: COL. GEORGE B, "1?CLELLAN AN “Lost and Found" artictee od in The World or “Last and Found Burea ‘World Building, will Been “Lost and Found” te ‘be left at any of Bho Worid'e MRS GENEVIEVE H, WALSH HON. EDWARD F,BOYLE . HON. JAMES A, FOLEY MAJOR THOMAS T. REILLEY HON. JOSEPH M. CALLAHAN HON. LOUIS WENDELL HON. ALEXANDER . RORKE iL ADDED T0 jie she would pay it, and wis taken to |the court “pen” with her two children. could stand | Removes Poorman for Inefficiency Cox anton, because of alleged ; and appealed to a ton business men to Schrants, nt a tele-| TO-MORROW, TUESDAY, EVENING Music by Ward’s Band. Admission Without Ticket New York’s Linguistic Hotel Bell Hops | The photograph shows a group of polyglot dell- boys at the Hotel McAlpin. Their names, which may indicate their nationality, but gives no indication of ‘The influx of foreign visitors to this;seems to outnumber other foreign’ country since thé close of the world | guests A guest failing to find among the hall attendants or waiters of the in the forelgn staffs of most of the) pennsylvania one with whom he can cosmopolitan hostelries and has also} converse may rely upon the maitre de drawn attention to the strides which| hotel, in addition to French, had been made, even before the! war, | Ktatian and Spanish, speaks the less | Popular German and other mixtures. The Biltmore, the Commodore, the elmont and the Manhattan provide a war has made necessary an increase who, ‘by the progressive American hotel (an institution far ahead of the most im-| ,, proved European, ones), especially in| j like arrangement for foreign guests t jo} fe i [berber m given to the foreign! cney nave linguistic hallboys, wait- | No New York hotel has disregardea|°"®, #84 room clerks, and furnish |guides and interpreters when re- | |the problem of making the foreigner) #itey cation bs . | i who does not speak English feel at|"S''lt wore possible to view as an un- [home while sdjourning here, although some have developed a more complete, far-reaching system than others. | . Alpin month by month, it would be to | The Pennsylvania, though new, has « : an Ne sien | Witness one of the most striking ex- started o} n important clie! arted out with an important clien | amples of the city’s cosmopotitanism. A more varied concourse gathers here than ever soughtan Old World shrine elled through a Chaucer pil- broken stream the polyglot procession |tele of foreigf guests. Their wants bogin to be taken care of when they jenter the lobby and find bellboys |ready to speak to them in their na-| grim's tule tive tongues. If they aré Spanish) Thirty-five thousand employees of e hotel system which includes the guests, the bell hop who bears the; the hotel system whic Waldo id the Me. pI ot conte! |sign “Expanol" on his coat will be-| Waldorf and the McAlpin, not content |just to speed up jcome a familiar and important figure! proaching guest, reach out to attract to them, They will be assigned to'him here and to assist him on his bee where there are Spanish speak-| YOeOKe. ae i psaeel ten ol baneiany iba } 2 a em for foreign service that has eve ing floor clerks and Spanish-spe wkIN8 | been developed by any hotel. Such a |women will shop for them and give! decoy as a moving picture film is sent them any information about the city|@broad picturing honeymoon trip jer dusts: to New York and its hotels. The for- ‘ eigner is met upon his arrival here by French and Italian guests are cared|a representative who is employed to for in the same way, though at pres-| (ake of people arriving on for- ent the Spanish-speaking contingency the ready ap- n service staff ts com- as guides or com- n of them speak every known Matthew as interpreter for the Turkish Foreign Department — for twelve years, speaks French, Italian, Spanish, Greek and Turkis Mado ‘is h and F pert, -Russell, a young Canadian, peaks Polish, Russian, Bohemia’ Slavonian, Austrian and Italian. ke \s ndinavian interpr Joseph Cad and Joaquin Bueno peak French and Spanish fluently. The fact that the McAlpin shop em- ploys Chinese girls as waitresses has made it kind of headquarters for the Chinese patrons, especially the ladies, who come in’ large numb: the woman doctor from been among the r nt If You nga our Eyes You'll surely regret it later on, You owe it to yourself to protect your eyesight NOW with Ehrlich glasses. Reliable Eyesight Examination by Registered Eye Specialists. Correctly Fitted Glasses, $3 to $10 Foie cheSons New York: 184 B'way, at John St, 423 Sixth Av a last evidence that the foreign- is well taken care of here, his whims and peculiar customs are car- ied out. If a patron prefers a room without a bed, as in the case of the Hindu guest who brought his sleep- ng carpet with him, the bed is re- moved, If an East Indian gentleman wishes his servant to sleep on the loor by his bed, this is allowed, A group of Hindu guests arrive who ob- ject to the food served in the din- Jam ing on account of some re- ~ ligious rite or fast, and they have | 2¢ ye a privilege beyond the ordinary guest, being given the freedom of the | kitehen, where they may go and pre- | A, | | vor N Aa St. *f, West 42d _ Street, Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St.,cor.Bond St Pure rooms pare their own fo The Majestic makes the point of Pl Me considering the foreigner of what I] measure of solidjam whichnetonly ever nationality from a human an¢ path be the taste, ages the unusual | intimately personal standpoint. All merit of economy, convenience and ap-| departments of the hotel are pro- 7d. Look for the blue| vided with foreign speaking people, ¥ |but the guests are mostly cosmop- olites and come to this country to profit by hearing English spoken as TS | ch as for anything else. Penetrating Purifier CHLOROX purges where no brush can reach—searching in microscopic mouth chan- nels to eliminate disease germs—it is not just a tooth cleanser, Sold Everywhere—Every Drug Store in New York Has It . NULINE LABORATORIES JACKSON, MICHIGAN |of travellers which enters the Mo-| |sent detectives who “looked around,” |the neighbors say. But the very next Murphy's Former Partner Seeks Welcome Foreign Visitors Flocking Here esis os. And Make Them Feel Very Much at Home | | THE LINGUIST BELL-HoPS. the variety of tongues they speak, are as follows, from left to right: F. J. Cadieux, J. Bueno, J. Sar- fatty, Thomas Collada and Matthew Homes. SNEAK THEVE LOT AN ENTE BLOCK N BRONX Twenty Apartments Entered by Burglars With Ladders; Women Terrorized. Sneak thieves visited about twenty block in Sunday nights, stealing cash and jewels. The is known only the police, who will ot tell, Also the po- lice aloe know the exact number of the complaints. The block is that bounded by Mor- ris and College Avenues ‘and 168th apd 169th Streets. The Morris Ave- nue side was worked Saturday night | apartments in one square the Bronx Saturday and amount lost to and the College Avenue side last night and garly this morning. The best testimony idicates there were two of the thieves ad that they worked with ladders which connctt- | ed With fire escapes. One of the first victims was Vin- cent A. Clinton of the Bronx Board of Trade, At midnight Saturday he heard a window creaking at his home, No, 1262 Morris Avenue, and found his trousers had been dra to the kitchen, which has a window opening on the fire-escape. He had lost $85 from a trousers pocket. In the same apartment, house that night Mrs, Carl Huber saw a light flashed into her bedroom window She screamed and the intruder fled On the top floor of No. 1248 Morris Avenue Mrs. Evelyn Palm saw a similar flash, screamed and heard men hurrying down the fire-escape. ‘There were ten or more complaints from that block on Saturday night, many of them from persons who said they had been robbed. The police night the thieves came back, made additional robberies and escaped. At 4 o'clock this morning Julius Carlson, No. 1259 Coll@e Avenue, was awakened by a noise at his win- dow He saw two men on the fire escape. Seizing a club he rushed to the window, but the men were half way down the stairway. Inquiries among other tenants in the College Avenue side of the square block in- dicated that ine or ten other apart- ments had been entered and that moey and jewels had been taken, One of the victims whose name escaped the police censorship was Mrs. Fred Meyer, No. 1269 College Avenue, who lost $38 and some jewels, salen asso HINES SUED BY HARTOG. to Recover $5,005, Louis N. Hartag, Charles F) Murphy's former partner in supplying the Brit ish Government with glucose products, and now plaintiff against the Tam: many Chieftain in @ $10,000,000 suit, is suing Walktr D, Mines, Director Gen- ral of Railroads, to rtcover $5,006, the Value of 632 cans of Maltoextrine, alleged to have been lost by the Rail. road Administration in shipment from Jackeon, Mich, This became known to-day when Alexander §. Lyman, attorney for the Railroad Administ-ation, moved in. the Supreme Court to vacate and set aside | attempted service of process in the action to recover samages. ~ Tee Men Get Together, The annual convention of the Na- tional Association of Ice Industries and the Natural Ice Assoclation of America opened th» morning on the eighth floor e “PERSONAL CHICKENS” - “OST MAN FINE OF $6 », Explains 11th Street Resident, and They , Lay Eggs. Antonfo Connato lost the first round of a battie with old H. C. L. this morn- | ing before MAgistrate W. Bruce Cobb in Eesex Mafket Court “This mAn," declared Health OM cer Donovan, “has sixty chickens at No. 231 Kast 11th Street without a license," “They are my personalehicken serted Connato. “What? ejaculated the magistrate with a start "T mean they as re the kind which lay emzs and I am saving them for my- | self,” hastily explained Connato. “Are they bantamns grown-up chickens?” inquired MagistFate Cobb. “Just regular chickens—the kind that lay eggs,” said the health cop. “Mr, Connato must have an enormous personal n appetite,” decreed His Honor e dollars.” NAME IN EVERY PAIR Those who sell Fownes Gloves” do not have to force or explain their wares. Since 1777 buyers have found them the best of GLOV | Men at Noon. Get Van Camp’s Beans Downtown Restaurants buy them to please men, for they can’t bake beans like Van Camp's These beans are selected by analysis. They are boiled in water freed from minerals, so every skin is tender. They are baked in steam ovens —baked for hours at 245 de- grees. So the beans are easy to digest. Yet the steam oven bakes them without crisping or bursting. The Van Camp sauce has « zest and tang like no other sauce you know. . And we bake that into the beans. You can cut your meat bills by serving beans like these. Try them—see how men enjoy them VAN GMP's Pork and Beans Baked With the Van Camp Sauce—Also Without It Other Van Camp ps Evaporated Milk Chili Gon Carne 2 atsup Products Include ‘ Spaghetti Pea Chili Sauce, et Prepared in the Van Camp Kitchens at Indianapolis y Every gtocer everywhere seils Kellogg’s everyday “The Best Newspaper Magazine of ¥ stor and will be in ° e next three days. About were present. Topica provision for a short crop year, fecting the appearance of nataral the standardization of refrigerator boxes. —_- Hage Haase’s Condition Grave, BERIAN, Oct, 27.Hugo Haase, the Independent Socialist leader, who was shot and gravely wounded Oct. 10, has undergone a fourth operation. Hfs con- dition ig serious, Supplement States of Am in the United erica” —THE SUNDAY WORLD MAGAZINE OWNEN, ¥ << \ FOR MEN. WOMEN & CHILDREN

Other pages from this issue: