The evening world. Newspaper, June 19, 1922, Page 13

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DIDN'T PROPOSE, —[CARKILLS WORKER YOUNG WIFE SAYS, | AT NAVY YARD: TWO OTHER FATAL Driver Menaced by Crowd Runs Away, but Surrenders Later. Mrs, Foster Attributes Man’s Allegation to Fear of Wom- an Who Adopted Him. e Frank Rotola, of No. 17% Trout man Street, Brooklyn, was killed by An automobile to-day as he stepped from a Flushing Avenue car at the Carlton Avenue gate of the Navy Yard, where he is employed. The driver of the ca Mrs, Thelma Helms Foster's peti- dion for right to reargue her mption alimony and counsel fees, denied tt Friday by Justice March, will come up before him again to-day. “It Is a cruel falsehood to say that I proposed marriage. The only se- erecy about our marriage was wholl @n Angelo’s insistence, and he didn’t t first tell his This is the answer of Mrs. Thelma Per" on Flushing Avenue a Helms Foster, wife of Angelo Scarpa . DENN NEE TS Came BSaK er, adopted son of Mrs, Nona Mc-| "4 Surrendeved to Policeman Bur- Adioo Foster, sister of William G, Mc.|/¢Y at the gate. He said he was ‘Boo, former Secretary of the Treas-| #/@!d of being mobbed if he stopped Gry, and widow of a Boston banker, W2e” the crowd started for him at to allegations In her husband's depo.| {%@ time of the accident. He was ation that she had proposed marriage,|1°cKe up on a charge ot homicide. that they had a honeymoon of one| Burley sald he had the names of hour, and in the year and a half since} Witnesses who said Ketcham violated the marriage had met only occasion. th OTdinance against passing within ally on Saturday afternoons. The deposition was filed as an answer in a petition by Mrs. Foster for alimony pending the decision of her sult for separation, She also served a summons on Mrs. Nona McAdoo Foster in a suit for $50,000 for alleged alienation of Angelo’s affections. Mrs. Thelma Foster is young and béautiful. Mrs. Nona McAdoo Foster is middie-aged, yet the two appear to have become rivals for the affec- tion of the handsome young Italian, who at twenty-seven, after an Acquaintance of five years, was jopted by the elder woman, According to the junior Mrs. Foster, —~. { her husband asked that the marriage be kept secret because news of it ete ae THEATRE MANAGERS Bo sho was e sutterer trom nenst ain.| LN CONVENTION HERE ease. Later, says the young wife, he — admitted he feared that Mrs. Foster,| Internationa ati if she heard of his marriage, would Internati nal Assoc no be go torn by jealousy, his material TTolds First Session at prospects would be ruined, as ho was Pennsylvania wholly dependent upon her for sup- : sii , Frank Ketcham of No. 18 Vanderbilt Avenue, increased speed when the crowd about the s iti 9 marked motor crashes in or nea New York yester- Clyde Huyler, eighteen, a clerk, of Baldwin, L. I s riding his motor- cycle on Queens Boulevard in Elm- hurst when the machine skidded and struck an automobile. He died in St. John’s Hospital, Long Island City. Benjamin Silvers, twenty-fivey of Rosenhayn, N. J., was inst&ntly killed and John Ritter, thirty, and Wolf Cohen, forty, of the same place, were seriously injured near Vineland when the automobile in which they were riding crashed into a tree. “Far from my pursuing hi ‘ young Mrs. Foster to-day, persistent in his attentions to m: He gave. me a two-carat diamond ring un engagement present of ri = feckinte, a ruby rig and a sealstia | Hotel Pennsylvania Coat for Christmas. He cartied the] \yalter Vin wedding ring in his pocket two months | R2Pley, before my parents consented to the] \ aa ok marriage. The only thing ‘sudden’ Gide ; was that it occurred without any fuss olimbus, O., 2 and feathers. We started to a the.| > and Ligon Johnson, ¢ atre, he urged me to get marriedp Counsel. ; dnd we went to the minister's house.| The organization came into being "Then came the life of evasion. H»|&t % meeting hel y la told me it would ruin him if his August The convention is expe ther knew of the marriage, that] ‘? inue to-morrow and probi @ would not share his affection with] Wednesday z uny other woman. Finally he in-} Winthrop Ames is Chairman of the formed me he would go to Europe} convention committee in charge of with his mother, tell her of the mar-] the schedule of proceedings riage there and immediately return tome. But he didn’t, and I got tirea md filed my suit. The only yi in explain his contemptible affidavit NP that he is trying to make his loving foster-mother believe I led him inte temptation and made him momenta- rily forget his ‘meal ticket.’ ”* Mrs. Thelma Foster is the daughter of Herman Helms, chess expert. Her mother js the daughter of the late Charles W. Whitney, a lawyer, ™ Foster met Angelo through Mrs. ma Thursby, the prima donna. Mr: Foster's uncle formed a corporation to in real estate, Mrs. Nona Me ees Foster financing Angelo’s share. ‘Mrs. Helms said: “{ did not want Thelma to marry him, but they seemed so thorough ly in love that I consented, most re- luctantly. [I am sorry I did not go further in my opposition, which might have prevented this unfortunate oc- currence. ciation, composed agers from all pi tates and Can nnual convention I I TE OT | OR the flowers that bloom in the Spring, there is no more fitting holder than an Ovington vase, There are almost as many varieties as there are flowers, and all are teasonable in price. OVINGTON’S " The Gif Shop of Fifth Avenue” Fifth Avenue at 39th Street ARREST DETROIT MAN AS AUTO STOCK SWINDLER With tho arrest yesterday of a man described as Edward Sween who came here about a we Detroit and stopped at the Hotel Bel- mont, detectives of the Tremont Station, the Bronx, claim they have wu an automobile stock swindling 56 large proportions. Sweeney was arrested on the com- plaint of Thomas Dodd, a gargne owner, 6 A’ , the fa : Sweeney, a dapper, well dressed young was arrested as he was about to ep into an expensive automobile he brought from Detroit. In addition tothe $6,150 got from Mr, Dodd, the police charge him with swindling operations that have alr netted over § ‘The alleged swindle was in the sale let stock in a company which wa. i Round Trip sell the surplus cars of a widely ad: ; tised automobile concern. The car S d E * manufactured two years ago, but nev unday Excursion old, it was claimed, could be bought nd resold at half the present market jee of the same mak great profit, aint antec oS SING SING DRUG USERS INCREASE 300 PER CENT. Number Admitted This Year Laru- SUNDAY, June 25 SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES astern Standard Time) onan ney, ent in Pri History. Feopeylygole Biakicn > 2 6804 res made public by Dr. Amos C Jersey City a eis = 6.33 Ay Stopping at Newark, Elaabeth Arrives Philadelphia (Bre head physician of Sing Sin t how a gain of more than 41 n the number of drug addicts ° imitted to the prison in the fiscal year yhich ends in twelve days. In the er ending, June 30, 1920, there BY ie vere thirty-threi re re i . Be a Pennsylvania Syst 0, 1921, and to 13: e y The Route of the Broadway Limited * closed. : Og mt ch of prison records for years k discloses that the number of drug iets admitted this year is the largest | _ 7 ssi Ma, A wrORY FALL “8 VETERAN, Uy; Frank J. O'Brien, thirty-two, a World WHOLE STW HIATT] far veteran, was killed instantly Inst A ht when he fell from the second his home, No. 225 aves Philadelphia 740 PM ity kHONE MUNN GLb ik, ‘ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1922," Small payment brings one into your home at 5 only; size 9x12 feet. Hello! Give me the ‘‘Linens’’! “Those Belfast linens that you sold me the other day have just arrived,” said the voice, “and I couldn't get to the phone soon enough ts tell you how beautiful they are— “I want two more cloths! “Have you got any left?” Yes, we had some—and the customer was highly pleased —"I'm going to tell my friends about them and show them the linens—I haven't seen any so fine and cheap since before the war.” They are a Belfast stock ~ that we bought in New York and are selling at these prices. Tablecloths 2x2 yds.—$8.95 each. Napkins to match. nch—$4.50 doz. inch—$5.75 doz. Tablecloths yds.— $11.25, 24, yds.—$11.50. Napkins to match. 22-inch—$11.25 doz. Tablecloths 2 yds.—$6.50 each. Napkins to match. 22-inch—$7.50 doz. Tablecloths and napkins will be sold separately, if so Telephone and 2 yds.-—$7.25 each mail orders filled as long as ds.—$9 each. - —$10.75 each. Napkins to match. 22-inch—$8.75 doz. Tablecloths 2x24 yds.— $5.75. 2x8 yds.—$6.75. These cloths are heavy single damask and very durable, They are termed in the Custom House as over-weight cloths and will give excellent wear. In addition to the table- cloths and napkins, we have just received from the same manufacturer, to be sold at equally good savings— All Linen Toweling 16-in. wide—17\4e, Hemmed Kitchen 2 yds.—$5.50, linen — $3,10 First Floor, Old Building. Loveliest of Baby Frocks And at such little ptices— 95c—$1.65—$2.95—$3.95 Sizes 2 lo 6 years Fresh from the workrooms of the designer who is | acknowledged to be the leading one for children in New so you can imagine how charming they are! s, afternoon frocks, party frocks, each more adorable than the other—a dozen different models, Delightful Summer Fabrics Flowered chintzes. Peter Pan cloth—in a rainbow of the that make bright little eyes look brighter anu Charming bits of Hand Work s like smocking—quaint embroidery designs s-—these are a few of the details «dividuality and distinetion to the clothes from this in brilliant colors particular maker Plenty of pantie frocks, Plenty of white frocks, in colored organdie, 95c; Me to $1.65, “ote Formerly A, T, Stewart Tuesday Morning at 8—-Annual June Sale of Men’s Summer Suits Not many—but very good ORIENTAL Rugs—Less $40 Beloochistans—Special $29.50 25 only; average size 2.10x4 feet. $50 Mosouls—Special $37 20 only; average size 3.2x6.4 feet. $175 Chinese Rugs—Special $135 4 only; size 8x10 feet. $200 Chinese Rugs—Special $150 Third Gallery, New Buliding. THE STANDARD CLOTHING SALE OF AMERICA IS READY. setting its house in order before another season begins. It is also the Wanamaker way of being helpful— of giving all men a chance to have better clothing at a lower price. 3,584 Suits, Wanamaker Standard Picture them in your mind, like this: Single-breasted suits; double-breasted suits. Two, three and four-button coats. * * * Coats with flap pockets; coats with patch pockets. * i * Suits of fine, sturdy worsteds; unfinished worsteds; cheviots, cassimeres, tweeds; flannels. * ™ * Hairline stripes; broken herringbone effects; fancy mixtures of many kinds in blue, brown and gray colorings; plain grays. * * * Models for all ages— fathers and sons Suits for business men; suits for young business men; suits for young men going to prep. school; suits for college men; suits for men who want the ul- tra-conservative. Suits for virtually ALL men, in- cluding— * % * Blue Serges and Golf Suits “in the Broadway Store Think of that! Blue serge suits and golf suits at all three prices in the Broadway Store. Tuxedo suits, too—at $28.50. * * * A very big range of sizes—34 to 48 For men of regular build; stout men; and men who need long stouts, short stouts, young stouts, long suits and short suits. * * * This unusual range may not apply to every in- dividual grade in the sale, but it applies to the sale as a whole. Annual Sale of Hair Nets 65ce dozen for $1.10 to $1.50 grades Fashionette, Bownet, West, Gainsborough, Univ ayfast, Bonnie “B” and other well known makes. »800 dozen, Single and double mesh. brown, medium brown, da in each make, but plenty sal, Unicum, cial purchase of Cap and fringe shapes. Blonde, light uburn and black, Not all shades hade in the lot, Street Floor, Old Building. of every Nightgowns made by hand Very low priced $1.95 to $3.95 Just received from the Philippines. New low prices, Fine sain sook, made over American patterns. Any number of lovely mode! decorated by hand with beautiful drawn-work, solid and eyelet emvroidertes, Main Alste, Street floor, Old Building. $3.50--$10 Serving Trays, $2.50 Substantial trays mes, ovottoms under a variety of «i andles, deep mahogany-finished king leatherized fabric. Oblong, SPORTS Everything for golf, ten- nis, swimming, canoeing, First in variety—first in comparative savings— first in the standard quality of its clothing It is the Wanamaker way of Made according to our specifications. No job lots; no maker's left-overs; no miscel- laneous varieties. ,, The good and true stock that the Wanamaker Store sells regularly and guarantees absolutely. Burlington Arcade Store 204 Suits — $40 grade.. 325 Suits — $45 grade.. $50 grade. . $55 grade.. $60 grade.. $65 grade.. Street Floor, New Bullding, In the Lower Price Broadway Store ———— a 62 Suits — $23.50 grade 137 Suits — $25 grade.. 182 Suits — $27.50 grade 163 Suits — $30 grade. . 286 Suits — $32.50 grade 210 Suits — $35 grade.. 246 Suits — $37.50 grade 260 Suits — $40 grade.. 187 Suits — $45 grade.. Broadway, cor, Elghth Don’t overlook the early opening— at 8 o'clock Tuesday morning. anton Crepe, $2.95 yd. a heavy weave with a crinkle— a silk that does not wrinkle— Will very rare| g Navy blue, black, henna, rust, copper, periwinkle blue, jade, beige, tanager red, peacock blue, Dutch blue The Silk Rotunda, Street Floor, Old Bullding. Elastic Girdles & Corsets, $2.95 $3.75 to $7.50 grades Of finest imported and American-made surgical web- two well known corsetiers, models that will not easily lose their trim lines. | $4.50 C 40 inches wide. Main Alate, Street floor, Old Bullding. 50 Different Novels—75c each Publication pric Young Folks’ Books--scores--25c Publication prices, 40¢ to 60¢, Book Store, Street Floor, Old Building,

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