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Young Men Had Looted the Home of Ely T. Berheim in Harlem, ~ FAMILY IN THE SOUTH. Police Think Crooks Belong to Same Gang as Men Captured Yesterday. Policeman Frank P, Schlamp, of the) est One Hundred and Twenty-ffth | treet station, eaw « couple of men along Seventh Gre merely the tools for other “erer thieves who are breaking them ‘Into the business. The rob! to-day * was _ Planned Sr obieded out. The two Baloves had discovered that Tried to Open Safe. After prying off the scuttle of rnheim home they jet themsel wn to the eae icnaing by After jork they man: this door and wir mercy. They took their nsacked it from top to bottom. There no’burglar alarm and they worked Hthout fear of molestati Intended to Return. the two crooks shortly after ed up with themesel COMIC SERIES. And Many Other Features, NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD. COURT IN A POLICE STATION. Magistrate Crane Quickly Turned Complainant Into Prisoner at a Impromptu Hearing. "So impressed was Magistrate Leroy B, Grane with the story told him last night By an old German saloon-keeper, who Was locked up in the East One Hundred id Fourth Street Police Station on a Pharge of assault and robbery Held court in the police static iter heating both sides of the eharged the defendant and plaincft on a c! Leg Kats 15.0 econd avenue. Nan Brady Homeless. entered the p Cause Kats refused to st HELD hela rge of intox/cation, iquor dealer at No Early jast evening Ju- twenty-nine years old and the 2004 and be-| nwith a | He thea | ve hi @iink he became quarrelsome, claims that ho was thrown out wf the | Peace, and in the tussle Kutz reached | thto his Jacket pocket and stole $50, Grady came back later with a d fective from the East One Hundred and th street station, and Ka ‘Arrested. He was held by Serg:. 1 onson tho charge of ussuult and roo- Yery. siKuts's wife e's home, a hurried to Ma; . ws West One tH find Niieeenth street, anv 5 40 bull her husband our, He o; wWourt when he reached the stat ly not having nad a chance to A ten-minute hearing convinced i that Brady's story was off color. iy \ appear for, Magistrate ‘Grane in the Harlem Court Re prisoner. ea | girls made it Gone, nue and Ninety-third street, held com- | was as follows: BRONX WIVES MELD ACES — |: | fifty-four sweet girl graduates. a very charming spectacle the pretty creditable to Miss Jeffries and Miss Anderson, their stage managers. “The Japeness Fan" given by 7B and “My Little Buttercup” ‘by 5B were also pret- for And There was an attractive programme of chorus, dances and recitations. Prob- |ably the most successful number was jen ance of the Watteau shephei | eases, thirty girls trained by Miss Zina | Mayo. The little ladies were very | quaint in powdered curls, hats and flowered gowns. Their dance figures and the musio of their songs were arranged by Miss-Mayo. Highteen youngsters from 6A in plo- big diack AGAINST PINOCHLE PLAYERS By Alice Rohe. The plague of pinochle has fallen upon the Bronx. Its horrible ravages have entered the homes of the oldest families. Husbands have been torn from happy firesides, wives have lis- tened and waited in vain for the sound of homeward bound footsteps, Nothing Uke it has been heard of since Flatbush took to bridge whist. The trouble with pinochle up in the Bronx is that it hasn't the approval of feminine society. The Bronx women |! ere red-handed after those ‘dens of iniquity” where spouses sit over the al- luring game, while housewives yawn and men give up their cash. ‘The pinochle mania has developed into one grand scandal. Any Bronx matron can tell you about it, but especially the wives of the six men implicated in the great exposure. Awful Losses Exposed, No gambling affalr at Canfield’s has caused the excitement along Million- atres' Row that has the pinochle expose in the Bronx It i# reported thut Sam ‘Winters lost thirty-five cents last werk, and Larry Williamson borrowed thirty cents out of little Willie's bank to plunge into the gambling vortex at that the Bronx women farreted out themselves where their wayward bus- bands were spending the evening. The barber shop was “spotted; then in- dignation letters begun to pour upon the head of Capt. Brennan, of the ‘Tremont avenue station The Bronx women asked to have the “gambling hells” closed up. of the women appeaied to District-At- torney Jerome. Be that as it may, a little friendly game was Interrupted at Jacob Holm’s tonsorial parlor, and six pinochle-play Ing husbands didn't go home at all Next. one| tion, yet returned, of No. Seventy-rinth treet. is often away on didn't think anything had gone downtown. is gol too far. I any of thing has happened. | 1m's, of op Std stayed’ an : banber- wait business, “Oh, thi thing ‘terrible, arrested, Tt am mighty gla pent the | dnt.” Charles at is (Bronx merchant, with a I sent a “shop about 3 . morning, it nobody was Jacob Holm’s barber shop. For know | hedn’ morning, saying he was down town on is pinochle pla: is aw I'm ‘sik: Che me They epent the night In the police sta-| a: A reporter for The Evening World unwittingly broke the news to the six anxious ‘wives whose husbands hadn't “I don't know anything about a pinochle party,” said Mrs. 8, N. Wartel, 726 East One Hundred and “My husband She's Glad It Happened. “Was he really arrested? serves him right. This pinooh didn’t come home that night, but as he business over ni, about it. morning, early, I got a note saying he I i have never taken lclal steps, and I who has written to Mr. Jerome or the police, but I certainly am g some- ry Perhaps it wilt | aa! maike the men ashamed of ves." Mr. Wartel, who was one of the p: a store om ire- hadn't seen tr " Keeps a mar: Mrs. Moses Lowensi Lae husband all nigh either, Mr. Lowenstein ket on Tremont avenue. seems a shane well-known merchants mixed affair like this, but-1'm not sorry. 1 . in a way, that it hap: ed. May be it will put a stop to men stay‘ng out all night at these places playing vinochle. y any difference between these bar | shop places and a regular gambi@g They'll Be at Court. ol 00) den't know arty own tor husband to she paid, "But he stayed over to the the I jome- mn were to have in an ‘IdnaDaricl Sons Sons Reduction Sale in Children’s Dept. +». Hats and Bonnets, formerly $2.00, at 98c Dresses, formerly Caps, formerly $7.50, at 4.75 $1.50, at 50c Also Children’s and Infants’ Underw greatly reduced prices. Women’s Underwear Sale Still in Progre Prices th ss on 2d Floor. e Lowest. rat Broadway, Eighth and Ninth Sts. One Minute from Astor Pl, Subway Station, THE. OF ORED: FRIDAY t) stan EVENING, JANUARY eh is ; wie ok NO. 93 IN FA Recitation, “Modern Education,” Miss Naitille Vassar; drill, class work with balls, welected graduates; drama, ‘‘Vil- lage with One Gentleman,” eight gradu- ates; recitation, “Dad Sez So, Anyhow,” Misses Mildred Coster and Alma KGl- lenbers. ‘The valedictory address was deliv- ered by Miss Dorothy Cocks and the address to graduates by Commisaione: Nicholas J, Barrett, Louis Werner, chairman School Board, presented the class medals as follows: Hauptner Medal—First honor awarded to Miss Dorothy Cocks. Gruber Medal—Second honor awanted to Miss Alice Greenstein. * @chool Board Medal—Awaried to Miss Amy Lupher. Joseph 8. Taylor Prizo—Examinations —Awarded to Miss Dorothy Cocks. Grammar i—Awarded to Helen Burrows, 100 per cent. ne. ‘Modal—Awanied to Mise Doro- tt Keen. ‘Dactory ‘Medal—Awarded to Miss Allce Greenstein. addresses to the school were de- The livered by Dr. Joseph 8. inoohle game were John F. Jo of . 244 Valentine avenue; John *Sjork avenue, and 872 East One man, of No. 1003 W: Joseph Williams, of No. Hundred and Seventy-third aireek, Teylor, Dis-/ trict Superintendent; Rev. Willism P. Manning, D. D.; John Ford and Joseph Schloss. Asthma Bronchitis Consumption First Treatment Free$ The person suffering from any of these dis- eases needsalr. With- out It he dies, With ft—enough of {the lives. But he 18 too athe, oF so mat- t a bd the bronchial tubes are #0 can't discouraged to make the effort. In any case, air is the cure, and the only possible cure. That ts where the Pneumatic Vacuum Cabinet does its work. It makes the pa- tlent breathe. ‘The patient sits comfortably and quictly tdon. | within this air-tight box and the air Is other wives the pinochie-playing husbands. Mr. Bjorkman says the ar- rest was a perfect outrage and that they were just enjoying a friendly “Down with Pinochte.”_ Anyway, the cry in the Bronx ts “Down with pinochle!’ The alarm Is soundet by every Bronx wife whose husband has a hankering after the se- ductive game. iT have my ideas as to, who sent some of the letters complaining about these gambling hells, but I'm not say- ing,” said an indignant Webster ave- nug woman. “Why, it's something awful. My husband is getting to be a perfect nighthawk. One night he didn't got in till 11 o'clock, and when T went thro! his pockets’ he didn't have a cent. It's a crime, that's what it ts. We Bronx women ought to band to- gether and crush this pinochle to earth, tT is a real menace to our domestic neace and it is leading our husbands Mrcltement Ix rife in the Bronx. All vou want to draw a crowd is to wink whisper ‘‘Pinochle.” It's the big- gest scandal that has broken loose across the river for many a moon. As for the naughty, naughty men, the Bronx women say they are not going to stop till gambli'ng joint where pee us ninochle is played has been “pulled. bands are caucht. (hey don’t care whose hus- pumped away from around him. The out- side air is then let into the lungs and air passages through a tube provided with ao stop-cock. You see what must happen. Be- couse there is no air around the patient. the alr coming In through the tube muxt expand the lungs. That's exactly what it does. Before you know it you are breath- ing, deeply, generously. You hadn't sup- posed you ever could breathe like that again. But you can, and do. The comfort and rellef ,are wonderful. You feel good at once. Every part of the lungs feels good. The second and succeeding treatments are evin better. The lungs are getting back the breathing habit, and with the new habit comes new life. Then the havling vapors and germ killers, Eicesa and Pineola, the juices of newly discovered plants, are sprayed into the air as it enters the tube. The Consumption and Bronchitis Germs cannot live in their presence. Asthma yields to them at once. They heal the dis- eased surfaces and complete the cure that the air has begun, This Breathing Cabinet ts one of the most marvelous {nventions of the rge, Come in and see it work. Note that it doesn't sct on the stomach or limbs or feet, but the lunge and air passages. It goes direct to the seat of the disease fixelf and enres it. It ts doing that daily, If | others are cured, you can be. Besides the Cabinet we also use the fam- discovered by Dr. Fiusen, We use the light when- 8 find It necessary. Call You can be cured if ous Violet Ra of Copenhagen. ever our speci before it Is too late. you will act in time. CABINARC INSTITUTE, Suite Gil, No. 400 W. 23a Announce j satin Duche e, application wear; value $50.00, Also made of Finest Black squirrel, full shawl collar or 100 Coats of Black Cheviot or light weight Kersey; 45 inches long, appli-\ cation of velvet at neck and cuffs, lined et IS. oo a superior quality of satin; value $29.50, trimming, a dressy coat for street or evening Lord & Taylor for Saturday 200 Women’s Winter Coats at Half Price. ) At each, 100 Coats of Imported Black Broadcloth; At 48 inches long, lined with white By of fancy braid? 25.00 each, 50 Women's Fur Lined Coats, / At Broadcloth; 48? 42. Zs inches long, lined with selected Balen each, black Lynx; value $75.00 Broadway and Twentieth St., Fifth Ave., Nineteenth St 1900. NCY COSTUMES > Men’s House Coats, double faced meres vmememmemn Stern Brothers Announce for to-morrow Final Clearance Sales in the following Departments Men’s House Coats « Robes |, plaia cloth and velvet, Formerly $5,00 to 19.75 $3.30, 4.80, 6.00, 8.50 $12.75, 16.50 Formerly $19.75 to 29.50- ’ Boys’ « Young: Men’s Clothing Ox‘ord & Fancy Overcoats, 6 to 16 yrs., Were $5.95 to 8.50, $3.95, Norfolk, Sailor & Russian Suits Young Men’s Suits & Overcoats, 32 to 38 chest measure, Boys’ Sweaters, 28 to 36 chest measure, Were $1.95 to 2.45, Long Coats, 14 & 16 yrs., se Misses’ Skirts, 14 & 16 yrs., Girls’ Cloaks, 6 #14 yrs., Girls’ Reefers, 4 to 14 ys, * THE PINK EDITION OF THE EVENING WORLD $6.40 to 9.75, 5.00 Were $14.75 to 19.75 Misses’ & Girls’ Apparel Misses’ Suits, 14 & 16 yrs, Heretofore $20.00 to 35.00, $14.75 “o | Imported Lounging Robes, in ve:vet and silks, t ' j i i « 11.50.to 13.95, 6.95 to 10.00, 10.00 to 15.00, 4.95 to 5.95, UPRIGHTS, $90 BIOU $4 opty, 135 WESER (acts 10.00 9 1160 WEBER 175 STEINWAY aoa 1.00 | }190BEHRBROS. 5. 210 ESTEY 220HAINES BROS. 6.’ SQUARES, ‘ $15 BROADWOOD $2 2, 16 WILKINS Qin IQSTODART. 2 nti 6.95 |] 22NEWTON &CO. 2 iter. ; 35GNETZ&C0. 2 wre 4.95 1] qe¥2aKAUER ie 6.95 T] GOSTEINWAY © 3.7m 2.95 CONTAINS ALL SPORTING NEWS OF THE DA Out at Last vacate half of our warerooms; we are now so overcrowded we must sacrifice several fine pianos DO YOU WANT ONE? GOETZ & CO., 81, 83, 85, 87 COURT ST., 1 Block from City Hall, Brooklyn Open Evenings. "Phone 359 Main PIANOS RENTED, $2 Uewneo. UPWARD. World Wants Work Wenders. = Saturday’s Matchless Values in the = | Shoe Carnival of. Bargains. and profit Saturday. (Infants’ Cloalts. } ek Lae Q = We Give Dividend Stamps. =” a 1,000 Stamps are worth $3.00 cash, and 500 are worth $1.50 cash, when E Merchandise tn over 100 Departments of ‘C Fulton Street, ftom Bridge to Duffield Street. A Stamd with Each ice of Your Purchase. inthe Here are four samples of the bargains the Shoe Store has gathered for your benefit real worth. $2.00, per pair 1.98, Value $3.50. Just this one statement tells the story of how baby can have a new warm Cloak for very little money. Prove that these are extra good value by a shopping tour. come back and tell us they are the best. eee e eee Infants’ Long Cloaks, of Bed- ford Cord, some with deep cape, face or fancy cord trimmed, others bla Dainty Conceptions ra! chitfon ‘edges, the latest season hat out, 6 new shapes, in black, white anid, value $3,00, for.” nee, peas { Fine Neckwear. } new eteeneee ( Point Venise Lace Collars, in cream and white, suitable for children’s coats and yokes 50 for waists, value 89c, for.... Ic Fancy Stock Collars, in long jabot effects; also some ot short tab, studded with beads, value $1.00, for ‘ ,.. 50C Stock Collars, embroidered i taffeta silk, in white, light blue and blac! i ‘Top Colla: H designs, wee eee ee een en= Satin Hats, all the rage now, 4 new and popular shapes, black, white, black with white, light blue, pink and the new rasp- berry shade, value $250, 4 19 . You'll trim- $3.50, ac shoulder value 1.98) value 39c, ea., 25c » new lace, in pretty cream, white and ; dainty patterns, each a Pmee In New Hats. colors tucked etween- light blue, 1.98 40, 9, pect to need them soon. Women’s Shors, Misses’ Shoe: patent leather. spring heeis, soles, lace only, sizes 11 to 2, pair..... Men’s Storm Rubber: edges and double heels; rubber made $1.00, pair.. a new Wai 0} uns plying Best matérials vici kid, lace and button, good heavy soles, Cuban heels, patent leather tips, comfortable lasts, serviceable and stylish, sizes 3 to 7; value $2.00, for Boys’ Shoes, box calf, satin calf, vici kid and patent leather, good solid-leather serviceable soles, good shape lasts, suitable for hard wear; sizes 1 to 5%; value J 50 ime, stitched box plai sleeve with déep tue! date i hed js box cal {Very Stre ery Strong Values in the | Clearance Corset Sale. eS Inventor Feoraty ip We want to clean up our stock of Cor- 's—henoe the strong values for Saturday. All the leading makes and models in the lot. 4 es ee a a nee Corsets, in all the leading models and makes, such as Warner's, C. B., Thompson's Glove Fitting, American Lady, W. B., R. Royal Worcester, P. . ef ne traordinary value............... f ; Best Ne ws of the Year in Girls’ Fine Winter Coats. Here is news that the busy mother should not miss. Such good values as Saturday brings you in Coats for girls should not be over- looked. Here your mon you expected to pay for Girls’ Coats, full length, in all-wool melton cloth, double-breasted front, plaited back, with belt, piping of { sizes 10 to 14 TS; lar ahd cuffs; col s ¢ wo Important Bargaias in Women’s Pretty Waists. Either ofthese Waists isa bargain’ Just now, when you to finish “ae ata these values come: at a vie! 1» BOO Inventory near, we want to be ready for new stock, so we must clean-up to make room. Every one should see these excellent values if they need shoes or ex- Inspection only wiil prove their ERO LES EIN a 0 |, Short, medium and long hip, the new high bust or medium and low bust; materials are the best: {fcr boning and all nicely trimmed; white or dra ae C. will the ue $5.00, for + Girls’ Coats, fill length, all-wool kersey, in blu and castor, loose front ‘and back, fastened with fancy silk ornaments, 4.98 fur izes 6 to 14 years; value $8.00, for....++ hee, OR are Lo full front with small tucks and tallor- small value f0, £0565 lace, yoke of Val. iace Insbetin Teeves'with deep cuit, lined th kid and i heavy with heavy rolled the best sizes 5 to 10%; value garments. 1.39 1.39 79¢ @ C. = G., J. B., Kabo, Nemo, 1.00 ae all siz x @ Cc. fit the girls out for perhaps half what Isn’t this paying news? n, biue, brown, brown, green, wine QC. heed fh made in the most up-to-date : vie workmat . See thém Saturday. silk buttons, tucked back, e collar; ‘! 9:98 seo tor th 4.98. Tuesday we were compelled to | my,