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We —ROUTS TENANTS ON WEST SD Rafters Break, Ceilings Fall and Residents . ¢ Flee in Night. POLICE ROUT SLEEPERS. (Warning of: Rumblings and Shaken Homes Had Been , Given for Days. Following the breaking of rafters, the falling of eeilinge and the cracking of the walls in No. 132 Christopher street, early to-day, the eighteen tenants in ‘the structure ran to the street In their night drosses. This house is along the edge of the south bore of the New York and New Jersey Tunnel, which nas wrecked more than one house, and which has caused ‘uneasiness among persons living in the wicinity. On the first floor of the house ts the cigar store of Henry Roston. ‘On the second floor lives Mrs. Martha O'Keefe, her two children and two boarders. The third floor is occupied Dy the family of Patrick Turner, and fn the attic lives Patrick Daly, who has several boarders. Mrs. O'Keefe was awakened early to- ay by the cracking of the rafters. At the same time the walls seemed to bulge ont, She gathered her children and, calling to the other occupants of the house, ray to the street. Roundsman Fogarty and half a dozen policemen from the Charles street sta- tion routed the tenants out of their beds in the surrounding tenements, Supt. Fitzgerald, of the Tunnel Com- pany, and a gang of workmen were called. They sald the house was in no @anger of falling and scouted the idea that ting “onement had been ‘weakened by the shifting sand, the air pressure or the blast vibrations. ‘A man came from the office of the Biperintendent of Buildings. He per- mitted the versons in the tenements to o to their homes, but the ‘house at No, 3k? Christonher stret was ordered va: . ented, The versons made homeless were faken in by neighbor ALL READY 10 BUILD HIBERNIAN INSTITUTE. Trustees at Annual Meeting of A. O. H, To-Night Will Urge That Work Be Begun at Once. ‘The annual meeting of the Ancient Order of Hibernians will be held to- night at Manennerchor Hall, No. 207 East Fifty-sixth street. Great interest is manifested by the members in the Teport on progress toward the erection the "Hiberian Institute,” at Furth avenue and One Hundred and Sixtoonth street. The have been passed by the Building Department and the Board of Trustees have received estimates on the cost of construction, and to-night will recommend building opera- tions be begun at Three trustes to serve for three years And one the unexpired term of the late Cor sloner John J. Pallas will be elect BRYAN, OF INTERBOROUGH, IN FAVOR OF AN ESCALATOR WOOSTER ON GRILL So Informed Petitioners for Relief at the 125th Street Station. Merger Has Now Been Decided | Upon, and It’s All the Same | to Belmont and Ryan. | The people of Harlem are yery much | in in their demand that the| Interborough Rapid Transit Railroad Sumpany do away with the antiquated irway method of reaching the train platforms at the Eighth avenue and }One Hundred and Twenty-ffth street ation of the “L,"" and that an escala- tor, moving Snoline or elevators be substituted. Several organizations of business men have interested themselves in the matter, inchding the Boani of Commerce and tho Property-Owners’ | Association. The Harlem Board of Commerce, com- posed of the leading merchants, real estate owners and progressive citizens, appointed a committee, with School Commissioner John A. Wilbur, President of the Salem Nail Company, of No. 279 Pearl street, as chairman, to prepare plans for an escalator and wait upon Vioe-President E. P, Bryan and present & petition signed by more than eighteen hundred business men and women of Harlem, asking for the Installation of an escalator. Vice-President Bryan expressed him- self as entirely favorable to the proj- ect. That was last October, and nothing has been done, Mr. Bryan went off to Europe, no one about the Interborough offices seemed to know anything about ir In the absence of the general manager. Chief En- gineer George H. Pegram referred an Evening World reporter to Mr. Bryan— In Euroze Climb Sixty Steps, Meantime the Harlem patrons of the “L" are compelled to climb those sixty weary Steps toward the sky, a grum- bling daily processton of 17,000-men and women. The Board of Commerce made a care- ful investigation of the three methods of hoisting passengers up to the sky- high station, and decided in favor of the escalator method now employed at three stations. They found that the escalator at Sixth avenue and Twenty-thin’ street had actually brought an increase of business at that station of more than $50,000 in three years, and the introduc- tion of the escalator at Thirty-third street was followed by an !mmediate increase of business. It was found that that escalator, which {s on the west side of Sixth avenue and runs up to the roof of the station, with a way station at the platform of the downtown sta. tion and a bridge at the roof over the tracks and connecting with the uptown station vlatform by a short staircase, is carrying a majority of the passengers up to both stations, and that the busi- ness at this station had been Increased by $30,000 a year. ‘These were strong points—in October. By; since the merger, by which all the transportation lines came under one management, the traveller must pay his tare to the Ryan-Belmont company! whether he rides on the “L," in the Subway or on the surface cars, so ‘in- creased business" now only means that the passenger who is gained to the: earnest COUNTESS FORGIVES ELOPING HUSBAND De Noyes, Deserted by Ac- tress, Gives Back Part of Stolen Fortune. (Spectal to The Evening World.) CHICAGO, Til, Feo. 2%7—Count Ed- ‘ward De Noyer, the Belgian nobleman ‘who created © sensation in Europe by. fleeing the country with Yvonne Her- . beve, a French actress, and $325,000 be- longing to his wife, the Countess De Noyer, arrived in Chicago this morning, @ prisoner, in company of his wife and her brother, Polorious Von Holie- becke, a member of the Belg#in Senate, ‘he romance of His Highness and the actress charmer came to an end In a Jogging camp near New Hall, Mich twenty miles from Escanaba, where the rumiway nobleman was found by the Countess. The woman deserted him several days @go in Saulte St. Maric, and bereft of her affection, De Noyer fell on his wife's Neck and begged forgiveness, declaring that the actross had hypontized him an forced him to flee against his wishes. When he had restored to the tess $185,000 of the 000 relented, embraced and fork. Instead of being sent to shortcomings the count, wit him. for his his wife, and her stern brother,” who by no. means satisfied at the turn affairs have taken, will return to Belgium via New York, providing the ‘balance of the Money can be made good As If By Magic! That's the way you ® whole yard full of chickens {f you have one of tne moder: and = reliable =Hen-Mother: Incubator, You can buy one, pew or second-hand, from many of the “Doge. Birds, Poultry, Btw." Advertisers in THE WORLD! can rain SAY HE HAD PART OF $12,000 LOOT Detectives Make Belated Ar- rest in Robbery of Broad- way Jewelry Store. Detective-Sergts. Kinsler and Duggan | arrived from Boston to-day with a| prisoner on whom was found some of the loot obtained in the robbery of the Schumann Brothers’ svore, at No. Si Broidway. on Noy, 12 last, when 312,00 worth of silverware and jewelry was carried away In broad daylight. The robbery took place at noon on Sunday, The watchman, who Was sup- | posed to remiin at the store all day, admitted that he had beea away, A brougham was seen at the door of the shop and men came out with boxes which whey placed in the vehicle and| drove away. ‘The robbery was considered one of the most daring that had been perpe- trated in years. There was abdsclutely no clue, The thieves smashed the lock of the front door and then drew the shades. They then carried their loot from je showcases down into ihe cel- lar, y tad made a selection | at thelr leis | | Deveciive-Sergeants K and | Dusean were arraigning « prisoner be- j fore Sergeant Dunn at Police Head- |quarters yesterday, they suddenly re- ceived orders to cau the next train for Boston. At Boston they found aj @iegram of instructions. At No, 19 | Temple street they arrested 4 man who gave his name as Emmanuel Brodsky, A Rpeculator, He is. also known to the police as! detectives say that when arched jhim they found on iis} |susnenders two of the gold. buckle | that had been ‘taken trom the jew Store, Brodsky refueed to make any Statement other than that he had pro cured the jewelry from a man on the Bowery. He was brought here to-day. Most of the Jewelry has been pawned in Boston, Newark, Providence and Philedaiphia, The detectives 10 get the greater part of It back. _— WOMAN DIES IN A SALOON. e A shabbily dressed weinan died tn al coholic cama to-day in the rear room of the saloon at No, 280 Second ave- nue, After the bartender had ‘refused to sell her a drink she stumbled to a alts sai down and Srired. © was about thirty-five years ok}, five feet seven inched tall and carried the marks of years of disetpation. No one could be found in the neighborhood who knew her and the body was taken. to the Morgue, hape | beach THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 27, 1906. THEN WENT TO EUROPE. QWegrgr SLowirg ES Covgeor - ThE SUPOUPAING WATS RER2I0VEI TO SHOW OPEraLTo/. The Climbers. By Walter A, Sinclair. Wo are climbing, ol 80 what if weary er ‘The moisture's in merger; th an't climb just learn to ry way aloft nbing Harton s you that ne 1 Th e's room enough on top, by the way and dv re dividends to pay; swim and get chers anyway. . ‘tis but four stories high, or to the sky. Oh, you climbing, climbing Harlemites! Where else !s Joy Ike this? An endless filght of endless stairs and nt a one te miss; For foxy Mr. mont knows that exercise lire that WIll keep the climoing passenge! ra from growing over-fat; And lean folks con de packed in greater numbers in his cars. And that’s why you are climbing toward sun Oh, you climbing, climbing Harles It makes your lungs heave faster It makes your heart thump loud! Why didn't you remember, when ‘There are diviends to divvy, the Why then bother with improveme! We are climbing, climbing Hartemites! ve got us on the surface, on the They hi They are drowning us with water, stepped-lively!" have :o climb a million stairs, We are crowded, shoved, But the day is surely coming, it When the greedy ones are slated “L’* 1s lost to the Subway or the sur- face line, Tne committee found that the four ele- vators ut the West One Hundr=d and Sixteenth stree: station, in a bullding which was given to the company Ww ft was in an almost uninhabited plain of hundreds of ucres which the hoped to build up through the “L' and fa station made convenient for trave can carry up but 20 passengers an hour, while 5,000 want tO tuke trains during the rush hour from § to 9 o'clo exch biusness morning, and half of them are forced to climb the stairs. They found that a greater percentage of intending passengers used the stairs at the Thini avcnue and Fifty-ninth stveat station than at etther of the es- ealaior stations, espevially elderly pu ple.and women, the moving incline in- stalled there having only cleats or strips of wood for the passengers’ feet nd moon and stars. mites’ Come clatter up the stalr; Of pneumonia have no car: You should go without a heart. ‘ot took your upward start. re is water to be sold? nts? Why new fougles for the old? Hark to our dotefu) sound: * and underground; they are taking it in farcs: 13 coming in good time, for another roasting clime. to brace aginst, instead of steps, in the csealator or “moving steirway,”” the elderly passengers and the women hesitating to trust thelr feet on it. Thess were the reasons which led the Bourd of Commerce to favor the escalator, Thor ompinyed an esca- |Jntcr architect, who drew plans em-| | boaying she desircs of the Harlem pe-| titioners and presenting an ideal ar- rangement for the safe, rapid and con- nt lifting of passengers from the sidewalk to the stattons. To Lessen the Crush. One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street js m double station, approached by a fight of thirty steps to a mezzo- platform above the centre of Eighth avenue. From this mezme-platform two broad staircases extend for thirty more stozs, One to the north, to the station for Ninth avenue trains | sone in ether direction; the other to | the south, for the Sixth avenue train form. Board of Commerce plans pro- vide for two short escalntors of ‘single file’ pattern from corners o: Eighth | dred and Twenty. mezzo platform, and another alators from there to the tr | form. ‘To eliminate the congeet! which results on the present u: sta'rease and in the statien and wa ing room due to the meeting of the in- coming and outgoing crowds of pus- eenyers. the plans provide for an alter- ation in the position of the exit stair- case to a slight extent The sinele-file escalator has a hand- ail up thie re, thus ace commodating a double line of passen- gers. It has an estimated opacity of 5,000 passengers an hour, and would cost abet $45,000. It would solve the prob- lem completely and satisfactorily, Heartily Favor It. George Ehret, who owns the Rerk- shire, which occupies the whole biock on the mst side of the avenue, and who was in Europe when the plens and pe- ution were submitced to Mr. Bryan, is entirely favorable to it, according to his attorney, Edward M. Burghard, of No. 12) Bromdway, to whom an Evening World retorter was referred. ‘fuch the Colonial Ho- of the block on tie aide of the avenue belongs, will , Rot object, as the escalators would oc- ta exactly ¢ Sainé Spkce TOW oceu- ed by the lower staircases, and wotld not shut of so much Hght as the lat- ter, being lighter of construction, ‘We are heartily in favor of the es- caloter,” sald Edward Noo: Wer of the Colonial Hotz. “It ou to have been put in long ago, The has one of we richest franchises the world. and tt can wi t at afford to be afford to Up to late and first class in every par- Heubir. | Push it aborg'? “We are heartily in favor of It," said A. Relsenberg. of ihe department store firm of H. C.F. Koch & o., West One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street, “Tt 's much needed, T have worked hard personally to promote the oroject, ond the Board of Commerce has ed hard for it. | With the help The Evening World we ought to succeed. Mr. mont f¥ u progressive, fee spirited man" MAN EAD, WOMAN AT MANN HEARING “Fads and Fancies” Solicitor Admits “Blue Pencil Club” Was a Paying Institution. Couple Found in Bronx Hotel, Where They Registered as “Robt, Burns and Wife.” |\STATE’S EVIDENCE _IN.|END OF LONG CM4ROUSE. |Col. Mann's Counsel Moves to Dis- miss Case, and Also Raps Jerome as Hapgood “Prosecutor.” Hawlitcheck and Companion Had Been Drinking Heavily—No Sus- picion of Suicide in Case. Moses Ellis Wooster, late chief solici-| xray 5. Hawlltcheck, a cigar-maker, tor for dx andi Bancies was to-day found dead in the gas 1 {examined to-day in the hearing of the! room of a Bronx ho’ his [charge of perjury against Col, W. D. panion, Mamie Cullan, ¥ critical and unconscious condition to the Lebanon Hosptial. There is no evidence of suicidal intent. An empty liquor flask and open gas jet tell the story Last night the man, who was fort two years old, accompanied by th svoman, who Is twenty-six, registered a: the Elsemere Hotel, No. 613 East One Hundred and Fifty-first street as “Rod- ert Rurns and wife.” They were as- signed to a room, and that {s all that the police could learn from the hot people to-day, This morning Mortimer Pe Mann, of Town Topics, before Justice McAvoy in Special Sessions, Wooster was interrogated by Attor- ney Cralg as to his connection with the defunct “Blue Pencil Club" which was conducted, it is alleged, for black- mailing purposes. Wooster admitted having obtained cansideruble money from different persons while he was a member of the club, a matter of but a few weeks. Mr. Craig got Wooster to admit that Robert J. Collier, the complainant against Col. Mann, was paying him a salary of $100 a week to help prepare objected : “Ate you charging the witness with! locked. He tried to peer through the bigamy?" Justice McAvoy asked Mr.| Keyhole but could see nothing : ee ucock called Policeman MeCarthy. @) Wf the Morrisania Station, who eent for Meanwhile Hilda Zin- p of th tel, weat to med the door with her Soin bed \n ambulance. er, an empl *he room and c passkey. The had made mis:ukes In } ination im regard to date with the Rico syndicat | and also tha: ‘he was wrong in ‘ Ing that he had received the Rico stock | F Fain was writhing convul- from Count Ward In London. He got it] Yut the women Wis ven eg the by mail after he had returned to this| sively. Miss Zimmor, a elty. windows end door, drew the woman to the fresh air and chafed her wrists As Wooster’s Scheme. on the Ward letter. you had Count! pondence und} if apartment, D, M..” *] want to know why Ward send all his corr the shares of stock to yx Intoxicated turned on the gas after it had been turned out. If this whole deal wasnt a scheme of| YON etic Mee al “ease. peas! KIDNAPPED, PERHAPS, correspondence with Count Ward,” re-| plied the witness, “which I didn't ‘want | Anybody to see, and arranged {t In that) theta Wooster admitted he had not nre-, duced in evidence all the letters he hat received from Count Wari, and with his cross-examination ended the prose- cution rested. Ina brilliant speech Col. Mann's prin- cipal counsel, Martin W. Littleton. ex- Borough President of Brooklyn, argued for the dismissal of the comp‘aint against his client. He said the prose- gution had failed to prove that Col. Mann had committed perjury in the trial of Norman J. Hapgood. "Tt js a historical fact,’ Mr. Littleton FOR HE HAD 80 CENTS. Cicchino’s Chum Appeals to the Police to Help Find Missing Young Man. If any one has kidnapped Antonio | Cicchino, twenty-one years old, of No. Beh Market street, Newark, who had almost 80 cents on his person when I said, “that all crusades have falled. his chum, Floro Notte, nineteen The Colifers assert they have begun a] seen. pay < crusade against my client. I defy them.| years old, of No. % Market street, It's up to them to shoot or give up the anit Newark, will give all that’s left of his roll of & for Antonio's safe return, Mr, Littleton claimed that even if Col" saan dit write the dispuied le:ters| Notte, with Diamante Tambor, a the question wether he did or not was |i. ye. msbip agent of Newark, hot Material to, the Issue involved in| AW¥e! and steamedyp Aglee O) Newt The Hapgood trial. With forcibie lan-| called at Police Heada * kuiage Mr. Tattleton denounced the attt-| and reported the case to Detective- tude of District-Attorney Jerome as|gergt. Petrosino. The boys came to anhatian yesterday for a good Ume, Manheite, who, had just drawn his amounting to #, admits having spent more than $1, Antonio had about S rents the last time they bought a threa-cent glass of red wine. the prosecutor of Norman Hapgood. He declared that trial a hippodrome, “The Diatrict-Attorney’s office played fast and loose with the administration of justice in that case,” Mr. Littleton declared in loud tones. MANHATTAN BEACH CAN'T BE UNLOADED ON CITY |Mayor McClellan, After Inspecting the Prop- erty, Declares the Price Asked Is Much Too High. The scheme to purchase from the estate of Austin Corbin the Manhattan Beach property as a home gor conva- lescents and pleasure gardens 1s practi- cally dead, It certainly 1s dead so far as Mayor McClellan ts concerned, The $3,150,000 which the Corbin people want for the hotel and "400" acres will re- maln in the city treasury. Mayor McClellan, with Engineer Lowis, Comptroller Metz and Park Commiastoner Kennedy, of Brooklyn, went down to the beach yesterday to pect the property. It was while dis- cussing this trip to-day that the Mayor showed his opposition to the plan. “I would certainly want to be con- vinced that the property is worth the price asked,” said the Mayor, “and I would need a whole lot of convincing. In fact, as the matter stands now, I do not think that I could be convinced at all. “They talk about giving up four nun- dred 6 and a beautiful, attractive Let me tell you wit 1 found. years and | do not think anybady could Pave been more disappointed. I found about one hundred feet of beach, @ lagoon, @ marsh which fad been caused by the action of the sail sea waves, which were there in plenty. Much Is Under Water. “Most of the so-called 4 acres are under water, no attempt whatever hav- ing been made to reclaim any part of t Outside of the 100 feet of beach to which I have referred, the remainder of the water front ognsists of a walk, not more than eight feet wide, This is held up by spiles and bulkheads “From what we could learn by our investigations, the hotel people have been making as little repairs as pos- sible. Why should the: when they thought they could unloai on t for $3,160,000? When they found it at solutely necessary to sink a spile or so that had rotted away they did it, and that is about all. “Ag a matter of fact, three spiles out of every four are rotten, The worms peculiar to auch places heve enten their earns Sie mile lat! to hi Tarly cus thera, t would praceioally mein that we would have to reconstruct the whole concern, and the cost. In iny id ulimately reach as birh as $6,000,000, “Do 1 uiink the price asked is too nigh?" sai the Mayor, repeating a question. “I do, most‘ decidedly, I think, in fact, that they have exhibited vonderful amount of nerve In asking hing of the Kind. At the price « am. certainly auwinst the proposic ‘Thel Mayor, who was all over Island vesterday, said there w ibt that the easterly or Mai the Beach end is washing away slowly but surely, and that Norton's Point, on the con rary, fs making ground “Just where we do not want It,” was the comment. 2 City Beach Washed Away. The park which the city owns at pres- ent on Coney Island ,the Mayor said, originally conslate! of fifty-seven acres, whereas now it has only about twenty acres. The remainder of It has gone into the ocean, The fact. that Long Beach, as wel as the Manhattan Beach ‘property, has been practically rejected does not mean that a convalescent’ not be huilt. Some other site | yor sald hatran Beac -cent fare apealer The stories of graft will now cease, iGIRL VISITED MOTHER, AUHT WAS ALARMED. Shopkeeper Failed to Deliver Mes- sage and Miss Mishnum Sent for the Police. A genera] alarm was sent out to-day |}for Pauline Feller, a seventcen-year- old girl, who lives with her aunt, Miss Mixhnum, at No, 128 West Bighty-third Some hours after the alarm had sent the girl walked into tne She explained that she had been to visit her mother, who Ives in Brook- iyn. She returned from school yester- |day afternoon and made up her mind to visit her mother before returning to her aunt, She left her books In a near- by store, The shopkeeper promised to notify her aunt of ‘her intention, but ad forgotten it. All night Miss Mish- num lad awake and worried, and to- day she went to the West Sixty-eighth streot station and asked that an elarm be went out. street. | WHY THEY WON'T SHOW MISSOURI Mutual Reserve Life Would Rather Quit the State than Submit to Illegal Fees, Referring to the withdrawel of the Mutuil Reserve Life Insurance Com- pany from the State of Missouri the company to-day issued a statement in which it siiye: “A few days ago W. D. Vandiver, Superintendent of Insunince of Mis- sour, notified the Mutual Reserve Life Insurance Company that he was pre- pared co begin an examination of the company, and thax five persons would be emploved thereon at a dafly change io the company of $81, together with the living expenses in New York of one ot the examiners, who was to come from St. Louis. Among the five was included @ stenographer or clerk, per day $6, | The State stature provides that "fees for an exumination of the assets or the Uabilities of a company shall not ex- ceed 31C per day for any one examiner, | together with all neceasury expenses in. and actually paid,” any objected to the . Negal, and In re ae: Npany's estimate of the min t of the examination 14. $8,000, ne Superintendent admits’ it Fobably reach $5,000, While the y 18 advised thnt the Miarourr urts would restrain the Superinten nt from Interfering with the business ‘of the company such action would in- Voive a large expense ne company, therefore, bad the al- ternative of spending money ty somesi the Superintendent to obser the law, aubmit to an illegal exas! withdraw trom the Bist: Race er ur es te ast burdensome to the policy-holde: nas decided to mubmit to. th - ce In the latter alternatives © Ue COLLEGE BOYS HELPED - RUN THE ENGINES Cornell Students in Engineering Made Round Trip to Cuba for Practical Experience. Ten Cornell engineering students ar- rived here to-day on the steamer Morr Castle, from Havana, having made thi round trip to Cuba in the steamer's en- gine-room, They were in charge of H. Diedrichs, Assistant Professor bt En- gineernig at Cornell, and made rip a4 8 practical object lesson in engineering. ' many cases | “We became separated In the crowd et Woaiand Mott streets,” eald Noite, “and I saw Antonio with a stranger, Then [ couldn't find him. Somebody must have seen my poney and his and i him to ge sree petrosino promised to do every- thing possible to foil the avaricious kid- nappers. PICKS OUT TWO AS HOLD-UP MEN DING FROM chs | x ‘ock, a lodger at the hotel, was pass- | Wooster admitied he had given Count! Then Dr, Glang arrived and hurried Ward” the impression “that "he could] ye woman tothe howpital. Cards in natetle ico mining syndicate in ee Epa Calel thle country. because Of being eo well| her purse Identified her as Mamie Cul known in newspaper circles here, lan, The man was identified as Haw- Mr. Craig tried to show that the] titcheck. He boarded at No. 76% Mel- acheme of getting shares of the Rico| -ccs syenue syndicate from Count rd was for-| 7S an hel Peanel ner hon mulated and carried out solely by Woos-| Mrs. Becker, who kee ; - ter. This {sin Aupport of the contention | ing-house az that number, said tha of ‘the defense that W himself yrnwiitaheck had been away ence Sun- Bye He, deouted letters, “O. K. W-) gay, The police belleve the man while EXPRESSMAN HELD AS THIEF, Leslie Sadel, twenty-nine years old, & negro, of No, 509 Sixth avenue, was arrested early today by Detective- Sergts, Carey and Rhaume, charged with grand larceny. The complaiuant Was Charles H, Osgood, of No. 1354 Broadway, manager of the New York Transfer Company. According to Cagnod’s compiaint, on |Jan. 22 an express wagon of the trana- | fer company was stolen at Twenty-sev- enth sireet and Maison avene, in the | Wagon were two trunks, Later the | abandoned wagon was found at Twenty= ) street and Ninth avenue, but were missing. a ArmoursExtra of Beef may be served in | SOUpS, gravies, etc., at the cost to each per- son of about one ‘centameal.' | A penny that earns ‘big health dividends. Sold by all Druggists and Grocezs, *'| ARMOUR & COMPANY, CHICAGO @ case against the aged editor, | When the lawyer began to question| ing through the corridor when he | | Wooster about Ms wives (he has hid] gvenei gas. He traged it to “Burns jtwo) Assistant District-Attorney Hart) oa 1 the door, which was Wears Better Than Silk. (ME S| ATCH a fold of it in if your fingers—did you material? Can you pi-ture anything pie't er for your new wait or gown? Suesine Silk is the diplicate of China alk but is more desirable berause it wears beiter for the touch of cotton in it—and conts less than half the price. Allcolors, Samples sent upon request. Please give the name of your dealer. 8 wt tot POR SALE EVERYWHERE Write to your dealer for samples, FORD MILLS, INTRODUCERS OF SIED' CARPLTS, FURNITURE AND BEDDING 3 Rooms 5 Rooms | 4 Rooms Furaished | Furnished | Furnished 124.95 | 99.98 LIBERAL CREDIT. $1.00 = Week Ovens an Ace..unt, Open Monday and Saturday Evenings, ray and Molloy as Robbers Who Looted His Store. Among the thirty-three prisoners in the “Introduction line’ for the detectiv’s to look over at Headqunrters to-day were three ugly looking men, who did their best to ayold the gaze of the Store Opens at 8.30 A. M, police. They were “Jack” Murray, James Molloy and Charles Frank, arrested yesterday by Detective-Sergeants Flan- nelly, Howard and Schoenfok fn an apnatment at No. 47 West Forty-minth street. With them in the house were two women, Stella Frank and Datsy McKean, but these were not arrested, On Feb, 2 the jewelry store of Israel Rauth at No. 415 Eighth avenue, was held up and robbed in true Western style. Three men entered shortly before 8 o'clock in the evening. They drew pis- tols and, after firing five shots, cleaned the nlace of some $600 worth of Jewelry. ‘They ran into the crowded street pur. sued by the proprietor and his clerks. ‘There was a pistol fight between the trio and a policeman, but the thieves | made their escape. ' After the Mne was formed to-day a ‘Mttle man appeared at the door, He walked rapidly until he got opposite Molloy and touched him on the arm. |" wphat's one of them,” he said, He went down on the line, “Hore's anothor,” cried the little man ‘pointing at Murray, who had tried to hide behind the next man, ‘They are the men who held me up in my store. I can take my oath to It.” The little man was Raut'gin d he had All Day Every Wednesday Every Wednesday hereafter until further notice we ‘come in a hurry when he had heard that posstbly the police had caught the men who had robbed him, The other man, Charles Frank, Rauth could not identify. partment in the Store. same as $1.50 cash. CASTORIA For Infants and Children, Tho Kind You Have Aiways Boughi nt Ca Lo ; Signatore of Sperry pee eRen a a yt teeter Jeweller Rauth Identifies Mur-|{ We Give Dividend Stamps. One Worth 2 Green Stamps. one samy git, cach We, of e purshane, Age for, hem, ogra phen, Paving Bergiancioe, We GaPMAN&G Fulton, Fom Bridge to Duffield St, BROOKLYN C.&C. 0-MORRO repeat our sensational Double Stam 4,000 Dividend Stamps are the same as $3.00 cash, and 500 Dividend Stamps are the As we exchange one Dividend i Green Stamps (and almost daily take in thousands of Green Stamps at that rate), now giving two Dividend Stamps on each 10c of your purchase to-morrow Really means the same as if we gave you four @ Hutchinson Green Stamps on each 10c of your purcha: 1,000 stamps Five, Ons Dividund ‘Wiamg Tor te aTeen stamps. gies! and on offer in every de- 5 Stamp for two S. & H,