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| fand escaped injury. j it Lu ould "IN FIGHT WITH ~ TREE BURGLAR One Taken Afier Battle With Policemen on Roof—An- other in Hospital. In an exciting burglar chase early to-day reserves from the Oak street station surrounded the block in which Gitterman & Co.'s store, No. 83 Spruce street, is located and fired a fusillade of more than twenty shots, which created freat excitement in that part of the city. A man who gave the name of George Jones, twenty-two, of No. 420 West street, crawled over the roof of No. & to a rear window of St. Gregory's Hos- pital, where he was met in the hallway by Ambulance Driver W. H. King, and a battle ensued. King, although much smaller than his @ntagonist, fought until he had the In- truder. on the floor, when Dr. Bennett ame up and assisted until the police arrived. While this fight was In progress Po- | Black-Hand men, Mceman Coales was engaged in a hand- tut MISSING. ~ MAY BE VICTIM OF KIDAPPERS i | Father of Annie Marotto Had | Refused to Pay Tribute to “Black Hand.” Fearing she has been kidnapped by Alexander Marotto has asked the police to find his thir- to-hand fight with a man who later | teen-year-old daughter, Annie, who left gave the name of Michael McCarthy, thirty-two years old, of No. 410 Water street, on the roof of a shed ten feet from the ground. They rolled off in a ..Olinch, but the policeman was on top The shots were |fired at a third man, who escaped. Foth Jones and McCarthy had to be | « | treated in the hospital for injuries they | Teceived and were then locked up on charges of burglary. | Gitterman & Co, have reported several burglaries lately, in all of which type- writers were stolen. The men were 0. 131 Liberty avenue, East lay echool at the of Loretta, at Sackman and Pacific streets, Sunday afternoon, and has not been seen since. | Marotto is a y vorker. her home, New Yo! He told the Br re- ived a le two t= ening to k him unless he gave up | $3,000, but he ignored it. He 1s a poor Since the girl disappeared he has learned she did not reach the church. She is three feet in height, weighs | women each to Fifteenth street and | Capt. Ivory Heads WOMEN AS LESSON == Procession When Police Commissioner Bingham | {selected Capt. Ivory, ten days ago, to | succeed Capt. McDermott in comamnd | of the East Twenty-second street sta- of Street Unfortunates | to Warn Others. J/tion, ne remarked that he considered | Ivory the best “cleanser” in the depart- | ment, The new commander floated around the precinct last night and in l the eyes of the law made it snowy white, First, Capt. Ivory lined up fitty patrolmen in the police station and Selected five whom he called aside, “Go home and put on your Sunday | clothes—the ones you would wear if | you didn't work Sundays, and report | back here in an hour," he said to them. | Upon their return he gave them In- | structions to go to points along Four- teenth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth streets just west of Third avenue, there to | look as if they had played Colin every The Captain set an example himself by ordering two women to remain beside him. Soon his aids arrived with ten more, The women were lined up two abreast and at the command, the pro- | cession marched down Irving place to | Fourteenth street, East to Third ave- | nue, and then north to the police sta- | uon, ‘There Capt. Ivory lectured way up Third avenue a crowd nd Capt, Ivory said after- | “I hope every wom: purpose who has been precinct saw our pa stration {s as eff der as It 4s in ch patie hese | ALDRICH CALLS TARIFF | of questionable festing the A demon- teaching or- | AND CURRENCY MEETINGS. WASHIN GTON, Ju man tee on Finance sional Curren une 9.—S Of the Congres- 8 called A LA SPIRITE CORSETS For the Woman of Fashion @ For real Summer corset comfort you cannot equal the cool, pliable, perfect-fitting feeling of our new models. @ The C/B a la Spirite is light in weight, lightly boned and thoroughly comfortable. It insures absolute freedom of motion and perfect ease in the wearing. @ The expert designing and the unusually careful tailoring of the C/B a la Spirite Corset keeps the waist-line slim and graceful. It feels better, looks better, and wears better than any other Corset made. VAN Completes Liray afi Modelaratiihel following Pilecs $1.02 1.80 2.02 2.50, 3.90, 3.50: 5,09 and 8.22 per Pair “There's a Model for every Figure, be it stout or slender’ _5 evVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, 1908.) inducing midweek buying For the and to relieve the great crowding that always comes with the week end, We Will Sell on purpose of Wednesday and Thursday Only These Exceptional Values Popular and handsome styles selected from our regu- lar $3 stock and absolutely perfect in style and quality, These 3 Styles Special at 54 AY 6) sae? Style | Style Ladies No. 1288 | No. 1367 Strap Ladies’ Pump Brown) Tan Colonial calf Co- x ; strap fonlal Pump, Pump Pump, diamond tip, perforated vamp plain toe, Cuban hee', pearl edg. mall gilt buckle. A very at- buckle. A very dressy, at- tractive and popular style. tractive and popular style. NINE BEST STORES. 1540 3d Aves, 86th and 87th Sts. 2891 3d Ave., 150th and 151st Sts. 162 Bowery, near Broome St. | 3d Ave. and 122d St. BROOKLYN 829-31-33 Broadway 1263-5-7 Broadway * 485 Fulton St., opp. A braham & Straus’ SHOES IN EVERY GRADE. 6th Ave. and 27th St. 609 8th A 39th & 40th Sts. FACTORIES 511 to 519 East 72d St. Quaker (Puffed and baked under 4oo* Fahrenheit) {seen climbing up in the rear of the store | ¢lghty-five pounds, and wore a whi | | this morning by a man who notified the| shirtwaist, blue straw hat and tan shoes | Police. ! and stockings. | e | | | Ht |time he started, and wnen the oppor- e e les for "7 cents The best value ever offered in cereal foods. ynd then sent them w te Thig ig a new and delicious form of whole wheat, thoroughly cooked, and is a great strengthener; any stomach can digest it. Crisp before eating The Quaker Qats @mpany Quaker Oats is now toc a package. MoM Koch Clearance Sale Entire Stock Trimmed Suit Hats $9.75 Formerly $5.00 to $12.00 WEST 23d ST. WEST 23d ST. GB. Altman & Cn, ARE PREPARED TO RECEIVE RUGS AND DRAPERIES, FURS AND FUR GARMENT. STORA HE MOST APPROVED METHODS B-ING USED FOR THE SAFE-KEEPING THEREOF, IT IS RECOMMENDED THAT OROERS BE PLACED NOW FOR CONITEMPLATcD ALTERATIONS AND REPAIRS IN FUR GAR. MENTS, AND FOR TH& CLEANING AND REPAIRING OF RUGS, LACE CURTAINS CLEANED AND STORED. 34th Street, 35th Street and St Avenue, | There’s a Fortune in _the Ground for You Dig it up! A World “Real Estate Wanted” Ad. will find a “Bargain” and a World ‘“‘Real Estate For Sale” Ad. will Seli it at a Profit lym a You can buy a ten cent package of Going to Wanamaker’s Local trains every twe minutes 2—Broadway both ways 3—TMadison Avenue (Fourth ave) 4—Second ‘Avenue Surface 5—Eighth Street Surface cggeeerace) Ay YUMafey, obo Organ Recitals in the Auditorium, 10.30 A. M. and 2 P.M. Store Closes 5.30 P. M,, including Saturdays Place Furs in our Winter Vaults 6°7—Third Ave. Elevated & Surface Forty stores under the Wanamaker roof await inspection as to ‘ability to show the largest and most complete assortments of Dry Goods and House- furnishings in this metropolis. (eae Some Tempting Price Reductions On French Lingerie & Blouses HE Paris Lingerie that is specially made for the Wanamaker Store is remarkable for its beauty and moderate prices at which we regularly sell it. The materials are tine yet durable—French percales and nain- sooks, Some of the garments are entirely hand-made, while others are charmingly band-embroidered, To- morrow many of these attractive garments will meet their tirst reductions in price, together with a group of Paris Blouses, of sheer batiste, all hand-made and beau- titully embroidered. A specially attractive occasion in the June wedding season, The price-groups: Nightgowns at $2 that were $3 to $3.25. Chemises at $1 and $2.25 that were $1.50 and $3. Drawers at 85c and $1.25 that were $1 and $1.75. Corset Covers at $1.25 and $1.:0 that wer $2 and $2.25 Blouses at $6.50 and $7.50 that were $8.50 cm $10.75. ae Fourth floor, Old Bullding, Much Bettered Restaurant_New Building, 9th floor Men or Women Walters Men’s Dining and Smoking Salon —New Bullding Tea Room Old Building Luncheon Room} Very quick Breakfast Room) good service DIAMONDS | For June Weddings & Graduation Gifts \ eee gifts of intrinsic—and appreciating—value, Safe investments, if you buy them sately. The Wanamaker stock of Diamonds contains only the purest stones, expertly selected and conservatively priced— much to your advantage when compared to those of other jewelry stores of equally high standing. For wedding and graduation gifts we are showing a fine group of Brooches, La Villieres, Pendants, Bracelets, Rings and Scart Pins, in ote and original designs—at $20 for a modest ring, to a brooch at Men's Rings, $25 to $345. Women’s Rings, $20 to $400 Brooches, $35 to $645. Bracelets, $26.25 to $425. scarf Pins, $25 to $150 Pendants, $80 to $485 Main floor, Old Buliding, | A Sure-to-be-Applauded Sale of | | Women’s Long Silk Gloves | NOUGH of the essential long silk gloves to make six EK thousand pairs of hands clap with delight, All new, perfect, double singer-tipped silk gloves, in black and white, that have come to us from various makers to sell Ata Third or More Below Value There are 12-button length Silk Gloves at 50c, regularly 75c 16-button length Silk Gloves at 65c, regularly $1 16-button Mousquetaire Silk Gloves at 55c, regularly $1.25 16-butt:n Mocsquetaire Silk Gloves at $1, reguiarly $1.50, $2 Main aisle, Old Butlding. And, in the Basement, Old Building, more of the 85c 16-button Silx-fin.shed Lisie Mousquetaire Gloves at 50¢ 65c 12-button Mousquetaire Silk-finished 'e Gloves at 35¢ | Pla in and Fancy Tan Hosiery To the Fore and Fashionable | HE Wanamaker assortments for men and women are remarkably rich in styles and shades of the fashion- | All the Men’s Summer Shoes RE in from the various men that make them for us able color. These cool, comfortable, hot-weather Stock- ings and Half-bose may be bad of cotton, lisle thread or silk, plain or with openwork, clocks or embroidery, Here are suggestions: : For Women For Men c pair; 3 palrs for s0c—of ad, mb in tan cotton or Women’s We doubt whether any offering of similar interest has ever been made betore. tive to the extreme—the latter being the moat popular with the colors are represented over half the lot consisting of the white, black, blues, burnt straw and tan that are most popular There are 2,496 hats in the collection, which will be sotd tomorrow morning on the Third floor and Main aisle of the Old Building, and at the Subway entrance in the Basement, New Building. At $1 Each, Instead of $2 and $4 Through an - espe- und a fine assemblage they are. Hard to think of the good shape that isn’t included, from the easy last to the most up-to-date (which usually ignores com. fort), And all jeathers—many tans, Perhaps the widest variety at a single price is ound among The Wanamaker Special Shoes at $3.90 We set a five-doliar pace for the maker of these shoes, and he lived up to it, in every way, We should like your cpinion, based on the shoes you kuow—except ours, which are more nearly other people’s $6 kind, Main floor, New Bu % We have bought the whole sur- plus stock of this season’s untrimmed straw hats from a large importer, whose oifice here 18 a silive ot the parent organ- ization in Paris, There are ecores of brand-new shapes, typically Parisian, in the collection, ranging all the way from the conserva. smart New York and Paris milliners, Practically all Rugs have broadened cially favorable arrangement with the foreign makers, these | Wearing “The Housekeeper’s Comfort” | their usefulness; espe- cially since the makers of cot- rich, hand- ‘i x some ‘Black Or ‘‘The Housework” Corset Means | ton and fibre Imported} Trace (oats C f t. Freed St 1 | Summer muae! Roe fe fon | work, Many o Coats, $20 | less than nor- HESE two admirable inexpensive mal value | L, R. Corsets are de- | Tugs are admirable for cool $20, instead of $30. ?: signed particularly Summer furnishings, and can ante en ates n as for athletic women and tor | be used on porch or grass ney, oN ovanied with ap- active women who attend | with jmpunity, as dampness ' ik: x ° e , plied braid in elaborate de: to thelr household duve® | or even rain won't spoil thei, signs, are 36 in, long, lined with soit silk, and have accor. dion-plaited chiffon at neck, sleeves and bottom of coat. Beautiful and _ fashionable Summer coats at a moderate price—$20. ‘Third floor, Old Building, Five styles of little children’s summer dresses, Fine as dainty, pretty and Values in | well-made as , you will find in Infants’ the land, Dresses 'Marked at :prices as ton- ishingly low for such remarkably attrac. tive garments, Some are nearly «ne-half, others one-third values. $1—Bloomer Suits e percale, trimmed r. Sizes for 2 » checked per- nds. Sizes for 2 -Bloomer Suits of trimming plaited back. Dresses and and Sizes Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co, In these days sensible wom- en, even if very busy, give plenty of time and lots of common sense to the selec- tion of a corset. They want fashionable corsets adapted to the figure, corsets which will give them shapely lines yet which are hygienic and comfortable, which allow free play of muscles, Both these models are ex {strong and firm without t "bulky he Housework somewhat lighter in than “Phe Housekeeper's Comfort’ and is cut low under the arm to give free arm play. Nothing better than this model for morning The picture shows Lousekeeper’s Comfort.” 3 36 can cept at WANAMAK Fourth floor, Old Butlding, | June Sale of CUT GLASS | And Kindred Things Fancy China from Importers’ Samples All at half price or less, Puddin- Sets, three pleces, $225! Chocolate Pots, $1 to $4 each. and $3.00 se! er Jars, $1 to $3.50 eash, Te t, Sugar and Cream, $1 to Chop Dish c H.00 set. Cake Plates, Cut Glass—the Makers’ Clearance Sale Monday. Bonbes Dishes, 760, 8c, $1 and Mayonnaise Sets, $2.75, Sugars and Creams, $376, and $4.50 pair. Water ‘Tumblers, $3 dozen. A continuance of the Sale begun on Bowls, &in, $, $3 and #4; 9-in., $3, 10-in., $7.50 each. Jugs, $2.75, $3.50, $4, $5. Comports,’ $1.75, $2.25 and $3.75. Celery Trays, $2, $3.50 and $5. Third floor, New Butiding, $3.75, 44 JOHN WANAMAKER Here are some good Summer sorts, from our superb stock: “Homestead” Kuga, old-fashioned, the colorings harmonizing with almost any from of blue, green, red. tan and decorative bord n 30x60 In, at 0. i, with, ‘seven , to 9xlt ibre Rugs, serviceable and effective, In a large variety of de- signs, In all the popular ors; ning sizes, from 20x36 in., at Te, to 12x15 ft, at $18, Bungalow and Log Cabin Rugs— description unne vy; the name tells the story. nt a large stock of them, but very desirable. Fitth floor, New Building The hornless talking machine—the highest er fecti the Victor—soft, iecuc nace rich, !ull tone the volume of which can be increased or diminished at will, An at- tractive look. ing cabinet at the same time, handsomely built, Plays any Victor rec- ord, and costs $200, All the other Victors are here, at $22 to $100, as well as the Edison Phonographs, at $12.50 to $55, and full selection of records for both. Come and hear the new ones in the Phonograph Parlors. Fifth floor, O14 Bullding. Hear the Victor Victrola Broadway, Fourth avenue Eighth to Tenth street