The evening world. Newspaper, February 1, 1911, Page 8

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vk ~ TO EAST SIDE FIRE 4 iss > © {tet Norfolk street, knocked down and —— NE RAGING LS SMALL Bt Abraham Snyder Dodged No. 55 and Goes Under the Wheels of No. 33. run over by Fire Bngine No. 33 at Stan- HERO SAVES LIFE, BUT REFUSES 10 REVEAL HIS NAME “No Use Telling, No One Knows Me Anyway,” He Says, and Disappears. After risking his own Ife and saving A man who had fallen off the retaining wall into the Fast River at the foot of Eighty-sixth street at 9 o'clock thie FETE ae ae % Peale: 4 | was saved. Clancey, somewhat the | | Worse for drink, went through Hast | | River Park, and was trying to con- | vince himself he could walk a straight line on the wall when he toppled over. The water under the wall was only | | feet deep, but the tide was) | rising fast. | began yelling. His orles were! heard by @ night watchman on Black- | well's Island, who telephoned Police Headquarters, and soon Poltceman | McDonald and several other men were | on the way to the park from the Haat Eighty-eighth street station. In the meantime @ fisherman on a, Pier about Ninetieth street had heard | the cries, He ran down the river! front and seeing Clancey struggling in |the water dived in and supported his |nead. He made no effort to get | Clanosy up tho slippery wall, which then was twelve feet from the water's | surface, but supported him until the polloe came, A rope was dropped and the fisherman tied tt about Clancey's| body. Clancey was drawn up and the rope dropped to the fisherman who was then pulled to the top of the wall STF EINE, TE NAAT PRR ARE BLT STE LR iby ons AAMC ARN IS Hm THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1911. Start the Lunch Right You don't want a poor cigar after lunch-- you do want e good appetizer before.’ .. Pabst BlueRibbon The Beer of Quality is the best appetizer and it aids di- gestion. Poor malt makes poor beer just as poor tobacco makes poor cigars. 8-day malt costs twice as much as the usual process but that’s 2 eeemeree nam gem rR And Much of It Store Opens at 8:30 and Closes at 6 P. M. } There Is Every Kind of Goo Furniture in This February Sale Half Less Than Our. Usual Fair Prices Is Selling from a Quarter, to a j| At Hy ‘ Abraham Gnyder, age thirteen, of No. © 3 ton strect and the Bowery yesterday Afternoon, died in Gouverneur Hospital | last night. The fire, at No. % Atanton street, brought Bngines Nos. 8 and %&, The for. HP mer was driven by Oncar Dahler and went south along the Towery. The other engine was racing north, Roth turned! into Stanton street, with No. & slightly | “im the lead. Young Snyder dodged tn} front of Engine % and apparently aid not notice the other engine just behind. Dahler used all his strength in an ef: | fort to swing the galloping horses to one | “You are a bi “* MeDonald anid to the fisherman, and then he| anked his name, but got no satistac- tion, “You better take nim to the hos- pital," suggested the hero, “He looks Mike he's in need of treatment,” At Presbyterian Hospital the dootors morning, an unidentified hero, who is said to be a poor fisherman, walked away from the police, remarking: “No use telling who I am, No one knows me any way.” . John Clancey, of No. 26 East Highty- why Pabst is best. This February Furniture Safe is not a mere mushroom that has sprurg up over night! ‘i Behind it is 22years’ experierice that has brought us into close relations with the very best manufacturers of the country! Its volume is illustrated by the fact that we are presenting more than $600,000 worth of furniture, and our three Galleries are crowded simply with the sahples— behind which are the carloads of reserve stock in our warehouses. Every kind of good, trustworthy furniture is represented. There are no trashy job-lot pieces bought up for sale purposes. Every Piece Is from 10 to 50 Per Cent. Less in Price! | | | 10 TO 15 MINUTES FROM ANYWHERE AUMANN’S | AT 149 ST. ENTRANCE OF SUBWAY OR ELEVATED ANNOUNCEMENT! second street, wae the man whose life|@aid Clancey wae in a bad way, ee " Bice to wring thn eaboning hore 0.008 |] pousth vor net, |\First Annual February Sale | haa ogee Mahl ery Strest Our New = | This is not mere newspaper bait—flung out to lure the unwary. et Satis ce ty tne uot | Jost Wea of nog IRatings ‘N'N'S Regular oe Walk for yourself among the parlor suites, the leather chairs, the bedroom sf There was considerable excite. | ei ‘as | PRM si ao tst untnurce oF susnav on cuvareo Reduced 3313% furniture, the library furniture—see how many pieces are a third, and more often ment among the thirty-two families in FREE .“i "St", FREE E 5 the building, @ seven-story double tene- | {a npr uses Guth xposition Samples || a half less. 1 ch: id rock id 5 fi ved th . ete eh Retr tent iti i s— See Tieity 6f.toe tenants hed rushed to | Special Sale of ace IT Reduced 50% And note the similar opportunities among the small chairs and rockers—an the brass beds and bedding in the Seventh Gallery. Note, too, how wide is the range of choice—for included in this sale andselling at February prices, are: : Period Furniture Dining-Room Furniture Bedroom Furniture Parlor Furniture Library Furniture Leather Furniture Mission Furniture Upholstered Furniture Single Pieces Brass and Metal Bedsteads Suites This Sale continues the entire month of February—but of course, where indi- vidual pieces sell early, we cannot replace them at the same prices. i Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Galleries, New Building. This Is a Section Store for People With Little Money to Spend and Who Want Good Merchandise That is all—nothing more, nothing less. But that does not prevent it from being a pleasant store, a dependalle store, a store whose management realizes that time is money to some people andcourtesy and decency more important than money to all people. The new Spring things are coming in daily. Women’s White Women’s Shoes, |Embroidered Batiste Serge Suits Are Extra at $1.40 | Robes at $5and $6 Ready A re-grouping of several! each are making miny friends. Pure white or with the hair-|Prizes we have captured, | We call them robes jecause the line stripes of black that arejand some shoes from | See cteain tt ehehed aaa popular. regular lines—bringing $2,| waist line. - Plain of cut as the season dic-($2.50 and $3 shoes to the; Delicate plain siades em- tates. New length coat, 26 in, same price, $1.40. |broideredin white. snd pasrenes ite with white|. Button and lace shoes of | Basement, Oldpullding, peau de cygne. $15. black kidskin, gun - metal, Men Driw Basement, Old Building. calfskin and patent leather. Some Prizes —- |All sizes in the group. | At 25 i in ; Silk Warp Adds All shoes of known qual-| t 25c, corded ilk four-in- | hand ties in rich plan colors and Richness to These | the street, carrying with them personal oflacts. 3,> FREE pering sue "| Our Liberal Credit System r. fAn} Your Terms Are Our Terms| Black and Colors $18.00 | Values $28.00 to $35.00. | | ? H9 Net Subdued, (Prom the Boston Transcript.) ‘ Fuddy—Do you believe that people ac- | "quire mental qualities from what they | eat? if Duddy—Heraiy think @0, My wife's | oe mother eats crushed oats, mashed pota- | toes and whipped cream and yot mere Silk Dresges| 22-24-26 West Thirty-fourth Street, THE EASIEST PAYMENT HOUSE IN N.Y,” ST. 1 DOOR WEST OF very pugnacious. OPEN EVEN!NGS UNTIL 9 P.M. | i] Charge Accounts With Greenhut and Company Will Be Continued by Greenhut-Siegel Cooper Company | No Resting on the Oars Because Our Goal Is in Sight! | - mi Will End on Its Greatest Day---Saturday. | | Just Three Days More It is not merely to win a race in retail salesmanship that we push our salé harder than ever. That was won from the very first day—no retail event of similar character has ever done such selling wonders. co a EE ity—in this season’s styles|ttack, One glanceat the silk and right for immediate|tells you somethng unusual j ; Cottons wear. $1.40. must have happene:, Ours is a much greater achievement; we must make | Tomorrow with greater determination than ever we At a little distance they pass| eee io Beane: | cuot spe enarter ional ae the greatest selling record in retailing history—a record | will bend to our mercantile oars and teach the final ferent a long list of reall |most pajamas of thi material, Enough of These Madras Waists for Two Days ‘Exceptional as They Are at $1.50 Severely plain waists of excel- | lent madras, patterned in neat plaids and stripes, with starched | cuffs and separate white collar. | Fresh and clean — each in its| $1.50, Basement, Old Bldg. that shall stand unchallenged for years to come! Fastened with silk frogs. At $2.85, luxurious lath robes of striped terry cloth wth collar, girdle and pockets. All are worth morg some @ great deal more. Basement, Old Biilding. These Are Goal Rugs Perfectly Mathed in Patterns Thit You Will Not SoonTire Of Best quality BodyBrussels, 8 ft. 3 in. x 10 ft. 6 in, at $19.50, Seamless Velvets,9 x 12 ft, at $17.25. | Seamed Wilton, Oiental pat- terns, 8 ft. 3 in. x 10% 6 in, at $27;9 x 12 ft., at $30, Seamless 10-wire try, 7 ft. 6 in. x 9 ft., at $103 ft. 3 in, x 10 ft. 6in., at $12. Basement, Old Bulding. A Solid BrassSet For the Des Blotting pad with fou brass corners, and pen tray, irk well, paper knife and blotter f solid stamped brass, The set, $1.95, Before Dhrist. mas many people gladly paid for the same. But, Bet thee hour with our stroke at its strongest! Bargains of unparalleled power will bring great throngs into this store because we know the sheer force of sensational value-giving will effect the volume of selling that is still to be done 1 The bargains are in every one of our forty-eight departments—a daily revelation of our intrepid price-cutting methods —a daily demonstration of the boundless success of a masterful plan and its masterly execution. » EVERY WOMAN _ SHOPPER in these | EVERY WOMAN SHOPPER who has | EVERY WOMAN SHOPPER whois the modern days is a business woman—fully | attended this Closing Out Sale has | busi i gone usiness manager of a home pocketbook posted in all matters of value and fashion. | forth an enthusiastic advertiser of the event. | owes it to herself to come to this sale. You should come to Greenhut’s every single day until the doors close---that’s the only | way to secure any good measure of the great bargains. Don't miss it] Don't delay!! Don't wait another day!!! Don’t wait three days and suddenly realize, too late, that a missed one of the greatest shopping opportunities in a lifetime. tf Er en nee See 1 The Price Cutter Is Busy Every Hour in Every Department Double ax. Green Trading Stamps With All Cash or Charge Purchases Until Noon. Single Stamps After Noon Greenhut and Company Dry Goods and Ready-to-Wear Apparel shades and black—18 inches wide and 38c a yard. Jacquards also in many colors, self-figured—24 inches wide and | 22c a yard. dea For the evening waist, the scarf, etc. Basement, Old Bldg. The February Silk Sale brings to the Basement, Store a} lot of attractive two-tone foul- | box. ards in various patterns of white | polka-dots, : | Homeless Corsets These are 24 inches wide and’ all silk, The sale price is 55c| to Go at $1 as ent black taffeta| Re-arrangement of| the Iso excel : silk, 35 inches wide, at 68¢ a Covet Gnomon [emes fet) yard. Basement, Old Building. 1$1,50 ie sect A Month of |. The Basement Section ; Petti t |had no room to spare but Silk et coats made temporary arrange- with Deser Yasisty and better! ments to care for these dis- values than Usual, ssed corsets fof the At $2.85 are petticoats of ex- | POSsess ji cellent taffeta silk, in black and | Short time that they will be colors. here with their new dollar Others, including those in ex- price-ticket. tra sizes, up to $4.50. | Popular models — long! Washable petticoats, 50¢ | hips ‘and medium bust—| to $1. : '. Black petticoats, 65c to $1, | Some of coutil and _batiste. cost us more in proprrtion, Basement, Old Building. $1. Basement, Old Building, Basement, New 3uilding, JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Stret, “FOLLOW THE GCROWD” into The World’s “Want” Columrs Store Formerly Occupied by B Altman & Co, Seth Avenue, 18th Ketone Ae ELAM SMa eH ROAR a to.A9th Street, New York City aor _— aba

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