The evening world. Newspaper, April 11, 1911, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ij J SNE EME RE Le mee een WOMAN CAPTURES NOTED THIEF IN SUBWAY STATION Department Store Wh fies the Feels Hand Clutch Her Purse and Grabs Benjamin Brumer. ‘Miss Freda Apfel of No. Part avenue, a tal! woman, who is . towm department store, was changing from an express to @ local at the Fourteenth street station subway, when, In the crush behind her, she felt a stealthy hand invade # pocket of her coat and fix upon her puree. Bhe reached back, seized a slender wrist an@ hung on, Turning, she saw her prisoner was @ small, dark man, He struggied hard to be free, but plucky Miss Apfel clung to him. She forced him up against the platform rati- {.g@ and held nim there helpless unfit Detectives Cassarsa and Cray of the Central Office ran up and relieved the | young woman of her captive. At Headquarters the man was recog: | alaed from his pictures in the gallery ae Benjamin Brumer, thirty-alx years old, Who, according to police records, Ss @ thief of international reputation. He has been arrested in Paris, London) 4 and Brussels, ho was expelled from | Belgium as an undesirable in 189 and since coming here lie as served sen- tences on Blackwell Island and at Sing Sing. He gave his presont res\- dence as No, 375 Rockaway avenue, | Brooklyn. In Yorkville Court Brumer watved ex- | amination and Magistrate Butts held him for the Grand Jury tn bonds of| $2,000. As he was being led awa heard for the first time what ar of money had been in Mins A purse. It was Neel es Mi thirty-six ce SHORT MEASURE. RAIDERS SWOOP ON GANSEVOORT About 1,000 “Bushel” Baskets Seized, and Two Farmers Arrested for Resisting. ‘There was @ great to-do at Ganse- voort Market at dawn to-day when Commissioner of Welghte and Meas-| ures Walsh and twenty men descended on farmers who were gelling gardgn truck in short measures, One thousand three hundred “bushel baskets,” meas- uring from two to six quarts leas than | the honest thirty-twe, were weised for destruction. The Commissioner sent two of his inapectors disguise Pupheart | peddlers to the market at 2 o'clock when the farmers began coming én and lining up their wagons. These two went haggling through the plaza marking down the short-weight baskets, judging their capacity by eye. At 4 o'clock two squads of inspectors, led by Mr. Walsh and Deputy Commis- joner McCoy, swooped down from oppo- site directions and began grabbing bas- rm One group of farmers got tts ts together and ran with them to the cellar of @ nearby restaurant. An inapector saw them and told Commie- sioner Walsh, “Do no them," said he. “They ving un work. When about one hundred baskets had been carried into the place the ¢ missioner went down and took posi sion, With rare bucolle humor oni u the farmers sought revenge by flapping || down the cellar door and padiock- ing It. Two men were arrested for Mehting the inspectors, John Wulferst matea and Alexander Baxter of hurst. Théy had eleven baskets tween them, which were from fi ix quarts short. But both were held tn Jefferson Market Court by Magis- trate Herrman for trial. pnw 4a: SKENE DENIES TAKING BROKER SIMMONDS’s BOOKS. Former State Engineer, at Bank-| ruptcy Hearing, Says He Knows Nothing of Them. ceedings in the case of Frederick St monds, the Consol States Gom omas Alexander in the Federal Bulid- ing. Frederick Skene, former State 1 gineer, was on the stand, He denied he had the firm's books in his posse and sald he did know. where Bkene and who, It Is re. moved the books from the offices Vrederick Simmonds, was not on hand at he hearing to-day, §' F asked Mason to call had not asked Simin mission to remove them “Did you tel! Mr, Simmonds th he would pay you, the books would returned?” asked Mr, Wer “No, I think not. 1 to done enough philanthro Frederick Bimmonds & Co., and t 1 was to do anything they would to show me. I also told Bimimonds | if he had money to hire dete ea to Watch me, he ought to 5 thing on what he owed me The hearing was adjourned unt! n¢ Tuesday. Subpoena servers will locate Mason, rrierataenel Painter's Fall ; @amuel Rosen of No. 885 Second ave @ foreman of painters, fell from a scaffoliing under tie eaves of No. 26 Bast Forty-fitth street early to-day and Was injured wo that he Hospital an hour aft there. THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1911. ORIGINAL FASHIONS FOR _# # #& HOME DRESSMAKERS | q ESDAPE ARREST { | | | | | Pretty Dress for a Child In- ane ittcortte Alarma stetty, cluded in Those Described | eve To-Day. den fi All questions con cerning designs and materials o/ | dresses should be addressed to thr Fashion Editor | of The Evening World. No pat terns for designs in thia cblumn can b 4 do obtained, Dut) PUREE with the descrip: tion furnished it ie @ simple matter | | to work out patterns, DESCRIPTIONS. ‘Tho first dress tx a lobster pink linen for a young girl, embroidery, the effectively, On the Peasant sleeve and yoke in one with | and on the skirt It is put on in po sited | design around the bottom, This as well | @s the yoke of the waist Is fnishe: @ white pique cording Phe satule figure shows a pretty way | of making an organdy, lawn or any | summer material, It ix trimmed with wide Val. banding, from the shoulders on the waist, form z 3 row Cluny insertion also trims this dress, being used to finlsh the finishes the | sleeve, Narrow 1 band of all-over a piece under the arms \tront and down tho Eyeglass Accidents are troublesome expensive, ees t preven is to have lasses fitted with the Se hus Suck Guy It grips the nose firmly yet se- ‘ nd prevents glasses from off the n ned to your glasses for 35 cts, Sold Only at Our Stores | Wed Kownis Oorditts ond OW ans 442 Columb 16 Nassau St ning loud rumblings wee * EXPRESS CLERK EASE Lamberts Save You Money office last night, bh aving hoard that Watchm You need not be familiar wi longer in h any part of the jewelry business f fet him tn to understand why we sell first at prices far bélow those Fe ‘ as not satisfied with tho | § Of other houses. Here are the facts: | statement of tie superintendent th sture mucl "1 The rest wi | the man he tought was tot thers. Ite We manufacture much of our own stock, The rest we buy suddenly drew a pistol and fired two |p direct from the makers in large quantities for spot cash, Our dia- : CER: “a Vi shots, one hitting hitting oberg, monds are imported by us direct from the European cutters; no mid- oor J nee ies Bkeltbdeant Bs dlemen figure in the transactions, Our store is in a modest ‘neighbor: LONDON, April 1.-An ar hood, therefore our ret is low. We make our pr | Pistol of adhered harged Ei mployee | *° scrutiny of the votes cust and manufacturing ends of the busiiwess; this accou! | @ last election another Liberal mem- |f to you. Causes Panic in Adams ef We | Henry Edward t at the buying s for the saving A haa Oaen wnasated. Add to these facts that we will not allow the misrepre- ike, the former Union. |g Sentation of goods, and you will see why the popularity the house Company Office. Ist member, was declared electod by Af O 0 $. pany may pte im ins declared elected by A) of Lambert Brothers gréw — on both sides were thrown out because ff iil me it | vet Sus an Pasa enna | See ses CoO Se WEDDING RINGS | wove Gailed to the fourth Boor of Ne; — $ a oH tale in the newspapers would aever have made wines 53 West Fourteenth street, the clerical | He eamless Wedding Rings so popular if the ri nselves did nol | department of the Adams Express Com- | ae R } 5 Un en deserve their reputation. They are all id we guarantee pany, by two pistol shots at 3 o'clock | As erat | ay to contain no solder, a tyle, Hee this morning. ' L | é, thicknes ’ | They found most of the employees | barricaded jexks and books, no one ap about any quirtes had 4 to know ing. After so n met with jhe would i 8 gal RRGn: ‘total. ‘com, Medd; outed Prepaid, > Oruggists’, Grocers’, Delicatessens, it of No, of Wet z Rough on ie one man the out. He wa seven years Hundred and Th tin the right ¢ ty-one years old, ‘as pointed out ' > did the shooting. ‘The | ol with two at pocket new West] charged with | THE LAMBERT DIAMOND POLICY From time to time the diamonds go up; yet when you come to our store you find o ul Uways moderate. We import our diamonds dir nd our policy is to make large purchases far in advance of retail sales.* We never deal 1 middlemen, and hence the saving of your money. Here a v illustrations of the many Td! Drugalsis’, Grocers’, Oelicalessens, | SOlitaires we carry in stoc made solid 14 and 18 be karat gold or gold and pla ‘“ 5 ie animal, pa the dog” clea Lignia, i Files, P ers’, He Twentieth stree | felonious ass: the wounded [ after ded by Dr. n of the New oy ork Hospital, went $25.00 $50.00 $100.00 LAMBERT BROTHERS Third Avenve, Corner 58th Street Store Open Until 6.35 Saturday Nights Until 10 0'Clock. lgipttpangntaateasinepanaih sed GALAXY OF MERRY SONGS IN- “LITTLE MISS FIX.IT” — 0 oe Globe Theatre Filled Nightly With Laughing Phage cath spuse Cold inChest Crowds Appiaudinj Bayes and Nor- ae: by the fall of a go elds, large bottles ame. soe World Wants Work Wonders, worth’s Tuneful H Hits. “PLEASE GO FIND MY BIL BILLY BOY!” Sung ty Nora Bayes io a handsome Collie in Act 1 to the pollee, Fe iOmes Furnished Compleit 3 Rooms at - $49.98 A 4 Rooms at - $74.98 Ce 5 Rooms at $124.98 napios SAT. = CREDIT = fairey 93.08 Lown on $50 ia $5.00 " 8 $75 $7.50 “ “ $100 160 9 Week Onens an Acco for ‘Sore Throat peib LeAvour ¢ districts in Sicily. of light was also obs) The Aeolian Company’s New Stroud Piano at $250 Is a Tremendous Success Think of the vast resources that have been drawn on, to make this piano abso- Biggest Song » lutely the finest instrument ever sold at anything like its price. is eg a hed - The Aeolian Company, its manufacturers, own and control nine great facto- ries in this country and two abroad. HOR In a bright li In its employ are the leading musical and mechanical experts in the music- industry of the world, This enormous organization has been four years perfecting this piano. The most brilliant musical mechanics of the present generation, together with men who have spent their lives producing such pianos as the celebrated Weber and the well-known Steck, have co-operated in its building. Is it any wonder that all who have seen this new piano— mle, teachers, people of critical taste—are astounded at its superb qualities and moderate price. Actually Worth Much More Than $250 ANOKA BAY and St Singing MILLY Boy las! i -pumnber ise high ly interesting novelty. It is sung to the “just too ; nber of the cast de don the programme as “Scotty, Almost Hu The standard of piano values has heretofore been set by manufacturers, who do not ena Fe caneamest colle thea any: Kesnel show cesciog evar & his entrance and exits 1, the most intelligent fashion and enjoy command a fraction of the Aeolian Company's enormous facilities. t rets of the heroine of the play (Miss Bayes). In the first act sh ; ng af the honeyiio9 au him to go an yriay 5 ste ack to her if ol * romps he po Judged by this standard, the Stroud Piano is worth at least $350. For it HU anh taranoat acinul’ tie tae nith keen paltehieey Fouad 8 loving couple, | and Norworth are clev Miss Fix-It” are boi costs the Aeolian Company 2s much to build as any $350 piano on the market, costs its maker. The Stroud will delight you. Its rich, deep beautifuily modulated tone ; its quick responsive durable action; its handsome imposing appearance, are all such as you have been accustomed to associate with pianos of much higher price. And this great instrument can be bought on the same small monthly payments as cheap bargain-store pianos. Bs Only $10 Down Buys the Stroud The balance in very small monthly payments. Do not fail to visit Aeolian Hall and hear this wonderful new piano. THE AEOLIAN COMPANY, Aeolian Hall The Largest Manufacturers of Musical Instroments in i World 362 Fifth Avenue, near 34th Street, New York ellas actor dedin all t ng write played ar nd their melodi afes in town. DOWN ON 509 e . {Zoe ER AMOUNTS IN PR PRIONT AND’ AVL RCD st 2I74.- 3" AVE. ser BES ve OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9 0° CLoOc(c

Other pages from this issue: