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Sassen ‘oll beer and whi: ‘that he lost the ‘(evening and did not see him again. Hf ce acouaintance did not sive any 8. TOF john Lawson, Local No. 304,|Donner and Jersey City, International Machinists’ Union. ‘outh Detained Admits Drink- | Once Pet of, Brooklyn Squad ing With Man—Tramp Ar- rested in Jersey City. j cmmnemnen ‘The Newark police have under deten-| Longing for the comforts, the pettion tom @ youth who admits that he spent} and the general excitement of her old dome time last Tuesday afternoon and | iite drew Donner and Blitzen, a veteran police horse, back to the poller stables to-day, She was nold at auction « few months ago, and the police of the Libs erty avenue station, Brooklyn, where homeless. Weles says he met a big, g00d looking Tuesday afternoon in a Newark and the stranger invited iim to ; They spent several hours to- tran er showing him a roll 1d making frequent purch: y. Welrs deol: Another man has been detained by Jersey City police on suspicion. man, who says he is James Mor- the railroad yards, where the body concealed after the murder. Newark detectives kept secret until Afternoon the fact that there pocket of the clothing of man & membership card by Local No. 34 of Jersey City if the International Machinists’ Union. card was made out to John Law- This clue is being investigated. Five women, actresses, and members of the same theatrical com- called at the morgue in Newark to view the body of the victim it car mystery: They did Adentify the may. One of the women Was wearing a stolen of clothes when he was killed. The ‘was stolen on July 1, 1910, from Hoffman, a waiter, who was liv- tag sewed in the trousers of the suit, with the name of the tailor, No. @ Park Row, This fact to the tracing of the sult. Hoffman saya the man who stole the lett an old coat behind, f of the coat was found # skeleton such a8 1s used by house! Although the suit presents no clue, tho that it was stolen has prompted ty Police Commissioner Dougherty go over the Rogues’ Gallery. ig the photogrdphs listed there thut of the victim of the freight oing Things | By Clear Thinking MURDER “WORN-OUT” MARE IN FREIGHT CAR REPORTSBACK TO HAD UNIN CARD) JOB ON POLICE — Blitzen Breaks | | From Humiliating Slavery | After Auction Sale. | ‘O SUSPECTS HELD. | WANDERS INTO STABLE. | Turns Up in Stall at Miller | Avenue Station. she iy now a guest, don't know her owner, ‘The door of the stable of the Liberty avenue station was open at ! o'clocl this afternoon, when @ riderless th an old blanket strapped a r, and minus a bridle or halter, ambled in and Ined herself up with the s plain that she had nger during th None of the m animal, She wax more than, friendly with all of them, Lieut, Atwater finally went to the stable and the old mare whinnled with delight at the sight of ‘him Atwater recognized her at once. She was for fifteen years or more the prine horse of the Prospect Park squad, One of her accomplishments was unaided. At last ahe «1 comply with the police van sold. It is merchant in the Brownaville district bought her. Poor Donner and Blitzen entered, in her old age, upon a hard and monot- onous existence. Long years of were her apparent reward for yeu public service, In some way the wagacious old mare | learned that men !n blue and but- tons, and sleek horaes were qu Miller avenue, near Liberty avenue. To- day she made her way to the only friends she has ever known, and they took her in. When the horses were turned out this afternoon, old Donner and Biitsen went with them, and ap- peared to be disappointed because whe was not assigned to duty. ‘The stable superintendent gave her a stall and a big feed. All afternoon po- licemen,’ with molsture in their eyes, Went Into the barn and patted the old herse and talked to her. Poor old Done red and Biltaen's new owner will prod- [ably be around after her soon, and ‘he great and wealthy city of New York will turn her over to him, perhaps to be beaten and starved, For New York a way of turning into insignificant seen with the ¢ In saloons apparently of ys No. 16 Sec. the He 1s » {afternoon when the {TO BRING OLD CASTLE HERE FROM ENGLAND. Wealthy American Said to Have Bought Ancient Tottenham Structure, LONDON, Sept. 2. <It was announced to-day that Tattershall Castle, | colnshire, a mediaeval structure Ifrom the middle fifteenth century, has | heen purchased by an American million aire | ‘The old castle will be pulied down the attempts which have save the famous mantelpleces contained in at from being taken out of the ary of the mantelpleces which already been taken out of the building were #0 badly broken that the council of the Na ‘Trust refused the proffered apwiatanc RODGERS MAKES AN HOUR'S FLIGHT IN COAST TRIP.! — — i Aviator Gets Machine Repaired and Crowd Cheers as He Starts Special to ing World.) | MIDDLETOWN, N. ¥., Sept. 21—Cal P, Rodgers, the aviator whowe machine | was smagled here Monday as he was making hia second start in the Hearst $50,000 prize fight to the Pacific coast, completed repairs and flew away to- | . He started from the Fair Grounds | this afternoon in the presence of an im: | airship ap: be in firat class shape. It | his intention to fly as far as his strength and the condition bine will | permit every day. attached to the been broken, he thin kitten that has a camp, The hilten w clana went west by train avistor tufther on, Rodgers landed at Callicoon cne hour | after leaving here » to a bomb In the hallway of | st Thirteenth street last Fri- | was Indicted by the Grand Jury to-day for felony under the new | Sullivan law, which makes it a major crime for allens to have deadly weap- ons in thelr possesion. The penalty for the crime ts seven years imprisonment in Sing Sing. Rizzo will be arraigned for trial before Judge Foster in General Beasions next week. Brandrettis PILLS The Great Laxative Made of the best materials — prepared with the great- est caution. One or two at night will relieve and cure constipation, headache, rheumatism, and by purify- ing the blood they keep everyone who uses them her fire and police horsed whon they have worn out thelr atrength work- ing for the city, The thought comes first. The better the brain, The better the thought, The better the achievement. A good working brain is built up from food which contains the things brain is made of. 'Grape-Nuts FOOD is skilfully and scientifically prepared from wheat and barley and contains the “vital” phosphate of potash essential in building up a well-balanced body end brain. *‘There’s a Reason” FOR in first-class health. SAVE NINE, With a Stitch in Time. To know of and use « food that will feed and restore brain and nerves before slight nervous troubles end in co: te nervous prostration or brain-fag for unless proper food is supplied it is unreasonable to expect the nervous system to answer the demands made upon it, There is » food, Grape-Nuts, for the particular purpose of restoring weakened nerves or fagged brain to health and atrength. busi made the trial says “Two years ago my health had become s0 seriously impaired it was impossible for me to attend to business, At the least exertion my nerves would give way and the condition of my system allowed me little or no rest or sleep at n ws man, of Baltimore, who Stomach trouble soon followed and I could take no solid food. 1 tried the best tonies and medicines but they all failed, “Finally Grape-Nuts food was recom- mended and after using it for 10 days 1} bomsa to feel its good results and at the end of three months I was again a well man — nerves restored to their normal condition, strength renewed, and I was| able to do any amount of both mental | and physical work without feeling unduly | Tatleved. “T know Grape-Nuts built up my brain and norves and still keep them strong ‘as food builds | ‘Trial 10 days Grape-Nute food Renson,” roves things whi fF sed, Berets 8 keg, for the fam littl bool The Rend te Wellvilien ne Uetle| Grape-Nuts 4 : (e EREGEGGSSESUSEERA SS SS SSSEEASSESSEERSSS q yas least one-third of the price you usually pay for clothes is paid for something which never enters into the garments and for which you get noreturn. It is paid because of a faulty condition existant everywhere outside the Smith Gray & Co. tailoring plant —in a word, you pay the price you do because of the low efficiency obtaining in the method by which clothes are produced. The whole- sale selling and producing seasons will average a bare forty weeks out of the year, while forfifty-twoweeks a year all non-producing help and all other over-head charges must be paid, and all this expense, which in no way enters intd the garments, must be pro-rated over the season's selling and added to the price at which each garment must be sold. That’s why you ordinarily pay one-third more than you should for your clothes—that’s why you pay for-a lot of something you never get. 100 Per Cent. Efficiency PPROXIMATELY two years ago the house of Smith Gray & Co, was reorganized, and the policy then decided upon had as ita basic premise the fundamental belief that supremacy in fine clothes production . was possible only by the development of higher values than had ever been before possible, and that this in turn could only be brought about by a hundred per cent. efficiency in our tailoring plant. At the time of our reorghnization we were operating about 250 tailors, who averaged between 36 and 40 weeks’ work per year, just the same as did all theother concerns. To-day we operate approxi- mately 700 tailors, and in the last two years we have averaged, counting over- time, more than 60 weeks per year—and right here on this one item alone we ave reduced our overhead and non: producing help charges 30 _per_cent. Now ft follows that steady work pro- duces better men, higher speed and a higher standard of workmanship, As matters go now no man is afraid to throw in his high gear for fear of working him- self out of a job, for there is always over- time for those who seek it. Then, too, the organization being held intact, being assured of steady work, works better, works more as a unit, does more an: does it far better. It requires no great head for figures to understand that with a factory output increased threefold with the same over- head and non-producing help charges, occupying practically the same space as when the capacity was two-thirds less, that all non-producing and over-head charges have been decreased more than fifty per cent. ‘ But the 15.50 and 18.50 special priced Suits and Overcoats are better evidence of all this than could be any mere words of ours--they are better tailored than arments for which you ordinarily pay 10.00, 22.50 and 25.00, In the Suits you may choose from high grade cassimeres, worsted chev- {ote and velours, neat dark mixture, new pe ideas and plain wate effecte--new grays, new browns, new dark olive shades and new dark mixtures. The models include the emartest and the most distinc- tive style ideas we have ever shown; there are sizes and models for men, young men and boys. Two New York Stores: Broadway at Warren St. Across from City Mall, 5th Ave., Bet, 27th & 28th Sts. 20.00 and 22.50 Standard Value 15.50 Special Suits and Fall Coats Standard 20.50 and 22.50 Values Here are Overcoats of high grade black and Oxford worsted finished thibets, exceflent velours, high grade worsted cheviots and wale tweed Overcoatings, in new grays, new brownsand new tans; stripe and herringbone stripe weaves. Models are those same smart and distinctive styles shown in our very high priced garments. Sizes are plete for men, young men a Smith G THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1911. Foremost Clothiers Since 1845 The Season’s First Complete Showing of These Far- famed Special Values---Now Here By the Thousands 22.50 and 25.00 Standard Value Suits and Fall Coats.. 15.50) |Suits and Fall Coats. . 18.50 “ Your clothes ordinarily cost you at least one-third more than they should because of low efficiency in fine clothes production. This, then, shall be the story. of how it is possible for us to produce these wonderful special values-—how we can offer them to you underprice NOW—right at the season’s beginning, when the need of New Fall Clothes is greatest-—when other stores must realize their very : top we Read every word-it means to you better Suits and Fall Coats at i 15.50 and 18.50 than you have ever heen able to buy at 20.00, 22.50 or 25.00. A Higher Standard HE Smith Gray & Co. tailoring plant is unlike that of any other in that every Smith Gray & Co. garment is made in one and the same shop—every garment is made in just the same way by the same workmen whether the price be 15.56, 25.60 or 45.00, and every garment is finished right here in this our own building. In every other plant of which we know each different priced garment is of a different class of workmanship, low priced garments being produced in low priced shops—high priced gar- ments in high priced shops—a shop for every grade, located here, there and everywhere, some in New York, some in Hoboken, others in Newark and again some in Brooklyn. And just as many shops as there are, just so many stand- ards of tailoring quality result. . Whenever a Smith Gray & Co. garment is produced it has behind it the cumula- tive experience of an organization that has concentrated on the building of none but fine clothes for more than sixty years. That's why we say that these Leese puced garments at 15.50 and 18.50 are a igher and finer standard of tailoring ex- cellence than is to be found in garments vet which you regularly pay 20.00, 22.50 or 25.00. usaty Fabric Purchases From ‘ect s le Sur- E buy many of our fabrics at mate- W rial price concessions because we buy direct from the mills in quantities mean to the weaver long, sure, steady weaving—the output of many looms for a considerable period-—our business is naturally more desirable than were we to buy one or two pieces at a time, as most makers do—he_ has no waits for orders, and so we buy for less, much less, and nearly all our fabrics are special and exclusive styles. You see, we plan these 15.50 and 18.50 garments by the thousands—our fabric orders are enormous, and this, of course, helps the price, and the great majority of all we use are special exclusive styles. We use no fabric that does not measure - up to the highest standard; it must stand every test. We test two weeks for service, exposed to sun and rain; we use the U. S. Government test for tensile strength, the acid test for cotton, and every fabric is cold water tub shrunk. Any fabricyou mayfind in these 15.50. and J8,50 garments is a standared fabric, o? the grade used regularly in high gradeclothes selling at 20.00, 22.50 and 25.00. The Parts You Never See * Inmas i] 0. arment e O matter what the price, the in- terior, the foundation, the base, call it what you will, of every Smith Gray & Co. garment is exactly alike. In nearly all other clothes there is a different quality for every grade. As a matter of facta garment is just as de- pendent upon its base, if it is to serve and endure, as is a skyscraper, and no expense is spared in Smith Gray & Co. garments to see that every base is the very best that money can buy or skill produce. For instance, we go ail the way to Ireland for the best of linens, all of which we cold water tub shrink, the hair sted meres, it olives. § effects o rt weavil lain wale,neat mi 18.50 Special Suits and Fall Coats Standard 22.50 and 25.00 Values Suits of fine English finished 1] velours, excellent worsteds, cheviots and Saxony crssi- grays, new browns,new and mixture ue and black grounds. Included are the new English soft roll models and all the other smart and distinctive Smith Gray & Co, style ideas; models and sizes com- plete for men, young men and boys. ay & Co. BERRBERGRE Gb oob subse bbb ockeaee eso 4 ‘ cloth is of high pick, also cold water tub shrunk, the tapes are submerged for three days in boiling water—in fact every lining, cotton, etc., that goes into a Smith Gray & Co. garment is shrunk and tested—has proven its worthiness, its right to enter. Even so small a de- tail as the thread secures special atten- tion. Every garment is sewed with pure silk thread made especially for us and costs 15 per cent more than that used by other concerns. And all this care and quality are put away inside a Smith Gray & Co. garment to assure shape retention and give you service such as no other ready for service clothes can hope to give. Unequalled Style Range HE Smith Gray & Co. styling orga zation in the very natureof things operates on a broader scope, on more comprehensive lines than does any other similar organization in existence to-day. Operating as it does under three distinct divisions, one devoted to the designing of clothes exclusively for New York men under the same styling directors who have catered so successfully to the more discriminatin; dressers of New York for more than years, another designer for our wholesale department and who in consequence must suit men of the North, the South, East and West, and a third which con- structs in more than Seven hundred cities the clothes of the critical. And so in the Smith Gray & Co. plant there exists a three-in-one’ designing organization which evolves and adapts styles metropolitan, styles cosmopolitan, styles from ‘‘the tight little isle.”’ Styles we may say from any and every good style producing centre for every purpose, taste and need. All are advanced and many not shown elseWhere until the following season. All of which makes possible a latitude of choice in these special priced 15.50 and 18.50 Suits and Fall Coats not found in any others which 20.00, 22.50 or 25.00will buy. The Reasons For These Wondertul Values HEN immediately after our re- organization there became effec- tive our present policy which em- bodied the development of our tailoring plant to 100 per cent. efficiency and the consequent reduction in productive costs, the immense savings which were possible through volume purchases and the incidental further reductions in costs, it was still but a pars of our plan. For we knew that with this tremendous increase in outputa just return as profit to us need be but a fraction of what was necessary to those operating along the old, wasteful, low efficiency lines, and we knew, too, that whenever the goodness of Smith Gray & Co. clothes was once known, another permanent patron was added to a list that had been building for more than sixty years. - But no words of description, no wealth of reasons why can convince you as can a visit to the Smith Gray & Co. stores,where you can see and choose from the countless assortment of these won-. derfully underpriced Suits and Fall Coats at 15.50 and 18.50, that cannot be equalled, go where you will, at 20.00, 22.50 or 25.00. Come in to-day when the assortment is at its very best. In this comprehensive array of fine Overcoats are silk lined black and Oxford vicuna Thibets, high grade worsted cheviots and velours, sergelined. There are correct grays, smart browns and exclusive olive shades; there are plain wale weaves, smart and distinctive models and sizes for men, young men and boys. wor- Two Brooklyn Stores: Fulton St. at Flatbush Ave, Broadway at Bedford Ave, (Co) re Co