The evening world. Newspaper, October 17, 1911, Page 15

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WELL. WE GOT “To SEB “THR Vedat get 1M DOGGCNEO IF (M GON “To Pay #10 TH A SPECULATOR FOR A “TWO DOLLAR. SERT, AND 1 AINT GON’ TO DRUEGED, MAYBE? BUT HE SURELY HAS THE PUNCH Knocks Down Several, Blocks Broadway and Has to Be Subdued With a Billy. Three policemen @ six-foot-three youth of excellent ap- parel, against the rail In front of the desk of the Macdougal street station to-day while such facts regarding him- self as he chose to give the Lieutenant were set down {in the big book. An¢ when it came to “occupation? and he answered “Gentleman,” they let go of him to laugh and he almost got to the door, Price had already giten an exhibition of his right to the title which blocked Broadway trafflc at Canal street, lald out two men, and ruined @ policeman’s uniform, He says that, he lives at Smith & MeNelll’s Hotel, but the po- Hee do not believe him. They have an iden that he {s a member of a wealthy and prominent New York family. The young man swinging along Canal street near Broadway bumped into Max Cohen, a young clothing clerk, of No. #2 Orchard street “Who are you shoving?" asked Cohen. “T'll show you,” sald Price. He struck Cohen in‘ the face twice, knocking him down, Then he kicked him. Morris: Isrucis, a candy merchant, of | No. 254 Broome street, ran up. held Alfred Price,! 1. ALWAYS HAD AN (DEA THAT “THESE. Bie suvs! THE EVENING WORLD, Tt Oh, Well! SPECULATORS wERE | Iwo Fre BIDS WIFE @ooosy, THEN MARRIES ANOTHER GIRL. Brooklyn Health Department Clerk Kisses Children as He Leaves Home. David Fenn, a clerk in the Brooklyn Health Department, left his home, at East Third street and Ditmas avenue, Flathugh, at the usual how in the morning of October ¢-after ing his two children good-by. He told his wife that In the sult case he was carrying were two suits he would have preesed down town and bring home with him tn the evening. But Instead of going to work, it was learned to-day, he went to the Brooklyn marriage Iicense bureau with Miss Katherine Gille, years old, of No, 293) West Twenty-third street, Coney Island, where they procured a jlicense, with which they crossed over to Manhattan and were married by Alder- man &mith. In obtaining the license, as the record | shows, Fenn asserted that he had never | been either married or divorced, and |gave his address as Bo, 42 Kast Third street, Flatbush, which is an open lot. | The discovery of her husband's act has | prostrated Mrs. Fenn, to whom he was married eleven years ago. She is at the home of her brother, Albert Cressing- ham at No. 44 East Second street, Flatbual ROBBED ON SUBWAY TRAIN AND MADE A JUMPING JACK. Angry Victim Tainks Public Ought to Know How Authorities Juggled With Him, A man describing himself as Thomas M. A. Stone, a real e dealer at No. m2 Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn, tele- phoned The Evening World to-day that he had been the victim of a hold-up, “As 1 was alighting at 10 o'clock yes- jterday morning from a subway train at Thirty-third street,” said Mr. Stone, ‘I was caught between two men and he sald to Price. ‘ou'll be ashamed of yourself in a} self, minute," howled Pri hit Taraels back of the right ear ng a deep | gash In his head and knocking him ollceman Robert M. ran to the rescue. Price knocked him down, took him by the shoulders and turned him around and kicked him and seemed likely to injure him Severely when Wilson drew a billy and knocked the big fellow unconselo' on the head, Price was Wilson taken to the Macdougal street station and an ambulance was | called from Bellevue with Dr, MeGowan | to attend the wound in Price's head. urgeon sald that Price showed all an emerging from the ig and took him WALL STREET. st, lowest and Kes, As COMM! eas follows privea of stocks I with yesierday's -% % - 4 + % i + Ff t Py - 9 + ¥ z + - % 2.2 3) -3 “Tel 74 Thar ance, Thecline, Henn by Wirelean of § On the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse to-day were John Lavery, a portrait painter of Paris, and his wifo, alster of Miss Dorothy Martyn of Chicago, who died two days ago as’ the result os! injurtes to her health due to efforts to reduce her wetght. The Laverys started for this country on cabled in- formation of Miss Martyn's {llne#s, but were informed by wireless yester- yey of hor death, fou ought to be ashamed of youre | s with a blow | | Jostied. They stole my wallet contain- jing #0. “As soon as I discovered the loss, I |asked the ticket agent to telephone the Next station and have the train stopped, but he told me to go to Police Head- quarters, I found a policeman at Thirty- fourth street and Madison avenue and | told him my story, and he referred me to Police Headquarters. I went to Po- ce Headquarters and told them I had deen robbed of $40, and they told me to| go to the Thirtieth street police station, Then I got mad and quit, “I consider that a Hteral hold-up. The |men were on the train. They could station, I think the public ought to know about it.” Ee TRAFFIC SQUAD BILL SIGNED BY GOV. DIX. Restoring Police Cavalry to Original Status To-Night. Gov, Dix to-day ment which exempts the police traffic squad of New York from the regula- tions of the Three Platoon bill, restores the traMe squad to its origt- nal status, Immediately upon being informed the Governor's action, Pollee Com) sioner Waldo signed three orders which put the letter of the amendment tnte , {effect at 11 o'clock to-night prep pide BESS BOMB CARRIER SENTENCED years to seven years in Sing Sing Prison tano and Dondero to have levied blac years. Since his arrect on Sept. & there has been a marked falling off tn t tenement hallways. When Costadiie was igned sentence to-day his counsel, John Ca |done, made the usual motions for rest of judgment and a new trial | motions were denied and sentence 4, Jylge Foster said he was fact that Costabile appeared | | first offender gave him an inde- lterminate sentence Instead of the flat | Mmit of seven years in prison. pi fe | CHINESE REVOLUTIONISTS CAPTURE ANOTHER CITY. PAOTINGFU, Oct, 17,—Kaifung, the capital of Honan Province, ix reportod ‘allen before the pevolutiontsts 11.—Tho Acting Amert- Nanking, Alvin W. GUl- ean Consul at bert, telegraphed the American Legation here to-day that the fall of Nanking was imminent, He asks that a cundoat be sent theer, a have been arrested at the next) Commissioner Waldo Issues Orders | signed the amend-) This TO 3/2 YEARS IN SING SING. A sentence df from three and one-half mail on east side Itallan merchants for number of bomb explosions in east site was |kios STARTED TO WALK |“MATT” WINN ANNOUNCES TO PHILADELPHIA FOR GAME Thought They'd Passed It When! They Reached Bayonne on Trip From Brooklyn, Carl and Isaac Herman of No. 515 A Lexington avenue, Brooklyn, are long on baseball enthusiasm, but short on geo- graphical knowledge, which accounts for their return home to-day from Bay- LOUISVILLE, Ky., Oct. 17 stakes for the hundred or more days 4 Nov. ginning Thanksgiving were announced by ager for the Jockey Club, Juarez, night Just before heleft for Mexico C where, beginning Oct. 29, he will eo duct @ seventcen-day race meeting. 5! Bayonne. They were fearful that the game would be over before they got to the grounds. “Mister,” Inquired Carl, of @ Bayonne citizen, “can you tell us if we passed! Philadelphia yet?" The citizen asked some questions and then called a policeman, who turned the juvenile walking fans over to Truant Officer Wick. The Herman fam-| Rio Grande .Stakes, at six furlon fly was notified and to-day Harry Her- | (selling), $1,000. man, an elder brother of the pair, jour-| Dos Republicas Handicap, at ax tu longs, $1,000. Chapultepec Stakes, at one mile and furlong (selling), $1,000, Montezuma Stakes, at one mile and sixteenth (selling), $1,000, $1,000. could walk to Philadelphia in a couple j two-year-olds of hou explained the Herman brothers, (now yearlings) opened In December, the first year. {ee PIMLICO ENTRIES. RACE TRAOK, PIMLICO, The entelas for tomorrow's FIRST n LOR) halt furkgnas Nor will — OLIVE FREMSTAD TELLS SECRET OF HER DIVORCE. | Opera Star Won Decree Here Last , ' July, While She Was Abroad, But Said Nothing. On the arrival of Olive Fremstad, the { Metropolitan opera star, on the Kaiser | Wilhelm der Grosse of the North Ger-| Ayre man Lioyd line to-day, {t became known | yearo that she had secured w divorce, July 11) fy Heo ELE last, from her hushand, Lieut. Edson | Superstition ‘W. Sutphen, a promoter of South and a hal American mines. The divorce was | 11): Sholay, a granted by Justice Lehman of the Su-| ay Gata, Se ae, Md., Oct. sare aiden prove + five & Ie: ) Handicap Stee: preme Couty, chee i fouryeatthin aig uy te rg ; i ; red ah 1 "Navarre, Sots manad: VeSstAd WAS! MN SIINKE te) Ue |Pavtaa 193; Gun ‘Cotton, 181; The Wrovliet, cuss the divorce or even to admit that! i aie cab it had been granted, When she learned | ,. that The Evening World already knew of it, she authorized ler lawyer, Evan | Shelby, of this city, to make the atate- ment. | Miss Fremstad was not In thi country when the decree was signed. Alice Zeppiit of the Dippel collection land Andrea de Segurola, the Metropoll- tan baritone, were also passengers on the ship. ee ty Auto Hite Many Me May Die. Henry WW. Cox, a salesman of No, 407 Central Park West, was, speeding |a motorcycle this afternoon’ on the > Grand Boulevard and Concourse, when he collided with a city automodiie in which Arthur J. Largey, superintendent 85 ist RACH —Three enrolls ie aed tr yardn- Harvey "F, Be i a2 iharney Ta Hi two-yearolde; mai 1 gelding: ive “and etait firtonge “S05: “th of highways, was riding, Cox was : thrown fifteen feet and his machine RD FACE ae ! | smashed. Largey took him to Fordham rate e Ta aN TIN Wiech it | Hospital, Avhere the doctors said his Bu, Co 110; p Moris, 109; imprud | jaw was fractured and that he had alle ade 9 Soa ea Aare internal injuries from which he might "te 103; ‘Starters’ 1 ale, T' TAOE Selling; twosear olds; fill 7 SPECIAL TRAIN ACCOUNT Giants--Athletics World's Championship Baseball was Imposed by Judge Foster In the SHIBE PARK fe) standard fabrics, from the world’s best foreign and Sere ae ener mean eas ey Nha) ’ @} ~=American mills, and ev fabric before being ads Cy epseh (hiny Can ECE American League Grounds, Near {2 judged Wary Peni f ito a Smith Gray & Co. vaded bomb, 1 entence w ° | fall arment has withstood the severest, possible tests for J aroun ae a auilvan ian ih NORTH PHILADEL PHIA STATION te Lath ice-giving qualities, cotton and fiedness, of adie courte holding that loaded bomb ts 5 All are cold water tub shrunk and steam table dried. 4 * deadly eapon under the meaning eanes ay, Oct. 18, 191 1 te All Smith Gray & Co, garments are alike on the + | Contabile, known to the police as “The (2 inside, all are built from the finest obtainable thor- S| rox,"' Iu sald by Detectives Carrao, Cas- Leave NEW YORK | Renneyivanie Station 10.60 A. M.) (3) oughly shrunk canvas, haircloth, wiggins, tapes, etc., Hudeon Termin Returning, L @ North Philadeiphia 30 Minut: , Dining Care and Coaches, After Game. Weekday. See time table. ‘the Bors Famous since LTO: ap Rober 4 Bur ie 4 Coppa steht TUESDAY, A World’s Series Game Is Worth Almost Any Prices. JUAREZ RACING STAKES, Winter racing to be held at Juarez, Mexino, be- 20, J, Winn, man- last El Paso Stakes, at one mile (selling) La Victoria Handicap, at six furlongs neyed to Bayonnet and took them for two-year-olds (at the time of clos home, Ing), $1,000. “A boy over in Brooklyn told us we| In addition to these events stakes ‘for to be raced after aso: | 15 pounds. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD 3 = a 5 10.560 A. M. GAME STARTS AT 2 P.M. | 38 Express Trains to Philadelphia Every) OCTOBER 17, 1911. - ‘TWO FINE SEATS = ONLY $20 A cory, GENUING | CounTerreits! FIRST RACE—Two-year-olds; and a half furlongs.—Springboard, (MeIntyre), 15 to 1, 4 to Land 2 won; Bwana Tumbo, 117 (Burns), 4t 1 to Sand owt, second; Turbine, 107 (M ‘Tagart), 12 to 1, 8 to 1 and even, third, Time, 1.052-5. Breaker Boy, Astrojoger and Surfelt also ran and finished as named. five 10! oy a | ag: asim a " iat! RET dkday, panvenieinat” semen ot RACE TRACK, 1. The entries for ag follow sAUREL, M4, Oct. uF to-morrow’s races " or more races will be run every day at! >, WIRST RACE -Seilng: two-rearctte; seven) upward; sell one and onealxteenth onne, N. J., in a suddued state of mind. | Fares, he sald, with no purse jess ths “feavor 4 Marken td; ithe Brown, Leet | miies.—Amaiti, {10 (McCahey), 4 to 5, 6 Cart la twelve and Tease nine. ‘They $3 added mone The stake events are olds Clearwater, 102; alter, OWilto § and 2 tol firat; Cliftonian, os started from home yesterday morning, of a guaranteed value for all ag? ‘ ttinger), 12 to 1, 5 to 1 ana s ostensibly for school, Instead they took|and are a follows: | yppestas Date” Papocre otal mt peal Ritca, 105 (Shilling) f trolley, car to Manhattan, crossed to| Ano Nuevo Handicap, at one mite andj Highton ark, 07 Slay anit, f18:Tlotend | 2 gant out, pind. Tone, 147 1 Jersey City on a ferryboat and started |a furlong, $1,600. xttenairoyel, gf Lois Dew Vanderveer, Fedther Duster, Dixon, Si to walk to Philadelphia to see the base- gage ltl one mile ana eet , jer pervisor also ral 4 ACHE -year-¢ nd ball game, Late in the afternoon they cabs 6 ONO tala bum, THIRD RACE-Three-vear-olde and had reached the business section of Aibady at aif turlones, r- Constipation Vanishes Forever a 8 | wart K i f Guy Fisher, 111; Plate “six RACE Setting: old ra n ng; unree-rear-oldy and up nd one-sixteenth ml! . Batterty, jondac Grania, 110 Track fast Cn 105 ck, 105 ‘© Aporentice all rwance claimed Be Shei Fannie Devite Mine ne. ‘The police have been asked to look or Fannie Devito, fifteen years old, of J upwards; Ave furlong SECOND RACE—Three-year-olds and |! af $27.50 No, 8 East Forty-seventh street. The girl is 6 feet 6 inches tall and weighs Sho ts of ght complexion nd has blue eyes. She wore a dark, srown skirt with @ dark blue sweater, Foremost Clothiers Since 1845 Fall Suits and Coats At Excess V alues it. Mt Fall Suits and Coats that are standard 20.00 and 22.50 values 1 3.50 Fall Suits and Coats that are standard 22.50 and 25.00 values, 1 8.50 THES underprice offerings are the direct result of the Smith Gray & Co. policy, which in the at- tainment of complete jprpauiesion efficiency realizes that in continuous high pressure production the dis- tribution must ever ‘Keep pace, For several weeks past the selling has not kept up with our tailoring out- ‘put, and these surplus garments are the result. In the Fall Coats there are included, in addition to the surplus garments, all these of our best selling num- bers from our regular stock in which, due to the tremendous Fall selling, the sizes have been broken At the values ind icated every garment = repre- sented the recognized ultimate in purchasing power at the price—at these underprices they repre- sent a value not obtainable to-day outside the Smith Graves & Co. stores. ti ential to the just consideration of these LA s that you understand that Every Smith Gray & Co. garment is tailored just alike, by the same workmen, ii the same spe in just iden i >, Acres of Floor Space the same way, few, if any, fine ready-for-service clothes producing organizations in the world do this, the custom being to grade the workmanship to the selling price of the garment. All fabrics used in Smith Gray & Co, clothes are SSE (ey BEBEPEEEEREe and all are hand assembled in a way that permanent retention of shape. Smith Gray & Co, styles occur in greater diver. sity than that of any other fine clothes producing organization, and include in complete assortment models after the better English, continental and metropolitan style thoughts, in a range so broad as to meet the requirements of men of any and every style idea, And all of this is yours to-day at prices that make the Smith Gray & Co. stores your logical choice, Motor Clothes for Owners and Chauffeurs Smith Gray & Co. ‘Two New York Sto Dread a WwW ‘Ts | [@] Fulton St. at Flatbush Av. Hopdway ob Warren 3. | [fl Broadway at Bedford Av. Sth Av, Bet. 27th 25th Sts. insures roles cS SE ea Pee ra) Two Brooklyn Stores (e Shackeiton, 10 Have Beautiful Hair. (Sehuttinger), 1 to to 10 and out, ‘Away, 1 (Burns), & to 1 | Soap and water if used too frequently nil; Theo Cook, 11 | Wil spell any head of halr, The Dest 1 to 2 and out,| Mair treatment Is a dry shampeo, made as followa: Get six ounces of pulverised named; | OFla root and two ounces of vilane pews ' Elec, | der, Mix thoroughly and Keep In @ tight Dreamer, Onager and| 0x or Jar, At night apply @ heaplag ngers all through the hair -yenr-olda ang| the fingers @l & sixteenth. Chicka. | #8! 3 to 1, even and|' 107 (McIntyre), | second; Cas: Sto 1, 8 to 6 and 3 to 5, dirt, removes Dinna Ken, Dandy | aratls ¢ and Attamaha also ran and fine | vised for as named. Altamaha finished flrat t was dl ifled No Deposit lron Bed, Spring Mattress and Pillows fron Bod with 1 1-16 inch continuous posts, 4 inch fillers, large chills and pretty brass scrolls, “Hudson” woven wire spring, very durable. Fine elastic cotton mat tress and two “daisy” |pillowe—made in our ‘own sanitary bedding Next day comb and brush until te removed, and as @ result or woman will have beautiful, surplus of, tablespoonfal to the halr; distribute with 50c a Weeke “a owt factory. In single, % or full size. Hundreds of other styles and bedroom furniture*’ to suit every! il Pay $1 fortnightly or $2 monthly if more? convenient. Collector sent if requested. re — 10% Off If You Prefer to Pay Cash 3 Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Oilcloths, Bes Curtains, Lamps, Clocks, Stobes, Kitchenware, Etc Low | Prices Marked in Plain Figures OnE very ” Thing in Every Department No “Free” Gifts and No High Prices Salesmen to show the goods, but the goods sell themselves. $15 worth for $50 $100 ‘ $200 “ $1,000 “ $1.50 $2.50 “ $12.50 « Payabie by the month if more convenient, end extra time on payments gladly given in case of sickness or loss of position. We will open an account for any amount on ms. No limit, large or small, Discount if You Prefer to Pay Cash No extra charge of any kind. Cowperthwait@ Sons ESTABLISHED 1807 | Park Row @ Chatham Sq 193 to 205 Park Row Also at 2212 to 2224 Third Avenue (Corn 12Sst St.) Hiteosés « wad ocse 3 time, temper and tramping. Simplify Home-seeking by saving

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