The evening world. Newspaper, February 6, 1912, Page 11

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ROBBERS CHOKE [GEE WOMAN, TAKE $40 Threaten Her With Knife, . Then Escape Unseen in Crowded District. ‘Two men entered the rooms of Mre. the tenement at No. 92 James street, today, choked and beat her, robbed her of $4, tied her feet and made their ‘The assault and robbery took place tn the heart of a teeming tenement dis- trict and in a house swarming with human beinge, but the attack was s0 sudden the victim was unable to sum- mon assistance in time. Mrs. Boldint's husband, Giuseppe, ts a laborer employed in the excavation for the Fourth avenue tunnel in Brooklyn. ‘They have two children who go to e@chool. By thrift and deprivation Mra. Roldini had succeeded in saving $0 out of her husband's scanty pay and had {t concealed in a pocket in her underskirt. Two rough-looking men walked {n on her at 10 o'clock and announced fhey husband's town in Tt They ques- tioned her closely, learned that her husband was away at work and her children at school every day and prom- §aed to return later, When they came back to-day Mr. Holdint was not surprised. Ono of the men stood by the door, The other ap- proached her and, catching her off her guard, grasped her throat and choked ht back but was no asailant. He punched her ta: free hand and knocked the’ back of her head against the edge of @ table, Still sho struggled. WAVED KNIFE TO FORCE HER TO GIVE MONEY. you can't keep qulet and tell us your money » Vu cut your ." threatened the man who had dold of her. He pulled a big dagger from his pocket. The expression {n his eyes was anurderous, Tn full bellef he would carry out his threat, Mrs. Boldint told fim where the money was and he the. underskirt the skife and eecured the famtiy savings. The other aan was at the «oor, when the robbery erday morning e from her around n out. wlammed the door, crossed the hall and entered a vacant flat. 1 from a rear . climbed a few way to Olly Mrs, Bo! to scream as soon fe the robbers left and was dragging herself on her hands and knees when neighbors ran In and released her. Her description of two men applies vo . but the es on the Show Up. ino and Johnny ff little Ella Fitzpatrick, who eloped from kas. | Orange las: Wednesday and have no: | been heard uicate with det them kx Wranceeca Bollin!, on the first floor of | ercape before she could give the alarm. | a plece of | h a final | | GO HOME, YOU KID ELOPERS. | WIL Forgive Now usTEN Axet! stave |= BOKIN® COMMISSIONER CNEIL fy \S GOIN 1B BE AT THE ;| RINGSIDE ToNiGHT TO see f | TALE 3 fe te thing may turn out h | ! hoft's are distructed v Lr-Na disappearance of th (Coy) old daugater and are ) 1 They sid to-day, to ~* give the couple their bles te} Since the tw rs went away | ifm mot the wilght heir wher} | f@bouts has been uncovered, They had | Dut $10 and tho Edethoffs foar thoy are | I{f flow destitute. — “SPARERIBS AND GRAVY. a@mearing 1 Funny Side make you lay 1-4 Carat, $10 12%" 20 ro 1 “ oo: Thala ktytofSatt Beeeee vt o raceret CHARLES A. KEENE Digmends, Watobes. Jowolry. 180 Broadway, New York YOU EIGHT . You WIN THIS BOUT AN’ Yov'LL MAKE AM DAS Guy's HT WITH HM, SEE F Now FiGHY f REGuLag pene GIVE PRAISE FOR |= George V. and Queen Mary at Great Thanksgiving Ser- LONDON, Feb. 6A national thanke- giving servico to commemorate the sate|as engineer in the plaster-making plant return of King George and Queen Mary |of W. H. Bell at No. 417 East Forty. | from India, wan held to-day in st, ;éighth street, died in Flower Hospital Paul's Cathedral. The King and Queon, |t-day from injuries he received at mid- with the Prince of Wales and Princess |Mht when his jumper caught in the Mary, the Queen Mother Alexandra and other mombers of the royal family drove to St, Paul's through a chilly, damp fog and deep Jess, Immense crowds stood aloi streets and cheered the proc which consisted of five carriages SURE KNOCK escort of Househol Cavairy, as it passed slowly toward the city. 5000 IN SONG The Archbishops of Canterbury and ’ York, with nineteen bishops and many other clergy received the King and on the steps of the Cathedral. A fon was then formed which 4 down the centre aisle toward the altar. There were more than five thousand persons in the congregation. b] The service consisted of the national anthem, the *Te Deum, five prayers of general thankegiving and "'Halle- lujah Chorus.” ‘Then came a short ad- So dress by the Archbishop of Conterbury, after whtoh all stood and sang with him “Now Thank We All Our God.” ‘The Wentminster City Council present- ea an address of welcome to the King » while jen recelved their Majesties at Temple r with the ancient ceremony of presentinng to the King the clty's pet rd. vice for Them. employed belt of the big fly-wheel and his head was banged against an tron beam. He was not drawn within the belti the force with which his head two places. He was forty-two yi old . [and lived at No. 36 East Twenty street. WHAT A LUCKY THING FOR AXEL ling that he dropped off to sleep. He | | Taenea uck | 482 East Seventy-sixth street were ar- the tron timber fractured his skull in} 4 v THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1912, a..." Come on axe! TAKE @ CHANG A FAILURE, HE TRIES SUICIDE) southeast corner of soventy-nixth street and First avenue. The two boys blub dered piteously as they were taken to Gas After He! i... wast Bixty-seventh street station ene. and thence to the Children’s Court, Max Rosen, @ young man who had|charked with juvenile delinquency. successively falled in several business | They sald they had turned in the alarm enterprises and found himeelf unabie| on @ dare, but refused to naine the boy Young Man Loses in to find any sort of employment, at- tempted suicide to-day at No. #08 Fou: teenth avenue, in the Parkville section of Brooklyn, by locking himeelf in the bathroom and inhaling gas through a tube. He wag taken dying to the Nor. wegian Hospital. Last night Rosen eaid to Mr. Tan- nebaum, with whom he boarded, “My next attempt at suicide is going through. | I tried it @ year and couldn't ev Mr, Tannebdaum sat up to keep watch and it was not until 3 o'clock this morn- awakened at 7 and amelied gas, which he immediately traced to the bathroom, He had to force the door with a hatchet to get in. cough or cold, now trouble- j= Fire Alarm on Dare. Thomas Weber, twelve years old of No, 49 Fast Elghty-firest etreet and John Kornos, eleven years old of No. child or It. A rested at Public School No, 70 on Seventy-fifth street to-day by Po! man Patrick Tooney on a charg this, ad. Regular sizes, and 60c. GUA! ITEED. turning in @ false fire alarm from the Foremost Clothiers Since 1845 These are wonderful Overcoat value days in the Smith Gray & Co. stc ‘es. ~ Smith Gray & Co. Overcoats enjoy the distinct and decided advantage of being made up continu- ously as the demand requires—not six to eight months before they are sold, as is the case with most other overcoats. 6 Smith Gray & Co. Overcoats are rarely made u more than six to eight weeks before they are sold, and it is no unusual thing to have less than three or four hours clapse between the completion of the gar- ment and itz sale. In consequence, in the Smith Gray & Co. stores the production of new styles and models is ince: -—the acquisition of new fabrics is continuous, so the fabric styles and models which are brought out during the season are not found in other stores until the season following. From which you can readily see that no matter how far advanced the season may be you are always sure of good style for the next corresponding season. And then, too, your savings now—to-day—will be more than half on next Winter's price. 18.00 to 30.00 Broken Size Over- | 2 50 e coats are NOW............0065 22.50 to 35.00 Overcoats, all mod- els, fabrics and sizes, are — 1 5.00 27.50 to ph, Seersnats: dress, storm ani glish gua od- els, are dana ase camel 20.00 40.00 to 55.00 Overcoats, silk lined dress and business mod- pa or Poa 2 5 00 FUR COAT REDUCTIONS 36,00 and 40.00 Fur Tri Contes scsi: Sw rrunmed and Fur 25.00 00 .00 F ett 85.00 65.00 and 75.00 Fur T: Lined eoca A Henna and hed 45.00 100.00 & 125.00 Fur Li pe most ni I pe oad hey nd as if 60.00 Come in for your suit now and get double value and double service. You are sure of a full two seasons’ service and what to all practical pur- poses is double value if you buy your suit now. The stock turnover of fancy suits in the Smith Gray & Co. stores is so rapid thatit is safe to say that there is hardly a Winter suit in our four stores that was here in September or made in from June to August. Furthermore, almost any suit that we can show you now was made from two to six months after all other makers had finished their Winter garments more than that, there are thousands of suits here now that were made since December Ist. And so you will find that every suit here is of a newer, later style than can be found in any other ready-for-service clothes and none but what youmay be sure will be good style next Winter. Many of the fabrics are medium weight, suitable for service right up to June Ist, and then, too, right on in the early Fall for another full Winter Service. earns in today and get double value and double service. 18.00 to 30.00 Broken Size Suits. 1 2. 50 Corking good business suits suitable for very hard usage, 22.50 to 35.00 Suits are now.... 1 5.09 A wangert ul ssurtment of worsteds, velours, tweeds, serges and chevio's. 27.50 to 40.00 Suits arenow..,... 20.00 Exclusive advat ced style fabrics—many are imported highest class garments of best possible value at original prices of 27.50 to 40.00 = 25.0 D na 40.00 and 45.00 Suits are now The best fabrics from English, Germai oteh an American weavers—exclusive designs and col: EXTRA. 25.00 to 35.00 Suits —iiade from exclusive mace-to- measure fabrics, tailored in our custom » shops—cut on acivance oi} le models I 7.00 Tailored, trinumed and styled exactly (ic same as they were made in our special tailoring department and cost you 32,50 to 45.00. Motor Clothes for Owners and Chauffeurs Your Charge Account Is Solicite! Two Brooklyn Stores: Fulton St. at Flatbush Av. Broadway at Bedford Av. Smith Gray & Co. Two New York Store: Broadway at Warren Sth Av.,Bet.27th &28th Ses, % &% % & sample bottle FREE at any Drug Store if you Leet 2c. N 15 WATCHIN’ you | WAKE UPB’ Spal iS Plies } (a TCH Shik Bile = f) i Wants ‘The Cammeyer February Sale * Offers Most Values These Shoes Are on Sale in Our Baseinent The Men's Shoes we offer are all this seoson’s lasts in the Cammeyer exclusive styles. — In Gun_ Metal, ‘Tan’ Russia Calf, Patent Leather and Black Kid, Blucher, lace and button models. The Women’s Shoes are every bit as good. Styles and lasts that you will readily see that are only made in the values we tell you these shoes are. These are all button shoes with a snappy and finished workmanship, never before offered in New York City at this price. The lexthers are as follows: Tan Russia Calf, Gun Metal Calf and Patent Leather, All sizes in the New Slant Top 14-Button Boot. vad RIES Y sTAMPED ON A SHox MEARS STAKDARD OF MERIT St. Swissco Stops It LARGE TRIAL ! OT ILE FREE. bald ore sealp, brite, ats Ss, eRrarae se sia tot ot mg wots, falling Work Wonders.

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