The evening world. Newspaper, February 15, 1912, Page 11

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the truth, and tried to explain, intendent Matthews camo to his ai ance, and called Policeman Newman, Winter- {halter and Hamilton, Casey was arraigned to-d He's ctill trying to figure whether it's | his fault, or the elevator boy's, or just because life is one darned thing after | Fire ba) —~— After dining not wisely but too we: Nichard Casey walked unevenly to the New elevator boy in the Ponciana apart- | “ Twenty-fourth street, in the wee, sma’ hours this morning and remarked, briefly and succinctly: “Casey.” The elevator boy, looked over his list. At first he aaw no ‘Casey, nor was there enything there to inform him that Mr Casey jodged on the fifth floor with a) ‘Mra. Bassett. der known to dru; "ase? ree discovery of whic “Casey!” repeated Casey, stepping into| yon Kahlden. with water to form a paste and applied | to the hairy surface for two or three min- | sixth floor he perceived that there was a| wtes, then rubbec the elevator, 1 levator boy looked at his list again, He had been wrong. On the Miss Casey, who lived there with three other young women, all connected with | Columbta University. j ‘He carried Casey to the sixth floor. | absen Delatone is especially valuable because jualities and for the rea- the second application hile delatone costs a dollar is worth several times its the skin of objectionable Casey's key muat have fitted the lock, | for he entered the flat and repaired to the room that he thought was his room, | whieh, however, chanced to be occupied y Miss Flora Hardie. Casey it was awfully funny that a s' rs spend for either. Winter. you as NOW. would be 25.00, 27.50, for hard year, round service. 7,00 & 8.00 Wor- sted Trousers ..4.9 5 Tailored in the Smith Gray, & Co custom shops from high grade full weight worsteds, these trousers at their original prices of 7.00 and 8,00 were a standard of quality, style, service and Value,’ Included are count ew correct English less stripes, in a he correct models, in all sizes, Two Brooklyn Stores: Fulton St. at Flatbush Av. but Miss Hardie Krauthe Turns Off the Gas Before) MM {ne Albert Krauthe, a porter at the Turn] the placo, sme! Hall at No. 121 Lexington avenue,| Krautho's roo accldentally turned on the gas in his} occupants of room over the hall-early to-day and the escaping gas killed a young man who | was sleeping in the same room, Krauthe himself is in the Presbyterian Hospital, | J and the doctors say he will probably ———< | Responding to an alarm of fire to-: 1 the team of Engine No. %4 of the Fire! Women Occupants Put Across | bepartment at New Brighton, Richmond borough, swervea from the ieeate of i H Richmond terrace to the sidewalk and High Bawls and Three Police- crashed into the plate glass front of the oe saioun ot Joe Dennis. One of the horses | men Do Umpiring. |was so badly cut he had to be shot at | the other may have to be he fire was in the building at {th street New Brighton, oc- | e National Biscuit Company. damage was-done, No one at OM West One Hundred and! = No Trouble to Rid The Skin of Hairs terested in a pow- its as delatone, the When a little is mixed yer! gaining popularity because of the of its antisp son that rar necessary, tr an ounce lady should be in his room! cost to Fr Amid soreams and cries, Casey learned hairs.—Advt. Foremost Clothiers Since 1845 And since Smith values today are practically al. doubled, you can Suit and Overcoat for about what you thought n Gray & Co. buy both a eeEPeEeeeeeeeeesee And with this double value, you have double service, for every garment offered is cut on an ad- vanced model and will be good style next Fall: and Every fabric is a world’s standard fabric and practically all the designs are exclusive. The tailoring represents a world’s standard of ready-for-service workmanship and the assortment is so varied that no matter what you have had in mind in fabric, weave, pattern or model, you will find your thought anticipated here. Knd as for values, it is not too much to say that at no time in our history have the reductions been so far reaching, of such vital compelling interest to From the surplus made-to-measure fabrics of our special tailoring department these suits have been cut on advanced models—models that will be good style next Fall and Winter—pur- chased through our special tailoring department you would have had to pay from 32.50 to 45.00— regular ready-for-service prices 17.00 32.80 and 35.00...... WeRErEHES 18.00 to 30.00 Broken sizes—all are light and medium grays, suitable Suits and Overcoats 12.50 20.00 to 35.00 Suits and Overcoats 15.00 27.50 to 40.00 Suits and Overcoats 20.00 40.00 and 45.00 Suits 40.00 to 50.00 Overcoats 25.00 8.00, 10.00 & 12.50 Chil- dren's Suits an Pree Peace ie For the children there are S ii brown mixtures — si for early Spring we: sian Overcoats, velv convertiblo collar Overcoat» and Reefers in light and dark gray mixed cheviots, i oe ele) wo Motor Clothes for Owners and Chauffeurs. iat i Your Charge Account Is Solicited. Smith Gray & Co. ( al fa Two New York Stores) Broadway at Warren St. Mall, 5 hAveBet. ith & 28th Sts. pProedway at Bedford Av. cs FROM ESCAPING GAS. ». Krautie's No Great Change in Temperatare fe Expected, However. ed By| A bis northeast blow ts headed this the gas on again. Way and due to arfive early to-nignat sleep. Quite a while! At 10 o'clock to-day northeast’ storm ple, another porter At! warnings were run tp on th My und traced ft t0/ on the Whitehall Bullding, W ston ne unconscious «| ae the same time ordered warnings dis- bits iayed as far north as Portsmouth. rhe worst of tho sale will bo felt at a between the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Hermuda, The muction which ts y} creating the storm was its greatest along the North Carolina coast when the «| signals were displayed. te the South tell of heav: Retiring, but Accidentally off the gas Turns It On Again. He, too, Ww er afterward Jot ——_ > _— Five Dollars a Share on O11, The Standard Oil Company o} the parent company a dividend of five d ‘able March 16, to at 19. Place knew the name of ring Patterns for we” Home Dressmakers Women who are now planning . thelr Spring wardrobes will wee ie tarch Tesne of m Patterns Fashions are also disclosing their | | new and charming ideas, 24 Floor 3000 Men’s Fine NEW SHIRTS At $1.15---$1.50 and $2 Grades Intended for the man who is “choosy” about the shirts he buys—in the pat- he quality and ak and likes to have a full range of sizes and sleeve Tn othe i } terns, tl lengths to pick from. r IP O11 i words, the man who usually buys his shirts from regular stock, but does not scorna saving. _ We found a maker with too much material on hand. Had him make the shirts up for us— our way—in full size-ranges. Or- dinarily we should sell them at $1.50 and $2—but we don’t need to. tn temperature is expected —— SIX MEN ARE KILLED were Killed and several to-day when a locomotly u ore train at Bingham, Utah, 16 track and rolled down/a hill, crashing through the roof of thé Bing! Bank. They are of fine percale or Jacquard - figured madras, with lain or plaited bosoms, with a ine variety of stripes, in black and colors, on white grounds. All — in coat style, with attached cuffs. CE mT i Freshly unpacked for tomor- aL) 2 row’s selling at $1.15 each. $2 to $3 Knitted Scarfs at $1.05 Made in New York oh"English hand-looms, and highly characteristic and well- bred in ap) nce. Smart, cross or bias club stripes in two and three-color com - binations, heather effects, various fancy stripes and some plain colors. About 1000 new Scarfs added to the collection for tomorrow’s selling. Ma‘n Floor Really Remarkable!---The HOSIERY In This Sale for Men and Women Perhaps, during the season of Winter weather and high shoes, you have been worrying along with your old hosiery, and waiting for just the rigat chance to buy your Spring supplies. THIS IS THAT CHANCE. : ( A great quantity of fine Hosiery has been gathered to make it for you. (ne very prominent New York firm of importers and wholesale dealers has supplied a great deal of it. Another splendid group comes from a Philadelphia manufacturer. What do you think, for instance, of a great offering of Women’s Si": stockings at 95c a pair, not a single pair of which was made to WHOLESALL: for less than $12.50 to $30 a dozen? And that is just a sample of the good fortune that awaits you. These are the lots: WOMEN’S HOSIERY 35c Silk Lisle Hose, 6 Pairs for $1 $1.95 Embroidered Silk Hose, $1.26 Pair Black silk, hand-embroidered in black or 3,600 pairs, mostly in black, some in colors, colors, in many pretty designs. all wit 4-in. aes tops. 18¢ for single pairs. | $3 Imported Silk Hose, $1.85 Pair 60c Lisle-thread Hose, 28c a Pair Made in France, of fine silk, with lace 5,000 pairs of imported gauze lisle, ee tae opie or hand-embroidered, black and | in si idered lisle, in blac colors, | ae $4 to $5.60 French Silk Hose, $2.35 Pair | it Hose, 38c a Pair Some self-embroidered on colored grounds; ™ ‘Pall fonhoneds in black and tan, with mer-| others with lace ankles. Colors only. cerized lisle tops, heels and toes, and double MEN'S HOSIERY soles. 60c Half Hose, 28c Pair Oot ee ee teat Women’s Sill| About 5,000 pairs of Silk and Silk-plated | Stockings, in black and various colors and s of a quality we have sold plentifully weights; some all-silk, others with lisle tops, ca pair. All rostened selects in heels and toes. A big wholesaler’s clean-up; nd-white, tan-and-white and navy all sizes, though not in every style; and at blue-and-white, | least half the offering of the $1.50 grade. 5c Silk Socks, 38c Pair F , 1,60 to $2.75 Silk Hose, 95c Pair. 4,000 pairs of thread silk Socks, ingrain dye, $h 3,600 pairs of extra’ heavy and .medium- in black and about 20 different colors. weight pure Silk Stockings, in black anc} $1 Silke Socks, bbe Pair t solden oak, $23; regularly 933. : Sideboard, Colonial design, | fg Early English or golden oak, $28; ' | Ses Sn en ‘ jarly $3. beautiful colors, All silk or with mercerized In black and colors, product of a well-known tops and soles. Lowest wholesale price, maker whose name we cannot advertise $12.50 a dozen pairs. Main Floor Favorite Toilet Preparations | Women’s White In the Gimbel Drug Store Nu-Buck Shoes Remember Hat can sf these saretully prepares Ginn! Sales of | at $3.75, Drugs and Toilet Articles consists of hundreds of separate items, | including practically everything for the home ete shelf, the Regularly $5 traveling nr the toilet table, and the bath. The following are 16-button height. Madeon merely ietanese, eee by them of the savings afforded by the | a smart high-arched last, with other offerings in the Sale: | high Cuban heels and short Phd Tooth Paste, 25c size ang aera Massage Cream, 28¢, 48¢ | vamp. Nu-buck is not buck- “Pebeco Tooth Paste, $80. n'a Microbe Killer, $1 size | Skin, but a specially prepared Sheffield Paste, 10c, fonlean # Microbe Killer, $1 si2@ | «oft and durable white leather Rolyce Pete, 180, Father John's Medicine, $1 size | that will give better service, Munyon’s Witch Hazel Taleum, 7c. | £07 59¢. and is easily kept clean, Babcock's Corylopsia Talcum, 16c. Swissco, large, $1 size Most stores sell these shoes Mennen’s Talcum Powder, 10c. ‘w Hair Health, $1 oes § | for $6—our regular price is | $5. Tomorrow, at a special offering, in all sizes, at $3.75 a pair. A fine group of Women’s | Extra High-Cut 18-button | Boots, in tan and black calf- and patent leather, and zinder of our Paris nots, NOW $3.26 pair, | Johnson's Baby Powder, 16c. Rubifoam, 12c. . Miro Dena Le Parfait Natural Rouge Vegetal, 60c. Lyon's Tooth Powder, 12¢. Dorin’s Rouge, brunette color, with- out puff, in round box, regularly 20c, at 10¢. Melorose Beauty Powder, 39c. Melorose Beauty Rouge, 39c. Vaucaire Galega Tablets, 19¢. Samurai Corylopsis Taleum, one- pound box for 91¢, Roger and Gallet Rice Powder, 20¢, | 50¢; 50c Gaiter El Perfecto Veda Rouge, 28¢, Leotlut regularly $5 and $7, Dr. Bell's Tooth Paste, 160. Dyale rin Women’s Evening Slippers, | fe eae abe, Gray ; ‘onic, 76e. small lots and broken sizes, Halycon Rose Cold Cream Jara, 0c] Pitcher’s Castoria, 16¢. | mostly beaded, and in coloys, tubes at 26¢. Alkalithia, 600, | some soiled, at $1.95 a pair imbel’s Face 4c. Stuart's Dysp ‘Tablets, 36¢. pep vy Sen , eit of Cucumber Fowles to. whitens| Gude'’s Jeol dy lio 106. »» | regularly $3.50 and $5, and aoftens the akin, 60c. Main Floor and Subway Bale: Second Floor = ——= styles of Furniture that you may choose from in this February At $96 set, [1 THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1912. 11! BOY DEAD, MAN DYING 5 atm uRy Cums] BIG WINDSTORM COMING, frenving tye nter win. 30 goat on Doctors Use This for Eczema’ x-Commissioner of Health | i¢ for eczema as quinine for m: a is a skin disease.” The] have been preseriilng the D. D. cured through the skin. | remedy for years.” It will take The gerus must be washed vul, wad so] the itch the justamt you apply it. A salves have long ago been found worth- | bottle proves it. WHEN TRAIN CRASHES | THROUGH ROOF OF BANK. Others Injured as Huge Mass Rolls |less The most advanced physicians of | So certain is D. D, D. to resch his, and | case that it will cost you nothing pl 1 this country are now agreed Down Embankment and are preseribing b want of: wintergreen, | very {inet feliolac Gol’ toler te Wrecks Building. thymol and other ingr zema | good every claim. SALT LAKE, Utah, Feb, men {and all other skin cis pound is known as D. D. D. Prescrip-| we certainly advise to drop is Yon tor & your druggist and invest be in [0D Dep has jows that D. D. D, anyway. ki Achieved By Specializing— The Ideal Dresses for Young Girls in Spring and Summer Styles A number of P ood ago the woman who was a specialty dressmaker for children was one of the most im it personages in a community. And her charges were gener- ally so high that only the children of wealth could enjoy her idealized styles, Today it is quite different—we have a specialized Salon just for young girls of to 14 years—also for girls who are not fully developed, and which are known as juniors. ‘This apparel is designed with proper lines for girls of these ages—so that alterations are a rarity. Styles are appropriate for their young years, whether the Dresses are for play, school or party wear. And they also con- form to the latest ideas of fashion. ‘The Linen Dress at $3.76, illustrated, isa | gem of Laue But that’s just what it should be for play and school wear, It is of fine French linen and its bandings are of an excellent quality open-work embr idery. Other models, $4.50, $6.76, $7.50, $9.76, to $16. These include variations of the Russian jacket and tunic styles, When Lingerie Dresses ‘are for party wear they should be fanciful—just as a matter of distinction, Byt they should al- me be dainty, as is the Dress illustrated, This model is, indeed unique, as the bat Cari ea ate is an embroid- panel. 60, Other models, $3.76, $4.76, $6, $7:60, $8, $10, $12.60, $16, $25, or oo hese and upward, French hand-made Lingerie Dresses, $5.75, $8.50, $15, $25 to $60. Challis Dresses—white or blue With ‘polka-dot or Hing Bini: a $8.76 and $9.76. Jp cool and Play: Dresses of gingham, percale and lawn—pretty plaids, stripes and Printings, $1.60, $2, $2.26, $2.50, $3, $3.76 to $7.50, Regulation Sailor Dresses of blue serge, $5, $7.60, $9.76 and $15. Guimpes of fine white lawn and batis i Hi mie i pee ne atiste—domestic, 56¢, 7c, $1, up to $3.60; French hand- Sample Lingerie Dresses, $4.75—Made to Sell for $6 co $i2 ; These remarkable savings because the Dresses are only in 8-year size. But it certainly is good fortune for the little girls who wear this size. Fine white lawns, daintily trimmed with fine laces and embroideries. A large assort- ment of styles, : Although our Apparel for Juniors is girlish, it Possesses i good style Utils (ah bet ee Hl 5 Wie oodimninees aut S Phe Demi-tailored Serge Dress, illustrated, is in white or navy bl: , trimmed with silk, Regulation Dresses of blue serge, $7.50, $10 and $12.60. bella da scot! UT Lingerie Dresses, $9.60, $10, $14.50, $18.50 and upward, Tailored Suits, $15, $18.60, $26 and upward, Junior Apparel is in 13, 15 and 17-year sizes, Very Special February Offerings of |) c= fk Good Dining-room Furniture | Dining Table, Barly Rnglish or Arm Chairs to match, Barly English or golden oak. 84; reg. 96, $ \ We say “good” of this Furniture advisedly. It is as sturdy as the oak from which it is made. It is Furniture that is well worth buying—as all GIMBEL Furniture is—because it is worth KEEPING. Dignified in design, thorough in workmanship, comfortable and convenient, as befits its important place in the household, Yet, in honor of the February Furniture Sale at sub- stantially less than its usual fair price. The DINING TABLE has a 48-inch round top, flush edges, heavy ocatgon base, and hand- some scroll legs. $23, regularly $32. é , The COLONIAL SIDEBOARD is 54 inches long, with a 14x48-inch bevel plate mirror, one large and two aalt drawers, one of which is lined for silver, and a large cupboard, with swinging doors, $28, regula 5 i st . Both of the pieces may be had in either Early English or golden oak. They, together with the chairs, also illustrated, are merely types of the hundreds of desirable Sal Here Is Other News of Dining-Room Furniture Golden Oak Sideboards | Golden Oak China Closets Early English leboards at $46 He China Closets at $30 Extension Tables 3 xtension Tables at $35 ension Tables at $35 ension Tables at $20 ension Tables at $12 | t $19.50 $45 Crystal Cl at $76 $24 Sidebourds at $1860 $60 Crystal Che 312 Batension Tables at 69 $20 Sideboards ut $12.60 Golden Oak Extension Tables i | 60 Sideboards at $42.60 Early | $37 Extension Tables at $30 | | $32 Extension Tables at $23 P=# | Early English Sideboards | | 347.50 Chi $20 China pts at $24 Extension Tables at $20 $20 China Closets at $15 $ ‘ension Tables at $15 $18 China Closets at $14 lension Tables at | $17 China Close + $13 | $12 Extension Tables at $9 Dining Chairs in Sets Reduced Mahogany; sis side a At $80 set, from $100. rm chairs; broac backs; seroll feet; upholstered seat covered in Spanis! ; six side and two arm chairs; covered in leather. At $75 x6 » $115, | At $150 set, from $170. Mahogany; six » two arm chairs; uphc nd our side and two arm chaira: spring ant) seat and back: oxic Ii: covered in Spans t and back covered in leather, At 696 nd two arm chair feet. | Gol x side and two arm chairs; carved back seit, leather panel in back covered in At $140 set, from $250, roomy; shi t lish; four side and two arm chairs; spring grain leather, | : her back covered in dark red leather. At Mahogany; six seats covered $55 set, from $67.50. Seventh Floor si ins Sesto ee de BROADWAY EW YORK HER a This com-| If you have skin trouble of any kind,

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