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sym ee etal amount 8. #8 Faison street, 8! ep Md ye 4 i Goldberg at No. 129 Rivington streets |in @ gentle voice, the tears streaming |) i Skipper Chippa Picked Up Three | "a party of ten after a day of fine fishing | Gabout 2 P.M. Mitwo guttars and shouts of “Viva Chippa!” from the happy fishermen. | Suddenly they eapted an overturned shell with three puths clinging to the bot- tom. PS which the noble preservers of the three plied them with good things to drink. they were , thought it would be a god idea to turn, f them over to the newcomers, >, Club's landing at Seagate. | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SUN@ 24, 1912, TOOK LIFE SAVINGS, BUT GRANDMOTHER | VERNIGHT, MOB PLEAS FOR BOY TORMS AT DOORS lace Looted as if by Ladies’ Home. Thorough Burglar. emepernearart | A nweet-faced S14 woman timidiy |stood before Judge Fawcett in the! e private bank of Auerbach & ‘County Court in Brooklyn to-day and Money, stamps, steamship ticket®) gown her wan cheeks, pleaded with books hastily removed over night.| him not to sen@ her grandson, who d its doors to-day in the face®|had robbed her of her life's savings clamoring — depositor! Shortly|to jail. Roy Emerson Slocum, the fter an involuntary petition in) nineteen-year-old prisoner, who up to uuptey was filed before Commis-|this time had been defiant, was so af- Shields against Reuben Auer-|fected and humiliated by the plea cr | and Henry Goldberg, the two/ his aged gtandmother that he collapsed '. in court and had to be carried out hysterical with grief. “Young Slocum came from Buffalo a few weeks ago, when he graduated from high sohool there, to stop for the summer with his grandmother, Mrs. | evidently not which were the bank's closing, reached early @to-day he found the rior presenting all the marks burglar's activities. Papers were the floor, the safe was and the valuable assets had dis- red. The cashier made no com- it of robbery to the police, how- home, No. 678 President street. days ago he disappeared, taking with him over $100 which his kindly grand- mother had saved to buy for herself a} , lfe place in an old ladies’ home. The je news that the private bank, | money had been the hard earned sav- supposed to have carried nts of the poorer persons hood, had closed spread admitted his guilt. He was arraigned | to-day for sentence. | As his name called out and he was ied from prisoner's pen inte the court room a little, pathetic figure in black tottered out into the aisle and with faltering steps made tyr way up to the Judge's bench. Nervously her shaking hands untied the strings of her old-fashioned black bonnet as she be- gan talking in a tremflous voice to the! Judes. fifteen mintites | crowd of more sitors pressing inst the barred doors of tho bank. . Burfeind of the Clinton street sta- sent the reserves to the bank, and vith difficulty®that the police- eded in pushing the distracted ors back fram the doors when Auerbach runs a printing “Please, Judges” she said, “don't send to jail. It w reak his) . Was closed, nor heart. He didn't mean to} really didn't realize what he joing. Won't you please let him| Id Auerbach fe found in his rooms then. looked | er. a woman a @ young pri upon the sternly at “Young ‘ou A severe senten it. On account of thi Ing to the petitioners, and the tia. jes much more. seph A, Lieberdoff, the cashter, sid Auerbach and Goldberg told ks to leave the bank early &nd would not allow them to | “Slocum burst Into tears. Kneeling he tried to kiss his grandmother's erical he had ay mm the looting of the bank Not even a postage stamp left in the safe. The amount of pney orders which been paid in » Austria and at #00. The which Auerbach is sup- ed to have taken ts in the neighbor- | {He was a member of ch deposited with his a member of the ‘The Secret Rev (From the Chicago Tribune, are taxes so high this year? dled the indignant citizen. 1 you consider it confidential if 1 ou why?” whispered the clerk _ the County Treasurer's office. ‘Yes, sir.” ‘ » need the money." ton Idsmith was appointed re- ed bank this al Judge Mayer. He 500 and will take charge! bond of once. | joat of the depositors were at work, when they return to-night and the! » closed bank running| tto reaches them, wild cted. There were 800 ive months aio the hank was closed | ause the necessary $15,00) in Albany for the p: ors, Later a partner d the sign stating that $15,000 in Albany to protect the bank made parance on the front window. A | # ago the new partner with- ——< O RESCUE ONLY AFTER CAREFUL INQUIRY NOW Vhirsty Ones in Bay, But Never Again The woes of th ung 1 4 Gamaritan were whe the pretty motor boa‘ ted to be a lifesaver yesterd: returning from Jamaica Bay | ‘There were strains from A thrilling res ue took place in | oarsmen clapped them on the back and Then said Ohippa, want to go?" “To Fort Hamilton," replied. Chippa did not know the way but as! Tight off Seagate at the time | and @ boat from the U. 8, Volunteer Life Savings Corps was coming, Chippa! “Where do you the rescued ones | ‘The trans- | fer was made and the grood craft Anna followed the Ife boat to the Crescent) The ten singer fishermen after some| elay thought 1t wood be a good idea} to visit the rescued ones, They started up the pier, “Where ya goin'?" sald a man on the pler. “Yes, where ya goin’? sald several more and “get out!" they ordered col- lectively. ‘The ten noble ones were thun- deratruck, “But we Presprved three lives. Wauteuie'e rs,” they protested. ‘Then they became angry and therd would have been a riot only the ten did not believe in fighting on Sunday, and eald so. They went away from there. But | that isn't why Skipper Chippa will not | pick another soul out of the bay, No Indeed. He gave the youths lots of nice things to drink small bird whi poorest swimmer of the three did five in the miles with @ trudgeon stroke nyorning. Warship Wasted 61 Oh Wanted a PEKING, China, June outbreak against foreign ean Consul at Cheigo has ¢ for @ warship. ——— : d the Man, eve in letting the | The “Of court office seek the man." Yes. But sometimes you have to uta lantern and ring @ bell to let te Office know which way to look,” | ; sweet BEFORE GIRL Business Bad, fruit, # three weeks couple Sends Wife Lydla Bushnell, who is widowed, at her | ren HE WAS Tom WED T0-D. Guida a self While Packing Trunk for Honeymoon. Enrico G azo, were engaged, She called yesterday for a walk in Central Park. When the. returned Gilda drow the air into We ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The 4 and told her tha cause of his bus ed at him and wa wrote letters to his nd to a friend. Then | trunk that he had teen packing in prep- aration for the wedding and, drawing {out a revolver, fired a shot through his screams brought a rews of Flower Hos- und the man dead when he ar- Dr. and Commits Suicide, After aending his wife and two chil- Edward Wink- Ten barek, a carpenter, living at No. 654 Kast Eighty-second street, committed suicide to Coney Island, y inhaling gas yesterday aft " ia nen Mra Winkbarek returned she wae Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. ¥., says: “I have used your Castoria and unable to get in the house. A window found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for | | Was forced and Winkbarek was found in the bathtub, which was full of water, « ings of years. When captured the boy | gas tube in his mouth. They’ re neck and neck— The Sizes and Prices of the Brisco-Kleanwell toothbrush. Quality exactly the same in j all sizes for all prices. The only difference, is fewer | bristles in the smaller sizes. 15c, 20¢, 25¢, 35c. Every brush protected by a transparent Dust Cap. BRISCO= KLEANWELL “The toothbrush that e holds its bristles” Sold high-grade shops _in UA fed New York City and Suburbs Alfred H. Smith Co. New York Shoots Him- gton Market ears old, and in @ week the | at the Forty. | sixth mprect address and the two went troubles, She ed him white ind Children to Coney (CCAStORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharma- | ceutical societies and medical authorities, It is used by physicians with | results most gratifying. Tho extended use of Castoria is uoquatianadly the | home tnavreet| POBULt of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: ast 3 days of thie SILK Suit Youth seal for Stealing | jer rim ivorx | Seeont—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi- | 4/NED offer. We bought 156 * 4 . " | street, Jersey City, to w the eva to | pieces of silk the other L pian ty Crowd Finds East Side} $700, Fund for Place in Old |te martiea to-day. 'Misw Tioetakt mer | Lates the food: 7n¢—It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Oastor Oil, at the price of mohair and Guida when she went to the market | get your suit SILK LINED the It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio | and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s | Cordial, eto. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, hows | rE for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. our knowledge, Oastoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by | Tegulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall’s Journal of Health. Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. |, Dr. B. Halstead Bcott, of Chicago, Ills., says: “I have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my practice, and find it very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “Your Castoria stands first in ite class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” many years. The formula {s excellent.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: “I prescribe your Castoria extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children’s troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I alwaye | | soe that my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr. Wm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: “As the father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experience I have in my years of practice found Ca» toria @ popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” | Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “The name that your Cas- | toria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by tho | Presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse- ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castoria my expert- ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an ex- ception. 1 prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found it to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children’s complaints. Any physi- cian who has rajsed a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoria.” GENUINE CASTORI A atways the Signature of | The Kind You Have Always Bought in Use For Over SO Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, DONT PITY Meo New York's largest commission house came to me with a proposition on their brang new spring goods. These goods are perfect, this season’s styles and the handsomest variety of patterns I have ever seen. had the pick of their entire stock and you can rest assured I took the best ones. Approximately eight or nine thousand yards, practically when the season is over,and I am going to unload them so quick that you can feel the heat of the bundles going out of my store. I couldn’t make a single suit up at the price which I intend to charge and get away with it, but three thousand suits turned quick will mean a small margin of profit on volume of business. This heading was caused by the commission man saying that I couldn’t get away with these goods at $7.75 and make a profit. Now I don’t want any pity. I want volume of business. Guaranteed all wool or all worsted, positively not a thread of cotton or shoddy in any of these pieces, but the finest worsted yarn ever put into cloth, two-piece suit to order (05 The balance of the United States Worst :d Con. pany’s blue serges, two-piece suit to order $8.25 255) MITCHELL THE TAILOR | | Ihave a range of flan- nels, white, cream, and black and white stripes, also crashes in the various shades, mostly all ends of sin- gle trouser patterns, which cost regularly $6 -$7- $8. My price, trousers to order, $2.75 If skeptical see these woolens in my window, where hundreds of styles will be dis- played, o¢ see and handle in my open doorway and have salesman cut samples. 1431 Broadway, Cor. 40th St. My ONLY New York Cily Siore. Open Evenings Until 9 aClock; Saturdays, 10 out extra charge. | ing us customers by the earload. | ast fine | Fabrics—cut to your own measure | —tailored to your own taste in the | latest: English ‘a American models—silk-lined at that— | at the price of a factory hit or misfit. Intest colors, blue serge) hig! perfectly satisfied call ours when you need one. NODEPOSITREQUIRED. 50cWeekly in of Brass “Bed, Spring and Mattress FR ‘This eee 11! ‘Physicians Recommend Castoria ‘Monday, Tivesdayone Wednesday Only BO iQ Suits Stk lined This is sure some offer and is mak- Jo you wonder? We give you the choice of a thou- Imported and Domestic to order And you're not limited to blue serge. You have the run of blues, gra nd browns, clear cut and unfinished worsteds, English mixtures in ‘afi the plain and fancy weaves, silk pencil stripes, ervalee checks and plaide—everything, in fact, that you will find in a class Merchan lor's stock Silke lining to match every round, look at the goods, com you have seen—and when you -have your measure taken. Be your owa salesm: Open Evenings Until 9. iConvsight, 1012. Oevtreteher Tre) Oestreicher 8ros. at 28°°S? 91 B WAY A i } ay FURWITURE-BAUM A ee ON 160TH STREET —- A Special for Week Commencing Sune 24th [ A Gigantic Sale—a Rare Opportunity COMPLETE FOR $14.75 NO MAIL ORDERS bi t or satin finish, all sizes, 2-inch its and heavy filing Pearre Bp in fancy ticks; a woven wire spring. autor $14.75 Sais soi ae WITH CASE 02 CREDIT FF] ; PURCHASES | Free with Every Purchase of $50 YOUR TERMS ARE OUR TERMS OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9 OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P.M. 149 St. “hk*" 3d Ave. bree Dellvery by Gur Kotor Trucks The Girl Who Knows The Vacation Girl has learned a fow things about where to spend a Summer's Outing. She does not go blindly to any one Moun- tain, Seashore or Country Hotel or Board-, ing ILouse, but is on the alert to locate some ne new place where she can get Ss the change in air, environ- ment, recreation, people, ete., that go to make a vacation all that it should be. Virst of all she secures a copy of The World’s Summer Resort Guide for 1912 Now being distributed FREE at The World’s Main and Branch Offices. a ~The Most Complete Vacation Guide Ever Printed Presenting over 2,000 ‘‘Summer Resort” Advertisements reproduced from the columns of the Sunday World. Take One Home With You To-Night A copy will be sent by mail upon receipt of six vents to defray postage i oy ee