The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1912, Page 4

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a i 4 f » THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1912, TWOPAIROF TWINS Two Pairs That Beat Four of a Kind ON SHIP KEEP DADS ONJUMPFOR WEEK The Topp Pair and the Swan- * son Pair Kept Things Lively on the Baltic. JOKES ON PASSENGERS. Many Were Victims of Pranks of Four Five-Year-Olds, | Travelling Together. Pour folly ttle revers are the Topp and Swanson twins, who parted here to-day after having beon abroad with their parents for the last two months, Passengers aboard the steamship Baltic of the White Star line, which arrived @aturday, will not moon forget the Youngsters, for their numerous and disappearances during the voyage over caused no end of excitement and kept the whole @hip in @ turmoil for eight days. Strangely enough the Tepp twins and the Swanson twins are the same age— five years old. Their papas, Alfred C. Topp and Alvin L. Swanson, grew up together on @ farm near Stockholm, Sweden, and migrated ¢o America to- when scarcely out of their teens. me the two yaung men re- New York, then they sepa- settling in Council Biufta, Swanson going to Tacoma, was firat to on ‘on ALA POUR BOYS BORN IN THE GAME YEAR. ‘The Topp twins—Tage and Alfred— Were born about two months before the Swanson twine—Melvin and yer! and their parents were so slated thai they immediately planned for a ae, of thetr families in Sweden. But busi- Ress interfered, and it was not until this summer that they were able to realise their Gream. They all eailed from New York together, first going ¢o England GOFF WILL CHOOSE SPECIAL GRAND JURY FROM LIST OF FIFTY}: Clerk Penny Makes Public the Names of Talesmen Eligi- In Playing Amusing Pranks at Sea ae Lied ME eet West Mightioth strect, business No. 3 Wall street; Charles Do Lancey Ocl- richs, banker, of No. 771 Park avenue, business No, 40 Exchange place; Ben- Jamin N, Rhodes, coffee, of No, 22 Weat Beventy-fourth street, business No. 10 Front street; J. Henry Statts, civil en- finer, of No. % West Fifty-fourth businens No, 29 Broadway; Jerrie I. Straus, merchant, of No. @ East Seventy-fourth street, department store; Alan S. Strasber; merchant, of No. 128 West Seventy: venth atreet, business No. 48 Fifth avenue; Geori build. er, of No, 211 West Sixty-ninth street; Frank Thompson, manager, of No. 27 West One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street, business No. 128 Liberty atreet; John Trounotine, manufacturer, of No. 0 West End avenue; Peter Vivna, res: ble for Service. taurant, of No. 71 West Highty-elghth street, business No. 42 East Forty-aec- ‘a ond atreet; nC, Wileon, insurance, Mwanson, “and, delleve me, they ser) ane itet pf taleemen from which the| of No. 98 Weat Hightiotn atreet, bum: Merry chase the whole while. Once near the old farm where we were visit-| Branch of img, and there was the greatest exolte-| investigate the police scandals was ment throughout the countryside. An-| made public other time they frightened a lot of|N. Penny @wedish children by masquerading as| 4s follows: Indiane and romping around some of the adjoining farms, It was all w could do to keep track of them. First one prank and then another, oe that ha no ond of excitement.” HAVE A FIGHT FOR AN OOD PIGCE OF CANDY. “And coming back on the Baitie,” broke tn Mra. Swanson, “it was really terrible. The boys became very friendly with the stokers, who were continually rain’ agent. of hey disappeared in the engine room, steerage and other parts of the vessel. One thing that was particularly amus- lug was when they espled a young couple sleeping in steamer chairs on the promenade deck and robbed them of a box of candy from which the young vouple had been eating. There were, New etree! Jat thirteen pieces of candy left, and | of No, 236 | turer, of Fast Rover there was a grand scramble ax to which | 2¢8* In Fi of the boys should have the extra piece, | reckway, Unable tu come to any understanding, | SIXty-firet they began fighting, and the first thing | Bible How we knew there was the liveliest kind of | See. of @ rumpus on deck. Tage's fa bs “48) Wall etreet. Samuel A. Clark, preal- | Of strength, Realising made » mixed scratched, and Melvin lom some of tis| Wyatt SiN fukin Wortieth’ arrests | close, hair, Adfred and Cecit cam® out of it| business at No, 14 Liberty street, whole, but thelr clothing was simply a| Frank C, Earle, manager, of No, 2167 The Closing Prices, eight to behold. It was the first time the| Seventh tie; busines at Pler No, "5, highest, iowest and last prises of stooke| youngsters had ever fought. Of courao,| 1, North River. ‘Thomas ¥. Farrell, | and hangia, ts comared’ wiht shutier’s to patch up their difter-| coal, of No, MT West Ninety-third | fine fig area fl ps street, 0 now they are as t By consent of lawyers on both sidi hi f the late R. Q. T ‘and Ps " Goldberg, real + jos | Reese, daughter of the late ays with ‘Meivin aaa Cook ste a sine see : Ninety-aixth oe = the trials were transferred to Wythe-|lor, a prominent merchant, was found pee Spe tv Mico Raia Aloo fe Libevtr coaat, = Q] ville, where two of their clan were sen-|dead to-day on the floor of her apart-|I WILTON WELVEPS—A $1.25 7.4% see some teal Indians ovt in Tacoma, | |. oll, of No. & Rivers FR] tenced to die and others got long term} ment in the Wentworth. A gash in the | room, hall or stair furnishing; ¥! But Papa Topp and Mamma | business, No. 8 Broadway, + Ri sentences, Hawards will be cried frst, | back of her head and splashes of blood couldn't see their way clear just Michael Harrteon, ‘contractor, of No, 110% + S$] deKinning on Oct. 28, for the murder of | around the ichly furnished aitting room | yard at... . to make the trp, and wo |i waa with| Wert Eighty-fourth street; buminens, |A + Q] Commonwealth's Attorney Foster. Allen | indicated foul play. E. A. Saucrwein, a || WILTON "4 Mast Fifty-necond street, ows = Ql wit be cried for the murder of Judge | nephew and prominent attorney, and the Holt, publisher, of No. 4. Bast | p's 1y| Massle when Edwards trial ts over,|police, however, do not believe a crime o—tinasayiipsei-nine— Reventy-eighth street; business, No, 35 a The prisoners were returned to the|wan committed, An autopsy has been t10 pee HAND AFTER HER PURSE. Fisk tashen ‘of i: + ieee elise at 5 (3 SHE FIGHTS TWO WOMEN t 1 “a from the Dobson looms; yard at..... + | Pino street, % —- retary, of No, dightieth street; | Rl zh > Grips One by business, No. 128 Broadway + 4 ne Grips One by the ene A. Johnaon, real estate, of No, ~R Wrist and Rough-and- | 1 One Hundred and enteenth, 3 a “yey ness, No. M Kast Fourteenth Tumble Follows, st Henjamin A, Jackson, ase nt, of | | i Mra, Jennie Levine, an aged woman, (Nu. West Seventy -agcond siree ty ant nv iving at Nu. $46 Broadway, Wilume- |" . 4 ; 8 for S and = burg, was making purchases in. the eo street market at Leonard and Selgel | ace i 8 Get 53 to 59 West riMiameburg, to-day when she en Vitale +. e ‘ oe pkiyt pocket, tn Bennet +18 n Hear “L" which she had her purse containing 86 No, 12 Bast} fiat “I 1] Mrs, Levine grasped « hand which |F Yo, 1 Madinon | Hy ral Neel + 4 he raid sie had found in her pocket, Avenue. Lyon HW, Krotel, manufactur. | Mos land J Sikatis wae “6 ti 108, Of No. 2 East Seventy-first street; | South Ry ith " usiness, No. 2 Pine street, Henry ¢. [ta Me t Be Oe si 69 Lawrence, banker, of No. 10t West {fe & Outhy t Ame . eg. end bit in un O % Piehtyentehth street; buslness, No. 16] Utah’ Conver (@) 1 G A crowd ‘gathered, and a third | Wat see A It means the Original and Genuine woman, #uid by the be m-| Renjaniin Moritect me ae + Tederate of the we Kporket, ate M9 V 1 sens » bre vine's grip fi u's arin NEW STEAMER NAMED. ¢ women were Oehting v Mt are ire Jesman, of ‘Can ‘arry 2900 in 120 Went Hiftyeninth street; business 0.88 Washlagion atreot, Willlam Monk n River Trae, ee C) @ mporter, of 833 Central Park West; . Kiso) ean orks hire pffered bin a hy Mork, cigars, of No, 2113 Bathwate Hea natal alter eat ig) "| ond earring h e 16; business No. 348 Twenty th q unopt Bh @ foot nue Police Court, re sie told M wtreet: bu Wis Selected after a contest which wa a was . 1 won by L. Wy Hare of Pittetle extraordinary Grand Jury will they wero lot for @ day in @ cave| Selected by Justice Goff in the Criminal Wea Sixty-ninth street; No, 60 Union Square, East. Sam Abra- merchant, of No, 18 West Eighty. atreet; business at Twenty-cighth atreet. business at No. 17 West Thirtieth étreet. Fred @ Blackall, Cortlandt street, No. 116 West One Hundred and Nine- Dutting them up to tricks. ul | teenth street; business at No, 72 Geand : ee te pati ive | atreet. Wiliam T. Blumberg, manutar- street; business at No, 100 Fifth avenue. Walter Brooks, treasurer, of No. 936 Broadway. John A. Berrian, of Bpuyten Duyvil; 1 Thint street: Malvin Gut be] ness No. 12 Broadway; Thomas C. Wood, of No. 1 Lexington avenue, business No. § New atrost; Murry A. Young, banker, of No, 2 Park avenue, business No. 4 Broad street. the Supreme Court Oct. 7 to by Clerk William owe rear c.te | WALL STREET No. 38 West Alfred H. Bond, No, 21 Hast Sixtieth etreet: A continuation of tast week's buying movement marked the opening of the stock market to-day. The bulk of trading centred in Reading, Union Pa- cific, @teel and Copper. All these j{ssues bounded up nearly @ point dur- ing the first hour, Pronounced |strength was in evidence throughout jthe list, many featurc: scoring good sized advances. | Realizing eventually supplanted the broker, Initial buying, with the result «hat pda Na gi Pilees reacted from the top, but the G, 8. Bodenheim, furi 1 aaone wane Sota tis meee Bast Nineteenth street; bust {atone Perec 1 ie In Steel lent a ‘latinon Bullding, Arthur A! @ afternoon dea’ lecturer, of No. 16 West met OD & peralstent buying demand street; business at No, 2|\cce™ Advanced over T—the year's high- Samuel J. Clarke, Inaur- (Ot Mure. Copper kept pace with Steel 200 West One Hundred [Mt Marking record ranges, Without trusiness at No, 61 abatement Copper crossed 9 on @ buret President, of No, 39 Alfred Blum, silks, of No. $16 West Thirty-second 108 ntieth street; business at No: at No. sik DOCTOR CONCEALS NAME OF GIRL HURT IN HIS AUTO} TO ROOSEVELT’S ARGUMENT. Hurties ‘ Her Away From Valley Stream After Collision With a Pole. Efforts were made to-day to learn the {dentity of a young woman who was serlously hurt in an automobile accident while riding with Dr, H. W. Dangler of No, 456 Classon avenue, Brooklyn, et Valley Stream, L.’ 1, last evening, Dr. Dangler, two other physicians and two women who were with them hurried the injured girl’ eway to Brooklyn, re- fusing all information to the Valley Stream authorities. ‘There were two automobiles for the party. Dr. Dangler was in a runabout behind and attempted to overtake an Pass the other four, who were in a tour. ing car, His automobile sidewiped the car of Edgar Willlama of No, % Ran- dail avenue, Freeport, sending it against the fence, Williams and his wife were not Injured, The phyalcian's car skidded and head- ed for a pond at the other side of the road, Only @ collision with a telagraph Pole prevented it from going Into thi Water, Both the young woman and D: ler were thrown out. The girl w cut and bruised about the face and her hip was dislocated. The doctor was also cut and bruised, <> Illustrated Magazine Free, A new magazine (handy size) with twenty-four pages, sixteen of them in color, with every copy of next Sun- day's World. A new magazine EVERY WEEK. Watch for the first number next Sunday. Full of pic- tures and good reading matter, aed OUTLAWS ARRAIGNED IN HILLSVILLE CouRT. Sidna Allen and Wesley Edwards, at Scene of Shooting, Have Trials Transferred, HILLSVILLE, Va., Sept. 23.—8idnea Allen and Welacy Edwards, the moun- tain gunmen, were arraigned here to- day in the same courtroom where on March 14 five lives were snuffed out in & shooting affray of which they are alleged to have been the ringleaders. YEGGS BLOW SAFE IN BRONX STORE AND GET $1,700 Wait for “L” Train’s Roar to Drown Out Noise of Explosion. The boldest Job’ that has been committed in the Bronx in years, ac- cording to the police, was discovered to-day when A. Goldman, manager for | Kaufman's Hat Store, at No, 2825) Third avenue, near One Hundred and Forty-ninth street, found that the 600- pound safe of the firm had been car- ried to @ store rqom in the rear. The safo was dynamited and looted of $1,- 700 in cash, Goldman says, Finger print experts from Head- quarters took possession of the wreoked safe but found no marks, as the y men must have worn gloves. The safe, which was nearly three feet tall, weighed 600 pounds. It was in the cashier's cage in the front of the store, in piain view of a window facing ‘Third avenue, near the One Hundred and Forty-ninth street transfer point between the subway and elevated, where persons are constantly passing, ‘The store did not bank its receipts of Saturday, and in addition took in sev- eral hundred dollars between 8 and 1 o'clock Sunday. In all, Manager Gold- man, who lives at No. 727 it One Hundred and Fifty-sixth street, left more than $1,700 in cash in the safe, When he reached the store this morning he found hats scattered all over the floor. The safe was missing from Vase cashier's cage. In @ small storeroom in the rear, hide | i den from the street by a small panel, he found the safe, blown to two ple So great wa the fo-ce of the explosive used by the yeggmen that the hea docr had been blown from its hing and embedded in a wall three feet away, All the Mastering hal been jarred from the ceiling and wails. * Detectives Felix O'Nelli and Tier- ney of the Alexander avenie station. who wore the first to reach the place, found that to get the safe to the store room it had been necessary to lift it over the railing and then over a counter. They belleved five or six men had taken part in the “job.” A patrolman on fixed post less than a hundred feet away told the detectives police believe that the roar of a passing L train was awaited by the robbers to cover the noise of the explosion. The burglars, the detecti found, had! gained entrance to the store by prying open @ heavy iron fireproof door at the | rear of the store, having first broken jinto the Adler shoe store, adjoining. ‘They took nothing from the shoe store. The detectives found that the yegs- men had left several three-foot jimmies, braces and bits and other safe-blowing tools in the store. There was not a ther on the safe or th and the experts from Headquar- ters declared the men must have worked with kid gloves. A dosen or more soft hats had been crushed into a mat, so that the safe- blower who drilled the hole for the ex- plosive would not hurt his knees at work. earned Chemist Burns His Hand. John V. D, Sheer, a chemi: 72 West Thirty-third street, Bayonne, N. Js, had his left hand burned this afternoon when a vial of murlatic acid, . of with which he was experimenting at No. 133 Water street, accidentally spilled. He was taken to St. Gregory's Hospital. ae Secretary Knox Storm. A typhoon in Japan severed munication with The Commerckil Cable Company nounced that “there ts and will be lay." Secretary of State Knox on! the islands Place. The firm’s books, torn into small bits, were thrown at random on the BASEBALL LINGO AN AID sailed from Yokohama Sunday, and hi ship may be within the storm area. People Are Not Merely to Sit in Bleachers and Watch Game but to Say Who Shall Play. PITTSBURGH, Kan, Sept. 22— There was a big throng in the public square to hear Col. Roosevelt speak here to-day and in the crush a woman fainted. Col. Roosevelt defended the recall of judicial decisions, He also re- ferred to his tilt last spring with Con- fon that the the bleachers. “To invert language that has been given some fame in your own district 4 Col. Roosevelt, “we intend that the people shail not merely sit on the bleachers and look at the game; we in- tend that the peopte shall run the do not! T fame. Wo believe it should not be a| we pragetind Ss nine game between two gangs of profes 849 Broad: fe roadway, sionals, but that the people should say way, ‘1350 Broadway, who shall pl 800 Fifth Ave, @ Broadway, Only Store in Nassau St,, No, Only Brodtiyn Store, 871 Fulton Bt, Opposite City Hall, fc. BURGLAR WHO NEARLY GOT Some things without estab- lished reputa- tion afford op- portunity for guessing as to their worth. Young’s Hats hey are certainties—both as to style and wear. $3 & $4. OUT OF JAIL IS SENTENCED. Harry Miller Gets 's Double-Barrel Penalty Which May Amount | to Nine Years in Sing-Sing. | Harry Miller, the nineteen-year-old burglar who almost succeeded in sawing his way out of the Raymond Street Jail Our Bs For robbing the house of Nelson P. Lewis, chief engineer of the Board of Eetimate, last August, an indeterminate sentence of from two and one-half to five years was Judge Rockwood's idea of appropriate punishment. . For another lareeny he decreed Miller should spend four more years in Sing Sing, finishing the first term. The case of Mra. Stella Moore, production of worsted yarn. AXMINSTE: the woman who brought to Miller the sawe and acids with which he attacked the ly sold at $30. Peres yh ere (9x12) WITH GASH IN HER HEAD. BALTIMORE, Sept, 23.—Mrs, Lavinjs fine appearing extraordinary reductions in price. Removal ¢, Business grown to suc! 2 that our in Brooklyn last week, got @ double- present quarters have borer ion We have barrelled sentence in the Criminal ove 1 Thave why Branch of the County Court, Brooklyn Pet rier 1 to-day. Carpets and Rugs ROYAL WILTOWS—A $50 rr that inaures longest wear. In ROYAL WILTONS—Made from pure chance for a ameniond patterns. Real value bars of td cell door, has yet to be dis- sont BRU! 5 RICH WOMAN DEAD IN HOME $16.b0, ats. Saprstay BuUsEEES—A 00d, Other sizes from the smallest rug up to the lar Specials in Carpets WILTON VELVETS—A choice lot ot regular $1. 16” yd. patterns VELvETS—A good 00 per yard value cut to mie, $1.06 pat yer Bec Surette, % eng wearing and san! Beat grade made, eo per yard quality, Orders placed now will be held for future delivery if desired OBSONS’ Mokers of Carpets for 50 years, Between Sth and 6th Aves. ibway and Mudson Tunnels. Min, five of > wit F No bait a furt Maw who Was the fl to select the eoeiviod £100, tof elght per winning ni ang Tce See | AP ites wing tank on the promenade deck Tm ok She ts 440 feet long end bas ax des | Ped Crees »f+ Cofh Droge. Loris ® Came m8 ‘08 Nop of Preah Boat | voted by electtie @ for and an} Dare none dat Be good, bi, ty? Sait kl, avevaged 10.80 conte pir ed open alr gimng room, Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. More healthful than tea or coffee, | | For infants, invalids and growing children, Agrees with the weakest br oma Pure nutrition, upbuilding the whole body, Keep it on your sid Invigorates nursing mothers and the aged. A quick lunch prepared in a — GH” Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S. | HORLICK'S , Contains Pure as has Ue of heavy bigh pile tr Oriental design Cut from $40 to. Beat quality. Regular- Special inducement at.. Always sold at $22. An ine Bie Guay rug at ve, seni t clean, veut! trom tad 20.00 hick, heavy; in wonder- $11.50 urable, $9.50 rug. Regular price $12.50, wt (11.8x15 feet) at alue carpet, (seed ioe ony 90c $1. A bargain 70c A masterpi *57lAc 14th St., N. Y. READING THE BIG WEEKLY JOKE BOOK 10 BE GIVEN FREE WITH EvERY COPY OF Ge. [25 sr MAIS MADISON A NE | ia EXT SUNDAYS WORLD 2:2 Sb canner ee heard no noise of an explosion. The | an- | RINGWORM AN EASY AND very SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT. ‘Try This Remedy at Our Risk. You know what ringworm looks like—starting as 8 Hitt circular patch of tiny which dry up pimples, Mito scales and are followed by ap other crop on the outer edge, thus em larging the ring all the time Tt may be caught fror dren, and from dogs ture of iodine is the old other chile Tine- medy, but we have a better one now— Saxo “alve our new skin re Apply Saxo Salve a few times (aa directed by the book in the box) @ the ringworm vanishes. Saxo Salve so saturates the skin with its power- \ful, yet soothing _ ingred that | the ringworm parasites are destroyed, Of course, Saxo Salve has many other uses, All kinds of skin eru | tions and disov¢ eczema, barber's r yie to Saxo Salve. wonderful remedy and we guar it most positively. All Riker and Hegeman | Stores in New York and | Brookiyn and at autdrug stores where this blue MO from us can be ex= {full value or returned for cask, per cents within one year. and white sign (a07" Special is idiphyed OO To-Day and To-Morrow GERUI a Diamonds changed loon t — ¥ enema ft told the pric sale menns to x jamonds are beth and “I ut re ot ee with a, lure on o be nearly twice Miwa fang : it Diamonds direct Ww display of over millon worth of ‘itanwenda, plainly marked at HARLES A. KEENE Dinmonda, 180 Broadway, Save!4 Your Clothes Money If you want clothes that are properly made from good, stylis material—elothes t will fit you as though made to your measure— come to either of our two stores, We specialize in fashionable, popular-priced Clothes sr Men Women one Children and willingly extend easy terms of credit. NO DEPOSIT PY Uf Weekly Clothes Made to Order at Same Low Prices Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry. Same Terms oxen 7w. os bet. Sth a Oth St. uel : OX bet. sana 134th | | OPENS AN ACCOUNT, Hverything Hight. In Imperial Leather, Value EASY TERMS| FREE FURNITURE With Every Purchase Oven Menday and MB snturday Unit 10"

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