Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
iz WATCH BURGLARS ROB SHOP OF SILK: * AND THEY Gave AS A GasY ; pay : UNDERSTAND Detectives, Tipped Off by Stool Pigeon, Lay in Wait for Thieves. | “@ ves jo THE Five young men, all looking bustnese | SuePRacerTs Surry’ ike and industrious, hopped down from A tuck that stopped in front of a Junk beers deme shop at Nos. 4 and 6 First street early! Jacob Zeidman, New Dic- Jamey, gina’ Almost avy one wn ww| ator of What Women them would have are them for work- Will Wear This Spring, wut not Detectives Witiame, Newon| Started Hie Career by Snipping Scaps as a Child in His Father’s ahd Foley of the Elizabeth street star ‘tioa, who lurked in shadows yee the Little Shop in St. Pe- tersburg. way. The detectives knew that the crew on the truck were burglars and that, Instead of being engaged in legiti- tate enterprise, they were out on an elaborately planned thieving expedition. A gtool pigeon had given the detectives advance Information ia aot intortere|f#e Got Gold Medal for when the men attempted tu get into the| Resigning the “‘Suffra- gette Suit’ and Now Is Made Head of the Fash- ion Committee-of the National Ladies’ Tail- ors’ and Dresemakers’ Association. Junkshop, swearing under thelr breath when they found that the securely fa tened door would not yield to the! Puehing. Nor did the detectives spring Out and selze the burglars when the; enw a jimmy produced and the door pried open. THEY CARRY OUT SIX HEAVY . Baas. The men went inside, and presently feappeared bearing large buriap tags, Which, from the evident effort required to move them, were quite heavy. These Marguerite Mooere Marshall. ‘Who ts Jacob Seidman? If you do not know that you confess yourself to fashion If not to fame une known. What Petronius wae to Rome, what Beau Brummel was to England, that Ia Jacob Zeidman to Amenioa. Ry the verdict of his peers he, and he atone, has been hailed arbiter elegantiarum— In plain United States, the fashion boss, For he has just been elected chalemaa of the Fashion Comnuttee for the. ae sombled National’ Laties' Tatlors and Dressmakers’ Association, and he {s the | for another man in a tailoring estab- law and the prophet of American dress, |Mahment at No. 18 West Twentieth From the styles <p soventeon States he | street. I worked hurd ana 1 lived care- fully; to save my money. What did 1) care for the restaurants and the thea- | measure twenty-four Inches or twenty-' trea when I had my beautiful dream} five inches—whother our hobbjee shall (Of clothes! But to make them realities Neleon, with drawn revolvers, ordered | hobble us !n one a quarter yards of ' Must have my own shop. And at the Teas thie gurvenes material or in one and three-quarter /end of three yearn I found that 1 could | The five jumped to the pavement ani! yards—these and other wesghty ques- )#¢} Up for myself. . four of them obeyed orders, but one| tions are ail at the disposal of our | HE MAKES A QUIET, MODEST fled. The detectives shouted a commang | sovereign ruler, Jacod Zeidman, 1 TART. to halt, threatening to shoot, but com- | life to Hie Highnese-and may he have; uy a 4 | mand and threat were ignored by the | Mercy upon his faithful subjects ET et ae wae at | funaway and three or four shots were! The history of the rise to power of bi t Ninety-third street, £/ Grea at, him as he founded, the corner |@very non-hereditary monarch {# bound |#tartet out quletly trying to build up inte Fourth street, \ to be interesting, Jacob Zeidman is no | MY, ase bans ri ged thought " . pending on a FIND THAT Tak CONGIETS OF peterticn to She rele, Bor the Fash °° tarde corps of eanistants, | A ils present lofty eminence had its be- | Policemen trom the Kast Fitth strect Winning in @ dark, crowded, little shop “Z found originality my great | Station came to the | of the’ away in one of the narrow streets of St. Getectives an@ went with the entire | Petersburg. abourd the truck, back to theiW® CAME OF A RACE OF Street tenement, where the pris- ghera were compelled to bring the bags TAILORS, HE CONFESS! @ut and load them on the truck, “1 came of @ race of tailors," he con- bags, six in number, were lifted on to the truck and then the expedition moved away. The detectives followed, scat- ting in such @ manner thp attention of the five we. Doesnt Uke HE NiLo Figure Now WE SAYS “THE FRENCH ARE STRAIN Our DRESS STUFF riven to Second Avenue and north to Kast Fourth street, faiting in front of No, 112, a tenement house, where the burlap bags were car- ried to @ vacant room on the ground Bat still the detectives refrained from interference. They simply followed again when the truck started away and Ot into First avenue, between Fourth ond Fifth street But just before Fifth street was feached Foley ran out and selzed the bridles of the horses and Williams and ists, But are bottom, Skirt topes will eight inches, ‘The coat x eo happy ac the Fifth street station and the prison- an@ truck taken to the Elizabeth etreet station. There the youths under arrest said they were: Fred Synope, twenty-one, of No, 6 Rivington street; Samuel Reich, “And now, Always had I the love of the craft, bi ways T sought my own ways and 4 signe. As a chad in the cerner of my father’s shop I drew my own fanctes with broken chalks on scraps of oloth, out Guplication, is bound to win ont e Paris. ed in my Ninety-third street ght years and I worked hard, but it was as an artist works, Grad-| now clothes?" And though Mr. ry in, of No. 7 Rivington street; | aud cut ahd fashioned them into gar-|ually my customers came to put a ur Relas, nineteen, of No. 1% East|ments, at which my good father held|complete trust in my ideas and de- | Geeond street, and Bernard Balist, nine- “The boy te either a|eigne, and they knew ti 1 would | teen, of No. 154 Norfolk street. ‘They refused to name the man who away and declined to tell where hired the truck. Pee Sk. LD BRADLEY MARTIN FUNERAL ‘ATTENDED BY NOTABLES. Services Held in Christ Church, _London—Family to Bring Body Here for Burial. . LONDON, Feb. &—A funeral service for the Inte Bradley Martin ¢ N York was held this forenoon in Christ Charch, Down street, Mayfair, and was Attended by the staff of the United States Embassy and a number of per- ius!’ he oried. ork late into the night, if necessary, | to finish their orders at the time I had promised. I enjoyed it too, for my work was my life. And then I wanted more room, for I was not a young be- ginner any longer, So I moved into my present quarters at No. 73 Weat Elghty-eighth street. It was thei longed to the most enlightened, that I designed one of the supreme most civilized people in the world." triumpha of my career, the Suffragette “And so you came to Americat I/ Mult, for which I was given @ gold Prompted. °' medal.” “In the end, for ft wae my destiny.”| WOMEN ‘ GET A CHANCE . TO Mr. Zeidman agreed, solemnly, “But 7 first I went to Vienna, and worked WEAR THETROUSERS. =, there @ while, to earn money for the| Amd then Mr. Zeldman showed me long trip oVer the oc this sensational model, which consists teen years ago I came to America, a| of ® coat exactly like a man's and a| young boy just over twenty, ready to; Pantaloon skirt with four pockets and apne prominent in society. bowin my life work. the ends ef the eousers +. “ . Although Mr, Zeidman is very proud} ‘The pody is to be taken to the United high fee re ineeirny of thia suit, in his position of dictator | States for burial as soon as the Martin |Jaunch myself on my independent ca-| he will. magnanimously refrain from! qisposed of. family ip able to make arrangements. | reer. For three long years I worked | commanding it for ® feminine public | 1 measures as follows: ‘Was not the chanee for my genius to de itself in Russia, Like a bird, like « lark, it craved the atmosphere of freedom. Not for the Russians would I create the artistic tr.umphs that I felt ‘were ewarming in my brain. The: trade as a “perfect bad,” admitted Mr, y the bust ? I remarked, Venus?" figure than would welsh other Great Ones, King}, In the Magazine: “C Q,” 4 new serial story of love and tragedy by Arthur bat one of the best known present-day writers of thrilling venture. Visit to a Turkish Harem, illustrated 4 of the Sultan’s favorite wife, Fatima. : g “Samuel Maryland Mapes, U. S. A., Patriotic Smuggler,” a ye} great story by Charles lle, Gg Astounding Craze for Gambling Among Women. q by an official photograph From Obscure Tailor Shop in Russia Comes Man Who Now Rules Fashions' some end one inch above the waist lime, and the full- ness will be gathered into a bos pleat at the middle of the back, with a single pleat oh either side, Coats are from twenty-four to twenty-seven inches in length. ‘The blouse’ cabaret coat has Deen displaced by the swallow-tall ending in an invisible point at the back. Tho distance from the collar to the’ poimt will measure thirty- ‘The fullness in the front of the goat will be pleated, not shirred as heretofore, ven will be three- quarter length and shirred at the 4" THE EVENING WORLD, SAT Which still Includes some antl-suffrag- | decrees, to take effect this spring: quarters to two yards in circumfer. ence. They will be draped at the | ‘The bage Were each found to contain | fersed to me. “I was born In Russia, me, An individaal, ber over the shoulder. This is a ek trimmings and remnants weighing | where my father and my grandfather ie why the American tailor @istinct novelty. New colors are Shout 80 pounds. This toot was left at|/and hig father before him were tailor who designs his own stylos, with- raspberry and chestnut. I suggested, “what sort | of figure do you order the American woman to have for the wearing of her Zeidman averred that his creative genius worked on sartorial rather than physiological Hines, I can state with confidence that the fashion dictator's favorite figure Meight, 6 tect 6 ipches. Bust, 34 inches, Waist, 88 inches. Hips, 39 inches. The figure is known to the “Though the ‘perfect 36 is not at all Zeldman. woman is & feet § Inches In height. sure is 38 inches, inches and hips 42 inches, “She's more like the Venus de Milo,” “Won't you approve of the “The American woman has a better any dead god 170 pounds it alive,” he remarked with the lofty lese turned UP.\ Tajeste shown by Great Ones toward So let us consider the Venus myth The Queen ts dead—long|® Wildcat. | | —| of his first modestly “This Her walst 2% that were | No trace of them h dows street, . 4 RWDPUBUICCARDE DESTROY ORCHIDS Hide in Conservatory at Night and Leave It a Ruin—Cut London Telegraph ires. LONDON, Feb. &—Milltant suffra- gettes destroyed many vaiuable plants wad did other damage in the hothouses of tho New Horticultural Gardens early to-day when they developed another part of thelr plan of campaign to force the British Government to give the vote to women, | It in believed a number of women hid themselves in the gardens overnight, for this morning long before the 4 came on duty It was found that a large | number of rare orchids had been up- rooted and scattered in ail dfrections, Thirty panes of glass in the orchid houses had been broken and the total damage is estimated at from $4,000 to $5,080. When the night watchmen had made the'r rounds at 1 o'clock in the morning everything was still in good order, and the women must have jaid their plans weil beforehand in order to find hiding piaces where they could ie in security. been found. The window-smashing raids also con- tinue tn London. Two immense win- in an establishment tn Oxford which has heretofore been im- mune because of the proprietors’ con, tributions to the women's funds, were broken du is the night. The postal authorities to-day issued ® fiotice that there would be delay on ail telegrams despatched from the South to the North of England as the result of the cutting of the telegraph wires in the provinces by the suffragettes yes- terday. ——___ 800,000 for Stableman. PORT DEPOSIT, Md., Feb. &—George Todd, @ stableman of this place, has fallen heir to §S00,000 by ¢ht death of grandfather who went West yearn ago. Todd was summoned to Wilming- ton, Del, to-day and told of the for- tune. When asked what he would do when he got his money, Todd said he would try to repay his friends for ther kindn and would be governed by thte advice of his business ¢ricnds. atarted it Thor fnehes o Brooklyn legh Siamese “dumbbell” e Charles V. K Pa,, yesterday. slipped from his pocket. to retrieve the timepiece. in his hand, Mrs. Tomaso 4'Ornell $100,000 to get rid of her appendix. fell in love over the wire. A “no seat no fai dances from the junior prom. A rural mail oarrier at Barnwell, pound liver pudding, two babies and \and pudding unharmed, ZINE— 16 PAGES IN COLORS 16-PAGE JOKE BOOK— A LAUGH TO EVERY LINE COUPON GOOD FOR PICTURE OF LINCOLN AND HIS CABINE WORDS AND MUSIC OF “SYMPATHY,” A LATE SONG HIT URDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1913. SUF FRAGETTES NOW Miss Elinor D. Wise, Wed To-Day, Is Newest eA ant Duchess }' AS (VERLORD OF CAFE News Odditics Montclair leads 1 the egg contest to-day. one inside the other, orn cackled and an eg diameter was added to the exhibit. But the wise Plymouth Rock owned by Charles Poect! of Montclair waited, and now enters the lst with a two perfect eg jer of Winamac, Ind., paid $100 for The porker had just swallowed Keoler’s $200 watch, which | A Winamao butcher will explore the porcine interior wife of a millionaire of Lima, Peru, That te th herself, her family and attendants to Paris, where the operation is to be performed. They arrived here yesterday. | A broomstick isn't @ “deadly weapon,” \8o Justice Blackmar of Brooklyn held in for carrying one, which the police called a “bludgeon.” supporting it declare that 100,000 “strap hangers SF FREE—EXTRA—SPECIAL 24-PAGE MAGA 8. BALTIMORE, Fe Douglass Wise, daug! of the late! Commander Frederick M. Wise, U. 8. N., was married at the Cathedral here to-day to Armand, Duc de Richellea et de Fronsac, of France, Cardinal Gibbons performed the ceremony at a low mass, the nuptial mass not being sung during Lent. ‘The ushers were Count Eugenio de Villafranche Soisons of Italy, Ernesto | Begn! Del Piatta of Paris, Josiah Macy | of Morristown, N. J., John Mack of Sal- timore, Harry Miller of New York and J. Sterrett Gittings of Paltimore, ‘The given away by her brother, Miss Elinor/ ‘LOUIS MARTIN OUSTED THAT BEARS HIS NAME - | Tenderloin, Astonished, Asks | Why—M. Albert Grisch, Late- ly of Pare, Successor. s | Louts Martin Is no longer overlord at the Cafe Martin, on Broadway, bear | Vorty-recond street. M. Albert Griseh, lately of Paree, sin his stead, and in the T asking why ‘The directors of the company whieh owns the business inet the other day and | voted Mr, Martin out and M, Grivel iy derioin, astonished, they are the change to take place instanter, It took place quietly and with mo 5 demonstra of any wort, Mr, Martie is still a part owner in the business end it will continue to bear his ne Mr. he best known restaurant men M, Grisch a8 sumething of 4 reputation tn that deay Pavis and was boss in Martin's place at Fifth avenue and Twenty-sixth | street. BOWELS BAD, LIVER | TORPID?_ GASCARETS, If constipated, bilious, headachy. | stomach sour, take a Cascaret —Dime a Box. breakfast was served to about two fra na att dred guests, quite a number of whom foul tants ‘and to i anne New Yorks Phitadelonie and ireath, disziness, can't sleep, are bi The Duc 46 Richelieu, who te the in- 0M _feRvous aml upset, bothered here fe Richelton, wie tm thorn. With a stck, gassy, disordered stom r no HAMS ANG Nowiesy a or have back-ache and feel worn nitles of Cardinal is halt out, American, Hiis mother wax Alice) Are you keeping your bowels clean Heine, daughter of Micoael lieine, ® with Cascarets, or merely forcing # b \pussageway every few days with fs rare Its, cathartic pills or castor oil? le ite Own Pub! i mportant. TOP! » Kan, Pov, ! ‘ascarets work while you sleep; Hodges signs a bill pas e and regulate the stomach, jby the House, Kansas will b e the sour, undigested and fer- own pudlisher of text ‘menting food and foul gases; take the the {dren of the > excess bile from the liver and carry Wy pene | oe Has passed Senate. | gut of the system all the constipated only by her niece, Pupila will De able to bt the tooks | waste matter and™poison in the joe Following the servic a wedding ‘at actual cost |tines and bowels. . —-—!| A Cascaret to-night will straighten , you out by morning—a_ 10-cent box KILLS THREE OF HIS MEN, |from any drug store will keep your He nach sweet liver and bowels reg ANSVILLE . Feb. $,—Atlen | ular aud head clear for months. Don't Von Behren, trenty-three years ols, [forget the children, They tove Cas- Aasistant superintendent of a wood-|carets because they tuste good—do working plant owned by iilx tather, B, | Ceod--never gripe or Fick A Staten Island Wyandotte shells and all complate. Joined by a shell tube an inch long. how at Canonsburg, ‘The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court‘here has decided “notsy rats and mice in the walls of a house” justify @ tenant in breaking his lease. Charles Williams, a rich recluse of Philadelphia, was found dead In his home with @ newspaper clipping of his wife's death, forty y 8 ago, clutched will pay timated cost of the trip of Migs Irene Woodside, phone operator, and Lawrence P. Fay of Pitt burgh | He proposed, and they eloped to Wheeling, each other for the firat time when they met at the railroad station. eee cing t least not in the hands of a man. ing Louis De Fiore, held in jail etreet car.ordinance is pending in Chicago, and figures dally. rried thei Cornoll authorities batred the tango, turkey trot, grapevine and slmilar C., had in his parcel post load a nine- attacked by He used the wooden leg to vanquish the cat and saved babies q York, gq Society's How Princes, Grand Dukes, Earls and Even Kings Fall in Be- hind “Tony” Drexel, the well-known American millionaire. The Almost Unbelievable Density of Population in New Recipes for Delectable Dishes Prepared by Seven of New York’s Most Famous Chefs (Add these to your cook book.) F, Von Behren, shot negro laborers to- trouble with them ea threatened to kill him. Walter Washington, John Gordon. Von Behren w nd Killed three He had had er and said they The cead are nd Henry sted Women’ Best Interests | demand that every woman should | spare herself unnatural suffering by obtaining safe and proper help when physical ills and nervous PAPE’S! BREAKS. A GOLD AT ONCE, First dose of Pape’s Cold Compound ends all grippe misery. depression occur, When ailments and suffering come to you remem: ber there is one safe, effective gentle and well-tried remedy 4, | You can surely end Grippe and break up the most severe cold either in hea chest, back, stomach or limbs by taking a dose of Pape's Cold Compound every two hours until three consecutive doses are taken. It promptly relieves the most miser- able headache, dullness, head and nose tetuffed up, feverishness, sneezing, sore |throat, mucous catarrhal discharges, running of the nose, soreness, stiffness and rheumatic twinges. Take this wonderful Compound as directed, without interference with your usual duties and with the knowledge that there is nothing else in the world which will cure your cold or end Grippé| misery as promptly and without any other assistance or bad after-effects ann 25-cent package of Pupe's Cold of special value to women. Beecham’s Pills remove the cause of suffering; they clear the system and by their tonic, helpful action relieve you of headaches, backe aches, lassitude and nerve rebellion, Try a few doses and know the difference—know how Beecham Vills will help your feelings; now they strengthen, ‘invigorate Preserve ' Compound, which any druggist can and- Protect jsupply—aecept no substitute—contains {no quinine—belongs in every home. py betie Mating wha erar ine Gold everywhere la boxes 19¢, In the Magazine: Next and Greatest Dance—the “One-Step.”