The evening world. Newspaper, March 10, 1913, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a an BLE AIT WRONG VICTIM +day morning, * gallery with @ friend, when a fight was AT WEST SIDE BALL Police Believe Shot That Felted] Lawrence Henry Was In- tended for Another. The police of the West F street station, after an ir the shooting of Lawrence Henry during | & ball at the Arbor Casino, Fifty-second street and Seventh avenue, early yester: | to-day began a hunt | among the old Chelsea Village gunme for the pistol toter who closed the dance with a near-murder Benry, a man of family, living at No. G8 West Thirtieth street, wae shot in| the groin and in in Roosevelt Hoxpita He declares he does not know who shot Lim, and his wife told the police he never had anything to do with the Bangs that infest the western edge of Manhattan. 1S ESE SERREEENDCERTES News Oddities A Berlin engineer announces an invention by which @ person can see what is going on tho es away, It is a combination of photography and telegraph. pected with the sending end of the wir picture, e and the picture at the with the apr Philadelphia Zoo i« Je because of “the high cost of living.” Food Int for the big animals has ine 40 to 60 per cent, in a year, and when offorea cheaper grate than of old the animals go on a hunger strike, ‘The historic Hotel Tontine in New Haven, built in 1825, has closed, It will ve torn down to make room for the new Post-Ofice, A Detroit man sent a box of clears by express to Milwaukee, paying 40 conta, The express company sent it by Parcel Post for 22 cents and made 18 cunts profit. Now, the shipper wants the United States to “do something about it.” Henry Myers, a retired baker, a mute, was burled in Greenwood to- day. The funeral was held yesterday, the services being attended by two score friends afflicted as he had been. The prayers and eulogy by the minister were translated into the sign language by another for the benefit of the deaf mutes because of the high to reports from Sea Breeze, Fla. He has to pay % cents a gallon at the local garage, the dealer, who pays full Standard Wil price for his supply, refusing to make a reduction to the Ol! King. or boat, but hesitate The Volunteer Firemen in Queens Borough threaten to strike because of the keyless alarm boxes installed In the sparsely settled sections by sloner Johnson, They have been kept on the jump anewering false alarm Loys, who because of the out of the way places in which boxes can get away easily, Capt. Walsh of the West Forty. ” bg ye ape ame Street station belteves tne |. Reform te a close association in Philadeiphia—very clone, Nine Judges have | Dubtiig Wad the feauit of a feud Appointed a board of eleven real estate assessors at $3.00 a year. The! Netweon guage of gunmen and. water-| om!" board Is made up of brothers, sons or clone relatives of the Judues | front thieves. He thinks Henry was 10g BoM | phot by mistake. Owney Madden, leader MISS MARBURY M scenic and religious nature. of the notorious “Gopher Gang,” was! BU yA ANAGER, Talks {Mustrated by tion pictures| shot in the abdomen in the same hall last Election night. He recovered, de-| clined to tell the police anything about | his troubles and packed new artiliery | for the man he heid responsible. Prior to this shooting, Madden had been arrested and then acquitted on th charge of muniering William Henshaw who had been suspected of squealing on the gang to the police. The feud be- tween the gunmen seemed to have! started with the slaying of Henshaw, | who wi ot down as he was helping | company” to @ car on) Ninth avenue. | When Owney was perforated, during a ball at the Arbor, his friends got busy and “Silent Bert’ Fitageraid was shot and killed in a lunch room at No, 723 Beventh avenue. “Dopey Ray” Calla- Ban was arrested for thie murder and| & witness was found to identify him.; ‘The theory was thet “Dopey Ray” was banding out gang justice to “Silent Bert” because of Madden having been laid low, Another theory was that “Bilent Bert’ had been shot because he Peached on “Stuttering” Walter leur, arrested in connection with © pumber of Harlem robberies, Last Saturday night “The Rambiers | Away” gave their annual ball in the, favorite shooting gallery of the gun- fen. Henry was there and was in the | Started. He was the only one to get! © bullet. When Henry fell, he yelled first for eth Marbury will take over the |@nd colored views w y Theatre to-morrow for a season, and with her advent into the ranks of managers another novelty will be added to New York's long list— that of a woman theatrical manager. is Miss Marbury's purpose to give eries of educational entertainments showing pictures of a scientific, k Davis, the y respondent in the Tur Italian war; Andon Smith, who will tell of Jong the Nile; Carroll Heck- . who will talk on art, and the Baroness A de Meyer, who will give “A Promenade Through Parts.” AAR STOPS FALLING, DANDRUFE DISAPPEARS—O5 CENT “‘DANDERINE” Save your Hair! Beautify It! Invigorate your Scalp! Danderine grows hair and we can prove it. Try as you will, after an application of Danderiae, You cannot finds single trace of dandruff or a loone or falling hair, and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks’ use, when will actually see new hair, fine and downy at first—yes, but really new hair—| growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine now will immed- iately double the beauty of your hair.] —now—that your hair, time. amasing—your hair will be |i and wavy and have an ap; rance of abundance; an incomparable lustre, softness and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and prove to yourself to-night .wife and then for a priest. After got his breath, he asked for a doctor. | Weary will recover, it was sald to-day It is the because R & G has the corset making. they follow strictly the comfortable, woman is getting. look comfortable It is the fashion to look easily soft lines. And you can't look comfortable unless you feel so, and feel so, if you wear an R & G corsets follow no fad. They follow strictly the fashion of the day, One woman in ten wears an R & G corset now. other nine, you are mizing the year-after-year satisfaction that the one There's an P&G corset built to fit you and suit you y. When you ce to the steve—insist on that one ‘our hair is as pretty and any—that it has een’ neglected ured by careless treatment— that’s all No diffrence how dull, faded, brittle] sof and scraggy, just moisten « cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through Fashion this Year to graceful, to have the sinuous, bending, You'll look so long grace of perfect lines, the easy comfort of sensible lines of your figure—they are as Stylish as they are If you are one of the ©: G corsets U'l you come to the one x Ges vcs to fit yous iad figure, ' NTR ar THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1918. MUNSEY SELLS NEWSPAPER. With Boston tity of Bayer Not Made Known. BOSTON, March 10.—Frank A, Munsey WALL STREET MISSES FUR OVERCOAT; ‘HAS A GUEST ARRESTED. Harold C. Lyons of Flushing Fails to Appear in Court, but 7 @ party at Lyon's home, Hyde walked out of his house with a fur overcoat. Since the night of the party Hyde, and the overcoat, according to Lyons, have been sojourning in Philadelphia. Hyde returned to Flushing last week Coot buying was tn evidence after] has sold his local morning paper, the | waleeonwas, "sere yl ae as Next half hour of trading in the! Boston Journal. ‘The announcement was Hyde Is Held. | hel 6 WRRFAWH. far en ba Leen bee are UN rally wat) made at the office of the Journal to-| Lionel Hyde, who describes himself 2® piaint, at which Hyde appeared to bs rn nde ined day, but the Identity of the purchaser] a coal merchant, with an office at No. | very much astonished, i we irre Was not made known. A week ago to-| 17 Park Row, and whose home, he says,| “I thought he was a good friend of dking pries to a new tow{@ay the price of the Journal was ad-|1s in Bronxwood Park was arrested to-| mine," he sald. “This thing wii! jan Pacific was very weak! Yanced from one cent to three cents {day on Broadway, Flushing, on the OF ie oC ee | 7, Ni see Lyons.” on foreign selling. land at that time Mr. Munsey said that| plaint of Harold C. Lyons of No, 211 The closing was activ nd weak he was attemptin experiment to) Central avenue, Flushing, Lyons says Fie Panitan Court ter teres oe e and we pting an Ps ; ¢ Feb, 15, followt in the Flushing Court for further ex- {determine whether Boston would sup-| that on the night of Feb. 15, n& amination to-morrow. Lyons did not ~ H ‘ ————— = | put in an appearance in court, nor did ‘port a three-cent morning paper. Ad Ot d [The Jourvat" wan tor many veare! CHILDREN WHO ARE SIGKLY Scrt"tettsMaremy ot No.'364 Sona Le. | recognized as one of the leading sup- | porters of the Republican party, It was purchased from Stephen O'Meara *| by Mr. Munsey in 190, and a few years | later the evening edition was discon- { tinued, Since the opening of the Inst national campaign the Journal has used the cause of the Progressive party, and there have been frequent re- ports that men prominent in that party were negotiating for control of the pa- per. It was generally paper circles to-day that local Pro: gtessives had taken over the Journal but at the pariy headquirters It wai : Amey = LANGUOR, orw rogular on tae is be promptly augmented with scoTrs Va coats and Suits at Cash or Credit You can buy your Spring outfit on the Club Plan, i you prefer to make Payments at Intervals p— } — {-) One of the Busiest Sections of the Store To-Day The Semi-Annual Sale of Women’s $4.50 & $5.00 “BURT” SHOES at $3.25 Only once each season are Edwin C. Burt Shoes sold below regular prices—when the manu- facturers send us a large shipment of these standard quality shoes at a liberal concession as a vigorous start to the season’s business. Burt's Patent Leather Button Walking Boots, with kid or cloth top, with high arch, new receding toe, medium and high Cuban heels. 0 4 A Burt's Gunmetal Calf Button Boots, with O cloth tops, Cuban heels, Burt's Vici Kid © Boots, in button or lace style, with new, slender toes and militai at the bargain "Blue Onion" Sets Regular Value $12.98 Regular Value $28.48 $39.00. 100 pieces fine German china with $25 Theodore Haviland Dinner Sets, One of these sets would be a surprise] tions with gold treatment to your Summer Bungalow. jece perfect. ‘O'Neil! House Furnishing Store, Basement. a few of the many special offers: $40.00 814x1014 Wil- ton Rug $34.75 Special at These are onl $45.00 9x12 Wilton RE iat at $38.90 Special at | | | | | Oriental Oriental pattern, patiern, | ‘ie Q Arttote, “hai Tea, Mites, aT TD Artlae, 188 Diy 1 50 ‘ : 98c for any piece—we reserve the right to limit quantities, No, M : o ° | fell! Momefuraishing Store— Basement, Nee O'Neill-Adams ot Avenue,20th to 22d Sir . Prema ast Saeocnoven pted in news: | We Give Surety Stamps Free With All Purchases and Redeem Them in Merchandise®) O'NEILL-ADAM sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street © " An Unprecedented Feat in Modern Merchahdising This Gigantic Sale of Men’s $18 to $25 New Spring Over- The Very Newest Models, Materials and Colors for Spring Wear—Reproduced from the Designs Recently Approved by the Most t xclustve High Grade Tailors in London and New York—Styles for Young Men and for Conservative Men. O'Netil’s Big Store for Dad and the Boys. Four Entrances Directly from Sixth Avenue, All have welted soles. The best $4.50 and 85.00 foot- wear for women in America O'Neill Main Store, Second Floor. High Class DINNER SE TS—Bargains! Theodore Haviland Sets\Old Abbey French Sets the popular Blue Onion decorations.| 100 pieces, various artistic decora-|China Dinner Sets, very handsome Every|decorations treated. wit gold. Special Sale Prices on Tine RUGS During this sale O'Neill's is featuring a standard line of wool Wilton and extra Axminster rugs, the latter with Oriental patterns in rich colors that won't fade. Big Shipment of New Axminster Rugs Underprice ‘ Rich colorings, oH." $8.50/0"... $15.50] si05° $23.50 Most Women who once use Aluminum Cooking Ware never afterwards use any other. 3,000 Pieces NEW Aluminum Ware Our well known “Best in the World Aluminum Cooking Ware”’—every piece guaranteed. Mothers who vali \) the health of their ehil dren, should never be } pe MOTHER GRAY'S | Etim ce for use when needed. They Break up Colds, Relieve Feverish- ness, Worms, Cot tion, Headache, Teeth. bed disorders and Stom. ach Troubles, Used bg Mothera DE MARK” any Substitate. for 92 Drug fistaeverywhere 25c. Trial ace FREE. Address, A.S. Olmeted, LeRoy, N.Y. For That Headache * pain relievers brin Berves and absence nett stimulants, depreseante, nor it forme ‘day Quantity o 10c and 26¢ Packages: yeare ‘They never fail. Soldbs | | way, Manhattan, who is named in the omplaint as having seen Hyde en- veloped in the coat depart from the Lyons home. The Lyons fay is very well known in Flushing. “Get the knack of the NOTCH” ISc, each—2 for 28e. Lord & Taylor Founded 1826 New Spring Models in C. B. Corsets Coutil. $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 8 $3.00 Batiste. $1.00, $2.0¢, $2.50 & $3.00 Fancy Broche. $3.50, $4.00 8 $5.00 Blankets, Comfortables & Bedspreads at greatly reduced prices Blankets Single bed size—pair $2.95, $4.25 and $5.85. Regularly %4.00, $5.50 and $7.50 Double bed size—pair $3.25, $5.00 and $7.50. $12.50 heels, and other good styles. price of, pair. . $3 2 5 o ‘Take 22d Bt. Klevators, O Regular Value 619.98, $16.75 100 Pieces of Old Abbey French touch of $29.50 6x9 Wilton Rv ciate $24.50 Special'at In many pretty eee $26.50 Values at Regularly $4.50, $7.00 and $10.50 Comfortables Cotton filled, plain borders. Regularly %3.00—82.25 Wool filled, plain borders. Regularly $5.00—4#3.75 Bedspreads . -95c, $1.10 & $1.35 1.35 and $1.75 Regularly $1.10, Satin finish (scalloped). Regularly $4.00—82.95 English printed. ....... Regularly $1.75—81.25 Mushn Sheets 8 Pillow Cases Sheets Value At 99.. 85c. .64c/ 49 99.. 94c..70¢ 45 99. . $1.04. .78c Pillow Cases Value At 3814. .22c. 17% 99. 81.15. .86c|59 x 38}4. .28c. .21c 108. .$1.25. .95¢ 154 3814. .80c. .24c Steamer Rugs Tartans and Fancy Plaids. Regularly $6.00 an 63 x 72x 81 x 90 x 90 x $4.50 & $6.75 Special Values in Dressmakers’ Supplies Dress Shields Imperial “Double Nainseok" | Speci’ ““Deuble Nainsook” Size Pair Doz. Value|Size Pair Doz. 3 19¢ $1.05 2.64) 8 10 90c 4 @le 82.15 82.86) 4 1% $1.00 5 2c 82.65 $3.30| 5 I5c 6125 $1.85 Spool Silk Taffeta Bindings , Spool. Doz. Price. Doz, L. & T.large size..45c $4.50] Blue Ribbon....18c $1.40 L. & T, Ysise....24c $2.25 | Colored.........13¢ $1.40 Special, yds. 5c 50c| Special quality... 8c 90c Hooks and Eyes Black & white, 15c per box 1.75 per dozen boxes. Value $2.50 doz. boxes, Dressmakers’ Scissors Light weighi.... S35 Heavy weight .... Sundries Chicago Feather Bone, Bank Pins, 14-lb. box. .20¢ box 68¢}J, J, Clark’s Cotton, 200 Basting Cotton, 500 yds., doz. 35c Mohair Skirt Braid, 5-yd. i sees. doz, $1.00 Slip-Out Collar Supporter, 4on a card.....doz, 65¢ 98c Article, R ke “pide ity Rez. Price, 50 a cet,New York City ————! pieces. . Mercerized Skirt Braid, 5- yard epee cao 85c Serge Belting, |. pes, # Plece '78¢ Cable Cord, per ball. . .50c Wavy Wire Supporters, doz, 9c Dress Shot Tape (10 yds.), Piece 65¢ Broadway & 20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St. Te NR TE TE TT A a ER Tr Nee,

Other pages from this issue: