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4 ad | ‘GAMBLERS ARE HEARD, | 4 wie the suffragettes aye wush to pa- je 0 lame ax tver * tripped the * to parade we me Weel ye the hoorse?* “Donald | would be indloted were I te lend you « horse, not perhaps, be- GAME OF “STUSS” €xpert Borrows Deck of Cards | aargonzola Served in Courses} * From Reporter to Demon- strate Play. in Case Against Policeman Duffy. | thet no person whose native tongue ix Wagtich can manter the intricactes of etues,"" the national indoor past- time of the east side and certain sve- tiena of our fair city known as Harlem. | Twenty-one memoers of the Kupreme Court Grand Jury know more about “etuss" than the man who invented It, for under the able guidance of ‘Huten" Gladatone, one of Harlem's most nimble Aagored deulers, all the lesson in the @entic art were shown them to-day. Even Assiatant District-Attorney John Kirkland Clark, who onve asked neem, in all the innocence of hin “how to deal crap is & pant Rew at dealing “stuns.” IN THE FASCINATING WINED AND OND and Washed Down in Yo, There ! dead man's chest, but there were eigh- Seinmoned to Give ¢ Testimony |" tewaWide (é the ateamer Napoli of the Itallan Line. They didn't have any bottle of rum, but they had caske | Mfareh 30 until this mo a eneatnael on wine, lemons and gorgonzola} : mn 1 bab dagaagihen! only Feanon they didn't attempt to leave the oh ‘ 4 St te & base Hide! hereafter to deciare| Cheese ship before was that there waa no op- peepestirere mee ee rere The Napoll sailed from Palermo on March 30 and arived in New York on April 14, remained un hour and went to Philadelphia. Here she discharged 700 pasnengers ami 39,000 cases of lemons and her wine, Then ahe came | back to New York and to-day sailed! for the Mediterranean. William = Hartfeld, general agent of| omy of the line, left his new office at No. 24| \meitent, l Whitehall street early thie morning and went to Pier B, Jersey City, to imapect the Napoli before ahe satled. Mr. HMart-| ¢ feild tm over six feet in height and is dulit in proportion, aoared, but what he got in Jersey City | Was a profound shock, being measured and he went into the hold THE EVENING WUKLD, The men managed to | tis Gear ee ed | Announces His Candidacy for Bor- ee laud. Mt Tare} ough President of the Bronx in who hasn't the plieht to land, Mr, Hart~ | Neld anw $7.00 Konmpering away trom | oat Primaries. him, and that was another shock Hut he fot his man busy in half an he td captured the runaway | st Thies were clapped t tte Pe > | Fifield ortered 4 made of the hold al they found a bat cave + time that hi Mee he now chine bureau as engineer tr “hin j f the State Tax Stream of Chianti. ‘i jeptember primaries, While Mr, M4 jas maintained his member he ts considered an in- teen men on a dead man'« chest. o a couldn't tell what he was going to do jeven if he dif land in the cou fret thing they was theld cheese, and the men heave, lio, and a bottle of rum.” werent fifteen men on any ft He lives at land Fifty: downtown real to ent some gorgonzola made a wry face ‘They Kor a lemon, ali hold of the right,” said “but it was nothing would have got had they made their escape. PICKS “CLUE OUT OF F HAT. of wine Since ng they iived the general agent; tw what we Detective Kaocks It Of Man's A hat whioh Detective Henne of the Fort Hamiiton police station knocked off the head of a stranger at Fifth and Bay Ridge avenues, Bay Ridge, will be offered in evidence a ‘anger to prove that he in nne picked up the hat a ed, when he noticed the Initi aide. It was a gray fedora hat. Just such « hat wes taken from “2 Thomas A. Stockdale's home, No. 100 ieraill | Seventy-necond street, Hay Ridge, when it was robbed on April 1, The burglar portunity offered them, or they were |too drunk to take advantage of it." EIT, SHIPPING NEWS. PORT OF ABW YORK. INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, ARRIVED, He te no panily ana, At wery. Raver ‘Withete 31 uroV. nine patio, lafovmdiand Rerparten, Potsdam, itotter ia OUTGOING sheen Ps, left a green fedora hat, with the in- jitiats “Hf. D. N." inside, which had been |taken from Harry D, Norwood's Bay Hidge home on March 30. ‘The vessel was Early in his life he once went S Abe” Jacobs and his partner, into m bat cave. Any one who has been | m. W. de Gran oume, peekeb"tee tes atk wise ta wenn “Butch” Gladstone, proprietors and | In a bat cave knows what happens when Jecxsonrille, rested, that he was Matthew Patchell, general manager's of a well-regulated | the bate go Mapping about. ity of Auania, twenty yeare old, of No. ¢ Bay Ridge game in Bixteenth street, wore witnessen to-day Before the Grand Jury, which Is con> tinuing its Investigation into the charge that Police Wergeant Peter J. Duffy was an able exponent of the art of col- Jecting graft in Harlem. Duffy already f= under indictment, but Jacobs and Gladstone, two important witnesses against him, had fied and had only been rounded up by Chief Process Berver Al Berwynd. It was to get their testimony 9m record that they were taken before the Grand Jury to-day. ‘fanaa POINTED OUT WRONG mA. JACOBS, { * Jacobs and Gladstone had Proven an | Qlusive duc—ae elusive, the process | in o “atuse’’ One Hundred and fo @ man she ald was her husband. He wan taken before the Grand Jury—and @acn't Jacobs at all. That worthy changed his address ten times—but was sounded up jast night. Together with “Ashley Bhea of Harlem, who hed fur- Bished their names to the DistricteAt- fterney, they were taken to-day before the Grand Jurors. While “Butch” was still in the inner Sanctorum, supposed te be narrating ‘the secrets of graft and telling how it Was all done, Assistant Distriet-~Attor- ney Clurk appealed to waiting reporters for a deck of cards, Just Mke that! As though revorters carried playing cards around in their pockets. The ene tire corps, {risked collectively, failed to Qsnay anything more deadly than police cards. One reporter foolishly offered to buy @ deck if ho were promised @ chance to jt in the game with the Grand Jurors. bought the deck (cost 15 cents om Hopter street) and presented them with * his compliments to the Grand Jurors, declaring a perfect willingness te take @ hand himself if the limit wasn't more than ao quarter, @RAND JURORS WOULDN'T PLAV WITH REPORTER, Although he is known as a consist- @mi loser and had money, the Grand durere refused the chance and elected Ww play the game alone, Which may he according to Blackstone end the Code of Criminal Procedure, but whigh iun’t fair to the man who bought the cards, However, the Grand Jurets, ever mindful of their oath not to reves! Grand Jury secrets, barred outsiders and “sat in” with “Butch” alone “Butch” must have known all the se- crete of the yume called ‘stuss’ too, for he kept the Grand Jurore entertained for an hour, Then pe cards fvet Alaad rer geenet to the reparte with the Grand Jury "adjourned ntl until + Without filing any more in- pecwonte against the oft-indicted Mr, A "athe “jouer” wr all im the deck when it was returned. Query-Do you play “stuss” with the er? _—-Ss DONALD M’FADYON CAN'T GET HORSE FOR PARADE. He's Six Feet Two, Weighs 250 Pounds and Believes in Votes for Women, Donald McKenzie MacPherson Mac- Fedyon, “Hoot mon,” 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighing 260 pounds in his Kilts, crowded into Commissioner Kd- wards's oMfce to-day und sald: “Mon, weel ye lent me a hoo: “A horse!" exclaimed “Bly Bill,” “I haven't 4 horse in the department stout enough to carry the kes of you, They are all busy hauling derricks, And why do you want @ horse?” “Weel, mon," explained Donald Me- Kensie MacPherson MacFaydon, "it's! rade, an’ an oause I was letiing out city property but, because of the cruelty to animals clause’ weld the Commissioner, “But I may endeavor to lend you a cart.” 14's call to fame in the suffrage ne #hupy Of an adver- ood laoking nen’ He fo #& Membe 4 Hey wsisitad e and is ‘fnule a she. women wio wan Mr, Martheld didn't wee any bate, but! im cia, aaain™™ 4} ge TO ORDER Breoklyn. Most Modern D: y-Cold-Air Fur Storage Vault on Premises Furs Repaired & Remodelled at Specially Low Prices. Bonwit TELLER & Co. Will Hold Tomorrow, Wednesday, A Most Extraordinary Sale Women’s Afternoon Gowns At a Greatly Reduced Price Shadow Lace-Top Gowns With Draped Skirts of Meteor or Charmeuse draped fine shadow lace, over flesh with French Brilliants—united — a er draped skirt of meteor or char- meuse by a setae ores o3%. gree of material, al 29.50 Formerly 49.50 Ton setiee rorien oltly Fifth Avenue at 38th Street USTEROLE Quick Rote From Rheumatism! ' Com; lete, A Mslhidglay has relieved thousands b) Width U mw § 48 from the torturing sins of rheumation, Get a jar at once ‘treme the nearest drug store, It ig clean, white ointment made with the oil of mustard. Beller thane mustard plaster and does not blister. Brings ease and comfort while it is being | rubbed on! | MUSTEROLE is recommended by doekern ond Burge nurses. Millions of ee are for Bronchitis sthaa--Neurelgia — ~ beumatism— Lum- Aches of the Back or tore Muscles— Bruises ted VootConds of ” 42 Inch Win- ( dows..... Orders Taken Thig Week Only All Ordera x ; Hung When -3s Wanted z Frames and" fittings are the STRE I renin , best galvanized in quartet just easil trust. At ‘drvugiat 5c and 50c om are John at 5 Standard ool Te- H and o cpevial large Ronpital wise cate 30. ersible duek in fast color stripes. Any length ca cnet Bo pobaite yout 4 desired made at this sale price. el am | the, aE) com Bc Custom-Made Slip Covers |! tad doar ewnings sabatertially mae at = ae — Chelsea 8700 of Send Vestal. 5-Piece Sets, of Any Size—Complete at. $ 98 This Week Only Oy offer is fer making Slip Covers for any S-piece framepar ite complete— of oe | may fast color Belgian Greed tater At this price no mail or telephone orders can befilled. Orders must b ed by customers in person. Sunday World Wants Dept., ¢th Floor. Work Monday Wonders. re! ee ee Ne *UMBDAY, Ectite Lest, Patent and Dull Calf Colonials with the new Louis Cuban heel. APHKIiL 232, 1913. Fi cede " A th "fee t you often find your new shoes a little uncomfortable at first? If so, try Queen Quality Shoes. They require no “breaking-in.” Their exceptional flexibility is no mere advertising claim. It is a spe- cial and scientific feature of their construction that is conceded every- where. One fitting will convince you. And in this season's large group of Queen Calby styles you'll find all the new- fashions in shapes, leathers, fabrics and ornaments. $3.50 to $5.00 A few at $6.00 QUEEN QUALITY BOOT SHOP 32 West 34th Street Midwey between the Waldorf and the McAlpin aT jf Eatablished Half a Century Special Sale Housekeeping Goods For Summer Homes, Etc. We shall offer this week a very desirable collection of Housekeeping Linens and Bed Coverings, suitable for use in country homes, camps, yachts, etc. The assort- ment is very comprehensive and the values unusually attractive. We invite comparison of these values with those offered. anywhere else and particularly with those advertised at fifty per cent. less than regular prices. Table Linens —inctuding Nepkine and Table Cloths, in a variety of sizes, qualities and designs. Cae rere Napkins, $2.25, 2.65, 3.25, 3.50, 4.25, 5.25 and 6,50 doz, Table Cloths, $2.25, 2.50, 3.25, 3.75, 4.75, 5.25,6.75 & up Fancy Table Linens—an attractive collec- tion of Hardt miners, S elle Tea Tea Luncheon Cloths, mostly pure w' some with colored em- broidery. All specially priced. Bed Linens —Pure Linen hemstitched Sheets and Pillow Cases in all desirable sizes. Pillow Cases, $1.25 to §2.25 per pair. Linen Sheets, $5.00 to $10.50 per pair. Bed Coverings _zvery we seasonable kind; Comfortables, $2.75 Blankets, $4.00 to $11.50 Nee eee tor ad Srceds: Gite te 8400 cose Pure Py cm Towels —Hemmed, $2.50 all sizes, oleate Hematitched, $3.00 to $12.00 per do, leas and kitchen Towels, $2.00 to ao) pe ct, Turk- En Bath Towels, $3.00 to $10.50 per doz James McCutcheon & Co., 5th Ave., 33d end 34th Sts. TO 15 MINUTES FROM ANYWHERE LUMANN’S Air laoan Ga, Rearones of Gubey or ncsetea No First Payment ON THE FOLLOWING GOODS: Open Only MONDAY and SATURDAY EVENINGS 149" St iT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU WANT, 3‘ Av. A WORLD WANT wate 1 No. 2 Another Deep ans ost t bree Sensational “GROCER! ies Reductions ii Canned Good This Week at All the 280 James Butler Inc. St Tomatoes itn omni Various Brands " of ripe, red fruit, solid packed in cans, each Same choice quality of Tomatoes in large No. 3:cans, each........... Essie Tomatoes. Largest Can of the choicest selected fruit Sugar Corn Sweet and Tender; this season’s pack at the lowest price on record. A can Essie Sugar Co Maine’s Brion nothmg finer packed, Cans regularly 12¢ a can for Essie Peas, 5x3, Early Junes, of the Highest Quality; large can 13° Early June Peas 1Q:. Garden Spinach 4Q¢ Green and fresh; free from grit, can So Essie Peaches CODD CBE Oi nce cice creases cessive ceeeecne Brand Made; from selected California’s Choicest Lemon Clie. preserved in 1 ci y Butler herds; in senitary cans richest syrup; in lar, ; regular 25c value; iC densed_ Rich and Pure; Fresh cut to, each Evaporated Milk The Famous Belle Brook; thicker than cream; tall 10c can cut 5 @a¢ Stamps FREE with can Best Essie Milk, ji." 1LO% Jack Frost Brand; \T ; , Chine Red Asaf FC) Brand ie ew c 1 Ib. tall can red; 1 Ib. tall can SERRATE esr treeecnenoenc et Double 2a“ Stamps FREE on ae ume, THE TAILOR te )