Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEREANATEUR SHES JOBS FOR ™ SX DETESTES Causes Arrests in the Bomb- Throwing Case, as Walda *''y Had Demanded, Sr STUCK. LONG TO TRAIL. Max Goldstein Follows Sus- pects From Scene of Explo- sion to Hiding Place. @ the profound emotions of the siz detectives attached to the Fifth street Police station could be expressed in sculpture there would be raised at eome comepleucus point in this olty a heroic broase statue of Maz Goldstein, twenty- year-old human bloodhound, whose bleodhounding bas saved the jobs of the detectives. Last night a bomb went off—bang!—in the territory of the Fifth atreet station. Had not an arrest been mede within twenty-four hours, Commissioner Wal- do'e orders would have gone off—bang! “nd six detectives who now wear vel- vet banded purple hats with bows in the back and the new brand of tight clothes, instead of uniforms, would found themselves reduced to mere bi duttoned patrolmen. A detective ea: $2,050. A patrolman gets $1,400 a year. But Max saved the day—also the clothes and the money for the six. Not one, but two arrests have been made ‘There were crowds about Second av- enue shortly before 11 o'clock last night. Gas company workmen were digging a hele in the street. Policeman Rellly twirled hie night stick on fixed post, Men and women passed, chatting and aughing. MAX WATCHES COIN TOSSERS, THEN FOLLOWS. Through Second avenue came Max. A gas jet burned in front of M. Wia- nowtis': srocery, shedding dancing rays om the entrance to Joe Padovano's bar- is @ flight of steps leading from the sidewalk to an areaway, where one can THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1913) AMATEUR SLEUTH WHO TRACED BOMB PLANTERS, SAVING SIX POLICE JOBS. GOLDSTEIN enter @ basement beneath the darber shop. Two men stood at the top of those ateps. As Max appeared they were toss- ing a-€oin, as though to decide a point between them. The coin rr @own the ateps. One of the men was tall and had a black mustache and brigandish goatee. The other was short and unwhiskered. The short man atarted down to look for the coin, The tall goateed one handed him a small package. At the foot of the stairs the smali man lighted match, as Max presumed, to look for the lot coin. A moment later the small man reap- red ard he and his companion ked away through Second atreet to- ‘What is 80 years, has borne the signature his personal supervision since its infancy. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘Jus trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment, ber shop on the corner next door. There! Genuine Castoria always t the cae ot y ward First avenue. ‘Then the bomb went off! Policeman Reilly, the gas company workmen and the crowds on the corner were in a flutter, Noc eo Max, He set out Instantly to trail the coin tossing pair. They went in Firat avenue to Hous- ton street, thence to Chrystie atreet and stopped in @ .estaurant for a few minutes. After leaving the restaurant they went, in @ roundabout way, to another restaurant at No, 43 Macdouyal atreet. They had gone eight or ten blocks, but always Maz was lurking close be- larting into doorways, keeping ow sight, never losing the ecent. SPOTS TALL MAN'S GOATEE AS FALSE. ‘The sharpest nosed dog in the world would have howled with envy could he have seen Max on the trail. Max le o furrier, .to something about mink and and ekunk. His professional training ied bim to think the brigandish goatee of the taller man was false, So it proved to be. The tall man took off his pointed beard and put !t in his pocket. Maz, the furrier, was vindicated, as Max, the bloodhound, was about to be. ‘As goon as Max had seen the two strangers give thelr order he rushed to the Fifth street station and told the story of what he bad observed and done. Detectives Later, Wuchner and Grot- tano, who prefer being detectives at $2.20 @ year to being patrolmen at , took Max and leaped into ry On the way to MoDougal street they picked up half @ dozen pa- trolmen, The restaurant was eurround- ed. Bighteen customers were lined up against the wall and Maz was told to enter and pick out the mon he had cradled. Of course Max was not proud when he went in and sald, “There is the tail man who had on the goatee and there is the shorter man who went down to the cellar door.” No goatee was found in the ¢aller’s man's pocket, but his chin, just below a a , Castoria ASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea, It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the’ Food, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s ayer ch kaa buen} , i Bou In use for over The Kind You Have Always Bought, of Skee. For more than thirty years it e) and has been made under Allow no one to deceive yau in this, ** are but Experiments that @ At the 4 Brill Stores Today and Tomorrow Big Season Opening Sale of Fall Suits for Men *10 For $15 and $18 Suits, Ready-to-Wear Clothes Bargains like these, at the very opening of the season, are made possible only by the tremendous trade advantages enjoyed by these big, successful, constantly growing, ever expanding Stores whose outlet is so immensely large that clothes manufacturers make every possible price concession to sell us. Included are Fall and Winter Suits in the newest and most desired fabrics and patterns—pencil stripes, blues, grays and browns— English and conservative models, many with patch pockets. Look | elsewhere if you wish, then see these suits, and you'll surely buy here. | $20 and $25 Fall Suits-for Men 1; ee With a Wonderful Variety of Pencil Stripes More remarkable values, comparatively, than those offered at $10, for they come to us as the result of a particularly lucky buy at even greater price concessions than usual. You will find them the smartest Fall and Winter Suits you ever saw at $15—real good fao- rics, thoroughly good tailoring, new, stylish models, splendid fit and a big assortment, with pencil stripes galore—all special at $15. 1 . Sale of Fall Topcoats $9.75 $17.75 For Values Up to $15.00. For Values Up to $30.00. At $9.75 —Black and Oxford Coats—many of them silk faced. At $17.75—Black and Oxfords—some of them silk lined and silk faced. Grill Frothors 279 Broadway, near Chambers Street Union Square, 14th Street, Near Broadway 47 Cortlandt Street, near Greenwich Street 125th Street, corner Th Avenue the under iy, according to the dete tives, was “gummy,” as though whiskers had recently been giued oritontre to) Ife brother John the & das j was na by tots eu The prisoners sald they were Fuseope | — wan 6 a the Donnaruna, barber of No 176 Chris. word topher street, and Louis Lameri of No RETIRES AFTER 40 YEARS: backaw %@ Hancock street. The barber is the Yl the crowd of men, taller of the two, Both denied know!- edge of the Becond avenue bomb. They Were locked up. Joe Padovano, the barber whose shop | was mussed up by the bomb, sald that recently he hi @ vacant store room &round the corner from his shop was: nted to an Italian to . Ile went to see the agent, saying, “You have been my ous- tomer and friend. If your place is to be a barber shop, why not Jet me rent?” ‘The agent sald he could not because the other applicant had deposited % Thereupon Padovano added % to the deposit and told the agent to return the other fellow $10 and declare the origina) trade off. This was done, and Padovano Bow has a second shop in the premises in_question, The police are enzious to find the man who first wanted to open the shop there, They will also have the agent KILLED 5 MINUTES LATER [se ered about the ret nized him. John, through the crowd, wight of the body, Never Had Accident in Time as wanna Limit: Engine in Yard. After dorty years of railroading Irwin n, alxty years ol, of No. 210 enus, Hoboken, and engineer on the Delaware, Lackawana and Weatern Ratiroad, was retired last night, and to day he was to go on the railroad pen- sion itst for the rest of his life, In less thao five minutes after he had affec- tlonately patted his locomotive he was tun down and killed by an engine tn the yard. Hie tecord of forty yeats had ‘Deen unmarred by @ single accident, of No, 43% DaKald ONEILL-ADAMSCo Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City HEN you pay your very first five dollars, you begin right then and there to own one of these beautiful pianos. When you pay your first week’s payment of one dollar and twenty-five cents, you have taken the second step toward ownership; the second week another step; the third week still another step, and so on, and so on, until the first thing you know you will be the proud owner of a fine three hundred and fifty dollar piano, for which you will have paid but two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy- five cents, without having missed it. But, now, suppose that while you are still making your payments you should die. Ordi- narily it would be necessary for your family to keep up the remaining payments or else lose the piano. But not so in this case. These pianos are sold through our co-operative plan. The plan is a mutually helpful one. It is based on the principle of “you help me and I'll help you.” So if you should die before you have completed your payments (it matters not how few you have made) the remaining payments will be can- celled “forthwith” (meaning immediately), and the piano turned over to your family free of any encum brance whatsoever. You thus save the piano for your family. Your family is relieved of all further obligations. The help- ful co-operative hand reaches out and cancels the re- mainder of your indebtedness, and the piano becomes the property of your family without their having to make any other payments. The value of these as an investment un in one of these pianos you are acquiring a valuable You are investing in something which will be w i t ; e orth somethin, when you have paid for it. You are building up an asset oe aside from the entertainment and pleas- ure you get out of it, will be worth something to you in dollars and cents twelve, fifteen, or twenty years from Low. Remember, you are buying three hun- dred and fifty dollars’ worth of piano value ata ones a only two hundred account—a form and forty-eight dollars and seventy- b to indicate that . ty: widely sed in LS all. five cents, Taking the regular run of e mention sCaested wear and tear into account, one of these qe: on pianos will be worth more after you have it fully paid for than you now have to pay for one, and at that time you will have had nearly four years’ use Ct out. of it. And, in the same way, the longer you own it, the less it will have cost you per month for its use. Figure it any way you wish, it is hard to see how pianos of the exceptional value of these will have cost you over a dollar a month for their use, it matters not how long you own one, whether it is ten years, fifteen years, or even twenty years. ‘ és All of the features of this co-operative plan are carried out in offering player pianos, with the single exotption that the terms on player-pianos are two dollars a week instead of ~~ a8 on the piano — one dollar and twenty-five cents a werk Pianos Crossed off by or fifty years ago (plent pe erty now living will remember ‘ou settled your bill at a st drew a big cross account to shi ch which is still ight one of these perative plan, dies be' his accotins beoks him befora the took out the Limited for Buffalo n . #0 unnerved that @ aub- Engineer and Is Killed by atitute had to take out the Lacka+ ———= Porter Killed tm Fath, Frederick Riches, nineteen yearn old, tm the buliding at No 27 , waa instantly killed when he fell through the ele vator shaft from the ninth floor to thé eub-basement: —— STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. ONEILL-ADAMSCO Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City When you begin to pay you begin to own your piano and in event of death all un- paid payments are immediately cancelled Copyright, 1918, by O'Netll-adame Cs, ray SOUR, UPSET STOMACHS FIXED IN’ FIVE MINUTES—PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN debilitating headaches, dissiness or in- testinal griping. This will all | ad and, besides, ‘here will be no sour food left ison your ! engineer, | ein the nat trwin! to have al racks In me of whom had fons, Who math: | . fone recog: pushing hin way staggered back at which he recog: \ — Best for Indigestion, Gas, Ieartburn and Dyspep- . ia —It’: ? ver In the stomach to sia —It's Great! breath with aauseous odors, Pape’s Diapepsin is » certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digesta it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you at any drug store, When your meals don’t fit comfort. | ably, or what you eat lies like « lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that in a sign of indi Get from your pharmac ifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take o dose just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fulness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, avenie, Brooklyn, ‘ion, this Bim or cet ec enough “Pape's Diapepsin” to entire family {ree from pend g bg ders and indigestion for many months, It belongs in your home. It Makes Little Difference What You Need—a World “Want” Will Go and Get It, ONEILL-ADAMSCO Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City Copyright, 1914, by O'Netll+ Adama Co, A column giving the whole proposition in brief paragraphs First. You get @ piano which is worth and sells regularly at three hundred and fifty dollara for two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy-five cents, saving you at the outsct one hundred and one dollars and twenty-five cents, Second. When you fi ying for your piano, if bought in the usual way, you atill owe from twenty-five to thirty-five doll Interest. hrough this co-operative plan, when you have pai@ your two hundred and forty-eight dollars and seventy-five cents, you have finished paying. ‘There are no further payments tovbe made, either on account of interest or for any other reason ,, Third. Instead of paying twenty or twenty-five dollars as a first payment and ten, twelve or fifteen dollars » month, as you will in & regular way, during this co-operative sale you pay but fi dollars to join in this associate movement and then but one dollar and twenty-five cents a Fourth. You get the strongest t guarantee signed by manufacturers—the Newton Piauo Co. tion for five years that ss safe as « Government bond, B Fifth. You get the privilege of returning your piano at the end of a thirty days’ trial and getting your money back. Sixth. Within one yenr from the day you may exchange it for any reason whatsoever, Seventh. All payments re thus leaving the piano free of enc nee to your family. Eighth. You act through th operative plan, an opportunity to carn cas! each and every week's time the life of the co-operative agreement of one hundred weeks is shortened, Through this privilege possible for you to earn cash in all to twenty-nine dollars and twenty-five cents, tee ever put on » pianc and ourselves, giving you pi et your piano, through th hout so much as # penny ¢ unpaid are voluntarily cancelled in event of your death— co-operative plan, you dividends amounting Ninth. You are given opportunity to secure others to co-operate in this plan, This still further reduces the cost of your instrument. Tenth, Under this plan, two tunin delivery within one hundred and fifty mil expense to the two hundred and forty-eight In New York's INFILL Sixth Avenue, 20th, Zlst and 22d Streets Main Btore, 6th Floor, 22d Street Hlevators. tool to match the piano, a late style scarf York are included without adding any pte and seventy-fi Shopping Center ive cents,