The evening world. Newspaper, June 29, 1914, Page 5

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‘, EN a aa der to save the rest of the big bulld- ing, which Is old and bullt of wood, AAGTORY BLAZE CALLS ALL FREMEN a wae ee QUT IN JERSEY GITY serexc*esrscr re sone e"Pame tenements and the National Grocery Stores warehouse adjoining was pre- vented, The 550 employees were moved from their stations to the street im seven minutes by fire drill tactics. Capt. John Murdock and Fireman Starkey of Engine No. 3 were injured by falling through a trap door on the second floor, Both were taken to the City Hospital to have their cuts and bruises taken care of. Murdock was a Fire at John F. Boyle Com- pany Plant Menaced Many Tenements. Fire started at 8.30 o'clock to-day in waste bins in the brick addition of the fon F. Boyle Company straw- board factory in the block bounded RL AR It Paced eed Ata eee atreets, able to return to the fire, Benjamin Wickham of Truck No. 2 was hurt by the falling of a ladder and Deputy Commissioner Roger Doyle was over- some of the machinery were damaged by smoke ee ee ce water. MRS. BELMONT TO OPEN CHINESE TEA HOUSE SOON Remarkable Structure Is Completed and Suffragettes Will Take Tea There. Mra. Oliver H. P. Belmont ts soon to open a gorgeous Chinese tea house, patterned with remarkable fidelity PIANO rounded 1845 uh a good piano fine tone quality is the most important thing and al- ways determines the su- perior excellence of a high class instrument. Absolute durability is also most essential. These two qualities the Waters Pianos possess in a pre-eminent degree. Waters-Autola player - pianos have the same fine tone and dura- ble construction as the Waters Pianos and con- tain all the very latest im- provements-so necessary in an up-to-date player. Call and let us demon- strate all that we claim for the Waters Pianos and the Waters-Autola player - pianos or send postal for catalogues. Very attractive prices and most liberal terms of payment are now offered, and old pianos will be taken in exchange. Horace Waters &Co. Three Stores: 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St. 127 W. 42d St., nr. Broadway 254 W. 125th St., nr. 8th Ave. |] | ture of the Ming dynasty, on the grounds of Marble House, her sum- of Marlborough, who is now a guest at Marble House, will be present at the “housewarming,” early next month, Before long the suffragists will be Invited to meet and take tea there with Mra. Belmont, decorated after the style of the Ming period by Willam Andrew Mackay; Now York mural painter, after ex- haustive tests in color, Nearly a thousand colors in lacquer were tried before the nine needed for the work were found. The dominant color in the interior is Chinese yellow, con- b 8 rated. with Chinese hieroglyphics sex oft the interior and add attractiveness to many copies of famous Chines paintings. LETTER CARRIER OF 70 FALLS DEAD AT STATION Leopold Stern, Known in Lower Broadway, Had Been in Service Since 1873. “Pop” Stern, the old letter carrier of Station A, who had tramped about the streets with other people's letters for more than forty years, and was well known in the regions of lower) Broadway and Greene street, tumbled | over dead to-day in the locker-room f his station, He was seventy years ern, whose first name was Leo- reported for duty to-day at the , at Prince and Greene! to the locker-room , ‘ay uniform, As he| ea, another | carrier, | a nt to him and) asked him what the matter was. Stern said “Hello, Murphy,” and fell |} over dead. | vas on Feb, 14, 1873, that Stern a letter carrier. He lived at Noo hat Araaterdase avauue with bis two sons and a daughter, CHOIR BOY SENTENCED. Golden Hatred Singer Fooled ‘OUR steamer letter finds its most fitting accompaniment in one of Huyler’s Steamer } Baskets. It contains all manner of good things to speed a deli!" ! voyage. } All sizes. Police by Ans ' button hook and who added ta It by ea. 3 four times from a Sst janis root 26 phe Stores in Greater New York WHEN PRESERVING CHERRIES the scum that rises on the boiling fruit comes from dirty fruit or impure sugar. Boil eome Crystal Domino Granulated Sugar in clean water—there will be no scum im becate the sugar in abactaly pure, It’s the only oafe ouger Mercer avenue and the New Jersey Junction Railway, Jersey City. The GIRL CARRIED AWAY flames made quick headway. In or- 70-Year-Old Father Chases | Two men drove up to the home , George Cole in Pinesville, near hi | before daylight to-day and arow the household, saying they were look- ing for evidence concerning the wrecking of a livery rig the night come by smoke, John McNeill of Engine No. 2 was stunned after being | before and must sre Cole's fifteen- run down by the tender of the engine, | year-old daughter Minnie, The young All the stock in the building and | girl dressed and came to the door. to their rig and lashed the horse, Cole, who is seventy years old, ahd «' his son could get to the door in bed nightclothes, bd for three miles ytd his years, ter sinter where sho nad been hidden} away. old Alton Vandervort of having been one of the pair who had carried her! ” Sua Williams and had posed as @ jetective, Vandervort was located at the home | after the gayly decorative architeo- | th, dervort to awai Grand hie He was locked up in| mer home at Newport. The Duchess| Pe!h! Jail eee JAUNT FOR CITY OFFICIALS. Fire Commissioner Takes Mayor Mayor Mitchel, Cit) Chamberlain The interior of the tea house was Maror_Mitchel,_City_Chamberiale THE EVENING WORLD, Briere and other city officials are the guests of Fire Commisstoner Robert Adamson this afternoon on board the new fire boat William J. Gaynor, which is making its matden trip from the Battery to Spuyten Duyvil. During the trip the new boat will manouevre and make ure of its appar- atus. Life boats will be launched and IN THE NIGHT BY TWO YOUNG MEN CALLERS the crew will work in the same manner as it would at a big fire, Had Tuberculosis, —Now Insured When you Bui & man has been ho Afoot After Wagon in Vain —The Girl Found Hidden. MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., June 29.— The callers seized her, carried her They were out on the road before Cole chased the Bhifeaets son running with him, hub the young man found his She accused seventeen-year- LOOK FOR TiS TICKET On EVERY PAIR and said the other was addressed Williams could not be found, but THREAD ELS @TOES WEALTH of good looks and a wealth of my, long wear are skillfully ‘woven into every pair. on New Boat. Tapering ankles—snug tops— rlect fit. i All colors, three weights, in (9M silk-lisle and lustrous fibre-silk. | FREE! ‘ with NGS heute bt DELAY {Terrien THIS IMPERIAL LEATHER COUCH " Free with reese] [ES over 4 | siciciy Facsitkea $17.50 | Com EI Fu, nished Your Terms 149 ny ree Auman |S agree am 4812260 | Com- Ed 50 r Terms. , to Te oue OFFICE eee 3d Avenue THIS WEEK’S COMPLETE NOVEL THE STAIN By Forrest Halsey AN UNUSUAL ROMANCE OF MOTHER LOVE AND OF THE GALLANT BATTLE WAGED BY A MAN AND A GIRL AGAINST THE POWERS OF EVIL. BEGINS TO-DA Y =IN THE: EVENING WORLD The Book on the Stand; Will Cost You $1.26 YOU GET IT FOR 6 CENTS MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1914. You men of N ew York | Nobody knows better than you what business success means; especially in this great city. You will be interested in this story. EN YEARS AGO Wallach Brothers, a firm of haber- dashers doing a successful business in New York, decided to sell clothing also. It was a big undertaking; New York had many good clothing stores, some of them long established. They did not expect the new business to leap instantly into prosperity; business seldom does that in New York. But this firm began right. Their policy contained the elements of success. They believed in serving; in giving generous values; they tried to see that a customer got what he wanted; what he ought to have. Men who dealt with them once kept coming. They did good advertising; they told the plain truth about their store, their goods, their methods. They avoided big claims and exaggerated statements; their advertising expressed the spirit of the business; and it brought results. Now a fourth store They are just now opening their fourth store for clothing. Here is a chronology of their development in the clothing business: 1904 122d Street and Third Avenue 1907 Broadway at 29th Street 1910 246 West 125th Street 1914 265-267 Broadway, below Chambers Street, opposite City Hall Park, a new store just now to be opened. As this new store could be opened by Wallach Bros. only in the middle of the season, we felt that their position as distributors of our clothing in America’s largest city entitled them to special co-operation from us. We have given them every advantage we could offer in goods and prices; they have for this opening of their new store a large supply of our goods, fresh from our tailors’ hands— the latest fabrics, patterns, models; the best ideas from all over the world. We are highly gratified to have our clothes represented in the most important business center of the country by men of this type; by a concern whose ideals and methods are so high. . This advertisement is published without consulting them, as our tribute to their principles and their success. Hart Schaffner & Marx. _ Good Clothes Makers

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