The evening world. Newspaper, July 14, 1914, Page 8

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Policeman Catches After a Chase and Finds Paroled Convict. Intruder | Miss Lillian Ball, who lives with} her stepfather, George Powell, at No. | 190 Pacific street, Brooklyn, told| Magistrate Dodd in the Flatbush Police Court to-day that she was alone early yesterday evening when | she beard tho bell ring and a moment | after she heard her door opened and fwome one entered. Realising then that a thief had tried the bell, she stepped boldly Into the hall and confronted a youth, who | seized her by the throat and knocked her half senseless to the floor. Then, as he fled, ho hurled a jimmy at her which struck her hip and lamed her #0 that she could not follow him Bhe got to the window, however, and screamed for help. Policeman Cox chased the fleeing } man and caught him a few blocks oat away (x Atiantic avenue, At the sta og tion, where Miss Ball identified him ae as her assailant, the prisoner said he ry was Edward Williams, living at the ra Pleasant Point Hotel, on the Merrick aa Road, near Jamaic bon °§ Beveral Headquarters detectives as Edward Ruddy, © with whom the poli e had many e@noounters, who was paroled from Bing Sing only last November. i 2 pissans diareeha FELL FROM ROOF, KILLED. Body Hit “L" Structure and Passer ht 1¢ Came From Train. 0 "The bod; of @ young man who was it to have Jumped or fallen from | @ Bixth avenue “L” train last night at/ Twenty-fifth street was partly identi- fled early to-day as that of James Rush, twenty-one years old, of No. 60 West ‘Twenty-fifth street. Augustus Benger, ef the same address, sald the descrip- tien of the hedy and the clothing tallied ‘with that of Rush, his nephew. He paid he thought the young man had gone te the roof to aleep and had fallen from there. . | Michsel J. Walsh, of No. 362 Weat/ ‘Twenty-third street, reported to the po- Uso of the West Twentieth strect sta-| tiem that he had seen a man fall from the elevated structure. None of the had seen any one fall and it is Rew believed that Rush's body struck structure after he fell from the roof hia home and then bounded to the| i eee At UP 24,646 FEET IN SKY. Aviator Soars Nei Breaks W LEIPSIC, July 14—A new world's rec- - @rd for altitude for an aeroplane was es- tablished here to-day by Heinrich Ocle- ich, a German aviator, who rose in his a". 7,500 metres, or approximately M fest, nearly four and three-quar- ‘ter miles. ‘The world's record foe altitu Five Miles and "e Record. a) | Park, ¢ operoximately, 84 fer established only on July Anne! man hal by Otto kogel, a Ger- rman. Too Small to — and Lawns Clean. The Ward condit na of the force to keep the litter. While the and gardens were LITTER MARS BEAUTY | OF CENTRAL PARK | Commissioner Ward Says Force Is| ttention of Park Commisstoner called to-day to the dirty walks in Central) and the failure of the laboring |“? shubbery, A.M cept that she was Dora | sixteon years old. Lieut. station, wher tioned her. Keep Walks mother.” hasia, ‘balanced. § ambulance until assured she to her mother in girl is blind In her I lawns free from bloom. | never in better shape the effect is marred by news-) eve papers, peanut shells and refuse from] lunch baskets, which remain on the! lawns and walks for hours. Conditions are particularly bad in) the northeast corner of the park, bor- | dered by Filfth avenue from Seventy- | second street to One Hundred and Here the park 1 used by per-! thickly forty-eight wagon Tenth, sons living q to 1s of litter Commissioner, lawns are far from clean, Commissioner Ward complains that| his force numbering 179, 1s too small to combat the situation force in former administrations was four times as large. laborers A young girl, found wanderi Second street and Avenue B at 6 Pairs Guaranteed to Wear 6 Months or we will replace them with new hose For Men, 6 pairs, $1.50; Mercerized, $2; Silk Lustre, $3 Men's Silk Holeproof, 3 pairs guaranteed for three months, $2 For Women and C! Sil Women's Silk Holeproof, 3 pairs guaranteed for 8 months, $3 We are New York Agents. BROADWAY, at 49th St. 47 CORTLANDT ST., ne UNION SQUARE, emoved from this, t of the park daily, according to were on the department pay- roll a decade ago, he points out there employed in the Man- hmond parks to-day, — | any ih & | BLIND GIRL LOST IN STREET. ALLY PREJUDICED against propriet tised medicines, @ populated incomes. However this may be, the general public is benefitted by the use of such standard med the walks and He says the Where 1,700 § o¢ women, cures among in the United States who dc not hesitate such medicines. , FREE hildren, 6 pairs, $2; Silk Lisle for Women, $3 Mail and Phone Orders Promptly Filled. #79 BROADWAY, near Chambers St- Greenwich, 125TH STREET, at $d Ave. h Street, Just West of Broadway. '2 PHYSICIANS ARE NATUR- ary or adver- r the sale of these remedies decreases their i- cines as Lydia E. Pinkham’s /$Vegetable Compound, with its wonderful record of thousands suffering We are very glad to say, however, that there are hundreds of honest physicians to recommend | She was tuken to the Unton Market i Bocker ques: She could not remember where she lived or anything about her family, but sald sho had left home “to go to the country in search of her A doctor, who took her to Bellevue Honiptal, said she was suffering from or possibly was mentally un e resisted being put into ) to-day by Policeman Potter, | could tell nothing about herself ex- Ginsberg, SSS = Imported Waists, Tailored Waists, ARGE co! A Cretonne Handkerchief and Formerly 75c to 95¢ Cretonne Work Baskets, Formerly (We and T5c, ap Baskets, nd 1.95, . Cretonne Formerly ly 50e to M5e, White Linen Glove and U Portfolios and Picture F decorations, Moire Picture Frames, Formerly 50¢ and 75c, Imported Floral Baskets, Formerly 50c to $1.50, Gilt and Ivory Imported Handmade Blouses, sand Squares, Formerly 50c. Enamel Faney Baskets, of flowers, Formerly 95c, Stern Brothers 42nd and 43rd Streets, West of Fifth Avenue. Special Clearance Sale, To-morrow, of Women’s and Misses’ Waists and Imported Blouses In this season’s most fashionable models, on the Second Floor, at very great reductions in prices. Lingerie Waists, Of voiles, crepes, batistes and organdy, at $1 35, 1.85 and 2.75 Handmade, of voile, crepe and batiste, trim- med with fine laces and hand embroidered, at Of white and colored handkerchief linen, with long and three-quarter sleeves, Corresponding Reductions have also been made on the entire stock of high cost To-morrow, many Important Offerings in the Art Needlework Department lection of Cretonne, Decorative Linen and other Novelties, also Stamped Articles, will be closed out to-morrow, in the convenient uew location on the Main Floor, at the following exceptionally low prices: Glove Boxes, . at 50c . at 40c . at De +, with floral » . 4 tt 25e . at 800, 45¢ . at 25c, 95e Of hatiste and voile, hand embroid- ered and trimmed with real laces, 65e | 3.85, 4.95 and 5.75 at 2-45, 3.65 and 4.75 $6.50 to 23.50 Stamped Made-up Nainsook Corset Covers, Formerly 25c and 50c, — 15c, 85¢ Stamped Made-up Nainsook Night Gowns, Formerly 50c to 81.00, at 3dc, 50c, 65 Stamped Made-up Nainsook Combinations, Formerly 85c, . at 50c Stamped Huck Towels, guest and large size, Formerly 40¢ and 98¢, 25c, 50e¢ Stamped Turkish Combing Towels, Formerly 35e, A . at 250 Stamped Turkish Water Bottle Covers, Formerly 25c, : . at 1be Stamped Linen Centrepieces, sizes 22, 27 and 36 inches, Formerly 30c, 50c and 95c each, at 25, 35c, 65e Orders for Stamping executed at very moderate prices. J eS THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1914, e Where All Harlem Does Its Shopping j 1251! STREET~WEST 4OCH 8. ‘Berween Lenox & 7: Avew = We Close at Noon on Saturdays During July and August. Here Go All Our $1.00 and $1.29 Waists at 65c & 79c At their former values. Judge what t high character. Plain voile, front of pretty embroidery; also of flowered voile with embroidered collar; others of black and white striped voile with organdie vestee and collar. CLEARANCE Summer Millinery $1.98 Untrimmed White Satin Hats. with black 95c rices they were exceptionally good fie new prices mean on waists of this $2.50 Untrimmed White Hemp Hats with black velvet crown... $1.25 83 to 66 Trimmed Tail- Hats...... 95ero $1.49 89c White Chip and Peanut Braid Un- trimmed Hats velvet fac- @1 and 8% Untrimmed Dress Si of 98 61049 Hats Summer Dresses ,, 3.98 For Women and Misses, $7 Value Styles and materials that deserve very much higher prices, But conce: s came to us, and over they go to all who come here tomorrow se charming dresses. ed Voile and Cotton Crepes, for women and misses, and o limited number of Challie Batiste in misses’ sizes only. ‘All have the smart, long tunic, loose blouse and silk girdle. Third Floor, New—And at Koch’s First Pi Vestee with Black F Pique Vertes with pace $1.50 They follow the trend of Fashion in the excessive use of black and ite st silks. ‘:neellent quality, and finished with large pearl buttons. Made to sel! for $2.25, but as an introductory offer, here at $1.50. $2.50 to $3.00 $7.6 Colonials . . . oe srs A Very | Patent Leather Special White Canvas July Seasonable styles. Offering Light flexible ~_| soles. whi 125th St., Ws HAIN & BRO Sai connec A eesctsen $125 Fu ROOMS Completely Furnished, and Chiffonier; large French bevel plate mirror, like cut; value $25, 16” & 1 5* { 3’ Ave.Cor.84" Sr. ‘IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED, A WORLD “WANT” AD, WILL GO AND. GET IT. | Formerly if A.T. Stewart & Co, roadway at Ninth Street The Biggest Little-Sale of the Season 888 SUITS for MEN If this sale were as big in quantity as it is in quality, it would be the largest sale of the season. The suits are from our own stocks or from our regular manufacturers— made for us, regularly sold by us. They are all that good fabrics and fine tailoring can possibly make of suits—they are not only satisfactory in every way, at any reasonable price but very desirable. Duplicates of these self-same suits have sold Newark, N. J., July 10, 1914, JOHN WANAMAKER, > In sending you the 1153 pairs of shi which you have just purchased, we attention to the fact that they are our uct and all perfect, having been made last two months, and that none of them were in the factory at the time of the fire, all such damaged shoes having bee: posed of through other dealers, Owing to our fire, we were tardy with deliveries, and these shoes were left on our hands for that reason, Very truly yours, JAMES A. BANISTER & CO. PS 4. B. Banister, Pres, for identification we publish the exact number of each grade now on hand— 267 of our own $20 suits 194 of our own $22 suits $ 1 1 50 461 suits at $11.50 ® These in the New Store for Men—Proadway, Corner Eighth : Street, 172 of our own $25 suits 83 of our own $27.50 suits 77 of our own $30 suits . 62 of our own $32.50 suits | « e 33 of our own $35 suits 427 suits at $15.75. These in the Burlington Arcade Floor. New Building. While the quantities in each particular grade are small, there is a complete range of sizes at every original price—but not enough of any one size to last very long in brisk sell- ing. Early shopping means assurance of the particular suit you want. These suits are all-wool, every thread; they are remarkable, and in the most desirable patterns and materials; their styles include the conservative and the extreme. We only wish for your sake that we had or could get more of these suits to offer at these prices. ‘ e e e At Surprising Prices—$3.95 and $4.40 The name is on every pair—an honored name—and is given in the letter here attached which tells the story of the purchase {@ Stress is laid upon the fact that these shoes are perfect, not only because we never sell damaged goods, but be- cause the fire-hurt shoes from this factory have recently been offered in New York. . There are only 1153 pairs, All are low summer shoes—black calfskin and kidskin, tan and white buckskin, in the latest models. None Sell for Less than $6, $7 and $8 This factory never makes anything cheaper than a 86 grade—a fact well known to thousands of New York men who regularly wear these shoes. Burlington Arcade oor, New Bldg 2500 Men’s Summer Shirts, $1.35 This price is so low because these | by one of our own manufacturers shirts are made’ up of the end of soma a Wanamaker standards. : nae. ese shirts are identical in materials after a good shirt ie wdterial GHA eke GER ORL Made up specially for us of silk- | which we are selling at $2, $2.50 and-cotton and fine woven madras | and $3. ' Burlington Arcade floor and Subway Entrance’ New Building. 800 Women’s Garments Now Bear 800 New Lower Prices A Complete Disposal of Certain Groups of Summer Dresses, Suits and Coats More than 800 summer garments for women bear new prices as a result of the workings of the blue pencil. This price-readjustment affects mostly our own regular stocks whose early-season prices were very much higher. Included are also many special purchases which have dwindled down to a few-of-a-kind variety and are now marked at new low prices. 465 Cotton Dresses, now $3.75 The majority are what remain of farge special purchases at $5 and $5.75, Every kind of cool summer fabric is represented. Voiles, crepe, tissues, ratine, corded crepe, and others. Many pretty striped and floral designs. Cotton Dresses at $6.75 Evening Dresses at $12.75 A new price on dresses that were origin- Originally $25 to $92.50, © Satin, crepe ally $15 and $16.40 in our own stock, Vaile, meteor and taffeta. striped ratine, crepe and tissues, All Cloth Suits now$5,$7.50and $15 Wanamaker suits whose ‘original Silk and Cloth Dresses at $3.75 , ' Prices These were originally $7.78 to 912,75,|have been three times as much and more, Street styles mostly; silk, serge, poplin, Only one or two of a atyle or material, i Wool Coats now $5 chiffon and lace. . V , New price on @ miscellaneous collection, Silk Dresses at $7.50 jShort length coats, mostly, that women Originally $22.50 and more. Chiffon an4/ want now for seashore or mountain, Serge, charmeuse combined with net; also after-|mohair, chinchilla, wool velour and inintaen, noon dresses of silk taffeta. Subway floor, Old Building.

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