The evening world. Newspaper, August 31, 1914, Page 5

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i te r! | . _ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, AUGUST 31, ‘ 1914. % ne as van, and Lieut, Colina reported at| Paid 6% a day. French was allowed on the telephone | women folk driving thetr cattle to = Pollce Hoadquartera to-day after an At Cherbourg the authorities re-| Secretary Bliss and his assistant, | be turned over to the Government a “ 7 with the Minister of Justice and In| ments of soldiers moved with the r CEASE WHEN AND RUNS AWAY DETECTIVES FROM ited they would be turned over by the! the end notified them that Secretary | rapidity and certainty of a machine. i ; 4 $10,000 found in the possession of the a | rl ; POSLAM IS USED ’ wrangling with the French authort-| Prisoners was alive wiihhold og the| 9 leave the prisoners with tho French ‘ea | Eeeoeeh the Bronch.- and return to New York at once. ; F CAPI p | f GF IN Kiselinger and Antoinette Bonner,| Washington to dude Mote” whe ncigantime the daten of the French o! signed the extradition papers. Aug, otel where they had been staying charged with embessiing diamonds) teh o aciaration of war found the] were doubled and the food rations ——— — Just think—if Poslam could not do the SKIN TORMENTS KILLS HER CALLER BIG WAR PREVENTS in-law of the Iate Timothy D. Sulll-| French detectives, who were to be] by calling in person, because only] came tron In, followed by their fused (6 deliver th i Mr. Frazer, worked for three days| The work of forming them Into reg!- absence of three months, most of Lebo shih nant nahin time they spent in Paris| Ministry of Justice in Paris. The! Bryan had sent word that they were Go > tles over the extradition of Joseph D.| round that it was to be transmitted A lane we Wee on oe Horseflesh was the only r j worth $180,000 from Maiden Lano! detectives in Paris again seeking the| cut In half. Be) Set Sing it increscing sabe and tr Jewellers wid of Ambansador™ Herrick. <‘The| meat served. ‘They made an ‘wit ; Uimpha, “Meitis the foundation of Poe-|. ; , —— The detectives satled June 2 and| Mevere ce bus eet Ore CAFOE) TaD at every. turn by soldiers 5 \ Jam's success—the ability to stop iteh-| Victim, With Death Wound,} Two Lieutenants Return From] reached Paris June 12, Their papera| the Ambassador told them to go to| Thovah they held four frst clas & ing, Lane leone = so es were taken by the French authori- Cherbourg and the prisoners would tomers the detectives were obliged + - aome, a er skin rases. ne j aris Fy rHa we given to them. They hired to take quarters in the steerage of y Geersigha appusction will ahow (kat Pursued Her Until He Paris Empty-Handed After | ties for transition and were kept) Uuecmoblie for 4800 to make the trig | the At Paul, and they describer tie | There is no better food than } Poolam can really do you good no mat- a " : without action. After| which was in vain. The American| conditions and the food as unfit for Grocers and Deli- . ter how virulent the di ; Fell Dead. Three Months, against the delay they| Consular agent could speak no Kng-| human beings. whole - wheat. “Force” is|I catessen Stores Sell Your druggist selis Posiam. For free were told to go to Cherbourg to get| lish. The British Consul tried to help| Lieut. Sommers was tremendousty “4 | é sample write to Emer Laborato- the priscnere: It was stipulated that] (Rey Out vent, them back to Paria| impressed with the spirit in which whole-wheat _in_ite tastiest|| It. PerBottle..... i + wit 5 0 ie to com-| the country people of France aci aS 2 ries, 82 West 25th Street, New York. A woman whose identity has not] Lieut. Michael Summers, a brother-| they must be accompanied by four municate with the Embassy except the onder of mobilisation, “he tree form. Poslam Soap contains Poslam—the beet med: soapcanhave. Im- ealth, color, quality. > CE on Broadway. After receiving his On next Saturday, September 5, th tt tl \\ ext jay, September 5, the store will be open all day. » te pe a Kitt New York i ce Labor vind September 7, the store will be closed EY two flights of stairs and fell dead pcan’ MBL —— on the threshold of the street door. : = = es = = The woman who committed the ; =s SS deed went to the tenement last | e kK : %Y Ss Thursday and hired @ room from é mW & IN Mrs, Esther Kepler. She said she pes was Teofila Koscianski, She was ie about forty years old and had gray- x ON ish hair, The police say that her name is Miler and that she was the = —— ——= = ee Ses gee ——— = a = wifo of the man she killed. F cainalipnea oem = = 20 Broadway. She ran through t Fj store, no one attempting to stop her, C if e this. a and out into the crowd on Broadway, af ) (i¢)} vans where all trace of her was lost al Weta Detectives found in the hallway bbe outside Teoflla Kosclanski's room a| ) 9 ; wave 88-calibre vest-pocket revolver with | ; | | Lie bulldog barrel. In the room was | Lhe valise with papers bearing seve 11-8 addresses, to which the detectives an ware | | ADVERTISEMENT WITH YOU | WAR ISK BILL PASSED. ‘~|Because We Have the Goods Is for Women Who Labor NUINE WZ ‘Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry 180 srosdway, New York A CAUTION mB Pagtint PLE Tene Te OTHER etore, MY ONLY ea- trance ts , Doorway Number 180 Enemy of Humanity Only correct glasses will protect your eyes from serious results of eyestrain Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians, S Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to $12 K Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St., cor. Bond St. Eyestrain a Great 17 West 42d Street. 223 Sixth Ave., near 15th St. Open Saturday Until 6 P. M. ZZ been established beyond the mn ———— she gave the lodging keeper shot and killed Abraham Miller in a room on the top floor of the three-story tenement at No. 54 Goodwin place, Williamsburg, to-day. After the shooting she ran hatless from the house and lost herself in the crowd It was at 10 o'clock this morning that Miller called on the woman. He had been in her room about an hour when Mrs, Kepler heard a shot, fol- lowed immediately by the flight of the woman lodger, whom Mrs, Kep- ler saw dash down the stairway. Miller was only a few feet behind her when he dropped dead. The woman shayer ran to No, 40 Good- win place, which is the rear of the grocery establishment of the Bohack Company, with @ front at No, 1208 N | was struck by a train and killed to-day. N| Young Rickard, a civil engineer, was N| working with an ensimeering force at N | Moodna, near here. N| Senate Sidetracks Sen’ went in search of clues. The police believe that the woman left Miller and that his visit was an attempt to patch up a quarrel. WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—Accepting the House amendments to the Govern- ment War Risk Insurance bill, the Sen- ate this afternoon adopted the measure finally and sent it to the President. portant House amendment The most 1 nate accepted waa that which the Se! ending the Bureau of War Risk Insur- ance within two years. y Officials Son. ing World.) MIDDLETOWN, N. ¥., Aug. 31.— Richard Rickard, son of R. D. Rickard, secretary and treasurer of the New York, Ontarlo & Western Railway Co., WASHINGTON, Aug. $1.—Th men’s bill revising regulations of ser- vice on American ships has been side- tracked in the Senate for fear that ad- ditional restrictions on shipping would Paraguay Signe Peace Treaty. WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—A peace commission treaty between the Unfted States and Paraguay, the twenty-second of Secretary Bryan's peace conventions has been signed in Asuncion, according to a report to the State Department to- day from the American Legation. Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co. Broadway and Ninth, oh hy rasahs te - a ee tomorrow, September 1, the Autumn schedule will go into effect and the store will remain open until 5:39. | With Austrian, German and French China Factories Practically Closed \ Aa We Hold Our EV Capa \\(@ September Sale of JUST THE SAME If the goods were not here you may be sure the sale for this year would be annulled. We value our patronage too much to substitute snything for what we have always offered; the best in the world, wherever it is made. And not one cent’of war tribute will be added to the prices---we sell as we buy, and for this sale’s shipments we bought at the old low figures We have 1,500 French, English, German, Austrian and American dinner sets for the sale—at not one cent advance. Our full complement would have been 2,000. We have 120 different open stock dinnerware patterns— at not one cent advance. | But What of the Future? Austria, Germany have absolutely stopped. The potteries there are closed In France and England they are greatly curtailed. Even in this eougtey there are threats of higher prices. These are the plain facts given to us by letter and colle direct from the manufacturers. We give them to the public, to act as it sees fit. The economies of the sale, not figuring the high- er prices to come, range from 25 to 50 per cent. War Makes Heroes—But What of the Heroes of Peace?— “that woman bending over a washtub these days to make money enough to pay the rent while her husband is out of work.” The September Sale of | Housewares It is for women who know the drudgery of housework. It is for women who know the pleasure of housework—because they have (4 discovered the right tools. Efficiency Is Freedom Great minds-today are studying how the work in factory and mill can be made more efficient—that is, less wasteful. We have been studying how to make the work in the home more efficient and less of a task. (This Housewares Sale is the Answer] Hardly a day passes but some new labor-saving device makes its appear- ance on our floor. have hi ful effect during the Euro- , , NewYork: 184B'way, at John St.N| pean Grint when ther meanuren are be: Hardly a day passes that we do not add a little extra quality to some house- | 223 s Ry eto . - ixth Av., 15th St. N] ing enacted to There can be but one result of the war: prices must yo up. Supplies from 7 = 4 “quantity-buying’— Hardly a day passes that we do not lower a price b| ed States for house- our two stores furnishing the greatest outlet in the U hold utensil—to make it more serviceable. \ wares. But We Have Two Hous Svare Stores in New York See: ) ES ° Ons ater the Subway floor of ihe New Building a block each way. . Registered Fatadtished D, ‘Sets—English, The other covers one floor, just as large,.high up in the Wanamaker build- = Heete Mery Maia Cenivy lite weet rer po eon Pl i thin lead blown water ing—the reserve stock. _ . t ‘ - distinctive shapes and decorations, And every single piece on these floors is warranted to give satisfaction or i 3 Note Our information Herth numberiok'n; $6,000 worth of richly decorated cups | YOUr money back. bd A Good Time ee antl bape aia and saucers from France and Austria. \ Ec i f th Ss 1 ~ ° 50, worth of Cut Glase—Rich new onomies oO e r E, e ore 40.000 worth of China and plates, in- $32,000 worth of Artwares — Solid | 10 to 50 Per Pood ” To Bu Linens cluding the finest productions of Doulton and bronzes from France and Austria, French ai id Wedgwood, in England, 151 patterns fiom art bronzes, German mounted wares, Italian | M = Why? Prices are all very much lower Fare SG pies tones our eukent fide oe ee ne ee ] revio x r i F e now than they are likely to be for a long yearly sale of china we have had. F wii ai | th We do » od vena ft he gis park goods and fo thom os 8 lure to. se | is tina to) come. 5 Second Gallery, New Building, Special display in the Broadway Tunnel other goods at abno ly high prices to make up for loss of profit on “cut RS as hist r iy for Ft re Section, Subway floor, Subway Entrance and Main Aisle of the Old Bldg. | prices. i < e chief source of supply for Flax, the : We do not use baits of any kind to bring people to the store. ; terial hich L i j 4 | i Hy pea sili vias 00 y f s ° But we do sell the best housewares to be had at the lowest possible | i : 10,0 ards 0 Satin America prices day in and day out—and in this September Sale at figures much bs Ph crop this apa lg a es of bo t 2 8 5 Y d lower than these regular prices. | | = uropean war, will no’ available, an: Fg this will very materially increase the cost a $ e ar F i] 2 of Linens. Silks are getting scarcer every day, but this Satin America is | The Sale Covers Every Household Need We, therefi take thi i : ° A BD gansta ramen Gon ce Better Than Our Regular $4 Yard Satin Brushes Galvanized Ware Refrigerators J = tion, and suggest to them the advisability Sixty-three beautiful shades and plenty of white and black are Dusters Tronware Fireplace Furnishings of purchasing, at an early date, Household included in the purchase. Chamois Japanned Ware Carpet Sweepers i (es ches Linens regener fall ans win The 10,000 Yards Have Come for So Much Less Cutlery Aluminum Ware Brooms iS pi —— because of the situation in Purepe, Bee by interfering with further Tinware Woodenware Bathroom Fixtures = g on hand a importations irm wit! tions, i Fa = large and well-assorted stock of desirable hewitt °C Managed to Enamelware Bird Cages Dress and Bust Forms \- Linens, of the usual McCutcheon quality, Wanamaker, its largest customer, financed the situation and took Sewing Machines Coffee Machines Dress, Steamer and Ward- for you to select from. over this satin, Silk Rotunda, Main oor, Old Building. Chafing Dishes Casseroles robe Trunks Subway Floor, New Building, James McCutcheon & Co. 5th Avenue, 34th and 33d Streets etreeete

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