The evening world. Newspaper, January 13, 1915, Page 4

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11,5: > FOR WRECK VICTIM. Mise Kathryn ey Sabgraober, No. 1403 Dean Btreet. Brooklyn, a ati who was hurt at North Haven, tear Coma. Sept. 2, 1913, when the New Haven Har Hatpor Bxpress vas smash, | Naa vot a verdict for anh a se ‘damages judge rt an Rene WS WOH MAN cavirararesss IUTDRED THIEVES ace AND LIVED ON LOOT Mlemonds in the eafe that the thief was working on when he was ar- rested. Rosenthal, the thief sad, had given him @ key to Greason & Co.'s office amd the combination of the safe, which he said be had ob- tained from one of Greason’s em- ployees. Grenson & Co., however, bad a few weeks prior changed the combination of their safe and when the thief—Thomas McDonald, alles Walter Weber—attempted to open it A was unsuccessful and was caught handed. a ME Pat tte Alfred Rosenthal seated Hed Jewelry “eDenaia gave Mr. Follette tne ROSTON'S BOAST. From the Roston ‘Transevint,) Boston may have beans on the brain, but she also has brains tn the / bean passa y Lace in Front.” SPECIAL SALE At Our New Store, 179 Madison Ave., at 34th St. Near Altman's (Famous Gossard Corsets ia eens, Prone Laced Corsets are recogn' the world over aa the stendard by which, ‘a We have “the largest jew York from w , fhe cubert corsetieres of ont custom epartment | Beaty a o models. N Every corset clean and fresh. We advise early solno- the stock te complete. pl tn te be Aleo a large li rd and eet Brassiores for this ssle—30 jerent otylee- Brassieres. . .37 $1.00 Brassieres. . » 67 OLMSTEAD CORSET COMPANY s Formerly at 224 Stree(—now at our NEW STORE, at 34th St. S SENT Captured Burglar Tells How Twenty-third Street, Shop in East One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street. TO ISLAND. Jeweller Engaged Him to Steal $50,000 in Gems. For forty yearn Alfred Rosenthal of fo, 128 East One Hundred and 1 man, He waa formerly lo- cated in New Chambers Street, but of late yearn hon kept & store at No, Kast One Hundred and Twenty- fifth Street To-day Rosenthal was sentenced by Judge Wadhams in General Ses- sions to the penitentiary on Black well's Island for mix me ha on hin joa of guilty to attempted burglary the third degree. In imposing sen~ nee Judge Wadhams said he had pon Informed that Rosenthal for years had been a ht to Jjuntice, riet Attorney Follette Asnintant.T laid bare Rosenthal's history to Judge Wadhama, He de od Rosenthal ; A number of Bien Jolie, Grecian Breco Corsete an the auccessor of "Mother Mandel- ‘Regular $3.50 to $12.00 Corsets..........-..+. 555: $2.50 [Hl num,” planning burglaries for un- yrtunate men who had fallen by the wayside and into his clutohea, reap- ing the proceeds of their crimes for 179 Madison Ave. himself. Mr, Follette told Judge Parlor Fioor—Telephone Seatrey Hein 2004, Wadhame that for many years the = police had suspected Rosenthal aiding thi an of homes than any ine more here than at want TP orks ii omered by any Temeinbering that Ten Tons of Quinine Used Every Year? mantity of Quinine al ( th eboat I-30 a all the Donte produced in the woeld the pepri of Laxative Bromo Quinin Militon 7,000, Boxes of which Oe ‘eal fy year because of its extraordinary merit. teading the accompanying label from the box of Geisine Bromo uinine, telli att dass and hot: ea dogs it, you can understand why this remedy is used sq effectively by so many, millions of people. Whenever | ie feel a cold com. | ig on think of the | name Laxative ettebel on beck of LasativeBromeQuinisstes) Bromo Quinine. “Bromo Quinine”’ Get The GENUINE, Gall For The Full tame ¢ Bromo Quinine eras te Gime ovdn ve Guns 4 ence w cur caw a ‘the Cough and , then take owe-hall the dose for Chlldree whe are vot old enough to ewellow pill be brakes oF cut ie hail ead given ia pr fo be owellowed wot el & Co, diamond merchanta at ‘There were $50,000 worth of unset When Objects Blur You Need ‘Glasses it's the first sign that your eyes are being taxed beyond their power. Only correct glasses give relief. § Eyes Examined Without Charge by R legictered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses as Low as $2.50 : QEhrlich Sons | Established 52 Years. N New York: He B'way,at a rene SOUPS AND STEWS are most licious when flavored by a dash of The Relish Supreme At Grocers and 10¢c Delicatessen Stores Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St..N. Y. ally sell for $3, $4, $5 Pure silk, silk-mixe: weight flannels. sizes 14 to 18. to $20 from prices up now sixty-five | nin inatructio “fence,” but | because of his shrewdness had never before been ti of}iow shortly after the conclusion of to dispose of their| the present struggle. booty, but it was not until the night} with Great Britain.” of Nov, 16 last, when a thief, caught attempting to rob the sate of Grea-| isabel Brush, an American journalist | @stimate on the unemployment prob- son Noa, 12 and 14 John Street, confensed that he was working for Rosenthal, BROKAW. BROTHERS MENS & BOYS’ CLOTHING HATS & FURNISHINGS \Neckwear Special 55c Bought below normal value---otherwise prices would be $1.00 and $1.50. Plain and fancy, this season’s newest open shapes. Shirt Special $2.45 Some from our regular stock, a quantity from our mantfacturer’s stock—materials that usu- james of two of his pels who had heared Rosenthal instruct him to go to Greason & Co.'s office and saw him pasa the combination of the safe, written on a small pie » of paper, and the key to the oMfte to McDonald. “McDonald told me," Mr, Follette told Judge Wadhams, “that Rosenthal had @ hole dug in the cellar of his home in which diamonds were to be secreted until the hubbub occasioned by the burglary was over, when they | {Se be dinposed of.” According to McDonald's story, he first met Hosenthal, when down and | out, about @ year ago, In order to «et money to buy food he sold Rosen- thal @ pair of cuff buttons, at which time Rosenthal told position to see that McDonald made | money pretty easy If he would follow | ‘MeDonald says that | "8 proposition ted in @ number of bur- aceording to McDonald, © of crooks working for, ynald was in the Tombs he saya that Rosenthal called to see him, giving a fictitious ne, and begged him to keep his mouth «hut hot involve him in the crime, De» ivea Enright and Conroy, on the night they arrested fosenthal at, hi suy they found a re auane f silverware, and later learned it Was part of the loot of a robber: Since he has resided in Harlem Rosenthal has been looked upon as a model citizen by his neighbors, He has «a wife and four children, WITTE PREDICTS WAR OF RUSSIA A AND BRITAIN Mary Isabel Brush Says Pocrvee| Me remier Told Her This Would Be Next Conflict. “Russia's next great war will fol- \a {questioned and that the public ought MAYORS POBLEN HOW MUCH WORK CAN CITY DO NOW? Mitchel, Attacking Pinchot in Dispute Over Unemployed, Estimates $3,840,000. “NO PLOT IN STRIKE,” SAYS JUDGE, DISMISSING UNION INDICTMENTS Contractor Who Lost Forfeit for Bronx City Contract Loses Court Case Also. Judge Gibbs, In the Bronx County Court to-day, dismissed an Indict- ment for conspiracy which had been found against five officers of the Stone Cutters, Pavers ana Bluestone Set- ters’ Union on complaint of John Malatesta, a contractor of No. 3149 Jerome Avenue. Malatesta charged that the unton efMficers, by calling « strike and refus- ing to permit non-union men to work on a city contract in which he was engaged, were guilty of conspiracy, nd as conspirators had caused him to lose @ forfeit for not roel | ny the job on time. ‘The contract was to level and grade @ portion of Barnes Avenue. The union officers declared a strike on the job on the ground that Malatesta | would not pay the union scale, al able to get men to finish the job, Malatesta went to District Attorney Martin, who took the matter befora the Grand Jury ana procured an in- dictment. The trial was called yesterday. As soon as the jury was sworn Francis X. Sullivan, counsel for the defendant union officers, raised @ question of law on the matter of conspiracy. Judge Gibbs took the question under advise- ment and delivered his decision to- day, in which he held that the charge of conspiracy was not well grounded. “Labor has a rignt to organize and use every legal means to protect its own interte: raise wages, shorten hours and enforce working rules,” sald Judge Gibbs, “Labor has tho Here's a real riddle for some undis- covered eMiciency expert on figures. The Mayor hasn't solved it; the City Chamberlain has made a pass at it and missed it by several million, ac- cording to one version. The problem is how much city work is ready to be done, The Mayor and the City Chamberlain say the Comptroller is away off on his estithate. Meanwhile the countless “down and outs," job- Jess and hungry, who have been read- ing #0 much of what the Mayor's Committee on Employment Intended doing through the city, are still waiting. City Chamberiain Bruere started off by saying there 1 $5,000,000 worth of city work that can be proceeded with right away. The corpor: stock budget committee, of whic Comptroller Prendergast is chairman, i» authority for the statement that there is but $62,115 worth of work available to help the jobless. To-day, Mayor Mitchel gave out a long interview devoted to an attack on Amos Pinchot for his criticism of his appointment of Judge Gary and Georga W. Perkina on the employ- ment committee, The Mayor defends Gary, goes over the entire unemploy- ment situation and winds up by say- ing he believes the city can release 840,000 worth of city work by ay 1. This is wbout $2,000,000 away ‘om the estimate of his Chamber- | hain, Referring to the criticism of Judge fiary, the Mayor said it was a pity nan of his standing should be outside competition that business has. ‘This was a legitimate strike, called by a legitimate unfon, and there was no criminal conspiracy, paces te A SCARBOROUGH PAIR HERE. to be glad the Judge volunteered his gervices to the poor of New York, The Mayor added he did not take the Pinchot tatement seriously and It will be a war This ls a statement woich Mary returning last night on the Cunard liner Orduna, said Count Witte, the famous Russian statesman, made to her in Petrograd a short time ago. Count Witte made this statement knowing he was being interviewed for an American ston and thut he was speaking for quotation, Mjus| 5 Brush says. The former head of the Russian Plenipotentiarion at the Peace of Portsmouth and ex-Premler of tho Russian Empire weighed his words carefully as he outlined to the Amert- can writer the diplomatig phases of the present war and the probable out- come. Miso Hrush said to-day she was | willing to stake her joOrnalistic repu- tation on the genuineness of the quo- tation she gave out. Se BID SOLDIER FAREWELL. Greenroom Cinb Sey embers tioodby The Cree Lieut, Morse, . West Forty- British reserves. and was on the road with the - when he was suddenly summoned home to join hts regiment an to the front, President John ©. of the Greenroom arranged a little sur- prise party for Lieut, Horne, Augus i aiph Stuart, Edwards Da- i, Capt. Rice, retired, of 0 . A. contributed the oratory, ‘They all declared then course, but hoped Lieut. seo the Germans first husband she must give to the cause. and $6. d “and imported light- Plain, plaited and tucked, Choice pickings in Men's Sack Suits reduced to $32. or ou WAV .—— SUBWAY A’ elves neutral, of e would At midnight Mra. Horne wi muggsled into the club—the firat wor who ever entered the Greenroom Clu ‘The mem- bers drank @ toast to her and to the that what he said was “unimportant.” The Mayor deplored the fact that there Is a wide difference of opinion batween the members of the Buard of n England Wrec%ed Two residents of Scarborough, on the east coast of England, who mar- Vellously escaped death when the Germans shelled the town early in lem. Speakitte of this, he says: “The important thing is that all the offi: clals of th! ity should realize there is @ serious situation in unemploy- ment and s| 1 put thelr shoulders tu the wheel and try to help do some- Ing, instead of arguing details and criticising one another, “I think Mr. Pinchot's suggestion | that the unemployed come to the City Hall for work in one calculated to breed disorder and unrest in the face of a very grave effort on tho part of the city government to do all it ean,” A serious clash between the Mayor thamberlain on one side and the Comptroller and the corpor- ate stock budget commitee backers in the Board of Estimate is expected | % at Friday's meeting of that body, and they left 4 by shel Algace is an invalid wh aboard the st Hines proved the 4 boty for on. the day before the Ger- ahips appeared she had by heir home to the hos- rly next day Mr, Al hospital to visit his had by Ips op, Rirace ie two servants, may left his home ed fire. A. shell home, | instantly 150 Tailored Fall Suits of broadcloth, gabardine and serge, the | accu- mulation of a season’s business; women’s and misses’ sizes. Formerly to 25.00. 10.00 140 Misses’ Fur-trimmed Suits of broadcloth, corduroy, pebble cheviot and gabardine; black, navy, brown and green; trimmed with various furs. Formerly to 45.00. 20.00 165 Women’s Winter Coats of broadcloth, zibeline, wool plush and mix- tures. Formerly to 22.50. 10.00 ‘ e right to protect itself against} le Also a Number of Selected Skunk Muffs | BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM. GLLINS & © Fulton and Bridge Sts., Brooklyn Will Close Out Thursday Imported Coats of ‘Hudson Seal rh clots, Ou out tran nied he have marked 4, An Opportunity Special Sale of few htt im- "$95 $20 & $25 362 Fifth Ave. Bet. 34th & 35th Sts, ANNUAL SALE C. G. Gunther's Sons Established 1820 FURS Also Women’s Fur & Fur-Trimmed Hats At Greatly Reduced Prices New York 391 Fifth Avenue, 300 Women’s Tailored Suits of broadcloth, gabardine and serge, the accu- mulation of @ season’s business. Some fur trimmed. Formerly to 39.75. 15.00 85 High Cost Women’s Suits of imported broadcloth, velour, plush and vel- vet, trimmed with skunk and other fur. For- merly to 65.00. 25.00 200 Women’s Winter Coats Women’s and Misses’ Coats of broadcloth, mixe tures, zibeline and wale cheviot, in a variety of models, to effect an immediate clearance. ‘ormerly to 35.00. 15.00 95 Fur Collar Corduroy Coats black, navy, brown and green corduroy, tined and interlined throughout; trimmed with various fur collars. Formerly to 29.75. 15,00 2) a itl se aa RS 75 Women’s Plush Coats of imported velour plush, lined and interlined with peau de cygne or Skinner satin. Formerly to 35.00.

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