The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1915, Page 10

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Mesubirnnenes races ot¢ [REDHOT RIVETS HURLED | irer icv sccn"ts “prorress svora . sees Bf i a IN RIOT OF STRIKERS ne Clubs, bricks and stones were NO BURGLAR, SHE SAYS; | isk : wena set nce! ONLY TOOK GOODS SHE Police Charge Missiles Were Dropped] threw redhot rivets at the striko- agen worionn. | From Bie on Nonnion | artes seage™= "1 THOUGHT DOCTOR LEFT Men During Fight. 3 BRIGHT BUT DEPRESSING, a HORLICK!S| cerns. 0 sor. n-nve of mua Mrnemtatinate | “what hot exciatmed the choertui| Sister-in-Law of Brooklyn Rec- dand THE ORIGINAL fifty strikobreakers were injureed an: ‘ta Ge Gemon, my then? perso ven strikers arrested here to-day in| you ought to look on the bright side of MALTED MILK a attack by the iatter on the former | thin tor, Arrested With Negro, 1 soameahanal cathe pion, | THO were Om thele way to work St! rie te GE T've seen AG arian Is Held, However. bad seeker Kunds war order auto| time was my uninsured house No Connection With Any Other Establishment in the World 43 & 45 West 34th Street, «iit. First Showing Saturday | Newest Fur Trimmed Coats & Suits Mra, Mary Clark of No, 308 Hanoock Street, Brooklyn, sister-in-law of the Rev. Charles @. Clark, rector of St. George's Church, Marcy and Gates Avenues, Brooklyn, was arraigned tn the Gates Avenue Court to-day on a charge of burglary, She and a negro, James Hanks, of No, @% Kingston Avenus, wore arrested last night, ac- cused of taking @ lot of clothing, bed linen, paintings, &0., from @ vacant house, No. 20 Jefferson Avenue, the property of Dr. Theodore Wiggins, of No, 620 Nostrand Avenue, Mre. Clark declared: that she be- Meved the stuff had been abandoned, and that she innocently bired Banks to move it. Dr. Wiggina said he was not anxious to prosecute for am honest mistake. Magistrate Nash continued the oase until Tuesday., Mra, Clark and Banke remain on, be batt of fiom each, furnished by the Mr. Ci when they Were arrested last nights Detoctive Daly says mre, Clark told him that she had visited the houne at No. 20 Jefferso 80 bed clothing for her and take the other things to his comiaemmntperiannts NEW ANCONA VICTIM FOUND, He Is Joseph Tortet, an@ Is an) American Citizen. WASHINGTON, eee LE Nov. 98.—Anether American citizen who was on the er- | podoes Italian liner Ancona haa been | located by the Consul General at Mar- | seilies. He ts Joseph Torist and 1s anid to be In a hopattal on the North Afri- can cons «| Doposttions will be taken from add to the facts officials of ‘the. Bia Blake Department are gathering to det the true Pike Aneons disaster | aa tt affocts tho United States, ee | IN A NUTSHELL. \ (Prom the Boston Record.) A class of foreigners learning Engtish at the night achool had just finished the ato! Robert Bi er which Parscvered Gaul’ after | Broadcloth Nat fn a8 melee aenl Chinchilla § A young Tri TS FS the yor hts of ee et had | watched the ‘offorte of the spider, Prete | they following: nt Ju ken @o, I ken do." th THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, PFULTON THEATRE Sees NOVEMBER 26, 1916. . Americas Foremost Specialists ; OPPENHEIM, GLLINS & G 34th aii aitinad York ~“ Witt Close Out To-morrow (Saturday) Misses’ Tailored Suits Misses’ Smart ‘Coats About Pita Misses’ Tailored Sults of Broadcloth, Misses’ Coats of Corduroy, Mixtures, Checks bardii and Whipcord, f id and Zibeline; suitable for general wear; ‘ me velvet trimmed.” arte some fur teimmal. : Formerly sold to 29.75 Formerly sold to 25.00 a” 18.00 15.00 Misses’ Fur Trimmed Broadcloth Misses’ Coats df Broadcloth, Velour Suits, In Black, Navy, Brown and a | 25. 00 | Cloth, Duvetyne and Corduroy, hens Green; Seal trimmed.~ and interlined. 29.75 aed Dressy Suits of an reat: a | 35. 00 be nerd on Pldsh Cont: tceengs 4 val | 35. 00 cloth, Duvet; and Laine ex uni im or wan si clusive models.” fined throughout. Misses’ Aiternoon and Street Dresses—to Close Out In Velvet, Charmeuse, Crepe de Chine, Broadcloth and Taffeta, also combinations of Velvet and Georgette Crepe, Se: and Satin; all this season’s best models; many fur trimmed. Formerly. sold from 25.00 to 40.00 20.00 15.00 25.00 Girls’ Coats—s to 10 years Girls’ Coats—io to 16 years , Girls’ Velveteen and Corduro Qiris’ School Coats in Corduroy, Zibes in Bi dy, Brown, Grose. 3 yA one 9. lines, Chinchilla and xtures ic} 9 Blacks fur trimmed; full lined. Special 75 Green, Brown and Navy. > 75 ‘vem Med ebegar ; ape in Mahowny, Green, Brown, Black a: penhagen; fur collar; lined and interlined. Special Girls’ Coats of Zibeline, Pebble eek 12.75 | Site eae Neat ato ores] 13.75 * Girls’ Velveteen Coats Girts’ Chinchilla Coats Of superior Velveteen fy Corduro; Belt model with patch pockets, in prevailing colors, or Beaves in Navy, Brown, fives ogee Gray; Cor- 9 trimmed, richly lined po interlined. 19,75 | duroy or Velvet trimmed; some lined Py f-) F we 16 years. Actual 80. throughout. 4 to 16 years. Special q - = me Seats 5c and 50c tare | ITH what scientific skill is the history of to-day recorded so that it will live forever! xcept for idealized paintings in the gpliecies, Waterloo and Bunker Hill, ravelotte and Chapultepec, Sedan and all the other battles of bygone times are now only in books and musty documents. A now different the history of the greatest of wars History is no longer simply that which may be read in the eietigaa page. Real history is that which may be seen just as it was at the tinie of its making It is this vizualized history which makes it possible for the deeply interested and neutral observer to get a sightseer’s angle on the titanic conflict now sweeping from Flanders to the Alps a in which more fighting men are engaged than make up the total population of New A turn in the life panorama and the trenches are disclosed with the defenders of the first line watching at the portholes, You see the wounded borne, away and here and there a soldier who never again will answer to the call of ‘*Advance!”’ Another series shows for the first time poison gases rolling away from the trenches while the high explosive shells are making the earth quake. You see the air scouts rising with their armored birds and flying away over,the lines; and you see mounds of branches suddenly disappear, disclosing batteries which immediately engages L Achat rand review, with kings and princes on the field and various soldiers receiving bravery me als, makes a picture full of dash and spirit. F hese official motion pictures take you along the line. What the camera men risked their lives to picture in months at the front i is unfolded to you in an exhibition which con- tinues two hours. An orchestra of forty pieces provides music which makes the action seem the more real, ne who would SEE history cannot afford to miss this exhibition. FOUR TIMES TO-DAY--1.30--3.30--7.30--9.30 Continuous Saturday and Sunday _ from 11 A.M. Till 11 P. M. These al the Only Pictures That Have Been Presented at the French Embassy in Washington. GHTING IN FRANCE Part of Receipts of Each Exhibition for the French Red Cross Society. Special Exhibition for Lafayette Fund Will be Announced, ITITIIITITITITILL ILL LLL ALLL LL ATLAS LLL aead eee SLT oho i i eveetes ad eR0 tS 08: The motion picture camera has become the modern eye which, seeing things, makes it pos- sible for others to see them. When the French Government steeled itself for the fray and the clash was on, the Great General Staff of the French Army created as part of its organization a corps of Soldier Pho- tographers and sent it under orders to the front, there to record in photographic writing, as Frederic R. Coudert phrased it in introducing the pictures on their first presentation at the Fulton Theatre last Monday night, the day by day events of a nation in the grip of war. It is war as thus shown in the French Government’ . official motion pictures which were loaned to The World through its war correspondent, E. Alexander Powell, for presen- eon throughout the United States and Canadas and now on exhibition at Fulton eatre, ( Writing from the office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs in Paris, Bureau Chief Fournol says: Dear Mr, Powell: wane ou the cinematograph films we selected. As I have told theae filma hi ‘operatoura mobilises’ at Jing of the French with the anthorlaatiag ot iy en Geen Staff, It is, as you know, superfluous to affirm thelr authenticity without retouch: ing, which is quite indisputable.”’ Quite as if e supplement this official guarantee, these motion pictures were first exhibited in the United States at the French Embassy at Washington, on Thursday, November 18, and sae seen by sixty distinguished guests, including members of the Diplomatic Corps and officials of our own government, These are the official motion pictures which are now on exhibition at the Fulton Theatre, Forty-aixthy Bireet, just West of Broadway, each day, The scenes projected on the screen, whether they be in the mountain fastnesses, in the network of fr enches on the reviewing fleld or at the battlefront with the great guns barking, reflect life and activity with almost the clearness of actual vision.

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