The evening world. Newspaper, January 10, 1917, Page 4

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ORIGINAL Matted Milk Henry Alschelmer was one of the best natured men in Bast Meadow, lL. I, where he had @ hotel. When he recently became 11 he told friends that if he died he wanted hir funeral made joyful. He wrote a letter to Lawrence Fitzgerald of Mineola, instructing him to have a band at the funeral. Soon after writing the letter Alschetmer died. Fitzgerald did na requested. Hi t to Manhattan and had a brass band brought out for the funeral day. It played at the servi also at the burial at to Alacheim: looked far from A Nutritions Diet for'All Ages. lorlick’s Always on Hand SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDMRS Franklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue Q Annual Sale—Thursday Men’s Furnishings At Greatly Reduced Prices en’s Madras Shirts ~ \\In bright or conservative stripes; French cuffs 1.00 Reduced from $1.50 \ Men’s Madras Shirts ' sCustom shirts of fine madras; French cuffe hw 1.45 X Reduced from $2.00 Men’s Silk Crepe Shirts Of fine, quality satin striped silk crepe de chine ® 4.50 ‘2 Reduced from $6.00 Men’s Silk Scarfs Of heavy silk, large variety of colorings 55 Reduced from $1.00 ‘ Men’s Silk Scarfs Of heavy imported and domestic silks 85 Reduced from $1.50 and $2.00 . Imported Silk Mufflers Of knitted silk in college colors 4.50 Reduced from $6.00 Men’s Pure Silk Sox “In black, white, gray or cham ie; spliced heel, sole and toe. 3 pair for $1.00 35 per pair, Reduced from .50 Men's Farnishing Shop 16 West 38th St. A separate shop on the street level. be OR. 46" ST, 6-8 AVE. s Good Furniture at Reasonable Prices On Our LIBERAL CREDIT ARRANGEMENT so to New Y N a KED IN er EMPIRE PERIOD BEDROOM in genuine Circassian Walnut, \| handsomely ‘iv yay and TOILET Wy iT E, with iy Litt. e) con- of 48 inches long, CHIFFON. IER 35 inches long, WE SELL ON CREDIT COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONES = From $15.00 U With Fryers wtog H woe hee hin 60 daye CHARS Drive. NISEED FROM $75 UP ON CREDIT SEWING MACHINES ON CREOIT PEN MONDAYS & SATURDAYS UNTIL TOP mre THE “SPREAD EAGLNG” ‘OF ARTILERYMAN ROUSES HS MATES Ructions Looked For When 2d Battalion, 2d Field Artil- lery, Musters Out. A condition approaching mutiny ex- ista In the Second Battalion of the Second Field Artillery over the “epread-eagiing” of Private Max Kel- lerman yesterday because he refused to clean out the drill ring on the ground that be had been etarved in the guard house. Fully fifty of the privates of the battalion told an Fve- ning World reporter to-day that al- jthough the Government provides 29 jand the battalion is still in the United States Army, no rations at all have been served to the men on guard and the men fn the guard house at the armory since the arrival of the com- mand last Saturday. ‘The men claim also that, through the ineMictoncy of their officers they were not properly fed on the trip from McAllen, Tex. If the privates make good their threats the armory of the Becond Battalion at Franklin Avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-sixth Street, the Bronx, will be the avene of & lot of action whon the command is muatered out of the Fedoral service. Lieut. Col, Frank D. Hines ad- EVENING WORLD, WE DNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1917. U. S. WILL INVESTIGATE | ARNOLD DALY DYING THE DEATH OF O'ANTIN’ AFTER QUICK OPERATION Well Known Actor Suffering Fram Peritonitis and His Chances Are Slight. | A bulletin insued at Roosevelt Hos- pital at 9.30 o'clock this morning states that Arnold Daly, the actor, | Who was operated on last night in a 4 | desperate effort to save his life, is still jin @ very dangerous condition, al- though some Improvement has been |Noted since he recovered from the ef- | 39th Street January Sale |cents a day for each man for rations | » mitted to-day that Private Keller- man was strapped to the wheel of @ gun carriage in the armory for en hour yesterday, “apread-eagie” fasb- fon and said he assumed reaponal- bility for the punishment. He added that he believed it was in accordance with army regulations and that he bad not received any intimation that the incident is to be investigated by regular army officials. The statement of Lieut. Col. Hines wae issued after he had consulted with his staff and with Capt. J. Gil- breth, .U 8, A. and three other officers of the regular army who are mustering tho bat nm out. The Meutenant colonel said: “The punishment inflicted on Pri- vate Kellerman was not inhumane. It 19 @ standard punishment for mu- tinous soldiers. “Private Kellerman, on the way from Texas bragged that he had a ‘pull’ and would be the first member of the battalion to reach New York. At eome distance out, down in New Jersey, he climbed through a window of the car and tried to get away. He was caught and placed under arrest, “Yesterday he and five other pri- vates under arrest were ordered to clean the ring. All refused, but five of them came around when threat- ened with the spread-eagie treat Kellerman alone persisted in ref to obey orders, “He was strapped to the wheel of a gun carriage from 4 to 6 o'clock. Then he decided to go to work, and that is all there was to the I suppose there has been son sion about rations, but the p the Bronx on our return certainly showered the battalion with suffi- clent food to keep it a long time, and @ lot of that food is still in the ory. “AH men not on guard or special detail are allowed to go to their homes for meals and to sleep. I un- derstand some of them are kicking because the Government doesn't pay th carta riva by court marth ‘August Kellerman, a butcher, of No. 1049 Nelson Avenue, the Bronx, father of Max Kellerman, called at the of- | fee of Major-Gen, John F, O'Ryan at the Municipal Bullding Orson A. Raynor, a la were told that Gen, O° nothing about the “spread eagle” case outside of what he had read in the | newspapers, Gen, O'Ryan said the }matter Is one resting entirely with the commanding officer of the regi- ment Max Ke old, He die with his batt man is to be tried jon Saturday, but went he was il, his ther says, On Mor | was placed under arrest | by a corporal and t escorted to the armo’ been tn confinament |FINDS “ABANDONED” BABY ——ND'CAUSES A PANIC er since. When Miss Ida Rubin of No, 181 Powell Street, Hrownaville, reached Jhome this morning from a viatt she | was astonished to find a brown baby carriage in the hall, containing a strange baby, Convinced that the infant had been abandoned, she wheeled It to the Brownsville station, returned home and went to bed, A half hour later the neighborhood was aroused by the screams of Mrs Lilllan Galos of No. 346 Rockaway |Avenue, She had been paying a call upstairs and had left her fourteen- months-old baby in ite carriage tn the lower hall, Somebody, she cried, had kidnapped her child | Mrs. Galos ran all the way to the {police station, still lamenting, Her baby by (his time had been carried to Kings County Hosj It was an hour more before Mra, Galos got her child Miss Rubin slept peacefully through | the € t, dreaming, it Is satd, how eds of kindness make the world hi r for everybody -> #125,000 Pire t 4 Quel big fire to-da hen SLWNS OAarctin: san Q7 rin Wife of Former Mexican Embassy Employee Thinks He Met with Foul Play in Mexico. WASHINGTON, Jan, 10.~—On re- quest of Mrs. Luis d'Antin, widow of Louls D'Antin, the American who muddenly died at San Luis Protosi on his way to Queretaro with Mexican Ambassador Arrendondo, the State Department to-day ordered an inves- Ugation of the circumstances attend- ing his death, One message was sené to the Ameri. can representative f Mexico City and another to the Consul at San Luls Potosi Mrs, d’Antin belleves that her hus- band met with foul play. He was formerly Chancellor of the American | Embassy in Mexico. NATIONAL PROHIBITION FIGHT TO COME SOON “Dry” Leaders to Meet in Washing- ton to Decide in Which Branch of Congress It Will Be Opened. WASHINGTON, Jan. 10.—The Na- tional Prohibition Bill will be brought up during the present short session, Prohibition leaders announced to-day. The bill is now on the House and Sen- ate calendars and can be called up at any time. National Prohibition leaders are to meet here this week to decide in which branch of Congress the first fight for nation-wide prohibition will be made. House leaders to-day stated, the House will take action possibly t. | within two or three weeks. Open daily until six o'clock tent of $1 whieh started in the cotte @ io. and spread |1s entertained for his recovery. | box Theatre Monday night. |plainead of violent pains | | performance, fects of the anaesthetic. Little hope Ho had been playing in The! Master” up to last night. The play! moved from the Fulton to the Band- He com- Monday, but insisted on going through with his He was stricken again laat night in bis apartments at No, 1 West Sixty-fourth Street about dinner time. Dr. Charles H. Peck of No. 80 West Fiftleth Street decided an immediate) operation was necessary. Daly was rushed to the hospital at 9.30. The) operation showed he was suffering from peritonitis following the burst-| ing of an abscess which had formed} on the large intestine, —» GIRL AGAIN TRIES TO DIE. At- ih at- | Admitting that it was her third tempt to kill herself a young woman who said she was Josephine De Leon, eighteen ye: Nd, of No, 2428 Firat Avenue, was taken to Bellevue Hos- pital this morning from the hallway of No. 203 East Twenty-sixth Street, where she was found suffering from fodine potsoning. School chi in found the young woman fn @ semi-conscious condition in the back of the ground floor hall They told Patrolman Weisenrider, who) forced milk and eggs down her throat. When Dr. Findlay arrived he said the patrolman’s action had saved er lfe. In the hospital she raid: im ti trouble, I've tried to die three times | before.” senile AUTO SPEEDWAY FAILURE. Baakruptey Actio a Whi The new stocks, for which this sale is to make room, willshow an increase over former prices; the articles in the sale show a substantial reduction. an unusual opportunity to re- plenish your glassware and china closets. OVINGTON’S 312-314 Fifth Avenue t, Brooklyn, against the Sheepshead Bay Speedway Associa- tion, which conducted automobile | races, and total Hiabilities are not stated in the papers. The petitioning creditors are the Frank Preabrey Company, No. 456 Fourth Avenue, Manhattan, $2,000 for | vertising work; Theodore W. Beck- | gnee of the Steel Equipment ,, $674.05 for filing cabinets, and J. Fleming Dutch, No, 30. Kant Fourteenth Street, $369.05 for furni- | ture. route from New York t gathering for winter maneuvres at Guantanamo, came into, Hampton Roads to-day, disabled as a! result of eplitting one of her turbine en- | y kines. The ship will not be able to sail! i i é Houser however, aro considered, fee | South with the fleet and ts expecting Three charming models on most pic- | Several models of notably effective: mote by House loaders who, are|te Meine repaire, Hear Admiral turesque lines. style. * + T commander of the seventh -|ing passed the District of Columbia Sint enetie nib Bae’ tote Silver Embroidered Taffeta with silk net. Georgette Crepe, soutache braided. Frohibition Bill) will eat on the nas Taffeta with embroidered net lace in a Georgette Cre; f i tional measure before the House gets| . reps iets pease repe, fur trimmed or em- to ft. * . : Aen eet teicict Prantuition Bul Silk net over chiffon, with silver lace and Crepe de Chine in pleated Russian model ra before it takes up the dry constitu. | flower garlands. of extreme smartness. tlonal amendment. i Third Floor pitied rencennemceaty MEDIATOR BEGINS N. H. CASE. ‘ Hed 4 G, W. W. Hanger of Federal Board) i e ’ Hae Talk With Telegraphera, | 4 Assistant Co ivsioner Hanger of the! There is one sure, safe way | | F —R d d vaintat att hein tne || A oraoig« teh, sl | | ine Furs educe here yesterday trying {o aotile the wage i t 4 ry See isehe ts dea cacae || opm ee in reeves For the January Clearance Sale bag cree . |] cheeks and good health, your blood . » * crane fee em and an annual vesation || must be ureand the YaGnous mat- Every Coat, aa Sage, Sieh and Bfalt in the Lord & Taylor wi pay. ter must carr 5 4 ~ he > Mr, Hanger talked, goon after his ar- Assortment of Selected Furs Included in This Important Event Sintere’ if there of Healltoad atone Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets eo wilt meet to-dai . ‘ , , pttes OC Ne never rhanamers, Headed || St etter ie ae ayes Ther act Hudson Seal ‘ Naturet Shan ——— . | 4 29.50 Muffs....., Noted toonint Dead. he di | (Dyed muskrat) ie Oe +» $22, CHICAGO 10. —laither D. Braa- They are relatlecusfe end cannot Coats $30.50 Scarfs........ $29.50 ? ey, fo v ye roc the = ; iota Bally Weve sae Rant dit bares — are ued by women folks | : Natural Raccoon { fey's ‘political and war’ cartoc Constipation Is nearly always the $110.00 Coats $19.50 Muffs,........ $14.50 4 tracted. international attention, Some || cause of all ailments of women, The $17.50 Scarfs.........$13.50 of his original drawings hang om the |} intestines must be made to do their $82.50 tener Interns. Fie, wae orn in, New Haven, || mote eaters ia treubios signe | 18 Natural Beaver tonne, n 1889 le fo he | a ‘ A minder of the crew ‘and ‘never 1 po Bgl pleasing ei gay HME $145.00 Coats $26.50 Moffe. . $21.50 widow and four children, + © Qdruggiate—t0e and 25e — Asst) | $110.00 $16.50 Scarfs........ $12.50 = . =| Silver Pointed Fox iS $195.00 C ; | 75.00 Coats $65.00 Muffs......... $49.50 ) $145.00 $65.00 Scarfs........ $49.50 § ». 4 . 3 bes > Black Lynx ‘ China and Glassware || 235,00 Coats 27.50 Mulls... $19.80 $175.00 $24.50 Scarfs......... $17.50 Q You will find many bar- $4 ; ale fat i , : x $265.00 Coats Taupe Fox » gains in Ovington’s china and $195 00 $32.50 Muffs., : j glassware sale, now going on. i $32.50 Scarfs,. $23.50 y is New York OSS 0S 097 9 — 00 I SO 0 OSSD Muslin Underwear Neligees, Silk Petticoats, Corsets Now at its height, this event is notable for its ample and attractive assortments, extraor- dinary economies and incomparable values. Featured for Thursday Extra Size Underwear At January Sale Prices. Night Gowns.~.... .$1.45, $1.95 Drawers........75¢., 98c., $1.45 Petticoats... 98c., $1.45, $1.95, $2.95 Becond Floor Ae eS ae ae ee eee eee med Remarkable for Its Values and Assortments The January Clearance Sale Women’s Fur-Collared Coats Now Reduced to $25.00, $29.50, $35.00 and $39.50 Splendid opportunities for selection, for there are many models and the materials are those most in vogue. Extremely smart gar- ments, silk lined and warmly interlined; tailored to perfection. Fashioned of Shetland Velours, Velour Cloths, Novelty Mixtures with large collars of French Seal (dyed coney), Silver Kit Coney, Alaska and Kolinsky Opossum or Natural Raccoon. Third Floor. b Women’s Dresses A New and Specially Purchased Collection Offered at Intensely Interesting Prices Evening Frocks Afternoon Gowns $19.50 $29.50 Hudson Seal (dyed muskrat) $16.50 Muffs.... $16.50 Scarfs., Models of the fashion- able lengths; skunk trimmed. plain or - $12.50 + $12.50 Matched Sets of Kolinsky, Moleskin, Ermine, Sable, Cross Fox and Fisher-—Also Radically Reduced. Third Floor eee ee ee ere vem: Se A

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