The evening world. Newspaper, January 25, 1917, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WASKELL BLOW-UP ACCIDENT | and Jury, Grand ur | Mieheved seater Inver into the explosion at th Powder plant at Haskell Jah, 12. That the expiosion was an| wident will be the substance of the port which the jury will make In & few days. The men were taken to the scene of the accider thing was eo , employers being closely questione charge of was made Herehtield ¥ @ county officials had refused an ta st into the death of two em plo: yesterday and every Heed the Warnings} "°°." sent out by Nature when de the stomach, liver and No. 119 First Street, Brooklyn. bowels have become gweak ROFRANO WITNESS ~ SLAIN NEAR HOE Curtea, known as “Choe,” [the surly reoanting witness in tho| 4nd Broomo Streets in Manhattan be- | trial of former Deputy Street Clean- 1 Rofrano for) Mike Grimaldi of » was shot to! Pac at | cato charged with murder. | | Licato bought his coffee house) |from Grimaldi two weeks ago. It! rly owned by Mike's| ath last evening near his home lice were Inclined to Jery to a band of Brooklyn dealers tn | forbidden drugs. | Policeman Byrne reached Curtca a shooting and took nih to a nearby saloon, where he was attended by Dr. Hipps of the Methodist Episcopal Hospital, while | Capt. Coughlin of the » Brooklyn De- ran down tho av | peated * Lefty Jim” Li ue and ar- the owner 1, Who R Reena Story, {of * coffee house at No. 670 Carroll Have Been Killed 1 F eud Over Drug S: Street. Licato was taken to the bedside of Curtea at the hospital. |_,,"You shot me, Lefty?” sald Curten. | ‘I don't know why. Mike Grimaldi) telephoned me to come from Sullivan cause he had a@ atick-up Job, and when I came out you shot m 17 Garfield and with Li- was arrested was forn | charge his murder to the long lst of | prothe ‘ore G \< v' A Splendid Idea—TRY var e brother, Fiore Grimaldi, who was Kilinga and stabbings and beatings | sentenced to prison recently for deal- aich grew out of the Rofrano-Gal-| ing in drugs. HOSTETTER’S = political feud tn the enaertues| Ralph Strizza of No. 649 Unton Stomach Bitters B. Altman & Ca. A Sale of Women’s Boots for to-merrow (Friday) will comprise a number of discontinued styles in broken sizes (small and nar- row predominating), all of which will be marked, to close out, at $3.75 per pair (Women’s Shoes, Second Floor) B. Altman & Co. The Mourning Department gives equal attention to the furnishing of Mourning Outfits in complete detail, or of individual items which may be required in an emergency. In the semi-private rooms reserved for the purpose on the Third Floor, everything that is fashionable in mourning attire and its accessories may be viewed in quiet seclusion. The new modes and materials for Spring mourning are a feature of special interest at the moment. Fifth Avernue-Madtson Avene. New Qork 34th and 35th Streets DELIVERED $54.50 Columbia Outfit This is your op) portunity to have a famous Grafonola without paying any money down! No Deposit at all is required. elther of our big stores and selcet the finish you want, together with six one ¢ Double Dise Records (12 p und you pay only a few ¢ trifling sum you can enjoy all the Columbia, Columbia Grafonola have a complete line of these supreme instruments from $15 to 1, handsomely finished in oak or mahe credit terms, The model illustrated is the tion price for which, together with six 75¢ Double Dise Records, is but $54.50. rument for your he tape. Take ad at 121st Street 2212 to 2224 Third Avenue Sto res bridge section of Manhattan. FREE Simply come to wonderful-toned » all offered on liberal ne and hear the Columbia Grafonota played—then select the in- antage of this combination No Deposit offer Now! CowPERTHWAIT & SONS “Oldest Furniture House in America” 3rd Avenue Two Park Row at Chatham Sq. 193 to 205 Park Row Later | Street, Badasara Antonina of No, 165 information seemed to make ft olear! Fourth Avenue and Joanna Petersen | that Curica was muspected of treach-|of No, 246 Seventh Street were also arrested as material witnesses be- | they had been with Grimaldi | caus and Licato earller in the evening, The Petersen woman sald 6! a been living with Grimaldi after a quarrel with her husband several | weeks ago, She went with the others | under arrest to a garage near Fourth | Avenus and First Street yesterday jevening, Grimaldi used the garage telephone, talked angrily to Licato and then ordered her to go to her room, She went only part way, heard a| jshot and turned back. ‘Then Grimaidi | came up to her and hurried her home, Later he went out saying if he was! not back by it would be because he had been arrested tor murder, she said. Curlca was one of the witnesses on whom Assistant District’ Attorneys Dooling ani rs relied to con- vict Rofrano, as locked up with Montemagno, the gunman who shot Mike Gaimari, and other wit for several weeks in the Wes Prison, Ho sitpped away from a detective on the street, got into communication with Martin W. Littleton, Rofrano’s counsel, and made affidavits to the effect that Montemagno, a man named Meli, a pickpocket and him- self had concocted at the instance of detectives, a story of the murder in- volving Rofrano. The others had threatened, he sald, to involve him in the story if he did not join them, Montemagno and tho pickpocket did involve Curica and he was in- dicted for the Gaimari murder, but was turned loose n Rofrano was acquitted. He has a long criminal record. Grimaldi has been to prison for carrying a revolver and is now awaiting trial for a shooting last May. He was acquitted of a murder charge in 1915, SUGAR STRIKE WILL END TO-DAY, REFINERS SAY Plants Find Police Ready With Nightsticks, The police had two clashes with strikers in Williamsburg to-day, and in one, at South Fourth Street and Kent Avenue, had to use thelr clubs, This was outside the Havemeyer plant of the American Sugar Re- finery, where 8,000 men went on strike yesterday, At 6 o'clock this morning, when forty employees were on their way to the refinery to go to work, the strikers tried to persuade them to join the strike, and failing, them, About a dozen policomen re- sponded and after nightsticks had been busy several minutes the strik- ers fled, John Bilinsky, twenty-one, No. South Second Str leader of the strikers, was to stop employees from entering the clothing factory of Bob & Barkin, No, 68 North Ninth Street, where there is no strike, The pickets rep- resented strikers in other f ch, twenty, No. ni Marcella Astro- No, 129 North Eighth Y itenry Weissman, twenty, ine Metals said ted the strike there to end to-day, from the way the men are coming back to work. “500 STRIKERS BATTLE AT AGATE IRON WORKS | Prevent Detectives Taking Strike- breakers Into Plant—Charged by Mounted Police, The situation Is tense to-day at the agate tronware plant of the La- lance & Gr Company at Woodhaven, L. L, where |1,200 men and 500 women have been on strike for several weeks, When agency detectives attempted yester- | | both sexes attacked them. Bricks and paving stones wer hurled until sixteen mounted polici arrived. These dispersed the crowd after a f paid he police arrested Josoph Kreutin ot. Later, the assault the few Joyal forenen . they were leav the works. The pollen escorted the one at a time fety caceemnaiiained adel Former Head of Woodmen Dead, CHICAGO, Jan, 25.-W, A, North cott, former Lieutenant vernor of Illinola and at one time head of the Modern Woc en of Americ: at Excelsion & Mo.,, to-d. heart disease. the Interocean Casualty Company, Two Outbreaks Near Williamsburg | > About the same time pickets tried | § _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, (1917. News Oddities BECAUSH WIFE FAILED to se came off, husband left her after twenty-eight years of wedded life. Loy engraved in gold and tied with pink ACT to prove kn while swimming. of fresh eggs touch. HONE FAINTING AT TELEPHONE TO ENCOURAGE THE STORK, “Below the deadline” thief TRAIL OF PENNIES that fell through hole in j.44 Pocket led Philadelphia police to two boys who were robbing slot machi HOMICIDE CASE put off in Jersey City because father of the defendant waa found on the jury panel, ENSLAVED BY BULGARS. Sei Forced to Work Under Ft PARIS, Jan. 25.—The following sta’ ment from the Serbian Press Rureau w on loose vest button and it finally correspondent Bulgarian slavery, has reached our lines. Paterson 1s issuing birth certificates He recounts that he, with other pens=/ or blue ribbon. ante, was deported by force before the! Ned to! S$ showed exhibits A and B to Trenton jury labor in trenches under the artillery are not matched since she struck a log | Bulgarian retreat and com fire of the Serbians and their aillle m all the villages into slavery. F teen hundred were so taken from 8 a truckload hodo!, under control of German 0 cers” in the financial district. —_—_——————— WHEN ITALIAN RBSERVISTS boarded liner at CARRANZA “LOAN” INQUIRY. Jersey City they found all first and second cabins had been turned into stalls and given to 1,500 horses, #o they | had to travel in steerage, Firat Chief Alleged to Have Forced One From Bank in Mexico, | WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—At the tn- atance of the Spanish and British Em- aged inquiri pment regarding @ loan Carranza is ela: ed the “loan” confiscatory, Pital of the bank ta 45 remaining British, Am 2D but fifteen minutes after wedding ceremony, | Fifty Killed by Los Angeles woman testified in separation sult, ago. (4.05 P. M).— Lynn, Mass, man's head tel on hia |Fifty natives were killed and 200 fountain pen and the point penetrated his brain. others were injured In an earthquake on the island of Ball, in the Malay $10,000,000 GIVEN BYU. S.FOR ROADS: NY. GETSSS01,440 Second ati 8 Distribution | Under Federal Aid Law An- nounced by Houston. WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.-—Appor- | tlonment of $10,000,000 to ald the States in the construction of rural post rog second annual dis- tribution In accordance with the eral Ald Road Law, was announced to-day by Secretary Houston of the Department of Agriculture. To meet the cost of administering the law $300,000 has been deducted. The re- maining $9,700,000 is divided as fol- lows: Alabama, $208, 027; Arkansi $302,127; tlout, Florida, $11 Idaho, $120, Ilnots, $441.8: diana, $271,495; lowa, sas, $286,414; Kentuc Louisiana, $134,949; 9 Massachusetts, $147,701; Michigan, | $291,567; Minnesota, $284,788; Mis- Leal cial $177,811; sourl, Arizona, $137,- 78; California, 380; Connec- Delaware, Georgia, shire, New $501,440; North Dakota, $15: $10; Oklahoma, $157,374; Penni Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, $143,615; South Dakota, $161,- 892; Tennessee, $228,306; Texas, $583,- 855; Utah, $113,900; Vermont, $45,68! Virginia, $199,321; Washington, $143,- 768; West Virginia, $106,540; Wiscon- | sin, $256,722; Wyoming, $122,393. In addition, $1,000,000 will be ap-| portioned for the development of roads and trails within, or partly within, national forests. The law pro- vides that $15,000,000 shall be appor- tioned in the fiscal year of 1919, $20, 000,000 in 1920 and $25,000,000 In 1 na, $ Ohio, ‘atte 78; Oregon, 1, $461,288; North Care 28 Acker, Merrall & Condit French and Italian Olive Oil—for one week only a spe- cial sale of the finest grades of olive oil—made from selected ripe olives—at unusually low prices. House- wives should take advantage of this sale, as oil of this exceptional quality has never been quoted as low before, Tuqular Special Price,’ Prive, Olive Oil Finest French: Rising Sun Brand Small Bottle...... 23 19 Medium Bottle... Large Bottle...... .70 58 Tomatoes——Orion— large tins ‘ 135 12 day to lead twelve strikebreakers | ‘into the place about 600 strikers of » but only one of the! strikebreakers reached the plant, it is} | Corn--Finest Maine— Small sweet kernels. 1.60.14 Peas —A. M. & C. Selected Early June. 1.40.12 Peaches—-Noreca— the y beua Baar Tae 1 | Sliced Pi apres! re, 160 .14 Stewing Figs—-Ib.. 18 | Cheese —Cream Regular 12c cakes.. 10 was President of Crawford Farms—mild and i | ship Vestris to start a purchasing cam- . |ers of the world | Olive Oil-- a Te | Archipelago, according to @ despatch Central Ne | More than a thousand how oe and f AT FEAST OF CALORIES is eeicunty damages Ps ——— of Federal Trad | Diet Squad to Have “Sweethearts’| Sem mest of wederal Evening” With Cabaret and invon of Philadelphia, P * r aldwin Locomotiv Dance Later. i A Chairman oft Cupld will become a Calorian to- | a ae night at the police Diet Squad dinner | , 5 President. of the lin Lafayette wet, for it will be| United States Steet Corporation, | “Sweethearts’ Event with the food \experimenters. ‘The dinner will be followed by dancing. Besides an or- | chestra there ls to be @ cabaret show ‘brought from among the Fifties, Mrs. | Eula McClary says. | | The rookies have fattened to such a | degree that Dr. Fisk has ordered a |rearrangement of the menus by | which they will get less protein. They | took in 3,035 calories yesterday from | a7 cent breakfast (870 calories) con- \ sisting of hominy and milk, toast and | butter and coffee; an 8 cent luncheon | (965 calories) of baked lima beans, Boston brown bread and butter, sliced oranges and bananas with shredded cocoanut and tea, and a 10 cent dinner (1,200 calories) of liver and bacon, creamed potatoes, whole wheat bread and butter, coffee, jelly and tea. a BIGGER ARGENTINE NAVY. Naval Conastractor to Contract for New Warships. Capt. Jorge Cantos Urquita, Chief | Na Constructor of the Argentine) Navy, arrived here to-dav on the steam- West 42nd Street In the Men’s paign to build up the Argentine Navy with battleships jo cruisers, destroy- s and submarine boats of United States manufac Within. four . he sald, the Ar- | gentine sto have a navy which will command respect among the pow- You can get vid of itching with Resinol Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap easily heal most cases of eee! 4 ilar skin-eruptions. ‘The first application ly stope the itching and burning instantly. Sold by all druggi ‘sam | ple of each free, write to Dept. +, , Baltie more, Md. Use Resinel Soap Sor the complexion, | belted backs; velvet Regular 8: Reuter Sreokat Finest Italian— Excelsior Brand: Full Quart Tin..... .79 71 Full 4gGallonTin.. 1.55 1,34 A popular Breakfast Blend. Tea—Special Orange Pekoe. A blend of fine teas repre- senting $1.00 a pound quality | Rice—Noreca Fancy Beid.scsseiasscd oe 8618 | Bacon—Elm City... Ib. 26 | Boneless Breakfast. Very Choice Floridas. lous pictures off Po! fn Tella How He aud Others! is forwarded from Corfu by the Havas ‘odor Javanociteh, escaped from ery male above boyhood was taken | the State Department has ad-| to the Carranza Gov-| Suits, Formerly up to $45.00 To Close Out, $15.00 #ald to have enforced from the Bank of | THREE HUNCHBACKS wanted by Chicago con-| {onion and Mexico, it was learned to-| cern to operate envelope machines requiring delicacy of |4# Mtish and Spanish officials here de- | ~ Coats, Formerly up to $48.00 To Close Out, $15.00 Sport Skirts, Formerly up to $15.0( To Close Out, $4.50, Fifth Avenue at Fiftieth Street Stern Brothers Between 5th and 6th Avenues Men’s Suits and Overcoats 50 Regularly $25.00 The Overcoats Materials are Oxfords, Blacks and Fancy Mixtures in button through and fly-front models; and self col- lars: sizes 34 to 44, stouts included, Men’s Seasonable Underwear At Very Special Prices Friday and Saturday Grey Merino Shirts and Drawers, seasonable weight . Final Clearance Sale of Men’s English Merino and All Wool Underwear Mostly drawers; sizes incomplete; formerly sold up to $4.50.......at $1.50 &, DE PINNA Announce for Friday and Saturday January 26th and 27th \ Final Clearance Sale Misses’ Suits, Coats and Sport Skirts Sizes, 14 to 20 Years ‘ The assortment includes the balance of the reular De Pinna stock, consisting of plain tailored sus of imported velours and other medium weight fatics, appropriate for Winter and early Spring wear. On account of the clearance reduction, none sent on approval or credited. West 43rd Striet Clothing Section on the Third Floor An Unusual Offering for Friday and Saturday of The Suits Are made of Plain and Farey Mixtures in all the new and degr- able colorings and weave: and three button models; sizes 34 to 46 chest, stouts included. in two Egyptian Cotton Union Suits, light or medium weight; shen with cither half or long sleeves; ankle length........at $110 $1.15 -at renee Tae) Ee | trait of Mark Twain in colors. blication of 16 Shackleton Antarctic Photo; r ice perils exclusive in Next Sunday World Gre eughe i Two of Mark Twain’s aE RUNNIEST STORIES — With quaint illustrations by Herb Roth and a por- Booklet Free ath Sunday World, January 28 In Greater New York and Vicinity In addition, a collection of humorous anecdotes about Mark Grape Fruit— Twain, gathered by Albert Bigelow Paine, his friend and hog: | Medium large 4 for 25 rapher. Don't fail to get the MARK TWAIN STORY BOOK EXTRAI—Firet newspaper ay

Other pages from this issue: