Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
OO aoe eee ee oe ee ae rarer BOMB LABORATORY -INCOURTROOM AT h—It’e Fine eeeeeete cn court and on the clerk's desk were the tubes of black steel that held the cendiary stuff and thé aluminum cap- mules that fitted into them and were to bu loaded with sulphuric acid When stowed away in the cargo of & ship acid would eat through (he capsule after three or four days and dur- ing 1916, Bince the arrest of the seven meh how of trial in April, 1916, no burh with an intense flame, Buch bombs as these destroyed more than twenty Allied #hipa in mid-ocean ——s throat and ‘ oa NE ee ee ae cteeaein|Detectclve Identifles Deadly | sere hire have been destroyed in about ft. Any aeungiat can rupply you with Materials Found in Dr. Pinex (60 cents worth | Scheele’s Hoboken Quarters. 8% ounces of Pinex thie Way, Detective Lieut. George Buaby, of the New York Polles Bomb 84 after von Kleist was arrested, he vis- at No, 1188 Clinton Btreet, Hoboken, Scheele is also in- ae A inte ay tle and fill the | dott Wy x wis \ ee sugar is sytup. thoroughly ahd it is) The United States District Court-| ited the factory of Dr. Walter Theo- . rat", tae The total coat le about! oom where Charles von Kieiat and| dor Bcheele family most efectual, six others are being tried for con- pleasant tasting remedy. Pinex is a special and highly con centfated Compound of genuine Nor. Way pihé extract, combined with| the appearance of @ chemical labora aincol afd is known the world over | tory this afternoon Areal area for its prompt healing effect on the) of bottles afd boxes of material used embFanes. ih making the bombe was displayed | Dolnted out the Avoi, fom gy oefe H by asking! on the table of United States Attor- and bombs and displayed in coutt a6 Mrs. Yarnall discovered the negro ru 5 W. Osborne 24, There were | Material he had found th Schedles! picking up her jewels. Bhé screamed, throat for "2% ounces o spiracy to burn Allies‘’a ships with fire bomba hidden in the cargoes took on y dicted with the conspirators now on trial, but he ie anid to be in Mexico. Busby described the three aete of doura leading into the place, There was @ peephole in each door, Busby ) bottles, boxer your 1) ney Jame Bien wi fe Serene ane con) large ginss jars of aulphuric and mu-|laboratory, One corner of the foom accept anything cla) Euarantes of | atic acid and wmall wooden boxes| was blackened and marked, showing a Watne, eti=Advt. iz Co, Ft | nitrate. Franklin Simon & Co. A Store of Individual Shops Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets New Corset Models For Women and Misses Just Received from Paris Paris-made ‘‘Helene” Corsets 6.75 to 19.50 These Corsets, made by a French corsetiere exclu- i A for Franklin Simon & Co., conform perfectly to lines required the new fashions—they are pliant, essentially comfortable, allow for freedom of motion, and ate made of highest grade materials, “Helene” Elastic-Top Corsets, 9.75 “Helene” Empite-Top Corsets, 11.75 “Helene” Evening Corsets, 16.75 “Parfait” Corsets Made in America by French Corsetieres 3.00 to 28.00 A specific model for sports, evening or general wear, of silk brocade, broch=, suedene, tricot, batiste, coutil, eatin or ribbon, in pink or white. “Parfait’’ Slip-On Corsets, 19.50 Of fancy silk, laced-back, shaped elastic gores at front. Franklin Simon _& Co. Introduce the New “La Supreme” Corsets 3.50 to 28.00 Corsets that typify all that could be desired—fit perfectly, combine style and comfort; of silk tricot, silk brocade, broche or coutil in pink or white, many ineet with elastic to give freedom of motion. “Binner” Corsets Of highest grade serviceable materials 5.00 to 12.50 Of fancy silk brocade, broche or coutil, in pink or white; entirely new models tor the slender, medium or full figures. Brassieres or Bandeaux For Women and Misses Imported Brassieres—Of rea}! Irish or $ real Filet lace; also of batiste, hand em- x broidered and lace trimmed. 9.75 to 12.50 American-Made Brassieres—Of Pussy ‘ Willow silk, also of crepe de chine, allover d. lace or embroidery. 1,00 to 7,50 Bandeaux—Of tricot, washable satin or i 1.00 to 4.00 For a real breakfast—a breakfast that is appetizing — pancakes prepared in a jiffy. Have them tomorrow! IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND GET IT |" 'teman heme fo man ja, be | Rett Resting nearby on the bar of the with thig| of nitrate of potassium and fodiam|that there nad been an explosion in| the place. confiding person by the evidence to- how Von Kleist told all about his bombing activities under the belief that Barnite would get money from Chiet Bpy Wolf von igel for him. to-day that von Kleist asked him while a prisoner at HeadqwMrters to take some notes out for him, “Are you a German?’ von Kleist asked, “Yes,” replied Benff. “Are you a detective?” “No,” said Senff. “God,” said von Kleist; then he gave Bent these notes, which were put In evidence: Hurry up and get away, Also Wi pert. (Signed) VON KLBIBST, “Karl Schmidt: I am arrested. Hurry up and gét away, Also Bi er. (Signed) VON KLEIST. Detective Henff testified that thanks to the notes he called up Ernst Beck- teatified that on April 12 last, the day Von Kleist wan again revealed aa a! day, Detestive Barnite had related | Detective Edward J, senft testified | " “To Capt, Eno Bode: I am arrested, { er, now on trial with von Kleist, and was artested, He, Schmidt, Walpert and Bode are on trial with von Kleist. oO HORSES, HOSTLER, TRUCK AND TWO AUTOS PILED UP Runaways on Bridge Hit Wagon, Fracturing Man's Skull and Motor Cars Crash Into Wreckage. James Ganley, a hostler of No, iM Nassau Street, Brooklyn, led two big black draught horses onto the Man- hattan Bridge from thé Brooklyn side @t 11 o'clock to-day. He procesded with his charges aa far as the Brook- lyn tower when all thes® things hap- peved in rapid succession ‘The horses became frightened and ran away, dragging Ganiey until they collided with a truck driven by John Higgins of No, 319 West Thirty-sev- made an appointment to meet him| {9% in New York, Becker camo over and | oq enth Street, Manhattan, One of the black horses was plerced by the end of the pole of the truck. The other was knocked down, falling on Ganley and fracturing his skull An automobile driven by Anthony Stark of No, 441 Ninth Avenue ran into Higgins'’s truck and = was wrecked. automobile, driven by James No, $48 Bergen Street, i into the wreck of ‘as put out of busl- C ey is in Long Island College Hospital and the injured horse is in a veterinary hospital at No. 74 Adans | Street. (KOSHER MEAT STRIKE FAILS; 3,000 BUTCHERS KEEP OPEN | Business to Be Fully Resumed To- Morrow—No Closing Owing to Jewish Holidays. Although the Federation of Hebrew (Retail Kosher butohers’ assoctations [decided yesterday upon a Kosher |meat strike, about 3,000 out of a total ‘of 4,000 members decided to-day to keep thely stores open and buy Kosh- beef and sell it, The other 1,000 were closed part of the day, ened in the afternoon and to-morrow will resume purc! at jaughterhouses, ing to the near approach of the hh Master holidays, April 6-10, will be no closing up of the sher butcher shops. ‘There has been in existence for ten days a boyeott by Kosher butche against buying chickens at set pri This boycitt, withdrawn from wholesaler ever, will 08 | eee rere iia «THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 36, 1017, PITY POOR GOLIATH! MA IN HE HAS SORE THROAT / THAT’S SIX FEET LON ASHERESPONDS 10 WIFE'S CRY OF HELP Harold Ellis Yarnall Shot! Down by Burglar in His Philadelphia Home. PHILADELPHIA, March 26, Harold Hlils Yarhall, well known in @oclal and ratiway circles, died to- day of a bullet wound received last night while grappling with a negro duretar, | Mr. and Mrs, Yarnall had returned | to thelr town house, at No, 822 Pine | Street, after a day in the country, And were dressing for dinner when @nd Mr. Yarnall rushed in from the next room. A hand to hand encoun- ter followed, when the negro, finding himself about to be bested, fired twice, The second bullet struck Mr, Yarnall, The burglar escaped with) $100 in a emall handbag. Mr. Yarnall was fifty-one years old, a graduate of Harvard and See- fetary-Treasurer of the Midland Val- ley Raliroad, Mrs, Yarnall was for- merly Mra, Adele L. Glipin, A negro answering the description of the burglar who shot and killed Mr, Yarnall was arrested to-day by the police of Riverton, N. J. —————— HOT SPRINGS ENTRIES. year-olds and anes, STs KS hau Ir: ie Conon Hritiee, Y Dib 110; iste, 100; ope Johness, i No Manage, 110. THIKD KAct Sqiing: toew.year viele a mands ate farloogs "Hondo, a; On TH Asking i, *Anon Krier. 1000. fea'iiwes 105; Brite 107 ireenwor!, 107: Korfhage, 107 Kipg Mart, 10 min, 110, three year-olds and Mosows. 100" We ar Me. tit Fieri RAGE ‘ SO) A. Jones Handicap; | Qt mile and an eight!) fe 10: Grumin, Li0. 1. four yea nd wy. | With the ward: mile th, Sotld tock. Thay, Ws habs Cel om Ai |the giant giraffe with the 1 De. ‘W4 1 108, ym & Bailey Circus, who has a sore| arti FAY thes Feap i|throct in his six feet of neck. G Mus, , 0; Bea: caught cold on the annual trip fron Bratt cette Ramet TB orn-!the winter quarters at Bridgeport, ‘Appren WATERS PIANOS Stand the Test of Time For over seventy years Waters Pianos have been subjected to every test a piano can have and in every instance they have stood the test satisfactorily Were it possible to produce a piano of finer or more pleasing tone; of more enduring qualities or more careful workmanship the great Waters Factory with its long experience and expert workmen, trained in Waters ideals, would do so, As it is, we firmly believe that the Waters Piano and the Waters Autola Player-Piano ire positively the greatest piano values obtainable. Moderate prices, convenient payments and no interest or extras. Write for Catalogue Horace Waters & Co. 134 Fifth Avenue, near 18th Street 127 W. 42d St., near Broadway 254 W. 125th St., near 8th Ave. OPEN EVENINGS ) 371 £, 149th St. near 3d Ave. Se ‘BA fw th | at eighteen cents a pound, and sell to js hot profitable because of the waste = jer of Senate w From Cont WASHINGTON, Mare | Leader Mann, Republican eandid Speaker of the House, Ie willini ko hin candidacy “in the 5 on) | REDWOOD F Minn, March) # 26.—William Kieeman, « young far-|@ We Pay Freight and $9.98 mer, who lived near Clement, killed Railroad Fare his wife four chil with an| ox, then hi A imaolf sometime be tween Fri ght and morning. % The six bodies were found to-day in & ® ¢ eved (o hase ded over Geble, of the small butohers | h they buy from the} slaughterhouses and the wholesalers | ther customers at twenty-four cents, BMRA AIO A Ok ik erage e Tere 8188; opens ite séason in Madison Square Garden, March 29, and bis keepers | t had an hour's Job bandaging his neck, SEEK REJECTED SUITOR Brooklyn Police Say Infatuated “Frank” Lured Girl From Wor- KITS LONG SORE THROA) he Sem O. Henry's one-armed paper hanger hives has nothing on Goliath, Barnum Conn., to New York, where the circus SS. 0-0 0 O06 50 0 Ot ——————— en ee AURORA AWM HI HHO A Ha a MARK & BRO i x Open Saturdays LAR Gur Liberal Credit : Until 10 P. M. UL Oo ¥. WE, Terms apply also We Close \o Long Island, | § Evenings at New Jersey and | 6 o'Clock Connecticut. Write for Our New Booklet, Mailed Free i White Enamel! Bedstead Kean UNH HT EOE ee with 2-inch square posts + SEEN ESERS REE RERS square filling rods, at —" One Chauffeur Wom ship to Waiting Auto. served with summ Aimong the ote 1 Vanderbilt sald hee | $20 and was in lGourt it Mr the amount of 38th Street ut, Al er and, despite her her to an automo- bile, The car disappeared before any of those who ran from the ehurch could make out the number. At Margaret's home it was sald to- day that Frank had asked her to FOR CHURCH KIDNAPPING elope with him last New Year's Day. a 365 SPEEDERS FINED. Employer RB Thirty-five speedera were erratgned Investigation to-day convinted the|t-4ay in the Traffic Court before Brooklyn pollce that the kidnapping | Maeistrate House Margaret Gallo, eighteen years old, of No. 101 Skillman Street, from Imey's Roman Catholic Chureh,} of No. 59 Nagle A on Kent Avenue, tast night wan the|prauffeur for Mrs. 1H. work of a youth named Frank, who| With operating his machine at thirty has been annoying the girl with his attentto’ ‘Ten were fined $30 each and the others $25 each. All were He was charged miles an hour on Amsterdam Avenue, between One Hundred and Twentleth| for the past three months,/and One Hundred and Twenty-fitth The police expect to locate him with | *' Httle trouble, They do not think he| instruct has harmed the girl, but believe he! Urged him to ge has tried to impress her with the ex- tent of his infatuation The manner in which Margaret was carried off was spectacular, She was In church with her grandfather and her thirteen-year-old sister Theresa when @ boy tiptoed In and told her that hér father wanted to see her at the door, Accompanied by her had only obeyed the ne of his employer, who hi R. Hf. Macy & Co. have presented tolout causing one tw! * Fund Fair to be held at the | soreness. fo ntral Palace from May alling for $1,000 worth ar cen aks stabsinebdldaiitld CORNG HURT TODAY? Lift your"eorne 00 calluses off with fingers and It won't pain you one bit, n Yes! You on can ly J wee 14 to Make|hard corn, soft corn of ite Money. |the toes, as well as hardened aes on My tae of sg without oné bit of pain. A gente in Cineinnati discovered freesone, It is aerd an ether com) str ane Gorey tiny bottles of this magic muse ths. Brom, fluid ean now be had at any Warfield of the drug store for a few Apply several drops of this Treesone upon & ten- der, aching corn or a cal- jus. Instantly all soren disappears and shortly you will find the corn or callus so shriveled and loose that 4 8 fin ew ‘ined | 1 to report to the! vou Lift it off with the fingers. You fd didnot refund! fee) no pain while applying freerone or afterwards. Just think! No more corns or cal- luses to torture you and they go with- of pain fr ju will it ger n>: the magic drug and it really is. Genuine frecaone hee a yellow label. Look for yellow label.—Advt. Actors’ Fand pnation, FIFTH AVENUE Charge Purchases Made This Week Will Appear on Bills Rendered May let f Lord @ Taylor _ | ae a oe Spring Style Exposition Women’s Suits and Coats Presenting the Supreme Achieve- ments of the Couturiers’ Art A Pre-Easter display of authoritative models, assembled with a critical regard for the fashionable woman’s requirements. An intensely interesting showing, in which are featured only the most correct and strikingly smart phases of the Mode. Tailleurs ite distinction, developed in spring's most fashionable fabrics; Men's Wear Serges, Gabardine, ‘lricotine, Poiret Twill, Wool Jersey and Silk Jersey. A collection of models so comprehensive that it includes both the strictly tailored Trotteur Suit, with its smart braids and but- tons, and the quite orate Afternoon Suit in many clever variations. Priced $29.50, $35, $39.50, $45, $50 « $55 Silk Suits of extreme elegance; many exclusive adapta- tions, others correct copies of Paris origina tions. shioned of lustrous Chiffon Taf- fetas, Faille, Gros de Londres, Charmeuse, Striped Silks, Geo A display, delightfully diversified, com- prising Suits of smart simplicity, as well as the most elaborately bead and silk embroi- dered models that are perfect symphonies in coloring. $39.50, $50, $75, $85, to $190.00 gette Satins. Spring Coats models of pronounced modishness, in fabrics soft, light, finely textured; in colors new and lovely beyond description; Wool Velours, Burella, Loopine, Gunniburl, Ansac an Cashmere Bolivias, Gabardine, Men’s Wear Serges. Lined with soft, rich, plain or novelty silks, there are Coats for street, afternoon and touring wear, Priced $25.00, $29.50, $35.00, $39.50 to $75 Silk Coats play an important part in Spring Fashions and are shown in the Lord & Taylor collec- tion in an unusual variety of models and colors, Street, Afternoon and Evening Coats of Faille Silks, Chiffon Taffeta, Satin Char- meuse, Gros de Londres, in black, navy and well, designed for the more conservative. $22.50, $25, $39.50 $50 « $65 Evening Coats and Wraps of regal elegance and rare picturesqueness. Copies of imported models in Satin Charmeuse, Satin Georgette, Satin Sub- lime, Satin de Lion and other richly effectiv ks, in the most beautiful shades, Elaborate with brilliant bead, silk and metallic thread embroideries. $75.00 to $190.00 Third Floor Sky Copenhagen Grey Hague Blue Brown Wistaria Olive Natural rn mee ee eae eR a Very Special for Tomorrow, Tuesday French and Ramie Dress Linen | ’ Rose ' | ! in fourteen desirable shades Oyster White Tan | Pink Cant 52¢c Helio | yard A quality sold usually at 75¢ a yard Recond Floor eee eens eee ee ee Re HS A A | the new colors, Not only the ultra-fash- | ionable in Coats, but the dignified styles, as | MOQ) cee) Seema” ee ee” (10) Seema”) rem” C2 SC) Sree” 2 Cees > ) > ~*