The evening world. Newspaper, June 14, 1917, Page 10

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)

r ‘i The diggers, headed by Miss Grace Humiston, the Crugers’ lawyer, were headed off yesterday by the opposi- tion of Mrs. that there would be no more digging on her premises, After seeking ad- vice, Miss Humiston ordered opera Outside Areaway in Cruger : tlons resumed by excavating from an m areaway into the tunnel leading from Search. the Cocehi o Armed with permits from the etty| 7 and the police, the band of workmen intent on golving the Cruger mystery resumed to-day their digging under the cellar of Alfredo Cocchi's shop at |No. 642 West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Street P| failer im +t pat 1] | Lane Bryant | MATERNITY ] CORSET ba reer bait for » erhity furure with fu ‘cig of (la redlremen ta, Metains Stylish Figure; Preserves Meaith IN COCCHI'S CELLAR Workmen Enter Tunnel From an igging turned up @ glove and miscellane- It was thought some of them might be tdentified as belong- ing to Ruth Cruger, the missing gir!, but her mother failed to recognize them, One workman says his pick struck into a burted box just as work conned one vi ‘oreventiog injury reticy bare Lane Bryant y2 Sci be, STORE CLOSES SATURDAY AT ONE P. M. Why be machined in units of ten when you can be hand-tailored fo: _» same money? Franklin Simon Suits at 325, $28 and *30 , are exclusively hand-tailored SSS Machine is for the Mob. Hand is for the Individual. | The Shuttle saves time. ; The Needle, takes. time. Which do you want? To be one of a hundred or one in a hundred? To be machined with the multitude or hand-tailored apart from the crowd? To be shuttled at so many revolutions per minute, or custom tailored by artists whose every stitch is as delicately done as an etching? : The The ' Once you had no alternative, but today, a Franklin Simon Suit offers you all the character and charm of artistic hand- 2 ll tailoring at the cost of merely mechanical clothes. Fine Woolens—Fifth Avenue Models skeletonized to a shadow and exquisitely put together $25, $28 and $30 (7 -THILO., at the AND those thatare not Men's Clothing Shop—8 West 38th Street A @ Shop on the Street Level Feanklin Simon & Co. Men’s Clothing Shoes Furnishings FIFTH AVENUE | Borough Preside Pounds, Pavk| Commissioner Ingersoll and Thomas W. Chadbourne, who r nted the | Mayor, reviewed th ade and were) © kept applaudihg constantly as the patriotic floats streamed past A parade about 10,900 school chil- dren was held in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn at the same time, ace companied by a gene demonst by shopkeepers and others along the) line of marca The ¢ of the Ievolution will =| meet at Fraunce’s Tavern, Rroad and The New and Better Oil for deep frying sautéing, | shortening and salad dressings | Mazola is amedium for cooking. as pure,sweet and wholesome as the most delicate food cooked init -Of your grocer or delicatessen dealer CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY NEW YORK LEA MAA 4 Soech!, who announced, a. Te VENING WORLD, THU: 4,000 CHLOREN N BROOKLYN'S FLAG AY PARADE Nation-Wide Observance I:- cludes Speeches by Wilson and Roosevelt. Forty thousand children in Brook- lyn celebrated the anniversary of the Stars and Stripes to-day with a great parade, in which they marched and waved flags as big as they could carry They sang every step of the route all | the patriotic songs they knew. All over the rest of the city, in the Pub: lic Schools there are special exercises | with 1 parades. Societies and| clubs organized for the expression and | stimulation of pride in American in- stitutions have planned extraordinary programmes, The celebration of Flag Day, nation wide, is such as the anniversary has not before known. President Wilson | delive: an address on the citizen's ‘duty id the flag, this aftérnoon, and Theodore Roosevelt speaks at Lincoln, 'Neb, on the call of the flag for) | American soldiers abroad and for th | backing of the Red Cro: The Brooklyn celeb: | jon, planned | , Superintend- ent o n the Kastern Distric’ was headed by former Police Captai Miles O'Reilly, He had nine assist- ant marshals. Thirty thousand children from the Bushwick section were ready to march soon after 10 o'clock, The route was from Myrtle Avenue, on‘ Bushwick Avenue to Grove Street the Public Library at DeKalb Ave- nue where the reviewing officers | had 8 of the fea ys of the tures of a pageant ng ranks were dressed as sol- and sailors and marines of the United States service, hey were followed by youngsters equipped as Red Cross units and as soldiers of the soll armed with shovels and hoes an |rakes, There also groups pic turing the sters in the development np from Columbus's land from 3B to tir ch, but wer children of the and below were not their small feet by the m | arranged in ranks along the curb near the older brothers and sisters the choruses of the marehers. reviewing stand to cheer their and swell Pearl Streets, a to the Sub-Treasury, where, after an chaplain of the society, Freder' Coudert will deliver an address. procession will be preceded by music and the society's color guard, Members: who in the army, navy, National Guard, Naval Mili Re- serve Corps, or the Veteran Corps of Artillery will parade in service ‘uni- form without « ‘The Colon 1 Dames will hold a re- ception at 8 o'clock at Van Cortland House, in the Bronx, at which the President, Mrs, Hamilton R. Fairfax, will present to the city the new 5 way and steps leading to the ga which the | Commissioner the Bronx will m has built, Park Whittle of order pmas W o'clock, and mareh | athe 2 that street, between Fifth ant Lenox Avenues, A parade of is of Public Schools Nos, 24 Boy Scouts of estant Episcopal ny © of the military school of Cal- ry Methodist Episcopal Church was President Hodge. programme, missioner was a_ musi er by the Rev, Dr. Robert Bruc k of the Church of the Puritan: ising of the flag. ceremonies were held in Mount Morris Park under the aus- pices of the jonal Association of Patriotic Instructors, with children from public and private schools tak- Sensational try di his and Market Nov. “Chicken Moe,” Who Is Awaiting Trial, Makes Revelations to Offi- cialsain Charge ot Case. disclosures the murder of Barnet aff, the poul- ler who was killed in front of in 4, humber of business rivals, hi D in the Hobol ail taken inte the men who desired in, allas oad the Tombs awalting trial’ for ‘com- Plioity in the shooting of Batt mut . Jacob Cohen, David Jacobs andyAbraham Graff, indicted with Rosenstein, and who have been at liberty under $25,000 bail each, were lodged in the Tombs to-day by order of Supreme Court Justice Tompkins because of the story told by Rosen- stein. The trial of the four men will be held before Justice Tompkins next Wednesday Neither Mr. Becker nor Mr. O'Malley would discuss the Information fur- nished them by Rosenstein. It is ut the’ at regarding ated upon Sesterda right hand bécar he was taken from the Hotel the hospital. sald w be favorable. the stage a few years ago. West Washington 1914, implicating « ve been ing part. There were short addresses home at } Street, w in obedie ch ceremonies from every, lodge. principal address will be fhade by John F. O'Ryan, Th Maj. MLBERTY GLASS OF 1917” GRADUATES AT XAVIER HIGH Students, in Uniforms of Cadets, | Make Patriotic Showing— Honors Awarded. Xavier High School of St. Francis Xavier's College, in old Sixteenth} Street, graduated a class of sixty-one’ students lastnight. ‘The graduation s were held in the College heatre which had to be closed at If past eight, so great was the wd that gathered inside and out. graduates marched on to the in the uniform of the cadet or- ion of the sc all it the ne of the third y ed—and Liberty ja name by which the dents, in after years, will graduation year in Sixteenth Street. J. White, President sided, at the exer- ed the address to ercises opened with in French of several Cyrano de Bergerac Class honors were ward P. Treacy for » Vincent J. Hart for ex The atage md honors were carried off by James P. Mahony for section A and John X. Sweeney for section B. Jehan captured the prize try and James P, Mahon physics, section A und Ma Is fi ly mee year class ,honors fin es A and B. third One Ver Cent. of Newspapers Fails to Safeguard Military Information, WASHINGTON, June 1M4.—Milltary information of value to enemies Is be- ing divulged by only 1 per cent, of the American newspapers, which are not regarding the volunteer censor- ing res ed by the other 99 Ktee on Public d to-day In a to suppress publi- tter of that naturé. BY * ‘ Heal your childs | sick skin with Resinol The minor skin troubles to which B infants and children are subject itching patches, bits of chafing, | rash or redness—so easily develop into serious, stubborn affections, that every mother should hav: Resinol Ointmentonhand tc them before they get th hand. Doctors and nurses 1 mend Resinol for this with t utmost confidence because of its narmless ingredients and its suc cess in healing eczema and similar } are The West One Hundred a st Neighborhood Asso New York. Floo Corner | Livingston Matchless assortm $39.50 Wilto Size 9x12, Unques est copies of the French Wiltons. . argest Floor Covering House in Brooklyn 60 Flatbush Av. Axminsters, $ SEAMLESS—9x12 SIZE. nized as the best selection of patterns in the city serious skin diseases, Resinol Ointment is sold by all druggists, t Covering Co. 1 Block from Fulton $t nent; recog: 1” 26° n Velvets, tionably the fin most expensive Made with felt rolls 2 b mea $12.00 (9x12) Grass Rugs Genuine Rex Rugs—Best Patterns and All Colors #709 $3.69 | 41.0 $1.89 | S135, 59e $10.00 Linoleum Rugs hi SLIGHT “SECONDS"—ONE AND TWO PARTS 9.00 $2.98 | $50 $1.59 | $42° $1.98 c5e-Print Linoleum | 1.15 Inlaid Linoleum OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS, ‘* Linoleum, with colors through to the back; eut from full € rolls; ood, heavy grade; please bring’ measure ments; reg. $1.15 quality; sq. yd High class custom tailored models of superior Jersey Cloth in | attractive colorings. Women’s Sport Skirts Skirts of Honeycomb Skirts of Bedford Cord Exceptional Value-—-Misses’ Dresses of plain and embroidered net, also ecru net, satin ribbon trimmed. Several attractive smocked and Norfolk models, in all white or white with combination trimming. Store Open Saturday Until 6 P. M. OPPENHEIM.GCLLINS& CG 34th Street, New York Special Values for Friday and Saturday . Women’s and Misses’ Pi dt Lal Ko Radel EAE Lt Summer Silk Dresses New and distinctive models just received Of superior taffeta, crepe de chine, striped and novelty men's wear silk in attractive colorings, included are tailored shirt waist and more elaborate models. Sale Price 18.00 Sale of Women's and Misses’ Smart Blue Serge Suits ° Superior navy blue men’s wear serge in sport, pleated and plain tailored models. 20:00 25.00 29.75 OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & ( 34th Street, New York OF . Women’s Sport Suits 16.50 Extraordinary Value | Of velvet Corduroy, Gabardine and fine cords in dis- tinctive button front and shirred models, with y) 95 pockets and detached belts. Special values 2 3.95 | Skirts of Wool Jersey 4.90 | Skirts of Wash Satin.... 11.75 Misses’ Summer Dresses Distinctive and exclusive models of plain and novelty Voile, Ratine, Ging- ham, Linen and Cotton Crepe in plain colors and smart combinations. 6.90 12.75 16.75 20.00 Misses’ ‘Silk Dresses Especially designed for Misses and Little Women, in tailored, shirt waist and other models of superior Taffeta, Crepe de Chine and novelty striped and check silk. 15.00 19,75 25.00 29.75 11.75 Sale of 500 Girls’ Dresses An unusual collection of attractive models of Voile, Crepe, Gingham, Repp, Pique and novelty wash fabrics. 6 to 14 years. Regular values 2.50 to 3.95. 1.45 Sale Price | Saie of 400 Middy Blouses For Girls and Misses, 6 to 22 years | 79¢ Exceptional :alue + “Kellar the Great” Potsoned, — Kellar, the magician known t eas “Kellar the Great,” i In Post-Graduate Hospital suffering blood polsoning, for which he was The magi oisonous insect, and ‘Tur A His condition to-day “ He retired from Exceptional Sales for Friday and Saturday ve 8 " *

Other pages from this issue: