The evening world. Newspaper, December 22, 1917, Page 3

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)

INLAND FINES FOR ~ SERMAK PLOTTERS annie ‘tschmidt Gets Four Years ii Must Pay $20,000— cal bree Years for Sister, ye MUTROTT, Dee, I-—-Alhert ©. hosdrmidt, who, with four out 1 emthers, w NY garly thie morning on @ con 9 tM eharge, wan nentenced a few Teepater to four yours in Federal olat @t Fort Leavenworth and to nee’ fine of $20,000, It on tom sentence possible under the ton ¢ Conviction on the threo counts +te him. 47 . Ida Neef, his inter, wan non- hie fto three years in the local Waa" ef Correction and fined $16,- te pits A. Noot, her husband, and omop@hmidt and his wife, Marin, indigntenced to two years’ tmpris- # OM and fined $10,000 each, Frana & seventy-year-old German, he Be only one of the six acquitted 2rec} three counts. He was held, er, to answer to two other in- “| sents pending against him. ‘hey counts on which Kaltachmidt 'Y convicted charged the setting on i in the United States of a miil- *y enterprise against Canada; a napiracy to dynamite the Detroit rew Works and a plot to destroy ae St, Clair River tunnel at Port aturon. Carl Schmidt and his wife were) convicted on one count and Mrs, Neet pod her husband on two. COURT RAPS SUGAR HOARDER IN HOLDING HIM FOR TRIAL “Men of Your Stamp Are Danger | Spots in War,” Says Justice Freschi to Borrok. Hyman Borrok, walst manufacturer, of No, 138 Boston Road, the Bronx, whose arrest for sugar hoarding fol- convicted in Federal ry . lowed information given District At-| torney Swann by The Evening World, ‘was held tn $500 bail for trial before tho Court of Special Sessions to-day by Justice John I. Freschi of Special ,Bossions, acting a) committing Magis MISS MOWRY BRIDE OF ENSIGN IN NAVY ACADEMY CH. POPPEOO TEEPE REET ORE EE FPPPSeESSPESEETEEEDOED THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER | Why Does Well, There's One Reason for it—The Other Is That There Ain't Any Reason—If They're Wearing Furs for Warmth Why Do They Wear Them on Parasols and Hats?—Oh, Yes, Here's a Reason: “A Woman Wears « Sealskin So Her Neighbors Can Sprain an Eye on Her as She Flatwheels Down Sitreet”—You Im- agine They're Wearing Furs for Warmth Until You Note She's “Wearing « Low-Cut Waist and Has a Freckle on Her Shoulder Blade.” Bugs’) Baer M | Copyriaht, 1917 « (The Mew Tore Bvening World. t T is impossible to prognostica ection in which a flea with the 3 colic will jump. You can’t figure in advance just what a flivver ; with a fractured steering gear wi next, I's liable to go Democratic, | 3 | climb into some pedestrian’s vest pocket or have a relapse and become 3 a pile of tin again 4 And you have just as much chance —_—— * of fieuring what the ladies are « ie in your sock, especially if your rd ' Brew’, | 4 ! & to publish next in the way of styles, | sock was cotton, + Pat Henry said that the only way w Well, 1s a couple of rough hemt- ° / could Judge the future was by the| spheres we are living in, Nobody 9O0900000049001004409 past, But if you try to do that with| knows the anawer, And, ne the Kal- Misa Janet Blanchard Mowry,| the feminino styles you are liable) sr paid when he hugged the Holeh daughter of Mr. and Mra, Allan Me- Lane Mowry of No, 146 East Thirty- to atep on your chin. | vid, of as the monkey said when he About a decade ago the frail) kind porcupine, we must take dahlinks were wearing the Princens| in with our pleasure. | fifth Street, and Ensign Thomas) gown, That was the style in which | ; annie | Crouse Parsons, U.'S. N. RB, of| their watst line was parked | FIVE ‘SUF’ PI | Rochester were marriod yeaterday In| found thelr ears, ‘Then a few sea-| CKETS PARADE | the chapel at the United States Naval) sone later their waist ln went | SEV \ mony, which was to have been per-|then you ain't sure just ae, to formed to-<¢ was advance look for the fashionable waist line 1 a 7 the erlarrun, ys las bien The styles keep bobbing north and : Turn to Look it Marchers training at Annapolis, will be sum. | south like a farmer's Adam's apple, Carrying “Why Were We moned to active dufy sooner than was expected, maximum price at which fresh killed Christmas turkeys may be sold at 46% centa a pound. The minimum price re- tall dealera will be allowed to charge for fresh killed fowls In 33 cents. There | prices are slightly im exceos of current quotations “in some shops They are slightly higher than the “suggested” ‘price for Thankssiving turkeys. | The retail dealer is allowed to make @ profit of 6 cents on every pound of \turkey ho sells, These are the | sale prices that he will pay Western turkeys (extra fancy) 41% cents a pound; good-lookir |hons and toms, % to 3% cents: { "trate. Borrok is the first food hoarder to bo > wrought before a Justice | Utuer the special enactment of the Legisinture constituting @uch action a misdemoanor, uinishable by fine and iprisonment n holding him for trial Justice Freschi paid: You purchased and hoarded 21,00 pounds of sugar—certainly more than you, waist manufacturer, needed. Your @efenge that you intended going into the manufacture of syrups is a subterfuge. “Small boarding by large numbers ts @angerous. Practices like yours are BI be severely condemned. “s ‘Men of your stamp are @he danger spote in this war, Unscrupulous * profiteers are traitors to the country.” Borrok’s case was brought to the at- tention of the District Attorney when , The Evening World discovered that the waist manufacturer held fifty-two bar- yele of sugar, Originally he had sixty barrels. STOCK EXCHANGE KIDDIES | HAVE. 40-FOOT XMAS TRE George B. Buchanan Plays Santa— Employees Get Gold Honor Day Certificates, About 2,000 persons attended tho Christmas celebration given by the ‘Stock Exchange to the employees and their families this afternoon, Tho big room had been appropriately dec ted, A Christmas tree, forty high, laden with gifts, towered on the south side. George B. Buchanan took the part of Banta Claua and presented gifts to the children and gratuities to the employees. There was also a presentation of “gold honor-day certificates, a reward of merit to members of the tube and Mloor department of the Exechany who have completed a year of unbroken at- tendance and punctuality. “ ra- feet The Seventh Regiment band played, the assemblage sang “Aferica the male chorus, composed of employees of the Exchange, and the Junior Chorum composed of boys , under seventeen years old, rendered songs. ’ Mair 8 Williams, Chairman of tho Committe on Arrangements, presided —— QUITS CHILD WELFARE BODY. Seeretary Res! Hecause Alder- men Refused $1,080 for Salartes, Because the Board of Aldermen refuse to allow the sum of $1,080 to increase the pay of three senior ‘‘visttors” or in- vestigators, Harry L, Hopkins, tive secretary of the Board of Child Wel- fare to-day handed his resignation to Henry Bruere, President of the Welfare Board, 4 Mr, Hopkins said he wanted to pro- execu: mote three of his present force of thirty- six after a competitive examination, ‘The Board of Estimate passed upon the item, but it was cut out by the Board of Aldermen when it made reductions in the 1918 budget. Mr, Hopkins said he * ) Gia not think the work of the Welfare Hoard could be done effectively without the help of the three senior ‘visite Mia resignation will take effect Jan. 4 2% to 35 cents; fat young hens (fresh killed), bruised or discolored (green on neck and wings, due ¢o improper bleed ing), skinned in plecking or with pin feathers, 28 to 36 cent*; old toms. (very fine quality), 32 to 8% cents; old tomas (good quality), 31 to 92 cents; frozen | variety, 25 to 28 cents. | The board would fix no price on frozen stock in poor condition eaninactaatits> Sseatatass SUGAR PROFITEER’S CASE | PUSHED BY FOOD BOARD “People in No Mood to Be Trifled With,” Says Williams to Lef- have sold 1,000 pounds of sugar at 15 cents a pound, Lefkowitz was represented by a new |tawyer, Harry Schimmel, when the case | was called. case was new to him and that he had not had time to prepare it. Robinson, attorney for the Federal Food Bureau. “1 think Mr. Robinson ts right," inter- r. Lefkowitz —— against M ‘Man Known as “Capt, Ruffner’ Said to Have Swindled Hotel, An 34th Street and Broadway as Capt. Jo- seph Ruffner was arrested early to-day in his room at the Martinique, charged with passing @ worthless check for $25 on the hotel. When Igeked up he gai the name of John Brown and sald he was a lawyer, is anld by the detectives that It he exact, seven blocks of TURKEYS 33 10 46 CENTS: every sha of skullplece from an} Fifth Avenue saw it, and did not ap-| UJ erratic pancake #hape to a tlon | pear to be particularly Interested, FOOD BOARD FIXES PRICE) mosetea atter a soup tureen with} Five of the pickets who served terms broken archer. n the Occoquan and Washington jails After the girls had defeated mil-|‘" _ be — at the bash todeney = " ea the Whi fouse, marched from the Retailer Allowed to Make a Profit ey, Har eeaniE reed hie headquarters of the National Woman's of Five Cents a lor new worlds to cot » and they) party, No. 12 Hast 41st Stree pm ound He Sel brand of shoe from a seven-quart] sith street, and back again on the ‘Tho Federal Food Board has fixed the} tango pump to a four dozen button} east sidewalk, Just which five of the kowitz’s Lawyer. becomes merely a scrap of paper. A| Starts Move and Representative Arthur Williams, Federal Food Ad-| woman doesn’t wear sealskins to keep Is Here to Organize N. Y. mindatrator for New York, refused to-| herself warm. She doesn't care) the 77,000 day to grant a further postponement of| whethor she i# insulated from the em pales! 50) Crman se, te 0108 the case of H. L. Lefkowitz of No. 1420 ba commercial travellers of the United Brook Avenue, Bronx, who !s alleged to Schimmel! pleaded that the “That's camouflage,” retorted Charles a ated to Police C Woods posed Administrator Williams, "The|inat there ain't any reason, If ®Jq letter from Chittle d, Dire people are in no mood té be trifled with. | nan wears furs for warmth why |tor of Public Safety rgb, may summon your witnesses py | ¥° — letter asks that Mtr. G be giv | Rummon your witnesses Py | tong sho wear ‘em on her parasol OF |every aasistuncn In hiv effort (0.0K Sraneene. wawill wand in the) or hat? Why does she wear furs] the erelal travellers of New York hear the witnesses SEIZED IN BOGUS CHECK CASE n Known tn the hotel section of IN the ladies busted out on a Jailed” Banners, campaign. They broke out in a rash of millinery. They wore Is Huet. Fifth day. Avenue saw an To be ther parade to- travelling brogan. ‘There were so many buttons on shoes that shoes had to be buttonea in instalments, There were more but- tonsa on doottante's boots than there were buttons on the desk of a vice president of a big corporation. That stepping some. After graduating from boots and hats, the soprano dahlinks played | poswum for awhile, but suddenly they || roke out In an epldemic of furs. And they are still epidemicking. They are aving every kind of fur from gen- former prisor ‘* bore the yellow, purple banners and the streame propownding the queries “We Were Jailed, Why? We Were Released. Why?” must remain one of the secrets of the cause. “If there is one thing we by the leading standardbearer, lielty or notoriety.” was culled #0 that sald it 18 pub- Whereupon a halt the photographers ning the steps of the Public Library might get a good picture. Few turned to look at tho paraders. In the short march a couple of members of the Montreal be arrigon Artillery with ups with flaring yel rakin We Be ee dubots attracted much more att ino sardine whiskers to authentle [ijn "and the activities of half a do: Mexican furless dog fur. personifiers of Santa Claus gathered Much larger groups le | The only comment heard was con- JAUTY unadorned is real beauty: | erinuted by a young man who surveyed B Pasting a flock of Danivh kanga- the group from an outside seat of a roo furs on a beautiful primma donna | PMH. "he called down, “it is like painting the lily. Or like put~!that is what forcible feed i« will do, ting salt on a fish cake. But if the | I'm going to let them try it on me The pur style foundries decree that furs are to| tg advert! f the short parade mass ini x sting in favor » th be the voguc, the ladies will get furs | of the, Fode N Suffrage Ainendment chia to be held at Carnegie Hall on if they have to shave every cat in the | ¥en, # held at Carnegie Hall on neighborhood, aunnianianiommenc, But what we've been trying to aim | this chatter at 9 the exempt way In which the lady voters wear furs. When a seal is still inside of his coat and vest he w 3 n to keep warm, But after old George Seal is evicted from his wardrobe, the original idea 77,000 TRAVELLING MEN MAY JOIN HOME DEFENSE Pittsburgh Council of U. C. T. cold or not. In the first place, sealskins so that her sprain an eye on wheels down the street States for home defense work and to supplement the Investigations of the Secret Service by reporting activities of allen enemics in all parts gf the country has been inaugurated by *mem- bers of the a woman wears elghbors can as she flat- It her neigh- r 1 Pittsburgh Council of the i © all nearsighted, sho hora wore ail United Commerclal ‘Travellers of wouldi't get any more fun out of her | Wnited sealsking than a rabbit would out of @) "Ww. m” Geissinger, @ membor of the shotgun. Pittsburgh Council! ar an officer in the Home Defense League arrived in New York t of that city, und pre- why a lady other reason is HAT wears furs. one reason he teint dangling down her spine Uke an ani~ in nels of the United mated lambrequin or a travelling set ta ih this city, atid of portieres? If a chicken totes pal r is to address euch around an edition of furs for protee- a _ tion why does she wear @ garageful U S MAKES WAR 0 solwe hoofs trailing after her like an OF T E K 00 0 canavall 1 xylophone Whenever H LA EW D Ht TEL you seo a frail with a lot of guinea pig tails dangling down her shoulder! Wij} Accommodate 2,000 to 3,000 blades you aro tempted to page a Ww Rie ike Swiss boll ringer and asic him to play ounded Soldiers en | | the Chimes of Normandy on ‘em, Converted. The Lakewor sa'saenm ie Sie the 1 Hotel at Lakewood also passed a boxus check for $65.74 on ww" i rae ee ma 4 S|». hes been leased by tho War Det the Hotel McAlpin. A check for $50 in street with a bandage of Fura) nine or use as a convalescent hospital favor of the Hotel Imperial was found| around gazello like neck YOUlts care for wounded America diers on him, might think that there 1s one WOMAN | brought buck from Franc ' ci ording to the police, he had served| who is wearing furs for warmth, Shelernment plans to take charge of th months tn the Canadian Army and| pag q rope of skit furs pulled] building on Jan, 10. | had resigned at the reauest of the U. 8] around her neck like a tourniquet,| | The hotel is a large brick struturm of War Department. After dc ome | 2°° A ina fireproof construction and has 400 r Jowal work for the department homing | She looks as if she hus lynched her. | (pag natruction ar nalone * 4 its own power plant and oommissioned 4 Captain. of tho 16th | golf ground: twelve acres, ‘I Javalry and atationed at Fort ze int laia tine ‘ounds cover twelve acres, ‘The bu rigon, indiana, it Is said, Bam Hare) yoy imagine that she 18 CArrYINE | ing wag crected twenly year b ay that nedkplece warmth until you |syndicate tieuded by Nat | , peep and Is exec hen « SAGE GIFT TO PARK MEN, | take another peep and You) mogute 000 to Jul ee that sho is wearing @ low cutl” The lease wns 1 : ‘ Widow of Financter Gives $10 Bilin| waist and that sho has @ freckle on |sfPnEE Day of No. st Na t This Yea her left shoulder blade and & mole on | for the Gover an ¢ ad Each of the 333 laborers and other| her hip, If they do wear furg, they /0f the Ordnance Department hot low salaried elty employees who work| compromise by not wearlng MUCH oF 2,900 acres of 1a on } |in Central Park will receivy @ $10 bill | else. River for use as a termina as 4 Christmas gift from Mrs, Russell! Why docs a woman wear furs Is] - > Sage 1 erable erte: De. Shaw Loses Her Appent enact th cipherable queries he widow of the financior has| inet must rattle down in history along|,,2f Anna Howard Shaw, surt made Christmas presents of cash to| ‘st Must \ loader, lost again yesterday tr Central Park employees for the last h as how long with other puz 000 sult against the Lehigh Va is a plato of « | road for injurte { and what be- y Ral becomes of the wuol’t ten years, Up to two years ago he i ol that was in the sustained F rn aii: wos & 96 gold piece. Last Gnrigt, | cone, otk when alightins from m train, ‘The & mas, because of the high cost of liv [pe late Division upheld the v f ing, she increased the amount to $10 HE last « vily the tougheat the defendant of a jury before 1 in gold, This year Mrs, Sage is sub- puzzle WOE DA erat demey Clie ot nat atituting bills for gold, be@ause of the | comes of the \ was in the hole bead rape. SS rv ud nM Government's request that the latter |in your sock ly knows whatlennte wrote ce a te be conserved, i} stepping 4 x plu at was.1o the" the car step by the porter, 22, 1917 NEW ARMY ENLISTS RED CROSS — Mark To Be Passed lo-Day and Reinforce- JEAN ROSS HECKMAN WILL BECOME BADR OF VAAL LIRUTENANT | ” | ments Will Appear Monday. The New Yorker, whow ate knoe ledee of the drive of the Crome to obtain 0,000 Chrlatmas * city in confined to 6 ninnen with the pretty worker in the booth in « bullding, may be eurprined . } fo find on Monday morning that an- * other has taken her place, If it waaa z : nie # wened him ap for mem- ’ ’ ership he may he hatied on Monday , from the aame booth by « brunette who wi blissfully anaware that - he has already “come acroma for the er bay Thin wilt be the way he j lly that @ big shift i | sag) haw taken place in the Red Cross Mics Fa © | campaign. BAN ROSS | Accord Bexmann \ \ } ording to the original plana ’ | Med Crom membership drive waa to jend to-day, The time, however, bas Sth ind Mire. Attra’ ecknal heen extended unUL Dee, 29, one week of No. 21 Eastwood Street, Kant | lMeer. There are 3,480 booth. im the Orange, have announced the en-| CY and many of the women will Kogement of thelr daughter, Misw| Shift places, Some of them wilt drop Sean Roen kmann, to Juntot Ut of the campaign altogether and Lieut. Edmund Hell Caldwell, U, | "hele places will be taken by, fresh N. The date of the wedding has not| Workers, There will be new faces been fixed. Mixes Beckmann was beaming from tho frame of many a born in Loulavilie, Ky, the former Rayly decorated booth Monday morn- home of her family ae” Licut Caldwell, whore home in| The 390,000 mark will be panned be- Tacoma, Wash. was graduated last) fore night in New York's new mem- April from the Naval Academy and) bership, according to G, O, Tamblyn, is a great nophew of Lieut. Cald-| director of the campaign, Already well, for whowe distinguished ser-, almost $103,000 in cash has been taken vige in the War of 1812 the new tor-|in at the he dquarters at Madison pedo destroyer Caldwell was recent-| Avenue and 38th Street. There ts ly named. Iie ix stationed on the | every indication that before the eve- dreadnought Wyoming somewhere on ning of Deo. 29 New York's allotted some ocein, Miss Beckmann, WhO) membership of 500,000 will be reached has a brother and #lx cousins In the and perhaps exceeded. army, ts engaged in Red Cross and | navy relief work. YEAR IN PRISON FOR SOLDIER WHO ~AILLED COMRADE The success of the | pends largely on the Hundred Per Cent, Club, whore | membership is made up of firms in ‘which every employee has joined the | Red Cross in the present drive, A firm, for example, In which 40 per ‘cent. of the employees were members of the Red Cross before this eam- |Paign and 60 per cent, joined now would not be eligible unless the 40 per cent, renewed thelr membership, | More than twenty-five firms are in the Hundred Per Cent, Club, and others are expected to be listed to- night when employees will have paid drive now de- growth of the . | thelr binant Cross membership after Corporal Volkenner’s Shot an “"A"'Wi Miiduleton, general manayer Accident, but He Was |0f, ue Consolidated and ; f Hlectric Subway Company, has a team wolng at @ record has over 2,600 members. The actual cost of getting a member “Criminally Careless.” He already laced ts 0ha weet wenn) in Now York ta a litte lees than five ee : ; 7. | cent, ding to Mr. Tanblyn who Se St hl ORTH. SPARTAN= "hag conducted memberahtmcampalgns —A year at hard labor is the sentence of a court-martial in the case of Corpl. Charles Volkenner, Battery B, 106th Field Artillery, in whose hands a service rifle was acci-| dentally discharged, resulting in the death of Antonio Massucel, tent mate, The sentence has been approved by Gen, O'Ryan, the Division Cor mander. The testimony showed that Volkenner, Massucct and several | other men were in a tent. Volkep-| ner was demonstrating the working of a loaded rifle, when it was acct- dentally discharged, the ball striking Massucel in the stomach and causing | his death two hours later, The court held that Volkenner was guilty of | criminal carelessness, In approving the sentence Gen, O'Ryan wrote: “This soldier shot} for the past nine months in New Jer- sey and up-State New York cities, In the smaller places, he says, the average coat of getting a member 18 three cents A feature of tho campuign to-day was the tour of a Red Cross ambu- lance through the automobile and theatrical Glatrict with a squad of pretty girls from Churchill's cabaret dressed a8 aurses, They were under the direction of Jerome Meyers of the Speakers’ Hureas of the Ped Cross and Mrs, H, J. BE. Blakeley who has and Killed a comrade. ‘Tho record shows no criminal motive or intent. It was simply one of the all too many cases where a loadad weapon n the hands of a soldicr was acct dentally discharged, Unfortunately for the prisoner, it resu fatally and he must suffer the consequences of his Kross carclessness, 2 sentence of the court In this should be @ lesson to other sol- but the There is an rs real punishment for} convicted soldier be the al- s present knowk that be ‘ thoughtlessly and carvivasly took the| its life of @ friend, | Camp Wadsworth ts to have an adee quate fire department. Thera are more than 1,000 wo: n buildings in 2 af the camp, and, while every, precau, Cigars thon is taken the danger of eal ways exists, Lieut. Col ea wm Meteor of (ie Traine and Holos: nea | Perfumes ven appointed Camp Fire Marshat and will have general supervision of io department, ‘The va4us been fivided into fire districts, in ea da which will be a om a am ” ol MeLeer and rey nim, ‘Phe district ma wsible for the ca and for trainir . fire department tr cooks and su tay be found noce ma for the © fighting th by Lieut, ¢ ht, Division Battalion of the 2d Batt antry, which company letall as cu ex and f nw I ad [ On all $5 assorted order 105th 4 Catalog i. MRS. LYDIAL. HARROLD Ld TOBE WEDDED TO-DAY TO A NAVAL OFFICER PLANS A “LONG SHOOTS SELF acne Commits Suleide Mer Arranging All Details for His Burial. When he had Gactted fie tamm omit Orr Pee eee eee i eeced erat ot in the head. Sle Body hie (oom (he morting = Piened wee thie note: This te to ony for the cremation mmr body Larsen had got a price from an ondartaker, addressed ta Chri N.Y. Thte wae written by Lar son but wae sinned “Willbranny* =the name of the Netet proprietor, It reader Tour son died suddenty, Hiv tedy wit! be cremated. ‘The oniy sumnestion of « motive for the suleide wae contained in @ pare~ rr ee One In the Chi of the Ascension, 7 o'clock this evening, will take place the marriage of Mins Lydia Locke |@Taoh of the letter Larsen left to the Harrold, daughter of Mra, Newton | hotel manager, Huahnell Cocke, to Lieut. Commander) "tT am sick and tired.” he wrote, “of Arthur Hudson Marks, 0. & No ft A dinner at the Hite-Cariton will fol- low the ceremony thie ewindle that te called life.” Crome booth at charge of Churehitt's Two life members who pald $0 eneh for joining wers reportet to-day. They are Miss Josephine Rogers, for- mer Principal of Public School 61, and ins Tone He ting Principal of the name weho apaien in the public schools orn have joed. & 7 lv loading in the enrolment of pupils, with 800 members —>___.- ENORMOUS INCREASE TO RUN N. Y. STATE IN 1918 Appropriations Requested Show $19,371,000, or 23 Per Cent. More Than Last Year. Sperial to The Prening World.) ALBANY, Deo, 22.—An enormous in- crease in the cost of the State Govern- ment 1# probable for the next fiscal year, State Comptroller Travin has received the eatimates of appropriations; desired by the various departments, which total as follows: Appropriations requested, an increase of $19,871, or 23 per cent, up, of tl State for the te $69,625,000, for be $30, the Hea mat fineal year If all the money asked ibe granted the deficit would 00,000, pA ee OV CREDIT DIAMonps WATCHES SMALL FIRE AT BELLEVUE. Y Department Pate Out Mane in Ble Shatt, While inspecting the “A and Terms §1 per week and ap. Building, one of the Bellevue Hox tal AN FASY WAY to Bay « iffindsome Christmas Presen' wroap, this morniag, Fireman J. Murphy saw smoke from the elevator shaft He called t Lowest prions _eliable anode, nt and within five min No employers’ referesces, hed, It was write, ohana, WH rie wi srrentative if ou fit pays ounding an alarm Murphy ed all doors to the wards preventing the smoke ST SALEM, O., Di —The out- RK & TILFOR GIFTS De LUXE a Park (& Tilford gift, however modest Baskets of Fruit These are always in good taste. We offer them in many forms to suit your every need... Our superior delivery service will meet with your approval. Mail and phone arders promptly and carefully filled. we pay delivery charges thr liduys there eather of t disappe Ap Was sunt will not b tay Hive Christo 1 tr d Executive Office: Fifth Avenue and 26th Street er door of the safe in the Farme State Bank was blown open by robbers early to-day and between $12,500 and $15,000 in bonds and negotiable paper and $60 in cash secured, Bank officials eannot open the Inner door of the safe, and whether the robbers secured the magney from the inner compartment will not he known wutil a aafe expert opens the inner door ESTABLISHED 1840 indefinable touch of elegance about cost, which insures it a cordial reception, Candies Toilet Articles Other Delicacies it the fifteen states nearest New York. ives full detail, We will gladly send it to you, 29-549 W. 42nd St » New York Broadway and 146th Street Columbus Ave. and 72nd St. Lenox Ave

Other pages from this issue: