The evening world. Newspaper, December 23, 1918, Page 6

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put a bomb aboard an American trang-|be locked at & o'clock every afternoon J AS GET $400 LOOT | port, | or hoon Leofheine 7 tn the morning. AT OLIGE HEADQUARTERS |, "nar 2 ree wu avg a acetyl | beavi Poll Hi tucked carefully under bls wing and|eatiod upon to identity himealt. °* And Now Even Patrolmen Must Get O. K. to Carry Out starts out of Commissioner Enright’s| No official explanation of the new temple he'll find himself in plenty of /OTder was given, but it was sald ( 3 Bundles. building, Among other things that s Brennan, custodian of the building. been Getting out of Police Headquarters| The order requiring passes for bus: | mee removed from under the Trouble unless he te armed with « pasa|ineeisr has been at wrecks tn thee ene that haa been vised by Lieut, William Ghese days with a bundie under one's dies was issued to-day. Hereafter all law aro electri : as fists arm is just about as hard as trying to entrances to Police Headquarters will pearly $400. soll arise eliNaealig | GB. Altman & On. MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street An Important Clearance Sale noses of the watchful guardians of the ee SORES SSRI Aumcnereeeeendinemese TWO SAFES LOOTED, WOMAN SLASHED IN NIGHT OF ROBBERIES Taxi Bandits Hold Up Cafe and Cigar Dealer Is Felled With Blackjack. day, and robbed the till, while a trace of how he did it. jin this case was an arrest made. An unusual number and variety of While the other tore up bed sheets. | robberies kept the police of Greater | They bound her feet and bands. They New York busy last night ana to-/ ransacked the house, found $10 and In one a safe was cracked and the building fired, At an upper west side saloon five men held up @ crowd |@ cross on her arm with a knife, 1th Street crook got into a building and into the safe without leaving any | on isth Avenue, between i29th and | After robbing 130th Streets, shortly before 10 o'clock | & Staten Island woman, two burglars last night. slashed a cross on her arm, while in Fighth Avenue a thief asked to see a box of cigars and cracked the dealer | over the head with @ blackjack. Only THE EVENING WORLD, MO NDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1 telephone was traced through Central by Staten Island Police Headquarters to No, 186 Canal Street, Stapleton, | nick were sent. | ey found Mrs. Catherine Conine, | & widow living on the second floor, | bound hand and foot beside her bed. A foot away was the telephone. From j her bed she had kicked the receiver jfrom the phone, then rolling to it | had screamed for help. | When released she told the police | that two men dressed in soldiers’ unt- forms bad entered her rooms and |seked her it shé had any money, Both | wore handkerchiefs over their faces, She replied that she had no money. | | One of the men grabbed and held her | ‘As they went out one of the men| leaned over the woman and slashed | ROBBERY NO. 4, Five men armed with revolvers en- | tered the saloon of Mrs, J, A. Culhane, | They ordered the bartender, John} |Gilmore, to hold his hands above his head and then searched his clothing | as well as that of two other men); standing in front of the bar. | |. Gilmore was then ordered into the \back room and told to keep quiét. The and Detectives Graham and MpKit-) to-day that Roy Tyler, bank robber {and jail breaker, is the man they cea cones etme 8. NEW CLUES POINT TO ROY TYLER IN BANK HOLD-UP Police Study Robber’s Methods Up-State and Learn He Lived in Brooklyn. Detectives investigating the East Brooklyn Savings Bank robbery, in which two men were killed and $12,000 stolen, were more convinced than ever want. Police representatives have been up- State studying the methods used by ‘Tyler in most of his jobs wore a soft robberies. They reported to-day that in all the cases known the same meth- od were pursued as those in the Brooklyn holdup, except that in no previous case was anybody killed. aaa oes Would always focelve a large ai of change # make his escape. le has operated in every State in the Union. ‘CHRISTMAS KEOUGH’ PHOTO SENT FOR BY PROSECUTOR Effort Will Be Made Here to Iden- tify, Suspect Arrested Against Profant NEW ORLEANS, just been receiv tains of the Navy to launch a vigoro 23.—Word has © that the chap- been instructed mpaign against the use of profanity and obscene lan- at Altoona. EIR, as well ax kambling in all Ite Assistant Di — forms among the Jac! ‘ars. The 'in- ji latrict Attorney Edwin P.| sioictions were sent by wire to” the Kilroe to-day telegraphed to the Chief of Police of Harrisburg for a photograph of the man arrested in Altoona, Pa., iate Saturday night who, it is believed, is the celebrated “Christmas Keough.” New York jewelers and furriers will be asked to identify photograph. Keough, who has a dozen aliases, worked his game only at Christmas time. Purchasing articles at high-class chaplains and it cost the Government $10,000 to send them CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years shops, he would pass over a check on the Bank of Commerce, Canada, for a large amount. By this method Keough the Bignature of The Ideal Christmas Gift ROBBERY NO. 1. 4 Al a4 At @ A. M. to-day smoke was seen duce tecslets oF Wee coming from the factory of the Goilars, | Byers & Hayes Company, manufac-| The hold-up men then escaped in a turers of gold fountain pens and pen- | Waiting taxicab. cils at No, 68 Barolay Street, fourth | ROBBERY NO. 5. floor, Firemen found the door of the |, Alexander Rubin, « cigar dealer at seven-foot safe on the floor. |No, 2138 Bighth Avenue, stooped to Tbe! get a box of cigars two men asked boxes containing gold stock had veea |to see, and one hit him on the head two other men were allowed to go. | dof the} hundred ‘Tyler, in most of his jobs wore @ soft hat of the sort worn by the “tall man” in the Brooklyn robbery, and he was always accompanied by a short, stocky companion, ‘The police have learned that Tyler is no stranger in Brooklyn, having lived there for several years. His father !s now being held, offers extraordinary values in WOMEN’S SLIPPERS A Box of . | taken into another room and emptied | With a lackjack. said to have died in bakeries ihm | e { tained consciousne: lice are trying to locate other yelatives the greater number suitable for ev |] | of thelr contents, estimated at $4,000 19 yeit'and the hold- ; : He | P oof H y di aa for smart street i ening wee, but some | OF More OueKAY NO, 2 | Rudin {a pursuit, down ‘Bighth’ Ave- |!" “nye bray preterit | epr osier adapte smart street wear in con i Bc RUS bath nnthindhescondeghand es . P junction h spats, | Aunique safe robbery was uncovered |. Rubio's calls for help were heard Another possible clue is a scrap of | paper found in a room at Peter Bol-/ linger's hotel, No. 296 Nassau Avenue, | Greenpoint, where the robbers are be- | | Heved to have stayed the night of the} | robbery. While the tall and short man | were in the hotel bar that night @ man | Freedom from holes, darning and unneces- sary expense accompanies your Xmas Gift when you give Holeproof Hosiery. For Men—$2.00 to $6.00 the Half Dozen For Women—$3.00 to $7.50 the Half Dozen |by Patrolmen Gleason and Moran of by Policeman Herbert Steinhardt ti}, West 123d and West 125th Streets | while trying the doors on his post; tations. At 1isth Street, several at great reductions from former prices | laity ctaany, “AL ia 10s” wast |Bicoke trees the mare tee oe were | 14th Street, the establishment of | Arrested, after several shots had been a ‘th b: sh Licemen, Schleicher & Sons, Inc., piano manu- | “Gre st the most mysterious robber: \| facturers and dealers, the front door|ics reported to the police occur: | Saturday at the office of William These Slippers are, for the most part, discontinued lines, and consequently the sizes are mot complete in all styles. The | was open. - . : tried to well them a ticket to a ball + | Detective James Finn's investiga. | Wiener & Co. importers, No, 6 West | | | = y vid | 27th Street. The robbers got into the | To get rid of him one of the men Jotted | ° best range of choice is in the smaller sizes and narrow widths. | tion showed the door had a snap loci, | office without tampering with the | qown the time and place the ball was Sy | and that there was not a mark on it.| bolts on the door, Then they [4 enea, tha sabia | moved all the burglar alarm devices | to be given and later threw the paper ther had a key oF from the door and the sate, | away in his room. " 1456 Broadway Broadway, at 49th Si 44. E. 14th St Prices 2 715 & 4 | es ee The safe was opened without leav~ ‘The handwriting was compared ay, al treet i. 14th St. Prices ° ° | Sixty feet back from the door,| ing a trace of how it was done. Fit-| wits tne signature of Tyler om a 279 Broadway 2 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn 47 Cortlandt St. | against the wall, is a big safe, six by| teen hundred dollars was stolen. The s apa 8 126th Street, at 3d Avenue | six feet. burglars ignored $60,000 in negotiable | Rogues’ Gallery photograph, The writ- The door was open. There was not a scratch on it. Either it had been left open, or the burgier found the combination. After swing- ing open the door, the robber un- screwed ithe metal from the com- bination and smashed some of the bonds. STORES OPEN THIS EVENING The police, in line with the policy they have followed in cases of loft robberies, tried to suppress news of | the cfime, At the office of Wiener) & Co. this morning, it was said there | was nothing to be given out for pub- leation. (This Sale on the Second Floor) ing was not exactly allke, but Capt.) Coughlin, in charge of the detective working on the case, said this might b accounted for by the usual practice! of criminals in disguising their hand- writing at potice headquarters. Many patrons will find the Madison Avenue entrance most convenient. WATCHES | tumblers. 1 a ' The police have practically stde- | eeEeEeEEeeEeE——E—E — —— The police do not know what the tracked all other clues in their efforts W- wares ne... | etre toes ee le DIAMONDS ‘ ROBBERY NO. 3. $5,000 reward offered will lead shortly | —— \ to his capture. It was reported early to-day that suspicion had been directed toward “Boston Eddie” Kelly, a bank robber, but Inspector Cray said Kelly is fifty years old and could not have BY “HUMAN ARSENAL” | |Compelled to Stand With Hands “SON CREDIT | Raised by Man in Bed With been connected with the robbery } 4 P t Revolver. ————— | mas Fresents : our employeen. ot tne Hote! New| EXCUSES POLICE IGNORANCE. | RELIABLE GOODS! | LOW PRICES! I NS Vicloria, No. 153 West 47th Street, in- were srs Buy Now! Pay Next Year! M A cluding the manager, John H, McCarthy, Justice, Ordering Alimony, Saye LARGEST ASSORTMENTS were forced to stand with raised arms| They Don't Know Court Rules, | for about twenty minutes this morning Tustic Benedict of the Brooklyn Su-| while a man on the ninth floor sat up| preme Court declared to-day that it is} in bed pointing a revolver at them. @ violent assumption to believe that When two patrolmen arrived he also] policemen know Supreme Court rules, ordered them to throw up their hands,| when Patrolman Edward J. Donahue but instead of complying one of them,| wys before him for not having pald the aPtrick O'Leary, tanded on the man's $100 counsel fees ordered by the court | chest and wrested the revolver from it for divorce against his wife. | OF PURITY Mason’s Chocolate Cocoanut PEAKS Diamonds, Watches GOLD JEWELRY Prices from $5.00 up to $500.00 i h . hin. lawyer wanted him punished = Li Made from the finest, selected Cocoanuts, shaped into ‘A srarch of the room, eccerding to| 1% Mat zeyran che money, saa’ Cor mak-| 0 sirupy mounds end dipped in Crosolate. Two Savors, neat ean ana ey ic|ebaanues layer mid that te at | & DC illa. individual piece wra) dete undies the mattrece m hamunerieas| Rare, Was abwurd, because Donahue 9 Molasses and Vanil ny? il . sng thei Ls oli Vea seh EN ihaipeeuit ath vert Manner was “ordered top wee REL IABLE CREDIT JEWELERS m wax paper and tin foi > assuri P eir clea ess an on the wali and another revolver in a| Justice Benedict d expressed his! MAIDEN LAN 47H FLOO retaining, their freshness. A_Patriotic.Confection. Serbs, Ueeerae a ee” 6 pa TAKE ELEVATO ‘The man described himself as George Arthur of Buffalo, He was locked up on a charge of violating the Sullivan Law. He had been ordered to leave the hotel after setting @ carpet afire while smoking in be WOULD REPAY $4,004.94 THEFT AT $3 WEEKLY RATE Barber's Plan Possible if He Lives to Be 100, but Judge Is Not Convinced, When Louis Cirker, seventy-three, barber and chiropodist of No. 2073 66th Street, Brooklyn, pleaded guilty to-day before Judge Mulqueen in General Ses- sions to an indictment charging him with the theft of $4,004.94 from the es- tate of tis wife, he asked that he be The calory is ‘the energy unit ‘which experts meastte food value. Mason’s Chocolate Cocoanut PEA has been submitted to experts for Chemical Analysis, and their report ‘shows each: individual piece contains 200 calories, or 2000 calories to. the pound. PEAKS is a Candy and is not made or put on the market as a Food. But" just ‘compare the food value of, Mason’s ,PEAKS.with.Food. products, Stern Brothers West 42nd Street (Belween 5th and 6th Avenues) West 43rd Street Calories}per;pound * Mas Ors 4» CHOCOLATE COCOANUT | IPAS AWN Wy ‘ Assortments have been replenished in our various departments devoted to wx ENS Wiis, Xone Teor, Ameiteal Dies only’ RY] iy trict Attorney Rorke exclaimed, "to pay Al 4 ys’ " Ie back the amount the rate be sug Mason, Au & Magenheimer than 100 years old, 7 a ee eH aN Te fee Gaia peaer eae ee ae So that those who have “last moment” gift problems “In other words, then. Judge Mul . . . . . Ketabttobed 1864 queen sald, yeu want the’ Court tnd to solve will find inspiration at every turn. 22-28 Heary &., Brooklya, N. the heirs to your wife's estate to gamble A on your living until you are 100 years old. judge Mulqueen remanded Cirker to the Tombs until Jan. 7. . Neale Stati Perf —— “4 Oys Weckwear stationery erftumes ARREST MAY SOLVE THEFTS. , oe | Books Leather Goods | Lamps Hosiery vw Mach Sil rk da & 1 : e shi 420,000 Rebates tn Cell. . Umbrellas Fans Bric-a-Brac Gloves Police believe that in the arrest of i ] I fale kh ee = Frank Cigliano, twenty, of No, 3813 10th 4 > > , g Te > 7 VY y » L- sia PR Avenue, "Brookln voy may tnd | Canes ewelty aan erchiets | Fancy Work ~ solution o1 hefts of more an 000 are g q re £ > © ¢ ; itd AN, : ae a ele a ee ae a Slippers Waists Silverware Hand Bags Mf eae aru a MCfellang was captured while attempt: | Sweaters | Linens Ribbons Toilet Sets é ing to pawn $750 worth of silverware at £ & shop at Gisth Greque and #4 Btreot by iteut, Youn ore tectivon ; ‘i : : Na Dovle and Dugan, It And hundreds of other things, including re home of Arthur C, Strattton, @ bro- ‘ ker, No, 639 West 155th Street, Dec, 17. , 4 sa, 8 | ’ : y White Christ for Chicago. d S d ee ot: Siisesnscntt nate"ie||| Men’s Accessories and Sports Goods Bi ch in the Mid-West, A white 494i cpr 4 2 ronan this he ihory was Ne ane D 44a 446 Py 8444 Aicted to-day by the Weather Chief, A cold wind and spitting snow began here to make « ‘ fy ee ner Lee ‘ =a TNE CRD 4, SSR APETED GAO ealaat in am NTS ALIN ETI

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