Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ing this summer an ice famine, threat~ ened by the shortage of natural ico from the Upper Hudson, All agreed “Tons Are Monsed on) the situation wae very serio the Medson. 675,000 tons of natura} ice and dealers from ive ote tac et fy Pat Py, oi m of the railroad, tt ice from outlying sections and Ralph M. Horton. thelr product until July when the need will be gre: Robert H, Eider, President iam Newark Brooklyn Broad Street & 460-462 Fulton Ww: Perk Street : West 34th Street—New York = "Summer Frocks of Georgette Voiles At Introductory Prices A Oo” Fresh, ing new Stmimer frock’ of pronounced charm— in soft, in sat, Seley, shee: fabrics that are becoming, attractive and phasising innocent simplicity of theme and a demure ena hans of development—unspeakably charming! Georgette Figured Voiles, Wonderful New Ginghams in Harmonious Effects, Checked and Novelty Voiles, “‘Midsummer-night” Dimities, Linons With Organdy ruffling and at collars, pretty over- skirts, frills, tucks, Peeping and Shawl collars, ghlish sashes, innovations in sleeves, Colonial side drapery. H Higher-Cost Wash Dresses / wy In Summer’s Favored Modes se | 2-98 and * 16° naive charm in simple new modes, revealing the soft strai ye effect abetted enich | “gba react in ar ite de luxe Organdies, Ginghams, Di imities, mintred; ped Checked Voiles, Linens—wondrously trimm Other Assortments of Exquisitely Beautir ful New Wash Frocks Priced at $19.75 to $25 === No Charge for Necessary : Alterations == to wet the natural ice men to reserve nd August, the Lee » is Chair- he Mayor, Blarket Commi Rath, a Hoda Wesley. Mt. Ofer “ana ie Luxury Tax on Drees wy Dainty Interpretations of the New Mode © 6 i : i i 3FF mention coffee to the men in the service and watch them smile. These brave fellows have endured long hours of hard labor with little rest. They have forced nature to the breaking point. Coffee helped them. It cheered them and seiitalal them. Very often it actually sustained them. Its warmth rested and _ steadied them, and so gave them new courage fo~ the great You men and women in every day life, waging the battle _of business, striving to maintain place and power and health ~ —you have great tasks, too. And you find coffee a real help in the day's work. And the joy of it—the charm of it—the delight of it. It greets you at breakfast—it cheers you at luncheon—it revives © ou at dinner. And very often regales you at the late supper. |Training Station, | motor fire enginé and patrol replaced THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 15, KIDDIES MOURNING NO GREAT ESTATE Five ating Laney Long in Service Forced to Give Way to Motor Apparatus. | Kiddies in the vicinity of Third Avenue and East Sist Street who for years have found enjoyment in watching the galloping horses of En- gine Company No, 8 dash forth to| fires are to-day mourning a personal loss. For late yesterday the tive | homes — Dalmuth, Ajalion and Colonel of the engine and Sandborn and Boss of the tender—were led away from their comfortable quarters and taken to the Brooklyn Fire A combination the horses, ‘The horses answered their last call yesterday morning when they gal- loped to the Argonne Forest, 69th Street and Fifth Avenue, The cam- ouflaged parade decorations in flames caused quite a scare for hotel man- agers in that vicinity. Returning, the horses apparently sensed it was their last call, for, ac- cording to Capt. Joe Donovan, they hung their heads, Scores of kiddies! were on hand to offer sugar to the steeds as they were led away. Engine Company No, 8 was first organized in 1863 by volunteer firemen. It was necessary many times, it is said, to race to the meadows where Central Park is now located in order to get the horses to answer an alarm. ‘The five horses are still in good con- dition, and it is believed they will be placed in active service in some of the outlying districts of Brooklyn. Capt. Donovan has served hi: ire | time with Engine Compapy No. 8 and | he feels keenly the loss of the horses. GARMENT STRIKERS GIVE EAST SIDE A HOLIDAY LOOK Numerous Requests for Settlements Reported Made, With 30,000 Workers Idle. The strike of 30,000 workers of the Garment Workers’ Union gave side @ holiday appearance to- The sidewalks were filled with The day. men and girls in good humor. only task of the policemen was to pre- vent congestion. Louis Wiard, General Man the Cloak, Suit and Skirt M turers’ Association, said on b the employers, that it would take sev- eral days for full consideration of the demands made by the union, and that the employers would go into confer- merous firms have already made re- quests for settlement conferences, which will probably begin early next week. Leaders of the strikers said settle- ments would n: arly be slow be- cause reports must be had on the ex- act conditions in every shop affected by the strike. GUARDED PARK SLEEPER FROM THEFT, IS STABBED Police Make Four Arrests After Vic- tim Is Taken to the Hospital, Anthony Geardi, twenty-five, of No, 163 Weat Houston Street was taken from Bryant Park to Bellevue early to-day with @ stab wound In the abdomen. A man who gave his name as Edward Klein, thirty-four, of No, 229 East ry Street was arrested, charged with fe- Jonious assault. Geard! told a patrol man Klein had stabbed him whq@n pro- vented from robbing @ bench sleeper. A crowd of soldiers and sailors trom the Y, M, C, A. hut in the park threat- ened the prisoner, and three others, who said they were Joseph Merrien, twenty- seven, of No. 465 Sixth Avenue; George Bminge, thirty-one, of No. 152 Hast 20th Street, and Stephen Blroscak, twenty- four, of No, #16 Washington Street. to. boken, N. J., arrested on a charge of aiding Klein. —_——_— LYNCHED, HIS BODY BURNED. Mob of 1,000 Slays Negre Accused of Attack on White Girl, VICKSBURG, Miss, May 14—Lioyd Clay, @ negro, twenty-four-years-old, who was charged with assaulting a young white woman, was lynched by a mob of 1,000 last night. After he was dead his body was cut down and was burned at the stake, Piha Ranh Foreign Mall Service Normal Again. WASHINGTON, May 15.—The for- eign mail service, interrupted by tho war, has been restored to normal and the ‘toreign parcel siderably extende Teached before the war, it was an- nounced to-day by the’ Post Office post, has been con- beyond points Mr, Department. gent Direct from ae % COFFEE) Freshly Roasted — Bean of Ground iu 32¢ in SU o fee Better coffee for less money because you save middieman’s profit, Delivered in Manhattan and Brookiya, ‘Mo a Ub,; elvewhere, 50, GILLIES COFFEE CO, FOR FIRE HORSES BETTER MANAGED, OF ENGINE NO. 8, GOULD'S D DEFENSE Lawyer Testifies T ies To-Day For- tune Is Now Worth From | $73,000,000 to $75,000,000. The defense of George J. Gould to the accusations made against bim by his brother, Frank Gould, will be continued before Supreme Court Justice Whitaker . William Wallace jr. sel for eGorge oGuld, will tell the court that no other great estate int jthe country has been managed with such foresight and bysiness acumen as Mr. Gould displayed, in spite of the fact that two wars and a business panic occurred during bis trustee- stip of his father’s fortune. Wallace will contend that the estate is now Valued at between $73,000,000 and $75,000,000, which, con- sidering the troublous times, is an excellent showing. The estate origi- nally was appraised at $80,000,000. Counsel for Frank Gould contends that the estate now amounts to only $70,000,0@) and that the $10,000,000 de- crease is chargeable to the alleged mismanagement of George Former Judge Seabury will reply to the arguments of John B. Stanchfleld and Mr. Wallace who are associated in the defense of George. Before Justice Whitaker takes the from Perth Am’ this Gould. It Is All Right to Manufacture Automobiles by Machinery, but a Man’s Clothes Ought to Be Hand-Tailored afternoon, personal coun- 919. case‘under advisement—he has an- nounced be will not decide the ‘case from the bench—William A. W. Stewart, guardian for the infant children and grandchildren of George Gould, will announce whether his wards are to remain neutral in the contest or take sides with Frank Gould and his sister Anna,, the Duchess de Talleyrand. It was said yesterday that Frank Gould had decided to return to America from France, where he has liyed singe 1912, and take en active part in the litigation. W. B. Walker, of the firm of Walker & Leonard, counsel for Gould, said he had no tn- formation concerning his . client's plans and for all he knew Frank might now be on his way to this country. WOMAN AND FOUR CHILDREN LOST AS BARGE GOES DOWN Coal Boat Nanticoke Sinks Off Isles of Shoals—Victims From Perth Amboy. PORTSMOUTH, N. H.. May 15.—Six persons—the Captain's wife and four children and the engineer—were drowned when the coal-laden barge Nanticoke, Jowned by the Potter Transportation y of New York, sank to-day off of Shoals. William Gray and Allen MeDou- gall 'n deck hand. were. picked up by the Coast Guard at Rye Beach after they had drifted in a small boat for several hours. viyors. ‘The Nanticoke was the last of a string of three barges in tow of: the tug Triton and bound from Perth Am- boy, N. J, for Portland and Rock- land. Me. Capt. Gray said he and MeDou were on watch about 1 A. M., they disco tng by the stern, The barge went down so rapidiy they had no tithe to arouse Mrs, Gray and the children, who were asleep below, or to warn They are the only sur- the engineer. ‘The captain and his family and the two members Thevery word manufacture has some- thing coarse and repellant about it to the man who has an eye for the finer things. refined. It is Tt is too rufhian to. be a bull in a china shop. A suit of clothes is, or should be, a matter of infinite care and solicitude, _ not rushed through a sewing machine as if it were a matter of life and ‘death, but worked upon by hand and given the time and the thought and the talent without which, fine tailoring is impgssible. attached to it, workmanship, fabrics. Underwear for Men — $100 y. $750 Not a branded underwear with our name but a special make of underwear, designed according to our own exacting standards of comfort, fit, Men's Furnishings Shop he crew were all 17 MAKES LITTLE 0 Annual Clearance Sale The Famous Mme. lréneCorsets FOR BALANCE OF THE WEEK The latest styles, consisting of the sample lines of our Wholesale it, and the newest models made of high grade materials which we are discontinuing. We offer them at these phenomenally low prices, despite thetremendousincrease in cost of materialsand producing: $8.00 to $9.00 CORSETS 4.00 and 4.50. $10.00 to $12.00 “ 5,00 and 5.50 . $12.00 to $15.00“ 6.50 and 7,50 } $16.00 to $18.00 “ 8.00 and 9,00 $22.00 to $35.00 a 10.00, 12.00, 18: 00 | Every Corsct Carefully Fitted. All “Models Lt dank Newest Designs Latest Styles in Silk svieot, Chamoisette and Elastic Corsets, also The New Corset D’INTERIEUR. A full assortment of Imported and Tricot Brassieres. Positively No Goods Sent on Approval, Credited or Exchanged. 518 Fifth Ave., Bet. 43d and 44th Sts. ENCE WHAT YOU NEED—A WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND FIND IT You simply can’t hold a stop.watch on art! And hand-tailoring is no exception to the rule. Franklin Simon Clothes ‘take longer'to make and cost more to produce, but what is the result? Take hold of a coat and look at it! In the hang of the sleeve, in the hesitant flare of the cuffs, in the curve of the collar, in the grace of the lapels, and fn the smooth unlabored sweep of the lines, every stitch testifies to the everlasting superiority of the human hand. MEN’S SUITS #30 TO 465 HAND-TAILORED AND READY finish and quality of FIFTH AVENUE MEN’S SHOPS—2 TO 8 WEST 38th STREET—STREET LEVEL HIGH AND LOW MODELS $'750 to $950 A popular-priced shoe without the limi- tations which a popular price usually implies. Designed in exclusive narrow, medium and broad toe models, shown in all leathers and comprising a total of over forty styles. fllen’s Shoe hop