The evening world. Newspaper, August 12, 1920, Page 9

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; “ A a ' woda was to ask for “wpecial reserve TNO WS GIN; MRS.BUTLER eS “SODA” WHISKEY; $500 A MONTH AND: INGER, ER” BRANDY $3000 COUNSEL FEE Fountain on we athe Street Had Sizzling Run Until Dry Agents Learn the Truth. | First of the soda fountains with x ‘oeath and a hiccough was installed. to-day at the Prohibition Enforce-! ment Agent's office in the Customs tha M. Butler, who is defending a House, It is held as evidence against Hyman Juris, @ soda fountain owner | «f-No. 145 Broome Street, His foun- tain has been attracting a tremendous ourtom lately. So much so that news reached James §. Shevlin, ‘The jatter sent his Flying Squadron, consisting | of Izzy Einstein, Moe Smith and) Herman Wittenberg sniff the | Proome Street soda. Last evening they ewept down Broome Street. Fighting their way to the front row at the goda counter, which was walled by un-Volsteady ranks, they selzed the fountain, and say they found the various nickel-plated squirters filled! with 150 gallons of brandy, whiskey and gin, The exgitement was so great, or maybe the disappointment was so poignant, that one man fainted In the street, striking his head on the curb. Friends spirited him away while the «serves from the Clinton Street Sta-| tion descended on the gathered thou- sands and told them to disperse. ‘The flying squadron took Jucis be- fore Commissioner IHitchcock, who to held him in $1,000 ball, and the soda | ¥ ounta!n to the Customs House, They said the method of cbtaining a super- ourff.” ‘The lst.of “flavors” accord- ng to the Enforcement men was as | Gin, | s Brandy, { ‘The Federal Enforcers said that | when they seized Juris he said ‘Byerybody's doing it, I've got to make a living.” Nothing was said about whether the luxury tax was paid on esr Sees LIGHTNING SWATS SWARTSWOOD PIANO Bolt Steals Down the Chimney, Wrecks the Instrument, but Family Is Safe. (Special to The Brening World.) SWARTSWOOD, N. J. Aug. 12.—AM this twn talks about to-day is what ho Ughtning did to James Washer's piano last night, and whether dt ought to be considered an act of God. One sure thing is that the plano in Ita present condition, considered as a mus- cal instrument, leaves something to bo jesired, In fact it ts a wreck, But the town js glad that the light- | ning fortunately didn’t injure Washer or his wife or his daughter instead. Tt happened in the midst of a violent storm last night. Qhe bolt struck the chimney and came down td the parlor. All the members of the family wer stunned, but they are all right this menring, Spend Your Vacation in Comfort in a Pair of Good Looking, Restful Blyn Ped - Tonic Shoes Long tramps and outdoor ex- ercise will have no terrors for the woman comfortably shod in Ped-Tonic Shoes. yet essentially built for com- fort, Their flexible soles |ler interposes a counterclaim for sep- \a nightmare because of the plaintiff's | com. | visits, she says, she found a sign on | rented. of Sued By tmiicitar for Annul- ment, She Counters With Action for Separation. Supreme Court Justice Glennon to- day awarded §500 a month alimony and @ $3,000 counsel fee to Mrs, Ber- suit brought by her husband, Harry V. Butler, of Butler & Sergeant, im- Throws the Little One to Safety as Auto Truck Smashes Into \ Runabout. Mrs, Madeline Schuele, twenty-four, Davidson Avenue, the Bronx, gave her life to eave her three-year-old daughter’ Gertrude, in fn automobile accident at Tremont and Park Avenues last night. runabout her husband was driving collided with @ motor truck and she was thrown out on her head, that the mother threw her child eeveral feet at the moment of the collision, and this saved the life of the little girl, who jJanded on the sidewalk and suffered no greater injury than a scratch on the foot. ‘The child was playing with No. 2066 Witnesses say porters, at No. 100 Hudson Street, to| her dolls this morning. Jobtain annubment of marriage on grounds of alleged fraud. Mrs, But- aration, alleging cruelty, Butler alleges that his wife before their marriage, unknown to him, was Edward 8, Schuele told the “police he was driving bis car west on Tre- t™mont Avenue and that tne auto truck, owned by L. Bernstein, merchant of Bridgeport, Conn., was| doned the child Is not ki The & produce “ime EVENING WoRTD” Ye OLI1Y, “‘AVGUS MOTHER LOSES LIFE SAVING 3-YEAR OLD ‘CHILD FROM DEATH coming south on the wrong side of Park Ayenue, which Is divided by tie New York Central tracks at that point. Mike Romer of No, 1651 Elmwood Avenue, Bridgeport, Coun. driver of the truck wus held in $2,000 bail in the West Farms Court today on a charge of homicide, eso lilaesnaadin CASES ARE CALLED TYPHUS. Magara Detained at Quarantine Pendin, vestigation, Two cases of ilness diagnosed by Quarantine ofMfcails as typhus . were found among the 996 steerage passen- gers who arrived here to-day on the steamship Niagara from Bordeaux. The ship was detained in Quarantine pend- ing confirmation of the Wlagnosis. Including the ba teste! bg 4 ohh riving here to-day 0 Raasengers. in J he Anny Gonsoee Dansig and Ancworn, 1) iaeluding 018 repatriated Polish t ar. 5 year-old. baby girl aban- doned in a hallway at No. 237 Hudson Street, Hovoken, on Augi 7, has been identified as Alma Rowen, No. 411 West 25th Street, Manhat Poormaaster Park received an anonymous’ letter bE tg ll Bs the child from a phi in a New York new: ized published Who aban- n, Burned by High Tension Wire. While at work in the New York, New Haven and Hartford Ratiroad yards nt 149th Street and Haat River this morn- ing, Wdward Stewart, living at No. 1220 Pleagant Street, Watertown, Mass. eldentally touched a high tenslo and was seriously burned about the yen face and body. He was removed TAncuin Hospital by Dr. "Martin in & FEE 35% advantage of our and carry plan. your coffee direct from wi quarters and eave 100 We gparantee the purity, and economy o! OUR’ MARACAIBO COFFEE Whole bean—Ground or Pulvorised. peaks RT a: “OPEN RAOAREAY Othe S'S Gillies Coffee Co. Take cash arsiny | guilty of misconduct with Dr/ James Daniel Hoyt. Mrs, Butler denies this, explaining that, while the physician's wife had oUtained a divorce from him naming her as co-respondent, this was done at a time when co-resond- ents did not have to be served, She alleges she was thus {n ignorance of the proceedings and had no oppor- tunity to defend herself. Mra, But- ler says she was Dr. Hoyt's head nurse for “years, during which she lived at the physician's home. \ * The Buyplers were married June 11, 1919, and went to California for their honeymoon. They lived in great luxury, Mrs. Butler says, during this time, ‘@ut,”" she adds, “despite the great expense, my honeymoon became | cruél and inhuman treatment.” On their return to New York, she relates, they refed a home in Morn- ingside Road, Nepperham Heights, onkers. (While here, Mrs. Butler says, she became il, and, at thi vice of her husband, she went to see Dr. Hoyt and Dr. J. Douglas Mal- | On returning from one of her the door thag the house had been Mrs, Butler relates that her bus- band ds a member of the New York |Athletic Club, Butler_ answers he was forced to dispose of his holdings in the import firm at a sacrifice in | June, 1919, and that he is now a| salesman on commission. Bijur & Herts are Mrs. Butler's attorneys, | When Folks ||’ Quit Coffee because of cost to health or purse, a ed naturally drink INSTANT | POSTUM “There's a Reason” “A step in the right direction, Borden's Milk, Acme of per- fection.” No expense is spared towa making the BORDEN’S MILK sup- ply clean, safe and de= pendable. The BOR- D dairies are give utmost ease to the feet. Seven Dress and Comfort Styles Now OF soft vici kid, neat and stylish, | ' ' 4 Black Vici, 9.50 & 10.00 Brown Vici, 10.00 ty Broad Sign, Military Pat Too Market. Sirset, equipped with every known modern device for the handling of pure, scrupulously clean, pasteurized milk. A competent force of veterinary in- spectors protect the general welfare and health of the countless number of cows, who supply the rich, creamy BORDEN MILK. Phone for our solicitor and arrange for daily delivery or call the man on the wagon, ‘This is Prize Rhyme No, 38. Any boy or girl under 14 years can wit $5 for each rhyme we can use, 2,891 conveniently located stores, Borden’s Farm Products Company, Inc. €3 VESEY STREET Phone: Cortlandt 7961 New York. ont. vice, Navelty styles of excellent taste As far as we have been able to learn these White Styles contain greater value than any now offered to They are priced to absolutely close Usual courteous ser- Note 5 MILLER WHITE Oxfords and Pumps. Cross Strap, Walking Oxfords and Sport Styles. $7. formerly sold from $12 to $16.50 formerly sold from $10 to $14.50 I. MILLER 15 West 42nd Street go Church Street Open all day Saturday 85 1554, Broadway High black also low Shoes Incomplete sizes. None GC, 0, D. 38th Street and heels, full assortment of sizes in the type of Shoes that are just right for mid-summer in the open. lace vamp, all right for wear this Fall; in Down Go Prices! For This Clearance Sale of MEN’S SHOES - Further reductions have been made to close out this season’s stock regardless of original cost. Men’s White Buckskin Oxfords Offered at Just About Wholesale Prices i $8.75 | Smart English last, rubber soles wing vamp, style. Men’s High and Low Shoes Wonderful Values in tan or black $8.50 | Shoes, wing Practical, tan or black. | Shoes in Sale opens this morning and continues all the week Fourth Floor Lord & Taylor ~—FIFTH AVENUE- Po a ne rn ntanen ermemmamcnnaemmemes oad dane tates $14.50 Sport styles with soles, others with black trim or fords—all sizes but not in every $5.50 have been much more, high or low tan English lasts, red rubber also leather-soled Ox- well-made Shoes that or black, Broken lots. smart No Returns 39th Street snp Bit ttl cs wernt’ st Pit } tee ene BONWIT TELLER. &.CO. h ‘The Specially Shop of Oryinalions FIFTH AVENUE. AT 38™ STREET Friday—Final Clearance—Broken Sizes ° WOMEN’S. LOW_SHOES Reduced to 6,75 Oxfords, Colonials or Opera Last Pumps in patent or dull leather. Suede Pumps in fawn or champagne colér; hand turned soles, Louis XVI. heels. Walking Oxfords in patent leather, black or brown Russia calfskin with welted soles, military heels. WOMEN’S HIGH WHITE SHOES 5.00 Laced or button boots in white kid or buckskin, or canvas with hand-turned or welted soles. Louis XVI. heels. No Returns No C. 0. D.’s No Credits ) 6,000. PAIRS ee Famous Queen Quality Shoes | Values up to $16 4 Placed on Sale for Immediate Disposal 85 85 85 85 Per Per Per Per Pair Pair Pair Pai) Never in the shoe history has such a sale been held. 6,000 pairs of Queen Quality high and low shoes—the very last word in styles and quality, placed on sale. Sunday's unfortu- nate fire necessitates the disposal of these shoes, Only a few slightly damaged by smoke— the balance perfect in every detail. This sale will place shoes in the hands of women at far less than the cost of manufacture. It is your chance to buy for late Summer and Fall. Buy ‘them by the single pair—three pairs—a dozen, These values will never be equaled, and the styles are the ultra of fashion. Do it now before they are all gone. | No Deliveries | | No C.0.D.’s] [NoExchanges| [No Returns | [All Sales Final | Store Closed All Day Saturday ‘ Queen Quality Boot Shop 32-34 West bet Street OY eee ra a ee i ere Tal BH The World’s 1920 Summer Resorts Annual and Motor Tours Guide Price 10 Cents At All World Offices and Newsstands and by Mail

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