The evening world. Newspaper, April 13, 1921, Page 16

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——— TEINS! ix av) : ; } H ‘ve ip ‘ THIEF BLACK] ACKS anata the arove be sprang trom bt] BROOKLYN SWEPT | WOMAN MUFFLES gan tearing ay the $700 diamond ring struggled to prevent losing the gem. | drew a blackjack and struck her time! Mai ° ! after time over the head, She was! _RINGFROM FINGER she we he f : ; blackjack and her arm fell paralyzed |¢"don foad, Brooklyn, was held up| Afth floor of No, 2600 University Ave- with such violence the nail of She is sixty and frail, but d, but continued to hold her right | over her left aa she was beaten om. Then struck her right hand with the| }from the blow. He then tore off the Mrs. Ingraham Had Admitted} ring “Columbia Student” Seek- | ber Hetle finger came off with I s. Ingraham had $2,000 worth of | | ing Furnished Room, trinkets In a bag at hor waist. The pe robber demanded to know where her | NEW CRIME OUTBREAK. other valuables were, but the soml-| conscious woman only shook head. He evidently suspected 8 Burglar Chase on Washington | them concealed about her clothing, | , for he was wu or had | at her garments) Heights Ends in an Arrest | when Mra. Frank Jopst, wife of the| j Janitor living In the apartment be- } on Bus Roof. li h, opened her door to learn the use vf the commotion, The rober heard her and, Jin Feflected in to-day's polico records.|Mrs. Ingraham to the floor, darted In the long ist of recent robberies | Out and down the stairs. Mrs. Jopst| ing was uiraid to try to stop him, She and the clevator operator found Mrs Ingraham on the floor, weak from) A fresh outbreak of hold-ups was| few have been so brutal as that which Jeft Mrs. Daniel Ingraham of No. 48 og OTHER ROBBERIES) | Martense Street by two men, who | took $48 from bim while covering his $6,500 | ne Laramenn the — Bedford Avenue Yields | With Sweater on Head She Warns $40—Tallor Robbed in of Man Jimmying Door— His Shop. Suspect Arrested, Clarence PV. Dillon of No. 2408 Clar-| Mrs. Arthur Gale, who lives on the last night on Bedford Avenue near} nue, the Bronx, heard « nolse In the hall yesterday afternoon and, pecping out, saw a man jimmying the docr of the adjoining apartment of Bldina M. um with guns Bradiey, principal of a public school opi: Goldberg was at work in| in Manbattan. tallor hop, No, 2610 Bedford] Mra. Gale's telephone is near the , lust night when a man held| dour to her apartment and she was }him up with @ revolver and took $10) afraid of being overheard by the bur- glar, So she wrapped a sweater Bunglars on Friday night took|around her head, effectually mufting worth of men's suita from! her voice, and telephoned to the janj- smuel Lebow!ta's plage on the top|tor. The latter called a policeman, of Nos, 26-27 East 27th Street,| who arrested a man describing him- n The same evening the! svif as George Timmer, twenty-three, Dress Company, occupy-|« subway guard, living at No, 219 Kast loor below, lost $600 worth | l14th Street. dress goods, presumably taken by| The police found a stickpin, a same burglars. Employees of|camera and an auto tire guage on! Spinner & Rosenberg, working late|the prisoner and this property later West 734 Street in a serious con-|shock and joss of blood, but still/ on the third floor, were sprayed with | was identified by John H. Hall of No, Doctors were called and| water from a pipe the unglars cut|#22 Batley Avenue, the Bronx, who ition. conscious. * The victim, an elderly widow, who, pronounced her condition serious, but fe said to be a sister-in-law of Su-| she insisted on remaining as home. | Deteatives of the West 68th Stree! Graham, has an apartment with her| Station were given u good ¢ Bister on the third floor of the West-| of the Bort, southeast corner of Columbus | apparently well-educated young thief, Avenue. Yesterday she advervised alput have found no ‘ace of him or Preme Court Justice George L. In-| Yoom for rent, and at 6 o'clock last| the ring. might a young man, about twenty-/| ‘gne, called, looked at the room, and |« Bald he would return shortly with| Ris brother. He came back brofher would arrive presently, and|? would pay the first week's rent. He| and Mré. Ingraham sat and talked ||" for an hour or more while waiting. He said, among other things, th: Ne was to attend Columbia Univ Then he asked for a drink of | WHY ing Thi Friday, March 25. By Order of Fire Adjusters We MUST Sell Our Entire aph: efrigerators, &c. these wonderful val: ACT NOW! GRAND STREET Low rents help make low pric: where! smooth-spoken, well-dressed, rment Work Fight Wage ie-| Ofticials o! \ 9, unaccompanied | ilies’ Garment Worker: @nd without baggage, and said hig|"ounced to-day the organ! fared to fight any attempt by the Suit and Skirt Manufacturers’ ng hours proposed yesterday. A special Holes baud of the Joint Board [oF the Cloak, Akt Union: has Ween called for to- ht to make plans to combat the ployers aity. jee We Are Hold- From the New York Evening Journal. Lyons, Stadtholz & Co. Also Englander ‘‘Productions for Sleep and Rest.” DON’T WAIT Don’t hesitate—Don’t put it off another day. Every day you wait the selection becomes less. At this sale YOU CAN FURNISH 3 ROOMS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE. Buyers from all over town are coming for There wor’t be much left in a few days. While other high class houses have moved uptown and now pay high rente we have remained on Grand Street, where New York's leading Department Stores originated. And it is easy to reach our store from Bronx, Brooklyn, Washington Heights, Jersey City, or any part of town, We make deliveries every- EASY TO ——-—— national La and increased work- WHY This Sale Our First Sale In 47 Years There are Sales and Sales, but none that offer furniture of such undisputed superior quality. We carry noth- ing but the finest. We are in business 47 years and this is our first sale. $250,000 Stock of FURNITURE Including Rugs, Lamps, Bedding, Clocks, Phono- a Wagons, Porch Furniture, Smoking Stands, We Have Been Selling Quality Furniture Since 1874, JOS. J sate ae 316-318-320 PEN MONDAY AN Pao ite: ay Sf hands. Look Carefully Before You Decide Buy only well known, dependable makes. Compare the class of merchandise others sell with eee faceus . makes we offer: rkey & Gay, Widdicombe, Prices Royal, Sligh, Phoenix, Singer, Greenpoint, Karpen, and other equally famous Grand D SATURDAY in entering the Laramenux company’s | sid his apartment had been robbed the day before. Timmer was sent to Chance of a Lifetime Go to any Furniture Dealer in the U. S, A. THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 138, 1921, POLICE IN AN AUTO BY HOLD-UPS AND | VOICE, PHONES TIP TAKE ALLEGED THIEF OF THIEF INHOUSE ONS5TH AVENUE BUS $2,000 Hold-Up O14, Discloned, Another robbery revealed after a Washington Heights Flat— One Gets Away. from a window floor apartment at No. 622 when Vollcemen Finneran and Gib- a Fifth Avenue bus after pursuing It in a commandeered au- | and arrested John J. King ve his address nd held him for arralgnment y on a charge of larceny. | \ Mrs. Elsie Ferguson, who had her) nd-a-half-old daughter in her armas, found two men ransacking the | drawers of a dresser in her apart t at the 179th Street address and her screams attr a crowd that took up the chase, men separated in the street and one sought to escape by jumping on the King when arrested rings and a wi Robbery Two Weeks $50,000 Jewe! on arming to. pawnshops | ) light a $60,000 jewel loot included a $6 POSSE SES oe os diamond lavalliere bracelet and several Material for making shirt watsts|Morrisania Court to-day to be ar-|mond rings val and forty-two dozen. waists, valued|raigned on a charge of burglary. Ba bd ut $4,000, were stolen Thursday night] Many robberies have been reported | trom the Society Waist Corhpany, No.| recently in the same neighborhood. 955 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Jewelry worth $1,000 was stolen yes- automobile standing in the|terday from the apartment of M \ rear of the Lyon Tire Company, No.| KE. Scannel, No, 2636 University Av 475 Hast 2%th Street, Brooklyn, in-|nue, and $2,000 worth of jewelry w terested (Patrolman James Kenney ty LT Reg. U. S. Pat. Office 39 West 19th St. New York City ter of the owner o Jardin of Paris, married In 1898 to Henry Steers Lake, | a New York broker who had rescued her from the hotel when it was de- | | gtroyed by fire, stolen fram the apartment of J, Per-| ‘Union an-\eatly to-day. He saw two colorea|son, in the same building. Jewelry) tion was|men taking tires out of the atore.| worth $600 was stolen Monday from His revolver stuck in {te holeter|the apartment of Mrs. Kate Beukler, when he ran toward them, so he|Superintendent, at No. 1856 Marmion} {ation to introduce | pointed @ finger at them and threat-|Avenue, the Bronx. The thief got ened to shoot. They held up their|into the apartment when Mrs. Beuk- ‘They said they were Robert|ler was summoned to the front of the rt and Reefer Mak-| Flipper of No. 771 Bergen Street and| building by 4 ring at the doorbell and James Wardell, no home, They|enguged in a business conversation were locked up. there. How to wash woolens— The advice of two great manufacturers of woolen Go to Auction. Go to the Factory that made them. YOU WILL HAVE TO PAY MORE THAN WE ASK. Compare the Compare These LIVING ROOM SUITES— cy Fine EQULAR RESALE $375 3 Pe. All Upholstered Genu- ine Leather, Loose Cush- ion Spring Seat..... . $139 425 3 Pc. Tapestry-Loose Cushion, Spring : ST AGaiLisLtNNehaNeSeRins 65 450 3 Pe. Velour, Cane, Loose Cushion Soring BenelS ictiiae annie 169 385 3 Pc. Tapestry - Davenport, Loose Cushion Spring Seat............ 159 145 3 Pc, Mahogany Genuine Leather... 79 1150 3 Pe. Frieze Comb, Loose Cushion DOLMIE GOBSissccescesseoved uss 575 DINING ROOM SUITES— $5459 Pe. Mahogany Queen Anne $239 850 10 Pe. Walnut , Louis XV vest, Gon 575 10 Pc. Walnut, Queen Anne........, 259 985 10 Pe. Mahogany, French Chippendale 510 685 10 Pe. Mahogany Adam, a TY 850 10 Pe. Walnut English Chippendale, 359 BED ROOM SUITES— $465 6 Pe. Walnut Queen Anne $220 850 6 Pc. Walnut, Louis XV. sete Me 875 7 Pe, Walnut (twin beds), Louis XVI. 475 840 6 Pc, Walnut English Chippendale, 415 525 7 Pc. Walnut Adam....... 0.00505 2000 8 Pc, Walnut, Louis XVI. 1048 EVENINGS Paro oe Dance Wool scorches easily. Press challis and Woolens should be dried in an even tem- other light woolens while they are still a little PeFature—that of the ordinary room is the best. damp. Use a warm iron—never a hot one. Heat increases shrinkage. Do not dry woolens Won't injure anything pure water alone won't harm err-.., in Motel a Year| West reet and Louis Geller,{an acquaintance with Cohn and to No. nn wont 116th Street, charged | have dtfored him bargains in jewelry. with having beaten and robbed |The jewels were exhibited to Cohn in ‘Charles Cohn, sixty, a Jeweller, of No, |a room he took at the hotel for the year of silence, came through the ar-|61 Wost 112th Street, in a room in the | purpose and when he returned with two men describing them-|Hotel Ansonia on March 1, 1920, | $2 selves as Abraham Gotzle ou n and robbed alleged to have picked up! No, 140' They POS 4 EF > KS SES KT hs Why Pay $60.00 at Retail: for a $30.00 Wholesale Suit? Retailers charge $60.00. We, the manufac- turers, charge $30.00. A simple, mathematical proposition: We are the whole sale manufacturers of the famous Styl-Kraft high grade men’s clothing and are offering right off our factory floor our entire stock of new spring styles at STRICTLY WHOLESALE PRICES. Styl-Kratt suits are priced as low as $30.00, Some very special topcoats at $25.00. No charge for alterations. Come up to our factory on the twelfth floor, You won't be dis- appointed. Open 9 A.M. to6 P.M. Saturday 4 P. M. raft Manufacturers of Men's High Grade Clothing Ot SSE PS SSE Kh SSE Eh} garments a pee name Carter stands for first quality in baby under. wear. For nearly fifty years the ‘makers of Ascher’s Knit Goods have made the finest quality of knitted outer garments for infants and children. Woolens, like all fine fabrics, should be carefully laundered. These two leading manufacturers, knowing this, naturally pre- fer that their products be washed with Lux. Below are detailed directions for washing woolens that these two great manufac- turers advise. Read these directions—you will want to use them. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. To keep woolens soft and unshrunken Whisk one tablespoonful of Lux into a thick lather in half a bowltul of very hot water. Add cold water until lukewarm. Dip garment up and down, pressing suds repeatedly through soiled spots. Do not rub. Rinse in three luke- warm waters. Squeeze water out. Do not wring. Press with a warm iron—never a hot one. Colored woolens. Have suds and rinsing waters barely lukewarm. Wash quickly to keep colors from running. Lux won't cause any color to run that is not affected by pure water alone. Knitted garments should never be wrung ot twisted. Squeeze water out and pull and pat garment into shape. Spread carefully on a towel to dry. out of doors except on very mild days. Woolens Sweaters will not retain their shape if put should never be dried in the sun. in a bag and hung to dry. Pull and pat them into shape, being careful not to stretch them. Flannels may be dried flat and stretched to Spread on an old towel to dry. Angora should be brushed while drying and material and using a warm iron. again after it is dry. Silk and wool is washed just as wool is, wooden forms, shape, or when absolutely dry they may be pressed by placing a damp cheesecloth over the Shirts and stockings should be dried on Knitted blankets and afghans, like other knitted articles, should never be hung up to dry. Spread them on a towel and pull into shape, to buy it, be alleges he wos STYLECRAFT COMPANY, Inc. $$ SSE S$ SES OS ES os

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