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. on t THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1921. NASSAU SWARMS FIVE MEN HAD STRUGGLE WITH BANDIT GANGS] TO SUBDUE CRAZY CITIZEN. FIRM OFFICERS ACCUSED . =oWIN ANNE STILLMAN NEW DIVORCE FACTS | TO SIDE OF MOTHER} ing been arr Brenner owns acing: Patrolman Patrick Burke with the crazed man, who threw twice with ease. Patrolmen tgan and Thomas Gaine then ‘took a J and their task was almost too much. them. yerger's jewelry store, Avenue Cards in his pockets ga Jacobo. ‘The a {of a large detail of State troopers to grappled | patrol the roads, oft | Running the gamut of erime from |night banditry to broad daylight ‘hold-up in Glen Cove, Oyster Bay }and Westbury, at least fifty robberies |have been reported within ten da jin the neighborhood of the sum homes of J. P. Morgan, Harry P: lWhitney, August Belmont and ot ‘i prominent in financial and social cir-| } charges are pi to whom the fir he Brenners blamed ate 7 sa On the back of # letter from Mis } |Fifty Robberies in Ten Days Alarm]? rte@ to Throw Himaelt tn Frout has hota nae aan lk cela SALESMAN, OUT OF WORK, | xatuie “r al, Ho. y Joni Ghiawa faa Sart of Sixth Avenue © bad yondon, 7 with Miller i | North Shore Residents—Sheritf J}. te nent mouty,| TORONTO, Sent. 26—the tet or| FOUND DYING NEAR HOME| les! 8 Bally { Corps Sworn In, " onigele of 4 | $700,000 Is one of five charges pending ; ‘ voy { | 1 and Sixth | wAainst two officers and one employee | “Everything In Very Dark, He} will not hur H Residents of the fashionable summer % th ing and in {of the firm of N. Brenner & Co. which | Wrote om Letter From a Se Rae ee ' places on the north shore of Nas- tement. thousands of {Ud an extensive business in metals! Maxwell Miller, nineteen iceman Dies While Wife sau County are alarmed over a series) oo ; eteattie tor | With New York and London interests. |anteaman out of work, was. found Away. H people milled about, stopping 2 for | Witt . i of robberies within the last twol vonty minutes, By this time the man| N- Brenner, head of th T}ing this morning in Sunset Park. Patrolman Winfield |weeka, which have resulted .n the| os in a atraltjacket on his way to{ Brenner, his son, and Gi one hand was a phial that had con- ! swearing in of a corps of special ; : Y ford, bookkeop ltatned nitric acid in the, ott No. | deputy sheriffs and the assignment | Lellevue Hospital. . tained nitric acid and in the other a ' ' ' ‘ ' ‘The struggle ended in Gold- ; od No. 757 Sixth in, twenty-five ast 48th Street, and | he namo of but it t MeGukin, six years old. w j oles. A be a fox terrier in the hall | One of the victims of the outlaws ~ _ — lis Louis Luckenbach, son of Edgar F. a aiiaiiiiaiienia = | Luckenbach, BP) ident of the Li lenbach Steams? Jompany, who was robbed of personal effects, including | t to e or |his jewelry. | <> | SUNDAY SUIT-PRESSER | 1S FREED BY COURT. Disordered Stomach | Tatlor's © Own ©) | | Benjamin Minten, a tailor wao lives back of his shop at No. 118 Buffalo Avenue, Brooklyn, was arraigned be- Some | Mag Dooley in Miss ANNE STILLMAN Reported to Have Said J Avenue Court to-day with Phases of Case Were Kept From |" “ull of clot ay — = = Her—Now on Way to’France. ner people's Clothes all week CHARITY. CHARITY, uy is the only day I ean press Miss Anne Stillman, nineteen-yea ; M4 daughter of James A. Stillman, @mce head of the National City Bank, who cast her lot with her father dur. tag the Stillman divorce suit hear- gs, has recapitulated and is now reconciled with her mother and her Brother “Bud,” always a sturdy chum- pion of his mother. The reconciliation came about dur- | ©@ ing the summer, spent in Canada. Im- | § portant new evidence unearthed by tavestizators for Mrs. Stillman is sald | to have played an important part in Miss $Stillman’s change of attitude Miss stillman never openly broké with her mother, but leaned toward a be Nef in her father until her reported } Bearing of the new evidence when she i quoted as having said: “The real facts were kept from my knowledge and IT have asked mother to forgive me, always remuin true to | future.” Miss Stillman left Saturday ) France to attend an exclusive finish- tng school. The Stillman hearings j will be resumed tn Poughkeepsie on Oct. 11. I didn’t know that was law.” KNOW YOUR BUSINESS USE YOUR SPARE TIME TO IMPROVE YOURSELF K OF C EVENING SCHOOLS NEW YORK CHAPTER Offer courses in Academic, Professional, Business and Voca- tional Subjects, Including PLAN READING AND ESTIMATING MILLINERY MECHANICAL DRAWING DRESSMAKING TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT STENOGRAPHY BUSINESS ARITHMETIC BOOKKEEPING ELECTRIC WIRING—VULCANIZING—PLUMBING And Forty Other Subjects. SCHOOLS OPEN TO ALL MEN AND WOMEN LOCATION OF SCHOOLS. 97th St.’and Amst. Ave., Manhattan. 315 East 36th St., Manhattan, College Ave. and 146th St., The Bronx Daly Ave. and 176th St., The Bronx. 240 West 5ist St., Manhattan. REGISTRATION N AT ALL SCHOOLS ANY E PT SA T EVERYTHING FREE TO EX-SERVICE MEN AND WOMEN e Qu tll OLD ENG Salice For the Roast On the Steak In the Chowder With the Oysters Can't be beat for an all-around seasoning. MADE IN U. S. A. At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores. E. Pritchard, 327 Spring St., N. Y. ® DOD OOOO For Catalogu Address PHONE CIRCLE Antendent, 240 W. Slst St 9360. The makers of Onyx Silk Hosiery say— Always wash silk stockings in LIX “ i ' Emery & Beers Company, Inc., is one of the ieading manu- facturers who have recently made a thorough investigation of the safe way to wash fine fabrics. For their own protection ag well as their customers’, these manufacturers are urging that their products be laundered in Lux. Complete launder- Ing directions In booklet form sent free on request, Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. . Made in U.S. A. , han , i Won't injure anything pure water alone won't harm ‘ de ; Le - > = af T = s = eee ¥ OF THEFT OF $700,000 de of metals for the as} of their homo Inst night New York Hospital attended Gukin for lacerations of t the boy for a lacerated ri rs, Me-| Street, Brooklyn, | where two he was found | thought he was out of town. blocks The — b of letters, H Norwegiar He was taken to the Hospital, The family of mother in Bloomingburg, N. ay Here are the facts: | THE AVERAGE RECEIVED BY THE | PRODUCER AT THE MINE FOR HIS TOTAL | TONNAGE IS $6.15. Only about 60 per cent of all anthracite (the lomestic sizes, grate, stove, egg and nut) | is sold at the mine at prices ranging from | $7.60 to $8.60. Ten per cent is pea sold at $6.00. The remaining 30 per cent is com- posed of the very small “steam” sizes, (buck- wheat, rice and barley), and sells at an aver- - age of about $2.25 a ton—much BELOW the average cost of production, The average cost of producing a gross ton of run- of-mine anthracite, preparing it in 8 marketable sizes and loading on cars, at the present time is $5.55. This cost is divided as follows: i Labor, perton . . . $3.92 Materials. . . . . 1.05 Insurance, taxes, selling expense, etc. 58 $5.55 This cost applies alike to coal selling at the mine for $7.50 a ton or more and to the small by-product sizes of coal selling as low as $1.50 a ton. This is No. 3 of a series on hard coal facts presented in an effort to help you decide for yourself whether anthracite mine prices are fair. Watch for future advertisements in this newspaper. 6. D. Warriner, President, Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co, 'W. W. Inglis, President, Glen Alden Coal Co, W. }. Richards, President, Phila. & Reading Coal 6. (ron Co, C.F. Huber, Prendent, Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. W. A. May, President, Pennsylvania Coal Company John M. Humphrey, President, Lehigh Valley Coal Co, ¢€ jcamenmemae Dr. Sutton of|the young ‘man lives at No, 273 434 ; trom members| = | Here’s the Mine Part | Of Your Anthracite Bill making a big profit on coal at say $14 a ton. i | parts of the country). But show him an itemized bill of mining costs— | and he is able to judge for himself concerning mine owners’ profits. Those desiring further information can obtain it by addressing ANTHRACITE General Policies Committee 437 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia J.B. Kerr, President, Seranton Coal Company Percy C. Madeira, President, Madeira, Hill & Co. Bal aif Cataaaa FAAP akan oe ‘They are all covered with nickel plate, but the quality underneath is what counts, WISS scissors are forged from the finest steel, tempered to stay sharp. They are guaranteed to give satisfaction, J. WISS & SONS COMPANY RATABLISHED 1848 WEWARK, N. J. IPPC PO RRP RRROROGRRMOROR! ail (It costs more in some Subtracting the average cost of production ($5.55) from the average price at the mines ($6.15), leaves a margin of 60 cents to the mine owner. Federal Taxes and interest on investment must be paid out of this 60 cents before any profit can be made. The U.S. Fuel Administration found that anthra- cite mines have an investment of about $8 per ton of annual production. In an industry involving so much of hazard as the mining of coal, a return of 10% onthe investment could not be considered excessive. This alone would permit 80 cents per ton profit—if anybody could make that much, The figures show a cost of production making it absolutely impossible (after Federal taxes and interest on borrowed money are provided for) for the anthra- cite mine owner to make more than 50 cents a ton profit. Few exceed it, many make less and some are operating at a loss. The difference between the mine price and the retail price is accounted for by freight charges and the cost of retail distribution, in the profits of which the anthracite producer does not share. “Black Diamond" Sept. 15 quotes the fol- lowing range of anthracite pric ton FOB mines seaeuacia $7.60 $8.25 1.90 8. 7.90 8.50 Chestnut . Alan C. Dodson, President, D. B. Wentz, President, Weston Dodson & Co. 1.8. Wentz Co. John Markle, President, W. L. Connell, Presidens, Jeddo-Highland Coal Company Green Ridge Coal Co, William Collins, President, S. B. Thorne, President, Susquehanna Colleries Co. ‘Thome, Neale & Co, | LIP COVERS AND UPHOLSTE SSO wee aw P ONE POE | CHE. SEA 'E.SEA 1@ 40 40 6 AUER 1OUAY 10 DAY SPECIAL ‘yi Old furniture Made Like New Fu.n:ture C lleered, Del vere, Stored Fe Write, Ph ne or Call tor TEL-FITIROY 41521 o Pi.ces Reuphol.tered AND SPECIAL inIS WEEK ARMONAIR REMODELLED INTO ROCKER, LOOSE CUSHION TO MATCH SOFA, and our representative will call with complete line of samples, 5 Pi CES RE-UPHOLSTERFD Old Furniture Made New Agair In latest style tapestry tion leather Value loone ‘cushions, |§5-Pe. Covers | $Made to O. der | @Any size eretonne, Shrunk 6 MAIN TACLORY / ‘ “th Av. in eae vee 67-- ae KLYN BY all | 9528 wll and and PRAAAS BHONS BKANCTL On AV. SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS| No >LIP COVERS AND UPHOLSTERY, we ¥ Cor. 46% St.& 8% Ave. sur cosy Payment Plan Applies Everywhere Within 150 Miles of N. Yi We Furnish Apartments and Homes on Weekly or Monthly Payments, thy i Period Bedroom Sulte in Antique Ivory with decorated panels; four pieces, consisting of Dresser, Chif- fonier, Tollet Table § 50 and Bed, as Illustrat- 10 + ed, at October Columbia and Cort!na Foreign Language Records on Sale. Columbia Gratonolas from $30 Up on Our Easy Payment Plan All Goods Marked In Plain Figures, Motor Truck Deliveries. ENGLANDER DOUBLE DA-BED, complete with mattress and spring; SEWING MACHINES ON CREDIT UP TO $110. OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS. as iilus trated, at A wo T IS HARD for the anthracite user to believe that somebody is not ; “1k i u HW cS aseee—— 22 lo ase ~ 8S BSB = OSes _=sen ———