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{ i] THE EVENING WORLD, WED NESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1922," Tae “TAUGHING BANDITS GET $8,000; STORE os anes “Strong Box” With $387 Low- _ ered From Window and Carted Away in First Robbery, i Investigation of the incursion of three jovial highwaymen into the as Roulston store at No. 845 Avenue, their “exit laughing” with $8,090 Bis day's collections of District * Superintendent Thomas Simmons brought to light « less boisterous bit of felonious comedy at the same com- pany’s store at Fort Hamilton ‘Avenue and 59th Street Saturday night or Sunday morning. On his way to church Sunday, Manager Thomas McMahon of the store saw that the store door, which he had locked himself at 11 o'clock + the night before, was open, He went in and found that thieves hr! forced the door, picked wp the safe , in the office bodily and had low- efed jt to a truck from a rear win- daw. The safe had $887 in it. The police have no more clues than they have to the merry bandits who came into the Fifth Avenir store, shouting and slapping each’ other's backs last evening. > men were well dressed young cans and wore no masks, One ined near the door and the three ober who appeared to be in & Jo¥ial mood, “Joshed” their way back through the store to where Simmons and Harry Healy, clerk, were at the biitter counter, A continuation of rouga-and-tumble pity took all five out of view of Morgan Cramer, the store manager, . and the roomful of customers he was 4 trying to attend. Brookiyn, yesterday Semaecee ¢ Tho three were still in the best of ‘ humor when they started back for {the door, stopping to josh with ‘Cramer and borrow a five-pound and ‘ then a seven-pound bag from him. They had a right to be in gond humor. - In a back room behind the yefrigerator, in a twinkling they had | day. pulled automatics. cowed Simmons Sand Healy into silence and robbed the Superintendent of between $6,000 and $8,000. The money represent.d collections by Simmons during the in seventeen of the Roulaton in Brooklyn. It was in the va- envelopes and constituted the ingly “personal belongings” the had stuffed into the borrowed fo one in the store knew what had happened. Manager Cramer kept right on serving his customers. None of the customers suspected | tbat a hold-up had occurred: The “‘traffie patrolman saw no suspicious actions and did not even remember { having seey an automobile. The three 1 vanished. (BURGLARS SUPPLIED : NOISE MAKERS. New Year's Eve clatter was appar- pave 2 made a noise screen for the of nearly all the tenants of Beh ler’s §=Butlding, Nos. 133-139 ~Canal Street, which became public } to-day, On ‘every floor it was ap- parent that windows had been smashed, desks pounded with chairs (and safes hammered with any kind of metal at hand for several hours. * Following are the offices visited: In some oases the property damage was ‘more than the loot: Jacob Oldak, manufacturing jewel- *ler,feecond floor, reported loss of $500 . im tools and models for casing rings, _ 4 Dressler, manufacturer of plati- ) mum, lost $100 in merchandise. Greenfield Jewelry Company, tools read wilver articles amounting to $150 WITH Benjamin Kimmel. jeweller, loss in tools and merchandise about $100, Nolde, diamond setter, place bi open but nothing taken. erman & Leitch, engravers, ost silver novelties worth | Katz & Alpern, jew valued at $25 stolen. ‘HOLD-UP VICTIM ‘ BEATEN. When George Smith of No. 373 Putnam Avenue, Brooklyn, an auto- {ingbile dealer, was on Fulton Avenug, ta block from the Hempstead rallroad tation, at 5.15 last night, two men rs, articles FOUND Is RIENTAL Superstition?— Perhaps so—but at least an interesting relic of Asiatic Antiq- uity, Alleged by the Chinese to be almost uncanny in its power to bring to the wearer, GOOD LUCK —Health, Happiness, Prosperity, and Long Life, ‘This odd looking ring excites greet in- terest when otterved on your finger, Goto your jeweler's tk to see this odd GOOD LUCK RING. ALSO LOSES SAFE | lin his office with Jacob Kroll of No. |1981 624 Street, Brooklyn, a manu- jumped from behind bushes, black- Jacked him and stripped him of cash and jewelry amounting to more than |factor! ing jeweller, and two employ- biishes and fled. Lo del eS tlarold Kin n hour later, his hands entered, followed by two Joseph Battaglia, twenty years old, o carried clubs. another prigoncr, out on suspended others, who carried club for a fe “gtick up your hands!” said the 1 to-day 4} two-gun man, and Knichthauser neal Session Pt o onthe did 80. Kinsy, Toh Chon elm AGUS | BY OLD NEWSPA R Krol! stood still without putting in his poas up his hands, One bandit knocked After this he was hefore him’ uneonacious, Judge Rosalsky, who had suspended | anee ‘ 90, “x ‘ . While the man with the pistols} tence upon him in July, 1920, on) Pass By $5,000 in Gems It De ue Uroplithn Wha Sestak a charge of the larceny of a watci| and money to the value of $100, (0| which he pleaded guilty, Judge Ro- Covered and Get Only a salsky sentenced him to Blmira Re- $100 Stickpin. formatory, his service there to begin | PI at the expiration of the penitentiary | bel aget 1 f An old newspaper proved the best| was about to take his selection when thought when you first came | e, a watchmaker, walked to hefore me that you could be saved to | protection against bandits when three |B. C. Jaffe, 2 we af a | tety,” Judge Rosalsky said to him, Grevolving WiSeey SAvErD nea gene mmt your record has. proved that for help ‘om could not be. You've found out | now that crime does not pay.” iano SUES HUSBAND AFTER HIS HOME BREW PARTY cove; robber walked up and down in front} of the gloor as a lookout, the third| man went behind @ showcase stocked with uneut stones and jewelry. He armed men passed by $5,000 in Jewel- ry and uncut stones on af open desk to waste time ransacking @ showcase, {as it was they got away with only |a $100 stickpin from the shop in the Loew Theatre Building, 884 Street and Broadway at 7:30 last night, John Knichthauser, proprietor of the stickpin, tal. thauser’s store when \ men entered. the Wife Saya He Recame too Atten- tive to One of Guests, As an aftermath of. a home brew''| * = party one year ago Christmas Eve, Mra. Vera Paine of No, 71 Post Avenue ts seeking the custody of her five-year-old son, Norbert, from her husband, William H, Paine. A hearing was held to-day before Supreme Court Stenographer Keinerd by order of Justice Hotchkias. While the brew was being brewed, it is claimed by Mra. Paine, a Mr. and Mrs. Rochettl were aiding. Mer hus- band, she alleges, pald more attention to Rochett) than he did his brewing. aine also alleges hia wife was too at- tentive to Mr. Rochettl. Mrs, Patne's stepfather, John Mum- ford, told of another “home brew" EP party at which a satlor named “Paddy” White was a guest, He said that the|| | CHOCOLATE, VANILLA CHOCOLATE COVERED MARSHMALLOWS: Big, honey sweet creamy Marsh- mallows under Chocolate. POUND BOX 44¢ home-made beverage was too weak (or “paddy’’ who produced a bottle of whiskey, and later, Mumford testified, Paine threatened to kill his wife. AND STRAWBERRY 24c| NUT NOUGAT: \ Exceptional value. STOKES CONVALESCING RAPIDLY. Willlam EB. D. Stokes, who ‘has be iL of pneumonta at bis home, No. West 78th Street, was to-day reported Es AE Ol a IND BOX to be “much better.” Because of his {lineas a hearing has been adjourned | Creme de We Also Offer Chocolate ungil Tuesday on the suit’ brought | Cc ‘d against him by a brother, ‘Th Menthe lovere: Stokes, The sult is based upon Nutted loged note for $20,000. This is U) Gums: has suffered in the last two ye Big emera ; : || | tinted disks of A big English FAIA KILL TWO AGED WOMEN. Walnut buried The injuries received by Llizabeth || | goodness, pre~ in Maple fla- sented in crys- talized form. POUND BOX Ann Spadone, ninety-three, of the Ap-| thorpe Apartments, 7th Street and] Broadway, when she fell in her room | yesterday, caused her death early to- vored Marsh- mallow. POUND BOX Anna Roach, seventy-nine, Columus Avenue, died at Harlem H pital early to-day of injuries received fn“talling’ down. the aa ray at her | residence on Monday. of No, 7 Continuing the Annual Sale of COMMERCIAL STATIONERY What did your stenographer say about carbon paper yesterday? Better stop in and order some—and while you’re here, you'll find other things for the office—all priced with a pleasing solicitude for economy. OXI avhvevi Tam at Terex \ Business Envelopes 69c Wire Letter Trays 13c Box ef 500 Typewriting Paper 59c Typewriter Ribbons 39c aan 4 30 quality ps si 8343 Black, blue or purple to fit all ‘ esata Sas Bes 225 standard machines. s Carbon Paper box, 89c. Stafford’s or Carter’s Ink — 69c Our usual price would be $1.49 Quart Bottle. Blue black or black. “Reliable” a box. Macy’s sheets carbon, 100 to Letter or legal Carter's Paste, Quart Bottle 89¢ size. Black, bluc or purple, Our usual price $1.44 K Stenographers’ is Note Books doz., 34c ‘Telephone Indexes 13c 60 sheets good quality paper to a book. Loose Leaf Ring Book Covers 47c Our usual price would be up to $1.69 Bound Books 79¢ Open end or side opening, Pocket Our usual price would be 94c siz 200-page books with double or single entry ledger, journal, cash, Paragon Eye Shades _ each, 8c etc ai F Pencils doz., 3% Typewriter Tablets 23c a Mongol and Mikado. 100 sheets of good quality paper to a tablet. White only, Ink Pads 13c, 19c, 34c ea, Adding Machine Paper, Roll, 8c Self-inking. Three sizes, in black, Our usual price would be 14¢ red, green or blue. | \I Hand Blotters 4c Manila Second Sheets Be Package of 25, Package of 500 sheets. Qlarery —Metn Floor, Sith Street, Rens KH -Meacy xo! NEW YORK ‘The bandits then fled, getting only Kroll was badiy beaten and was taken to the Knickerbocker Hospi- He had just arrived at Knich- hold-up | Had the bandits wait- the Broadway Jewelry Company, was ed a few minutes longer the news- paper bundle would have been T yelled for opened by the jewelera and the vaiu- came up and plac help and a 1 me under policeman arrest hone tsha teal atl a At the Kast 67th Street Station HELD UP IN IN HIS SHOP; Hat he made a annine ot intox cation against me, 1 was locked up AFRAID TO TELL POLICE) in a ceil all night and disc barged In -— Yorkville. Police Court the ext| Last Time He Did So, Taflor Was! morning.”, Himself Locked Up. A man Walked into Kleinert's shop | last night and hartded him an overcoat’ | Jacob Kleinert was held up and]and a button with instructions to sew robbed in his tailor shop, No, 571/the button on the coat, Kleinert Southern Boulevard, the Bronx, by an| Obliged and when asked the charge armed bandit yesterday evening but| Sd he didn't want money for such a trifling service, Ta the he didn’t report it to the police. upon again,” said Kleinert to- | day. ‘Two months ago I was held up and robbed of $120 at 78d Street and Third Avenue, The highwayman had a gun and he also slugged me. stranger pulled a revolver, backed him into a corner and went through his clothes. Since the hold-up experience Kiein- ert never carries more than in his pockets. The robber took the dollar. a dollar | RYND LUDLOW TWINE“i guaranteed to hold the weight of an eighty pounsl boy. If your packages.are: tied with LUDLOW’ TWINE, they are tied securély, _ And the Ludlow package is sd. convenient. 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Gates Ave.) 357 Fulton Street JERSEY CITY NEWARK & 108NewarkAve. 825 Broad St is a aaa AAMT @DN I iJ BA\IMANNGBRO. ! 3rd Ave. & 842 St. - + OED ¢ ENED ¢ CES + OD + Ets + ED + GE aD All Goods Marked in Plain Figures Our Liberal Credit Terms Apply Also to Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut 84th Street “L” Station at Corner. 86th Street Crosstown Cars and Buses 3d Al Street C eens ee ek Two Blocks Away. | Pass Our Door, A-Phece American Walnut Queen Anne Period Suite Consisting of Dresser, Chifforobe, Toilet Table and Bed. Four pieces, as illustrated, at 4198-5 | d Davenport Sofa Bed Golden Oak or. Mahogany fin ~ ished frames; up- holstered in tation leather; makes full size bed when i imi- need. How much better than keeping twine ina tangled miess. . of sharls in the catch-all drawer... For convenience, for strength, for economy, ask your dealer for LUDLOW TWINE. 25°. ore rae UNITED ST. ATES Ss DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK At the suit of the United States demandir¢ forfeiture thereof under the provis sions of the National Prohibition Act of October 28, 1919, I have seized and held a quantity of intoxicating liquors, con- veyances, containers and utensils heretofore seized by the National Prohibition Director within the Southern District of New York from on or about February 16, 1920, to December 2, 1921, and the details for which are set forth in the schedule annexed to the original libel filed in the office of the Clerk of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York on December 19,1921. Notice is hereby given that the cause is appointed for trial in the United States Court and Post Office Building, Manhattan, New York, on January 13, 1922, at the opening of Court. All pe#sons jare notified then and there to appear and defend their interest, if any, in said goods. Dated: All not appearing will be defaulted. 121, WILLIAM ©, HECHT, United States Marshal. December 21, WILLIAM HAYWARD, United States Attorney. ‘The above is published pursuant to an Order of: the United States District Court of the Southern District of New York, filed in the Office of the Clerk of said Court on the 22nd day of Decem- ber, 1921. FOR THE WINTER VACATIONIST THE WORLD’S || Winter Resorts Annual Just Published 1921-22 Just Published Containing Leading Foreign and American Resorts, Steamship Travel and Tours to All Recreation Places. MAY BE OBTAINED FREE AT ALL WORLD OFFICES OR BY MAIL ON REQUEST. ADDRESS Winter Resort Bureau, N.Y.World PULITZER BUILDING, 63 PARK ROW, NEW YORK CITY | 5 + + + SEEDS + IY + OED + =