The evening world. Newspaper, January 16, 1922, Page 15

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i heh ESP ATER PTI HOTT se FIT more Wrantic Koodoo | Snared by Hooch | Is Led to Its Cage High-Jumping Antelope, at Large in | Bronx, Is Recaptured by Savory Strategy. Parents who live in the Bronx are hereby reassured. The frantic koodoo, wilder tian the celebrated prairie Nlower, is back in his cage, lured there wy the fragrant strategy of Tony Weis- feld. emergency man. It would be ee if there were a man like Tony every block. esterday the koodoo, a pre-Volstead type of antelope now somewhat rare in this country, jumped an eight-foot | fence at the Zoo and looked around | for the shortest route to a point be-| tween Abyssinia and South Africa where he came from. But Tony was equal to the occa-| sion. He went straight to -— and| vame..back a moment later with a glassful of Three Star Hennessy.! hen he figured out which way the ind was blowing and took a posi-| jon from which the perfume of the | drink was wafted to the nostrils of the koodoo, And the corrupt beast followed him like a dog back to captivity. The Evening World has no infor- mation as to what became liquor. of the Black Collars and ( |WOMAN IS KILLED —===BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & “FULTON STREET—BROOKLYN BY “WILD” PLANE escapes. Her Brother Loses Arm When Machine Plows Into Crowd of Skaters, James Casey, who for a year was an aviator in France, will be ar- raigned to-day in Freehold on a manslaughter charge growing out of the death of Mrs, Anna C, Hounthan, thirty years old, of Red Bank, N. J., when his runaway airplane dashad | into a crowd on the tce of the Shrews- bury River yesterday. sliced off the woman's brother, Law-| Pen and Brush Clb rence Conley, twenty years old, of Middletown, N. J., when he tried to | wings but not injured. cut off her brother's arm, late. $1,500 ball. en naire, PEN AND BRU The aviator had landed on the ice and was preparing to start again | when the plane whirled and bore down | on the crowd of spectators, several of whom were xnocked down by the|of w. It was the propeller that killed the woman and Casey had leaped for the cockpit as the machine started, but was too He was arrested and held in | tertes, No. 707 Fifth Avenue, will give An arm was}, coffer talk this evening before tie in their club | house, No. 134 Hast 19th Street. The talk will be followed by a auestion- The “Qu sality” Tea "SALADA | Annual Sale Exceeds 30 Million Packets — BLACK, MIXED or GREEN— Announce for Tomorrow Women’s and Misses’ Coats and Wraps Trimmed with Caracul This remarkable offering is occasioned by a special purchase of Wraps and Coats developed of the finest black fabrics and lined throughout with crepe de chine. cuffs of the popular black caracul. A Most Noteworthy Value at 78.00 Values to 150.00 ‘oat Department—Second Floor Steadfastly Refuse All Substitutes. An Important and Timely Sale of All Sizes For Women and Misses flyin panel braided, Hy Dress Department—Second Floor | beaded BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM. CLINS & C FULTON STREET—BROOKLYN Continuing Tomorrow An Unprecedented Special Purchase and Sale of Several Hundred New Model Cloth Dresses For Immediate Street and Informal Wear All Sales Must Be Final 13.75 At Far Below Prevailing Prices Hundreds of fascinating frocks of surprisingly high quality Poiret Twill, Tricotine, Tricolette, Canton Crepe, in distinctive coat, circular, straightline and effects, variously and charmingly and hand-embroidered. A Dress Event of Extraordinary Importance THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 1922, save her, Two hundred skaters in PNEUMONIA FAILS the path of the plane had narrow Walter Whrich of the Whrich Gal- GUATEMALANS REMOVE _/|HIS FIRST NIGHT ALONE FLAG OF THE UNION’ AND STORE IS ROBBED ia brought by the executors of hie brother’n estate and is based on al-| Ieged noten a ‘ating more than | Mtr AS STOKES'S EXCUSE $100,000, sis to appear in} 20 wd Suprem: hursday in an ac.) Court Orders Testimony, Be Taken tion br fre, Heloa| Central Amertom felteewina, nt Bedalde, Fane wien tes placed by Nat When the reputed pneumonia illness! week, Sam WASHINGTON, Jan, 18—The flag o it Say D, Stokes, owner uf) Mra. Stokes, expr doubt In court) the Central American Union whieh has Sewairy & ’ the Ansonia Hotel, was given to-day | Sontinu Sruene y been flying over Guatemala City for the | 69 At @ b'aive \ as a reason for asking another week's nonth was hauled down Saturday help. He found | { cltigzens and the Guete- Y adjournment of an action pending COLLECTOR RA RTY HAS Charles Mul st ith] against him in Supreme Court, Justice PNEUMONIA, flag raised in its place, | Street sitting with hia} Erlanger refused to grant the plen John T. Rafferty, Collector of In-|according to a despatch today to the} Muller, the night w man, said The court set the case for trial Wed-| ternal Revenue in Brooklyn and Te- State Department from Geers ios alarm at neaday and informed Nelson Olcott,| publican leader of the Twelfth District, | Curtis, American Change 4'Affaires | (- el for the aged millionaire, that | Brooklyy: 1s jit, with pneumonia at Bie there. ld cross-examine Mr, Stokes a Feat colt ve apartment, y's st Mr. Stokes artment oMelals refused to | reday, Dr. James ny atte wes doing We that the ¢ a anne The Store Beautiful && The Store Dutiful Start the Ncw Year Together SouBLED in size, served by a fleet of five modern passenger elevators, and front- BS ing on three thoroughfares with windows as fine as any on twocontinents, the new enlarged elaborated home of Oppenheim, Collins & Co., in Brooklyn, is today one of the world’s handsomest establishments catering exclusively to womankind. It has ever been a store housing beautiful things—-today its beautiful things are housed in a beautiful store! Vroma foyer that a coach and _ pair could turn in, the perspective sweeps through long vistas of columns, over broad unclut- tered counters, and down deep unencum- Specifically, a new store has been added bered aisles. to the old, and an old store has been harmo- nized with the new, fusing the past with the present in a.re-dedication to the future. And this is only one of four such floors, in a store of wide open spaces, lofty ceilings, and commodious displays. The change, in round figures, creates an additional 40,000 square feet of shopping space, but the beauty of the addition is that it is an addition of beauty rather than a wilderness of square feet. Yet, the Store Beautiful remains the Store Dutiful, too, still pledged to lighten the burdens of buying for the women of Brook- lyn, and still using the great buying power ot seven affiliated stores to promote economy Observe, for example, that we speak of Hat TES DELP shopping space rather than selling space, subordinating mere business considerations to the larger consideration of comfort, conven- ience, and congenial environment for our patrons. Not all the glamour of a new store can diminish or beguile us from our devotion to Brooklyn! Paris may be first in tashions, but Brook- lyn remains first in our affections—our scope may be international, but our sympathies are local—our eyes may be fixed on the Rue de Ja Paix, but our heart is in the Rue Fulton! One glance at the new Main Floor alone, with its belvedere of comfort in the bal- conies, reveals a spectacle that is beautiful to.behold. And that is why the Matrons and the Daughters and the Little Girls of Brooklyn may continue to look to us for two things: First, to deal intelligently with the subject of Fashions— and_second, to deal sympathetically with the subject of Price. OPPENHEIM, OLLINS & © FULTON STREET — BROOKLYN eheneaeete stants: © ee 44) tate oer

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