The evening world. Newspaper, February 7, 1922, Page 6

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ASLAYER CAN ET + FASY PRION TERM vestigation at Meeting of Magistrates of State. Evening World.) Conference this morning of the New ich was begun yesterday at (he THotel Ten Eck, a committer was ap tuffalo Official Calls for In- ALBANY, Feb, 7.—At the Annoal) § | 'F¥erk State Association of Magist fates;| . |f i |WEDDING HASTENED ld HUNGES WAY AS BUSINESS CALLS GROOM TO AFRICA irom a Staff Correspondent of The! fy pappetnted to meet with a similar com- | TH mittee of the State Associution of Dis-| “ltriet Attorneys scheduled to meet her: H}to-morrow to consider methods and| Ferime waves, This was done after at Djaddress by District Attorney Guy bh. Moore of Buffalo, in which he mad P) strenuous attack on the indeterm'n- ‘Tate sentence section of the Penal Ls / ))and called for an investigation of the M@easures to combat the State- wile} { GER TRODEA MILLAR 1 wie Tatitude given to courts to issve| Miss Miller Bride of George Francis (permits to carry concealed weapons. Train—Couple Sail To-Day |) He said that his own city, Buffalo, for Europe | [was like an armed camp, nearly every | wther citizen carried a gun elma ee ya Sy auitanta g “Take the crime of second degree |*d for Europe to-day she had )) murder," he said. ‘The law provides aboard yridal couple who, had they i ghat punishment for this offense shall married yesterday, would | ‘be from twenty years to life imprison en separated by this sailing. They were Mr. and Mrs. George | ment. Under the indeterminate sen- | tence provisions the twenty years is | eut to ten and with compensation and © computation for good behavior this | fm cut to seven and one-half year Francis Train, he a grandson of the well-remembered — “'Citize Francis Train, and she a da the former President of the George ehter of Sorough | Think of giving a man only seven and]! the Bronx and Mra, Cyrus Miller a half years for deliberately killing! Mr. ‘Train and Miss Gertrydo Allan Gaother human belng.”’ Miller had made* all their arrange- | He also attacked that provision of |”! Uae oe eee | the law which permits Judges to pul ments for a wedding in the autumn, old offenders on probation, saying that | but, unexpectedly, he was ordered to } &@ man convicted of his twentieth fel-| south Africa on a’ business journey ony. might be placed on probation. | v.01, would last a year, and it was Chief Justice Frederic Kernochan of the Court of Special Sessions sald: “As a matter of fact very few per mits are issued for the possession of i pistol in a home, and none are be- ing issued, I understand, to carry the | revolver in the street. I believe we might recommend placing the author- ity to issue permits with the Police Commissioners and other peace off cers and define to whom such priv- decided to t with vo the wedding forth- So it was solemnized yesterday the Corner, and there wam a wedding THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1922. WOMAN RARE “THER GY AND BOYS CATCH |Alleged Burglar Found Hiding} After Long Pursuit by Youngsters. A plucky woman and a crowd of email boys of her neighborhood caused the arrest and the arralgn- ment to-day in Washington Hetghis Court of Morris Selden, a fleet- | *ooted driver of No. 145 Went | Street, on the charge of entering and | robbing the apartment of Mrs. Jennie | Sadowsky, on the third floor of No. 112 West 114th Street The courageous woman, who was also quick of wit, was Mra, Sadie Kath, an apartment neighbor of Mrs. Sadowsky. Incidentally, this was the third time Mrs. Sadowsky’s apart- rent had been robbed within‘a year. The cigar store she and her huspand 524 conduct at No, 62 Lenox Avenue has | teen robbed twice in the same period. | As the Sadowskys are at their store all day, her fellow tenants in {the apartment house keep an eye on her rooms there, especially since the burglaries, Mrs. Kalb heard some Jone in the Sadowsky apartment yes- terday afternoon and opened her door to see a man coming out with a suit case. She demanded to know what he was doing and then grabbed him by the collar, He broke away and darted down the stairs. Then Mrs. Kalb went to the win- dow, waited until the men emerged from the building and set up a cry of “Stop thief!" pointing to him. The small boys of the neighborhood took up the cry and set out after the fugi- tive. He ran to an apartment house ut No. 67 Lenox Avenue and hid. A call had been sent to the West 123d Street Station and Patrolman Kelly came on the scene in a side car. and Kelly was told of the man hiding there. He went in and found Selden crouched in the rear hallway. The sult case was found on the fourth floor, It contained four suits of clothes from Mrs, Sadowsky's apart- ment. A search of Selden's rooms dis- closed a quantity of jewelry and women’s clothing, valued at about $5,000. In a dark hallway at No. 13 Stan- ton Street, yesterday afternoon, Ed- ward McCabe, twenty-six, of No, 28 East 127th Street, encountered two | ANDRuDWw COND DIES OF PNEU- thugs, one of whom shot him in the leg, and when he fell, took $136 from his pocket. McCabe had been making collections for the Borden Farm Prod- ucts Company. As the thugs fled, McCabe limped to a drug store in the building. Dr. Browd took him to Gouverneur Hospital. It is believed the thugs are those who at noon held up and robbed two employeen at the Sheffield Farms milk station, No. 282 Avenue B, of $730. For Clearance— Wednesday MONTA, Andrew Cone, founder and President of the Andrew Cone General Advertis~ ing Agency, died of pneumonia yester- day in hia home in Bast Front street, Red Bank, N. J. The funeral will be held to-morrow at %.80 o'clock in his home. He leaves two brothers, Edward 8., of Cone, Hunton & Woodman, and Frederick, Treasurer of the advertising agency. “gmoricas TE Sreotahay” OPPENHEIM.CLLINS &G 34th Street— New York Misses’ Cloth Dresses By this time a crowd had collected in front of the Lenox Avenue house Favored coat effects and straight-line models, some with collars and vestees of Crepe Knit. and with faggoting and buttons. Misses’ Dress Dept., Third Floor Tricotine and Poiret Twill Showing the Season's most approved styles Formerly to 39.75 18.00 Braided, Embroidered morning at the Little Church Around | February Sale News Furs and Winter Fashions There are really extraordinary opportunities in every Salon now Furs Handsome Mink Coat, $985 (Formerly $1950) Choice Broadtail Coat, $950 (Formerly $1600) Beautiful Ermine Cape, $975 (Formerly $1950) Taupe Caracul Wrap, $595 (Formerly $1250) Natural Squirrel Wrap, $695 (Formerly $1250) Fashionable Kolinsky Wrap, $595 (Formerly $975) 3 Odd Hudson Seal Coats, $495 (Dyed Muskrat) Plain—Squirrel and Opossum Trimmed (Formerly $950 to $1150) Smart Winter Fashions Handsome Fur-trimmed Suits, $75, $95 (Values to $225) Trig Street Frocks, $65 to $85 (Values to $195) Youthful Dance Frocks at $55 (Values to $125) Dinner and Evening Gowns, $75, $95 (Values to $225) ilege may be granted. “Some members of the Legislature seek to repeal the Sullivan law and give every one the right to arm, This ™ seems to me to be entirely wrong. Our efforts should be directed at the ~ réstriction of the practice of carrying guns and not at extending it." breakfast afterward. Now the bride FORE and groom will have a year's honey- moon in Africa, and on their return | will make their home at No, 706 West ni fend Avenue. hy Mrs. Train is a graduate of Barnard | & & College, class of 1919. Mr. Train was} born here and graduated from Yale in 1915. He served in the war as Gaptain with the 801st Tank Battalion of the A. E. F. Fur-trimmed Evening Wraps, $95 to $145 (Values to $295) MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fifth Street Thirty-fourth Street LER. &CO |} + Specaly Shop of Oipinatons FIFTH AVENUE, AT-38™ STREET The New Assortments of TheFrench Millinery Salon | (on the Third Floor) | | | | American-made Lingerie | | is now displaying a new and most interesting | collection of | i | Specials for Wednesday introduce many interesting novelties, i: style as well as material. Hats for Early Spring In addition to the dainty underthings com- posed of lingerie fabrics, there are fascinating | garments fashioned of a new silk-and-cotton crepe plissé and trimmed with real filet lace; and others developed in silk, chiffon georgette and other favored textiles. ‘“‘Bontell” and Kayser Glove Silk Underwear KAYSER ITALIAN SILK STEP-IN CHEMISES AND STEP-IN DRAWERS 4.95 Formerly 6.50 to 8.25 Tailored or lace trimmed models of superior quality. Limited quantity, discontinued styles. ————— “BONTELL” GLOVE SILK VESTS 1.95 —a collection which includes many recent arrivals from Paris (creations of the most prominent modistes in that great center of fashion) as well as a number of clever origi- nations and adaptations evolved in the ateliers of B. Altman & Co. With Next Sunday’s World A Fine Photograph of Bridal sets, trousseaux and individual gar- ments of unusual fineness may be obtained from stock or made to special order. The quality of material and workmanship, in either case, leaves nothing to be desired. The prices are unusually attractive The Hosiery Department has assembled for the rapidly-approaching Spring season e very large assortment of Ready-to-wear Lingerie, of the finer type, is in regular stock at these prices: Women’s Hosiery e Exceptional quality; bodice style with strape of Nightrobes . . . . $2.95 to 37.50 Mernntineal cust jas strape o! in silk, wool, lisle and cotton, and In every Chemises . . . 3.75 to 23.50 0 e lus style and weight for which there wili be « Combinations . . . 3.50 to 26.50 “BONTELL” GLOVE SILK BLOOMERS demand, Included ere the following moder- Pajamas «ws. 2.50 to 7.90 (Size 10x16 Inches) ately=priced items In onesie Blin 4.50 48.00 2.95 r+ + 450 to 48. Women’s Slik Hoslery Drawers . + + «+ 2.50 to 14.00 ee ee ee salons fn black, white and African brown; with Pettlcosta, + + 9) * 5.90 to 31.50 Separate Sheet on Good Isle tops and soles , , per palr $1.75 There aro, of course, many prices lower than these. Paper Ready to All etiky Im black, white and the mew colors, per palr . , $2.95, 3.50 and upward (First Fleer) Hand Made Lingerie Blouses 4.95 Frame (Second Fleer) Unusually fine blouses of white batiste or volle with dellonte hand embroidery, hand drawn work and real filet laces—many smart dealgns, | | Thirty-fourth Street To Insure Getting It—Order From Your Newsdealer in Advance Madison Avenue - Fitth Avenue, New York Thirty-fifth Street

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