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WASKED BANOS WITH GUNS UNEP TONER, ROBHOTEL Robbers Get $110 From Till of the Sagamore at Thirty-fifth Street and Eighth Avenue. ‘Tbe police are on the trail of four ®eld holdup men, who stood up a Gcore of people and robbed the pro- Drietor and the till of the Hotel Sag- @more, at Thirty-ffth Street and Wighth Avenue, early Sunday morn- tng. Not a shot was fired, not a Blow was struck, not a man was febbed save the proprietor. There was a display of guns and a deluge @f profanity, a waiting automobile, four masked men, a glimpse of mov- ing picture stuff, a flash of Jesse James days, “hands up” business, an absent policeman and—here's the etory:: At 3.30 o'clock Sunday morning bella were ringing fromathe upper rooms of the Sagamore “Hotel, the tables in the back room were full and ten men or more were lined up at | the bar. It was too busy a morning to close up. Arnold Ruege, the pro- | prietor, and Eddie Monyhan, the bar- tender, were behind the bur, busy with both hands. In the back room glasses were olinking and arguments wore raging, when suddenly there was a commo- | tion. Loud oaths were heard; com- mands were given. Silence fell on those in the barroom. Drinks were given pause between the mahogany and the mouth, speech was inter- rupted, arms were paralyzed in mid- air, Ruege and Monyhan, with Glasses poised, riveted their eyes on the swinging door leading into the) back room. The door swung open and three men, the lower part of their faces covered with bandanas, two of them levelling revolvers, jumped into the, barroom. “Throw up your hands!" manded one. | “Come out of that, you Dutch | blankety-blank!" ried another, and Ruege and Monyhan dropped behind the bar. | ‘Two men dragged out the proprietor and the bartender. The other holdup | man admonished the crowd to be good and they wouldn't be touched. | ‘They took the proprietor and “Eddie” to the office, taking Ruege's gold watch and chain and all his change on the way, and locked them in. Then they opened the cash register and took out $110.20. They helped themselves to cigars, the best in the house, cach Yad a drink and told the eustomers to help themselves. ‘Then they backed out of the bar- room, warning the early morning Toystorers not to make a nolse on their lives. In tho back room a fourth man was holding guard over the “sitters.” He had told them to keep still and they would not be robbed and they obeyed. “We're only after the big stuff,” he @ssured them. The four backed out through the street door, removing their masks as they went. Thoso inside heard the whirring of a machine and a defiant | “honk, honk.” Then thoy woke up and Ruege and Monyhan were re- leased. com- a few moments before the hold-up the policeman on post had been called away by the assault of a man on a woman, and the coast was clear. Ruege notified the police, but the police failed to notify the public. ‘They have kept the hold-up as far from the limelight of publicity as Possible, It is said one of the gang was recognized, and that his identity has ‘been revealed to the detectives on the case, ' There have been no arrests. TWO ATTACK WOMAN; PURSUERS NAB ONE Henry Hoppe, an amateur at crime #0 far as police records show, piead- —_—_—— || What Montclair Maids Will Learn ed guilty to burglary, assault and violation of the Sullivan Jaw against carrying concealed weapons before Magistrate Herbert in the Harlem Court to-day and was held in §7,500 Last night Miss Rose Goldstein was attacked in her parents’ apartments 35 East Kighty-seventh Street by two men, one of whom she later identified as Hoppe. Both ran. A crowd pursued Hoppe, but he held all at bay with @ revolver. Police- man Smyth of tho Eighty- eighth Street Station, knocked the gun from Hoppe's hand and arrested Detectives found in the Goldstein apartment $300 worth of jewelry the etartied them. ing. burglars had left behind Nearly $1,000 worth was miss- Pile Remedy Free ple of Pyramid Pile mating tres tor Ceial eve stops itching, bleedin fee, hemorrhoids and ‘all rectal Remedy quick re r protrudin, the pri Sage i ie RU ane Bt tial with in ‘wrapper. be ty tte UG COMPANY, dg, Marshall, Mich, Pyramid Pils Komety, 12 Pisin wrapper, Montclair Will Solve the Servant Problem By the Free Education of Its Costly Maids #0, Ac Sep NER TO THe CoormG ScH0oL: — At the New School for Servants First lesson—Equipment. Care of tt; uniform, hair, hands, nails, stoves, fuels, temperatures, methods, beverages. Second lesson—Cereals, Coarse and fine; use of fireless cooker; setting of table. Third lesson—Sa' Thin, medium and thick. Soup, vegetables, souffle. Fourth lesson—Griddle cakes and popovers and waffles, Fifth lesson—Muffins, Dutch apple cake, baking powder. Biscuit—Nut bread. Sixth lesson—Yeast bread. Parker House rolls, cinnamon buns. Seventh lesson—Graham bread, white bread, pastry. Eighth lesson—Toast; use of left-over bread into puddings and escal- lopec. dishes; review table setting and the serving of a mock meal. Ninth lesson—Eges. Care of them; soft, coddled, hard and soft cooked, poached, scram- bled, souffle. Tenth lesson—Vogetables. Potatoes, baked, stuffed, boiled, riced, mashed and creamed. Eleventh—Tender meats, broiled, pan-broiled, chops and steak. Twelfth—Meal, prepared and served. a They Are to Be Taught Not Only How to Cook, but Cleanliness, and How to Prepare and Serve a Meal—And They Must Learn to Take Pride in Their Work and Refuse to Leave an Employer at the First Offer of Higher Wages. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Bend your maid to school! ‘That's the new and Interesting answer which they've found in Mont- clair, N. J., to the servant problem, The much enduring commuter need no | longer demand the discharge of the maid who offers him turbid coffee and Mauser-like biscuit. Nor need the lady of the house counsel patience lest a worse thing befall—a servantless kitchen, There is a third way out, the entering of Olga or Gretchen or Nora in the school for servants, which is to open early in January and be in operation for the next three months, Any graduate maid should be able to qualify as a good plain cook, ‘The Housewives’ League of Montclair, co-operating with School Superintendent Don C. Bliss, has arranged this novel educational experiment. Mrs. William Win- “me ton, Chairman of the league's domestic service com- mittee, has worked out the plan to its last careful detail, and she and the President of the league, Mrs. Chauncey H, Marsh, believe that the first step has been taken toward putting domestic service on an efficiency basis. Registration for the maids of Upper Montclair will take place Jan. 4, 1915, between 8 and 4 o'clock, in the domestic science room of the Mount Hebron School, Montclair maids may register in the domestic sclence building of the Central School Jan. 7, 3-4 P.M. The regular work will begin one week later in each case, For twelve consecutive weeks classes will meet Mondays and Thursdays at the echools mentioned, beginning at 3.40 P, M. and lasting two hours, A brief summary of the ground covered by the course {s printed with this article, The servant-students will continue to hold the positions they now occupy !n various Montclair households. Any woman's maid may enter the classes, up to the Mmit of their capacity. “Tell me more about the plan,” I urged Mrs. Marsh, when I talked to her in her home at Sunset Park North, Upper Montclair. “How did you women come to think of such a thing?” “something had to be done,” she “Montclair 18 generally n as a town where the maids see very high wages In return for very incompetent service, A per- feotly inexperienced girl demands $20 or $25 a month, and the scale runs up h as $40 or $50, - nine M the things which the jc servant of to-day ought to learn ling of moral re- sponsibility. Counting the board and lodging and extras which she receives besides her wages, her job must be put among the highly paid occupations, She ought to be willing to earn her money, ine atead of doing ae litt she can to get it, She ought to feel that — consists in sligtting It. “For instance, in the first lesson the instructor, Miss Hansen, who Is in charge of the domestic science work of the Montclair public schools, will explain that clean hands, tidy hair and a uniform are not merely the whims of an individual mistress, but are a part of tl. neccessary per- sonal equipment for cooking with suc- cess, She herself will wear a unl- form all through the course,” “But why should not every mistress give to her own maid such a course of instruction as you have laid out?” T asked, EVERY MISTRESS NOT A COM- PETENT ONE, declared. EVENING WORLD, THUR GRADUATES Wee 86 WW GREAT DEMAND. (6 DIFFERENT POTATOES AnD THEY FE Tavent To COO little more money. She is too hted to realize that the sort of girl who will leave one woman in the lurch will leave an- other just as quickly.” Then [ asked Mrs. Marsh why the co-operative kitchen, recently estab- lished in Montclair, had not solved the servant problem for that town. “dn the first place, people want ser- vants for other things besides cooking meals,” she said, “In the second place, the co-operative kitchen charges 60) cents per meal per person, I don't say it’s too much, but I know that J can have prepared and served at home an equally good meal at leas cost, 1 think it will take a genera- tion or two yet to settle all our prob- tems by co-operation, Meanwhile, this relation between the individual servant and mistress must somehow be put on a more can to make a success of educating the maids. In a num- stances the tuition of the course—19 cents a n—will be paid by the em: 130, the time id er regular outings, just did not go to school ‘one ternoon a week. She will re- @ @ certificate on completing jurse, which will serv an additional should like to have specia given to the best graduat “We have tried to m the in- struction essentially practical, The fundamental principles of are to be treated, The maids will be encouraged to put in practise at home what they have learned at school, even if in some processes—sucl@ as setting the table — the employer secretly prefers ‘her own way.’ You note that four lessons are devoted to the preparation of different sorts of bread. The average’ maid Is apt to be especially Inefficient in that phase of cookery, “Economy and avoidance of waste will be emphasized all through the course, but they are specially treated in elght lessons with its various sug- gestions for the use of left-over bread. To the last lesson, the prepa- ration and serving of a meal, I trust all the employers will be invited,” Mrs. Marsh added with a smile, TO MAKE EMPLOYMENT AGENTS LIVE UP TO LAW. “Besides the educational scheme, the Housewives’ League 1s attacking the domestic service problein from another angle by making the employ- ment agencies live up to the law, For instance, we wish to end the illegal trick of certain agency managers, who urge girls to leave their present employment in order that the mana- gers may pocket fresh commissions, Then there is law, rarely en- forced, requiring each agency to have in tts office a list of all the refer- epces_of each girl it “The lecgue stand in the of ing refe The number of women who neglect thie obvious duty is amazing. “Our training course, which we hope is the first of several, will not increase wages,” Mrs. Marsh con- cluded reassuringly. “Rather, it will help in standardizing domestic ser- vice—something to be desired both by mistress and by maid.” investiqat- it Is morally wrong to take large wages, unless the taker can ren- ivalent in efficient ser- “Because not every mistress is fit- ted to instruct,” Mrs. Marsh admitted frankly. “We had crowded training courses for housewives in Montclair last winter, and we shall repeat them this year, “One reason why maids a expensive and incompetent i TEACH MAIDS TO TAKE PRIDE IN THEIR WORK, “That 1s a feeling which I very much hope will grow among maids through such courses as we have planned, It fe not merely that they will be shown how to do things, but that they will learn to take a pride in doing their work competently, An attempt will be made to chow them that there is nothing to be ashamed of im their Job, but that the shame ‘ ¥ x Wine! ad cause there are mistresses who will pay anything and overlook anything in order not to be left i in the kitche An- whe deliberately hires away her friend’e servant by aremising @ What We Say and What You've Beem Told influences you to try R & G Pills What YOU y, after you have tried Rt & G Pills is what decides your friends to try them. THEY NEVER DISAPPOINT, For Constipation, Biliousness, Head- aches, Liver Troubles, Stomach Troubles, Skin, Eruptions, use 10c, Zhe the Bos, Get @ box hecniats 3 Centre NY. ROG Pills, 206 cooking | DAY, DECEMBER 94, 1978; ‘ST. CLAIR COUNSEL AES$ow wet 4 CUsANUNEss 1 | ae STR | Prosecutor Sustained When He Refuses to Produce An- notated Affidavit. i Opening to-day's session of the trial of Edith St, Clair, actress, charged LOSES FIGHT FOR | - camera? He's been standing ofthat corner all day.” “Ho's taking motion picture of that messenger boy.” SAYS BOARD IS DESPOTIC. |”. eve Declare Fdacatorn. Mise Henriotta Rodman, the t who was suspended for nearly « for poking fun at the Roard of Edu- cation, has not determined what ourse she will take in regai the punishment meted out to her for her merriment. Gilbert E. Roe and Jacob Bernstein, her ki ets, said this morning that they hed nol cone sulted with their clle The attorneys issued a long atate- ment in which they characterized the Board an exercising despotic over the teaching staff. Recording to the Board found they had man guilty, pot of inmus hordination, but of gtaea misconduot ing accuses eo if “mother batting.” site lied J 17 leading drugaiot Wo-ounce original bett with perjury, Benjamin Slade, her at- torney, called upon Assistant District Attorney Manley to produce the or- iginal of the aMdavit signed by Miss St. Clair May 12, 1918, and bearing on its back this memorandum: ‘This is matter to be most care- fully considered. It seems to cor- roborate 8. to a considerable de- gree as to his interviews with HB. Should be compared with 5.’s tes- timony. ‘The memorandum, according to testimony in the Steuer disbarment proceedings before Judge Holt, was tn the handwriting of former District Attorney Jerome, counsel for Abra- ham L. Erlanger. Mr. Manley said he had no such paper. In the memorandum 8. is sup- posed to stand for Max D. Steuer and K. for Erlanger. Miss St. Clatr came to court with her friend, Miss Cortley, and her phy- sician, Dr. Louis Lichtenstein, . Jerome, who was in Justice ‘a court at the time under sub- poena, sald the memorandum, as he remembered it, was in his book of minutes, but not on the back of any affidavit, Mr. Slado made a second appeal for the production of the St. Clair state- ment of May 12. The Assistant Dis- trict Attorney sald that copies, but not the original, had been used in the disbarment proceedings. The memo- randum by Mr. Jerome, he sald, was not part of the exhibit. | Mr. Slade maintained it was expression of Mr. Jerome's attitude. ‘The Court sustained Mr. Mauley, and Mr. Slade had to be content with reading the approved minus the Jerome note. The first witness called to-day was Dr. Lichtschein, a spectalist in nerv- ous diseases. He had attended Miss St. Clair from time to time since De- cember, 1910, The Court would not permit him to answer any questions as to her physical condition. The case was then adjourned until Monday at 10.30, MRS. CraunceY HW. MARSH Tree of Light Watcher Stricken A man employed by the Tucter Cor struction Company to watch the Tree of Light in Madison Square Park col- Inpaed early to-day, and in Bellevue Hospital it was said was suffering from paralysia, He wae unable to tell hit name, but from a memorandum book in his pocket it is thought he may be J. 8. McCade, address unknown. Hg 4s about sixty-five years old, 5 feet 8 inches tall end has gray hair and mus- tache. STILL LPR, (From the Buffalo Express.) that guy doing with that “what! Don't t Poison Baby. OUCH! LUMBAGO? Try Musterole. See How Quickly It Relieves. Broadway at Gh B'S “Bustanoby" Dinner $1 u “DINER CHOISI, Rover Bull, "Cabare acustinest NEW gal ANESE TEA GARDEN ‘Teien! in made with oil of mustard. Use it instead of mustard plaster, Will not blister, Doctors and nurses use MUSTEROLE and recommend it to their patients. They will gladly tell you what relief it from Sore t, Bronchitis, Croup, Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the Back or Joints, Spra Sore There will 7 be more en=}/ Muscles, Bruises, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, joyment ih the Christmas |} Colds cd the Chest (it often’ prevents Pheu: Inner if you flavor it with | | monia). ia), ‘At your druggist, in 25¢ and 50c jars and’ a special large hoepital size for $2.50 |" Be sure you get the genuine MUSTER. OLE. Refuse imitations—get what you ask The Musterole Company, Cleveland, ‘Eddys tessen Stores sell it 10c Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St. All leet or found articles ade vertised in The Wi will tion Bureau, Arcade, Perk u Uptown Office, northwest Ber 38th Mt. and Broadway; Werld’s Harlem Offices, 1 West 125th St., and World's Brooklyn Office, 202 Washing- ton %., Brooklyn, for 30 daye following the printing ef the @dverticoment. lr yeu want your “busi. nees’’ to become the talk of the town, tell about a ihrengh @ World “Want” 3333 3.3 World Wants Work Wonders will offer on Saturday, December 26th, in Women’s Ready-to-wear Department (Third Floor) Extraordinary Values in Women’s Suits, Dresses & Skirts at the following unusual prices: . ,, Tailor-made Suits (trimmed with fur) s reduced to . $15.00.) Afternoon Dresses reduced to ane | 4 Separate Skirts of corduroy, tweed or broadcloth, reduced to . « $4, . ° e 25,000 Yards of PS Desirable Dress Silks, Velvets, 2. Corduroys and Velveteens ~ in suitable colors for afternoon and evening, wear, as well as white and black (originally ia 85c. to $6.50 per yard), will be placed on.” sale on Saturday,’ December 26th, arranged in Dress, Blouse and Coat Lengths, bah at 406., 65¢., 90c,. $1.25. 1.85 per yards > My Fondest Recollection By Santa Claus . Filing Chitedas 63stisgc truuen as Zoemay well Spocts only knows. To humble homes and mansions | have brought good Yuletide cheer, But of all my recollections there is one 1 hold most dear. 1 have seen babes coo for rattles 1 have left beside thelr bed, uz I've made glad the heorts of children with ball, doll, .orn sledy i With gifts of gold and diamonds | have brought to many a cheek ' A radiant flush of gladness, But th.t's 1.-¢ of what | speak. , Ahi how well I now remember the night | oft recall— Fad The moon was shining brightly and tae snow had ceased to fail; I chanced to spy a cottage In the outskirts of a town Where dwelt a goodly family Fortune had not smiled upon. iar oh I was on my homeward Journey and the presents left were few, 1 had a drum, a pair of Skates, a picture Tools or two, These I wrapped and left beside their little Christmas tree . And as | turned to leave the kitchen clock struck One! Twot Tiree? Then what a noise! The tr: of feet resounded on the stair, I hadn't fime to get away, so hid behind a chair, It's what I saw right there and then that * must tell about— In came the father, mother and the children with a shout. My package was tc:n open and say, talk about surprise! You shodld have seen the twinkle in those merry children’s eyes, 1 guess their folks had told them they were poor as poor could And all they might expect this year was a little Christmas tree, ‘ While the children romped about the room, the father, wan fy thi,” Picked up the Morning World that | had wray resents in; He turned to the “Want” pages and you shoul how fled His worried and discouraged look as World Want ads. he read. rf For months he had been unemployed, but work was offered there, x He found a ya to sell his farm for ready cash and where $ He then could buy a market that a goodly profit paid, Das When he, to save his good wife's health, could hire a working mald, n And all the things that he could buy at bargain prices rare | Would fill the City Hall, thought he, and there'd be some to spare “Oh, wife, look here!” the good man cried, “I'm happy as can be, By far the greatest of his gifts good Santa left for me.” The wife then came and marveled as she read ad. after ad. Hot tears of Joy streamed down her cheek as she took hand of “I knew our luck would change some day,” said she with fond caress, “And for this gift of World Want ads. let’s good, old Santa bless.” PE i es.