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SLEUTHS TRAP BURGLAR. AW RXCELLENT TONIC FOR LAJAEW AND GENTLEMEN'S HAIR BALDPATE Reetetered in UK and Ca HAIR TON VJEWELLER ROBBED OF GEMS LASHES POLICE INACTION |sitherfetd Says He BlewWhistle Vainly 10 Minutes After Thieves Broke Window. Detectives Flood and Picco saw Walter Howard at 8 o'clock last evening, recog- ised him as a man with a record, and followed him. He was carrying @ suit case and instructing two lads. ‘The three were bury robbing Heney | Riskin's clothing store, No. 600% Wort! Forty-fourth Street, at 10 o'clock when | the detectives grabbed thom. Magts- trate Herbert tn the West Side Court this morning held Howard in $6,000 bai for trial, and his apprentices, Charles of ‘Trial_will_ convince you. PRICE $1.00- For Sale at al! Drug and Devartment Stores. _ = = =!May and Richard SUNDAL WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS teen years old, in $2 A Judge of the United States Court was petitioned by creditors to Appoint a Receiver for OWNER OF PIERCE & CO. FURS Petition Dismissed—I, Representing Ma- jority of Creditors, am in ‘Charge. Note Price Reductions. ODD SETS (age Mat nd Seat) ON BUSIEST BROADWAY. Thief Vanishes in Flathouse and Escapes Pursuit by Store Watchman, Pierce & Co. “I blew @ police whistle till my |/of us. throat and lungs are atill sore,” naid Mr. Milberteld, “and fully ten min-| gone to the rear of the store to fetch utes passed before a policeman ap-| out the iron gate which is fastened ARREST. THAT SKIN TROUBLE WITH POSLAM Be sure to attend to any skin dis- order an soon aa it appe open Besides likely to spread it ma I Must Raise Money. shaq Persian Lamb Coats, new models; formerly up to Men’s Fur-lined Coats, 35°09 "sx" Pieroe&Co Poslam Soap soothes ten oves color and quality. 25 Silk Lined Two and Fhree Button SACK SUITS Announce to the Men of New York A Clearance Season’s Best Styles of Overcoats Choice of Hundreds of $15.00, $18.00 up to and Including $20.00 Suits and Overcoats ALTERATIONS FREE OF COST 69 BLUE SERGE THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1915. peared. We might all have been mur-! and west in Thirty-ninth Street, dered as well as robbed, for all the! help the police gave us. “E think the policing of this dintrict in outrageous: Here we are in the busiest, most crowded part of the) city of New York at 7 delock in the evening, with crowds in the atrect, bright lights everywhere, and yet no one can find a policeman. “I am going to see Commissioner! Woods, and ao are many merchants auffering all sorta of petty robberies for weeks, The thieves come in from the went of us and just help them- selves, We have grown used to that. “But the robbery of my etore inst evening was deliberately planned by a skillful gang. It is not due to the pollee that they did not get the en- of fact, they got only a few rings, sore is the complete failure of the police system to give me any kind of help. Monday evening my wife saw two men studying our window and ecrut- inising everything in it. They looked whose jewelry | like thieves to her, and she hurried store was robbed last evening in the away to call me. When I got there, presence of a big Broadway crowd, |they were gone, This was at 7 o'clock, was indignant to-day at the utter| the hour we olose for the day. failure of the police to afford protec- tion before the robbery or to do any-| study of the place and our habite, for thing practical in pursuing thieves.| they had been staring in for twenty Fils store at No. 1308 Broadway ia| minutes before my wife called me. next door above The World uptown| Their gang robbed us just twenty- office, at Broadway and Thirty-|four hours later, Evidently they had! ts Tz” “The men had made a oareful timed every movement of each one “Our watchman, Joe Plender, had over the window at night. My clerk, Jack Ruff, had opened the rear door of the show window and was about ‘to take out some of the etock when rick crashed through the glass front, All Ruff could see was a hand which grabbed at the rings, Ruff followed the man who had grabbed the rings. T followed too, but sud- ; denly remembered that I had left atore unprotected and returned to window and blew my police whistle, Plender ran after Ruff and the thief. “You would think that a man blow- ing a whistle In the heart of the white Hight district at its buntest hour ought to be able to attract a policeman. No such luck! There wére five or six hundred tn front of iy the broken window and I didn't know at what moment a thief might try “|for more jewels, while apparently there wasn't a policeman on Broad- | hia; ‘on feel id | way. rlesiakese i “The man who finally came, ten minutes after the theft, was called help for ua! 69 Satin Yoke Cassimere Overcoats Reduced to f 29 & «Oxford Melton Overcoats Reduced to helping with street tram ec. He haa | tne to-day from injuries received when | passed Silberfeld’s siore @ few min-| they were knocked down by motor | | Utes before the sobbery. care. The condition of cach Is se Evidently the thieves had studied | Kenney's mainly on account of his # [te the utmost detail the movements of every one why might possibly ing terfere with them. where he disappeared in a bathuuse. A policeman on post in Seventh Av nue told mo later that some one—« of the gang, probably—had po! out a Seventh Avenue car and told | him the thief was In it, and that he caught it at Forty-second Street, only to find he bad been fooled. “Twenty minutes after the robbery Gerard Murphy, the policeman on our post, came In and explained that he was down at tho Thirty-third Street but I do think the of the neighborhood. who have been | #ystem is very much at fault. West Thirtieth Street Station re- gretted that some one had not run to the Thirty-ninth Street flashlight eta- eased the button at once to call help. The blotter shows that | == the firat telephone call was received m™ the Thirtioth Street Station at 7.17 P. Bernard Kenney, sixty-two years old, {a at his home, No. 104 Roebling Street, Willlamaburg, and Albert Friedberg of No. 109 Hopkina is at St. Catherin A ‘Thirty-third to Thirty-ninth Streets tlre stock on show In the window, | from dl to 7. ae traffic police were at supper, ar 6 | wich fe worth $6,000. As a matter! Was busy at Thirty-unira’ wrest, | worth about $3,000, What makes me|~ “TIZ" GLADDENS | SORE, TIRED FEET No puffed-up, burning, ten- der, aching feet — no corns or callouses. “TIZ” makes sore, burning, tired feet fairly dance with delight. Away go the aches and pains, the cor blisters, bunions and c! “TIZ" draws out the that puff up your feet. hard you work, how lon far you walk, or how on your feet, “TIZ” brings restful foot comfort. “TIZ" is magical, derful for tired, aching, swollen, smart- Ah! how comfortable, how Your feet just tingle for joy; shoes never hurt or secm tight. Get a 25 cent box of “TIZ" now from Py the green flashlight at Thirty. | any druggist or department store, End funth ‘Hireet and Broadway—a_ fixe | foot torture forever—wear smaller shoes, ur feet fresh, awect and happy. ink! a whole year's foot comfort “Ruff followed the thief through | Just ‘Thirty-elghth Street, Seventh Avenue | for only 25 cents.—Advt. WE GIVE AND REDEEM SURETY COUPONS & Tuxedo $10 Overcoats \ Convertible col- lar. Reduced to | Every box is de Friedberg, who is twenty-one ye old, $8 belleved to be Internally injur Kenney was run down last night by the machine of State Comptrotier Eugene M. Travia, at Division Avenue, — 'ne the motor was mpproaching the Car Nans Down | Williamsburg Bridge Pinza. Bridge Pinsa. ! Friedberg was struck at 7 o'clock this | || morning an he was crossing Broadway at Garaham Avenue by the motor car | [iilp of Albert F. Feldman of No. 682 Van | [ii serving of the name it bears, Buren Street, Brooklyn. Mr. Feldman | was driving, We took the injured man | ji ‘eet, Williamsburg, Very special for Thursday Women’s Fur-Trimmed Suits at $15 in a collection of the newest models, such as : regularly command $39.50 Fifteen dollars is absolutely incompetent to convey the character of these suits. ‘They must be considered solely as $39.50 garments, in order to appreciate their remarkable value at tomorrow's price. They are simply extraordinary at thst figure. They comprise the season’s short coat styles, with flare or belted back, and high choker collar and cuffs of skunk-opossum, and a new circular flare skirt. And they are tailored and finished exquisitely. 4th floor In broadcloth, wool faille, gabardine, velour de laine, diagonals and velveteens. All suits lined with peau de cygne, and warmly interlined. Important clearance tomorrow of Women’s Winter Coats at $15 which formerly were $25.00 to $42.50 This is beyond question one of the - greatest coat opportunities of the season Every coat in this sale is reduced from regular stock and carries the confirmation of its former price. Included are tailored coats of broadcloth, plush, zibeline, cheviot, striped Ural lamb, matalam and caracul. Tailored in seven-eighth, three-quarter and full length, plain or belted, flare and ripple models, with convertible collar of plush, fur or self material. All coats full lined with peau de cygne, or guaranteed satin, and warmly interlined. Continuing to-morrow, the sale of Women’s $6.00 Leather Overgaiter Lace & Cloth Top Button Boots at $3.85 The colored-leather overgaiter boot is the newest mode in smart footwear, and this sale features the four newest examples, as well as a new patent colt boot, with cloth tops. Made on the latest last, they are six-dollar boots in every detail of design and making. Lace Boots, patent colt| Lace Boots, designed with | Button Boots, the vamps of vamps, and tops of faun,| smart gun metal vamps, and | patent coltskin leather, the taupe, and brown leather. tops of taupe leather. tops of black cloth. We have reproduced especially for tomorrow A Callot Model Woman’s Dress of crepe de chine, value $25.00 to sell at $19.50 Designed with box pleated skirt, four yards wide at bottom, and stitched to form yoke at top, self-cord finishing an Empire waistline, and a new high collar completing a singularly attractive dress for afternoon wear. Made of an excellent quality of crepe de chine, in navy, black, Hague blue and putty. 4th floor Chiffon Velvet and Velveteen Dresses radically reduced $89.50 Chiffon Velvet Afternoon Dresses. Reduced to }$45.00[ Women’s $59.50 Chiffon Velvet Dresses, with lace waists. ° Reduced to \$39.50 White Glace $95.00 Chiffon Velvet Evening \ Lambskin Gowns. Reduced to $45.00 Gloves $35.00 Velveteen and Broadcloth Street Dresses. Reduced to }s 18.50 $29.50 Velveteen Afternoon Dresses. Reduced to ‘$18.50 Reduced to }$14.50 69c A two-clasp glove, with heavy black crochet em- broidered backs, regularly .00 Velveteen D: " $25.00 Velveteen Dresses ee oe A very exceptional offering tomorrow of The New Spring Blouses Priced at Special Introductory Figures Tomorrow we shall feature the first arrivals of advance Spring blousewear at those reasou- able prices which are always a feature with the Saks Blouse Shop. The collection em- braces many bigh class novelties, exhibiting new and effective phases of color and design. Some of these blouses are handsomely embroidered, others are lace-trimmed, others are semi-tailored. All are notable for some refreshing originality of treatment—some exe clusive tou#h which has saved them from the commonplace, 4th floor Special at $5.95 Special at $3.95 Special at $5.00 Blouses of heavy crepe de Blouses contrived of the | Blouses of crepe de Chine, Chine, in high neck military | daintiest or-lacea, with flesh | buttoning to neck, with models. Shown in white, | color chiffon, and made with | smart military coller, In flesb, black, sand and putty. | new three-quarter sleeves, white, black, sand, and putty, New Lingerie Blouses, very economically priced Special at $2.00. Blouses of fine voile, | Special at $1.00, Blouses of fine cotton in battleship gray and sand. Smart semi- | and novelty crepes, {n several extremely tailored effects, military collar or low neck, | eifective military and low neck styles,