The evening world. Newspaper, March 26, 1917, Page 6

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ee ee en eee ee | ee es FORBACON, DOOMED ASSPYINENGLAND a an He was carried to the « 7 ’ — Pi ter being worked on for nearly an hour Plotters’ Agent, Spared After with a pulmotor was rent to rns Death Sentence Abroad, Says i ital, = Hh ondition ts ma to b ma °""! He Bluffed Germans. The fire originated tn the cellar and| drives out the gives new strength. 414 $5,01 damage in the cafe, Low: pawnehop and the fur store of I. Fi SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK WONDRRS man. VICTIMS OF COLDS outing seh "just tmiserable’victims of colds relief Lest oan oy cana ep soothes ing passages, a A ee if Reson Revived With Palmotor. After firemen had fought @ partion ‘larly amoky biage at No, 778 Sixth Ave- | ntte for half an hour to-day, Laeut. Gold- smith of Engine Company No. 26 forced | his way Into Fitewerald’s cafe, on tho| ground floor, and found Patrick Hoaly, thirty-eight, @ walter, of No, 648 W Forty-eighth Street, unconactous, reot, and af- | George Vaux Bacon, who was sent! }to England by Albert O. Sander and Cha the man Government and who confessed and brought about the ar- vest of hin fellow plotters when he was cuptured, was sentenced to-day by Judge Ven Fleet in the United t Court to one year in the Federal Prison at Bacon was indicted with for violating the neutral- ity laws of this country. “Bacon was captured tn Pngland, W. Wunnenburg as a apy for Lorgest Populer Price Garment House in New Yor D. PRICE & CO, 6" Ave. Corner 18" Street BrooKLYN NEW YORK NEWARK | Featured at All Three Stores Tuesday Exceptional Sale of EASTER SUITS 4 5" $ g® 95 Copies of Paris Modele— Suits That Lead in Style. (od a Spy,” Aasistant United States Din- triot Attorney John C, Knox infor the court when Bacon, short, thin nd sen- United knowledge all the In his possession of the tem, but despite this his conduct calls for substantial punishment “Soon after his arrest in England he expressed a desire to tell all he knew to this Government, and even FEEL FINE! DON'T BE SICK, BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED Enjoy life! Stop the head- aches, colds, bad breath, sour stomach, 10-cent “Cascarets” is best cathartic for men, women, children, Cascarets ure a treat Phey liven your liver, clean your thirty feet of bowels and sweeten your stomach, You eat one or two Cascarets like EXPERT ALTERATIONS FREE Those who have seen our Easter Suits were amazed at their won- derful value. We know that ours is the smartest collection of models ever offered at these prices—and we are positive that you will think the same upon inspection. A selection of over fifty authentic models is presented—an assortment so varied that all may be thoroughly pleased. The choice of fabrics includes Mannish Serge, Gabardine, Poiret Twill, Gunniburl, Plaid Taffeta, Burella, Oxford Cloth, Checks Mixtures, in black, navy and the correct shades of blue, fe: tan, gold and rose. Smart demi-tailored models —braid your head is clear, tongue stomach is sweet, breath right, and cold gone and you feel grand, Get a 10 or 25-cent box at any drug store and enjoy the nicest, qentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced, Stop sick head- aches, dilious spells, indigestion, furred tongue, offensive breath and constipation, "Mothers should give cross, peevish, feverish, bilious chil . A ren a whole Cascaret any time. They und, button trimmed and showing the newest cutaway and ra RaPaitae aad haves gripe et pointed dip effects—are strongly featured. Sizes 14 to 44. sicken,—-Advt. BROOKLYN STORE NEWARK STORE Fultonand bridgeSts.| Market & HaiseySts STORE AUMANNS AAD S1RELT ® Sea Avenue OpenEveryEvening ; “7 Apartments Furnished from $50 Up i ih ALL GOODS MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES. | o> at = NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR CREDIT A complete line : of Heywood i _¢|| Baby Carriages at ' Popular Prices FOUR- 1| PIECE 4 ADAM PERIOD K BEDROOM SUITE, IN | BIRD’S-EYE MAPLE, neatly | carved, with French plate mirrors. Consisting of DRESSER, CHIFFONIER, AND BED in 4 ft. size; 3 pisees “" User $71.50 i trat ENTRANCE i on STREET tried and sentenced to be hanged as a) life to b operations of the German spy sys-| | Bacon explained. candy before going to bed and in the | AGNES VERNON IN “THE CLOCK,” NOW ON n'croennow ov THREE LOSE LIVES COO a | | 219) POCOO after the sentence of hanging was cha’ he further jeopardized his ‘ome a witness for the Gov- ment and was brought here by nts of Scotland Yard. Yet justice |demands that he shall not go unpun- tohed." “How did you arrive at that state | of mind which enabled you to become a spy?” Judge Van Fleet asked, “I never met the men who sent mo abroad until two weeks before I left,” “When thoy asked | me if I would like to take a trip to| Burope I wid 1 had always wanted | f That desire to get to} side had a lot to do with my decision. Firat they sald 1 was| to go to Germany to bring back war films and I agreed, but when they said I was to remain in England and spy for Germany I hesitated, “I was in a sense committed to the Job, however, and I went. When I arrived in England, the land of my forefathers, I decided the only thing | for me to do waa to play the game | and biuff the Germans by merely pretending to give them information, As the English authoritles discovered, I gave them nothing of value, so f am really only gutity king money from the overnment under © pretenses. ou had @ narrow squeak, didn’t | you?” asked the Judge, “I did, indeed,” he replied, “1 think your view of your offense is a wrong one,” Judge Van Fleet said. an Go | ‘Your real offense conalsts of forget- |*ttarry,” a waif taken from an instt- | ting your allegiance to your native |tand and Joining an enterprixe against Its laws. I am against sending a |young man of your intelligence to prison, your offense being more po- | | iitical than penal, but as a deterrent | |to others I will send you to Atlanta |for one year and one day.” Bacon, visibly relleved, turned and; thanked Mr, he was led a eee RN | CHARITY WORK AT STAKE. Appe! Knox and the Judge as Againat Judge Mulqueen in to-day wus asked ‘by Land Levy of No. 233 dway, attorney for the | Rabbinteal ¢ e of Amefica, at No, 11 Montgomery Street, to set aside the jeonviction of David Pickeling, a col- lector for the college, who was fined $10 Jan. 15 for begging by Magistrate | Frothingham Mr. Levy told Judge Mulqueen that! Pickeling Was one of mar collectors jemp id by the er going from door to door with « coil A polices man arrested bim at One Hundred and Temh St Third Avenue. o the Court Whatever the ultimate deeis fraught with the greatest tmpc fo the charitable societies of this rew It ha by th ie 34th Street—New York Announce an Extraordinary Sale For Tuesday, March 27th window the draft swept the fire! against their bucks, “Harry” felt} from Mrs. Foley's sand Was not} |gone back to look for him, THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1917. IN EAST SIDE FIRE; | BOMB WRECKS SALOON; | No One Hurt, but Glass in Windows | able to give only a vague descriptt and on Shelves of Duggo's Fifty-first Street Station had to, be) gatroya with @ summons returnable called. No one was hurt. tee 4 a great many excuses, but ‘A neighbor reported that he saw alinis one is uniques $90 fine” eald the man run from the door and disappear | Magistrate. Murgatro’ paid. into another tenement a few minutes EEE | before the bomb went off. He wi EMPTIES BIG TENEMENT of the man. enemies or having threatening lette Duggo denies having | “° T(WJASHINGTON received Place Suffers, | rit G, 12, 2 | —_—»— MAN SAVES EIGHT A bomb was exploded early this|“HIGHWAYMAN” WAS A COP.) 3-DAY TOURS |morning in the doorway of the saloon ieeniaed. Slay id of Joseph Duggo, on the ground floor | old, a messenger for the David Foley Gives Life Trying to Protect Little Son at Sec- ond Avenue Blaze. A man and two boys died In fire at No, 1464 Second Avenue at 2.20 A. M, to-day, Two persons were severely burned and several thrilling rescues were made, The dead: | Foley, David, forty-eight years old. Foley, Vincent, his son, ten years old. . “Harry,” a foundling, living with the Foleys, three years old. Mrs, Mary Foley, forty-five, wite of David, and Arthur, her son, twen- ty-three, were burned while perched in windows waiting for the firemen to arrive, They were attended by an ambulance surgeon and taken to the home of friends, The blaze, of suspicious started in the ground floor ha of the five-story house, Stephen Puppl bas the Budapest Cafe, with an all- night Ucense, on the ground floor and lives on the third, He and his wife were in the cafe when the fire w discovered, and it had such headwa they could not get up to aid the mem- | bers of their family. | Mr. and Mrs, Kelly and Mr. and Mra McGowan, living on the top floor, and Mr. und Mrs, Rowan on the fourth floor, with their children, went up @ rear fire-escape to the roof and escaped to an adjoining building, ‘The Foleys were asleep when the ery of " awakened them. Ar- thur H. aroused his parents and the two boys. David, the father, opened, the hall door and the flame le; d in, and he ran without closing the door. Holding Vincent by the hand, he to reach ¢ Both were overcome and the position of their bodies when found showed the father had thrown himself on the | boy in a last effort to protect hin Arthur Foley and lis mother ran to the front windows and threw them, open. Mrs. Foley was carrying rear fire escape. tution by the family. | While they were walting in the found until firemen had carrted| mother and son to the street and} Charles Sansky, @ brother-in-law | of Puppi, the cafe proprietor, way the} hero of the fire, In the Pupp! flat] live Jobn and Catherine Tf parents of the own and the Puppt| children, Steven, six, and Charles, two. Running up the front of the] bullding is ign with the) name of is a lad repalring { When. e cut off} he ass of the Puppl family at the front wind: He first carried the two chil down the ladder, one at # time, fr the third floor, and left them sitt on a ledge over the cate, He back and brought down, one time, the old couple, William son, his wife and two children, who also live on the third floor, ‘As he finished stringing them along the ledge Trucks Nos. 13 ond 16 ar- rived and firemen took them ail down tadders, The did $3,000 damage, Sapreme Court Orders Varned Oved to B WASHINGTON, March yreme Court teamer Ap and her cary 375 Silk Afternoon Dresses | sion blew in the door, knocked bottles | Le |from their shelves, broke several win. | | dows and threw the tenants Into such a, * panic that reserves from the East An accumulation from our regular stock, all this season's models, About 375 Women's and Misses’ Dresses of Crepe de Chine, Chiffon Taffeta, Satin and combina- tlons of serge and silks. Included in this offering are a number of sample dresses. Regular 25.00, 29.75 and 35.00 Values Reduced to 18.00 None Sent c. V0. D. No Approvals. No Exchanges. im) and 1 Beret Urner eee ce the |] $13.50 $15 $16 Acetate of the five-story tenement at No. 30 |Metropolls, of No. 31 Union Sauase | Proportionste Rates’ trom Other Potate + en told Magistrate Ho ay that he © East Forty-elghth Street. The explo- was ing the t automobile on | Lg ct} and details from 0. rty miles an hour} he thought the| ‘a inctoreycte was x Avenue at t last Saturday beca’ man chasing him a highwayman. The “highwayman” Patrolman Stephens, Pennsylvania R.R. turned out, to be who served Mur- Stern Brothers West 42nd Street Between 5th and 6th Avenues West 43rd Street Another Important Sale, To-morrow, of Women’s Low Shoes at $3.75 pair All patent leather pumps in two differeut styles; turned soles; Louis heels; formerly $5.00 a pair. Also a large purchase of this season’s newest Novelty Pumps at $3.75 a pair Sizes 4, 4). and 5; these would sell up to $8.00 a pair. Sterling Silver Tableware A timely offering of desirable Wedding or Easter gifts. Candlesticks Tea Caddies Flower Vases $3.25 to 9.85 each at $5.85 to 6.75 * $5.45 to 20.75 Bon Bon Dishes and Baskets at $5.25 to $10.85 Sandwich Plates, Syrup Sets, Butter | Berry or Salad Bowl, Gravy Boat aad Dishes, Compotes, Centrepieces, | Tray, Sugar & Cream Sets, Pap Bowl Mayonnaise Dishes and and Plate, Bread Trays, Cheese and Candlesticks. Cracker Dishes, Coffee Sets, 3 pes., at $4.35 to 12.65 at $13.50 to 29,75 A Sale of Stamped Articles In the Art Needlework Section, Main Floor, al very special price concessions To-morrow. Nainsook Envelope Chemises at 50c and 65c Nainsook Corset Covers at 25c and 50c 13 pieces, on cotton, at 25¢ & 50c 13 pes., on linen, at $1.65 & 2.25 A Clearance of Finished Embroidered Models regularly from $1.50 to $20.00, at 95c to $10.00 Nainsook Night Gowns at 65¢ and 95¢ Luncheon Sets GB. Altman & Cn. New Spring and Summer Styles in Women’s Separate Skirts are shown in an unusually large and attractive assortment which features the most advanced ideas of the fashion creators as well as the season's most desired fabrics. Among the latter are sports satins im the smartest color effects, khak! kool, tussah, silk Jersey, washable white satin, plain and fancy pongees, slik poplin, corduroy imprime, wool jersey, movelty woo! plaids and stripes, and white flannels and gabardines. The assortment includes models adapted for slender, medium and stout figures. (Ready-to-wear Department, Third Floor) Fifth Avenuw - Madison Avenue, Nem York Thirty-forth Street Thirty-fifth Street

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