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( re ‘DOOR AND ROBBER pit DIONT FIT; Joy Ride Also Arrested. Accompanied by a man who called Ip an automobile believed to have Been stolen, to give him a joy ride, jer Haggerty, until yesterday Watohman at the Century Theatre, Was taken to the Wert Side Court! this morning and arraigned on a charge of gro larcen Haggerty M8 accused of aiding the men who ytipped open the safe in the theatre * early yesterday and escaped with $5,400, Policeman Curran was making his rounds early to-day when he saw a Man pounding on tho door at the the- atre’s stage entrance. When told he ‘Was under arrest the man said: ‘AM Might; officer: we'll drive around to the station in my car.” At the Wost 68th prisoner sald he wa her, a teamster, of No. Street. He said Lo had called to take Hagserty for a ride. He had no hauffeur's Iicense and the police are looking up the license on the auto- Mobile in bis possession. Was held on a charge of stealing the auto, and his finger-prints were taken a the same time Haggerty was un- derxoing the same procedure, Hagegerty’s arrest came after a aight of grilling by the Police and resulted mainly from the of a Century Theat tives visited the t the watchman to r the robbery. He t tives where he had met tw alleged robbers on an upper floor as he was making his rounds and ex- plained how they bad unlocked the door to the stage entrance un Wost @2a Street and admitted threo other men. Haggerty said two of the men him to the back of the stage and tied him to a chair, The men then went to the office, where the police foun later that the safe had been rippe: mn. Haggerty tnen related his strug: le to reach the stage door, out of which he toppled, still tied in the oe The detectives found the door- was too narrow for this, and they took him into cust A woman who said was em- ployed at the Century ‘Theatre told detectives that a man with a scar itted by Haggerty. Dlainea he thought the employee. In his story had de- eoribed one of the robbers as having a ecar on the left side of } K. WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER eystom before putting more food Into stomach. on fast like you do on the outside. ia vastly more important because Be skin pores do not absorb impuri Hes into the blood, while the bowel pores d ‘ re’ every ounce of food and drink ‘ into the stomach, nearly an unce of waste material must he eerried ont of the body. If this waste eateries {s not eliminated day by da it quickly ferments and generate and toxins which are hed or sucked into the blood vtream, throu the lymph duets which should nae only nourishment | to sustain the body | A splendid health measure oo firink, before breakfast each doy, glass of real hot water with a t ful of limestone phosphate in it, - a harmless way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the ach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, ienetentie | and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food Into the stomach. A ‘quarter pound of limestone phos- phate costs but very little «! the drug store but Is sufficient to make any one am enthusiast on inside-bathing.— Advt. ——————— | ANCHOR DENTURE, NO That Lasts nature, fol By applying the tae ing then aud boon te humanity w con he, New WATERBU RY. Way by! our “NEW BOTANICAL DISCOVERY Full Sets of Teeth Gold Fillings Gold Crowns, 22 karat ~ $5.00 up Silver Fillings - + SOc up WATERBURY Dentat COMPANY Incorporated 29 W. 34th St., New York = «© + $5,00up $1.00 up 414-16 Fulton St., Brooklyn Hours: 8106 Sunoays. 910% German, French and Swedish Spoken. LADIES IN ATTENDANCE | here was 1 Gallagher | | took " planss for storing anthracite coal next “| for piling up large amounts before next ‘Wash yourself on the insic- vetor| Dentistry, COMPLETES 23 YEARS AS | GUARD OF MAYOR'S OFFICE Police Lieut. Assigned to Job in 1895, When to City, Hall ert A. Van Wyck, fter consolidation; Bath Low, ( two terms), William J. Gaynor, Ard Kline, who succeeded to the o upon Mayor Gaynor's death; Mitchel, and, since the first of the} year, Mayor Hylan. nel has come in contact with Practically all. of the distingulahed visitors to this elty; has been vit- tually in charge of important func tions Inside the City Hall, and has | made many friends in all walke, He speaks German, Yiddish and Hebrew and has had any number of adven- tures with cranks who Inelrted on jereies the Mayor, “WATCH YOUR STEP” IN CROSSING STREETS frafflic Court Issues New Safety Bulletin for the Guidance of Pedestrians. 4 to-day from the ‘TraMo Court twenty-firat Safety Bulletin admonishing pedestrians to use care when crossing streets. It follows: “A pedestrian, when in the roadwa should not be lost in mental abs! tlon, looking at the ground or at the sky, or engage In conversation with an- ither, Concentrate your attention on getting across the street. “It ia bad business to step from the curb into the roadway before the traMc policeman gives you a signal to cross, You interfere with tramMe by do- ing it and endanger your life as you are jn a place where the driver of @ vehicle does not expect you to be. | “Remember that nogiigence, as defined by the Court of Apps of this State, te want of ordinary ¢ And ordinary care ts auch care js fairly propor- ioned to the danger to be avolded or to be incurred, judging by the tandard of common prudence and experience.” naan CONFER ON COAL STORAGE. Peters an . ‘ow Making Plans r Winter. Harry ‘. Peters, Chairman of the Fuel Conservation Committee, conferred to-day with J. J, Storrow, Federal Fuel Administrator for Now England, on w York and New Eng- Mr. Peters said other conferences would be held until methods have been decided on, He declared the necessity fall was apparent. Plenty of coal will be forthcoming from the mines, and the chief difficulty here will be in obtaining storage facilities. One plan before the | authorities in Washington is to utilize | back yards and lots during the summer for the storing of coml. | FIREBUG SETS FOU FOUR BLAZES. ‘Twenty-four a vamiilen Driven to Street From Apartment, A firebug as yet not caught set four fires In a vacant apartment on the first floor of the Mat house at No. 239 East {19th Street at 7.30 o'clock this morning ‘Twenty-four families in the house and jan equal number of those whose apart- iments faced a central light shaft be- tween Nos. 229 and 241 fled to the g Battalion Chief Quinn arrived with the engines he found one fire burning in a nest of wall drawers in the front room of the vacant apart- jiment, two tn the middle room and a [fourth in the kitchen, He placed a | or the apartinent after the fires n extinguished to await the ar a _fire marshal ae ir ; FIRE RUINS YIELD BODY. Victim is Un Jersey ed in Debris of ty Batlding. Cleaning up the wreckage after » fire tory frame building at Ninth im Bireets, Jersey City, early | * y, Frederick Schultz, an employee of the Erie Railroad, found the body of a man. It waa later identified | waste and o: turned in at, the Brie nea when they en made quick ne body Was not this morning work of the found until | Gets Five in Jail for Fetgn- ing Tiiness, AYER, Mass., March 1.—John San- | fean of Cambridge, a private in Com- ‘pany 1, 80tst Infantry, charged with felgning illness and making dlsre- | spectful remarks to oMfcers when or- dered to perform military duty, was given a five-year prison eentence by , court martial which reported to- lay. He was acquitted on a charge of assaulting a rpore) and attempt. ing to strike @ Deserted Camp Wadaworth to See New Haby, He Says. Charged with desertion from the) 19th Infantry, formerly the 284 Regi. ment of Brooklyn, now at Spartan-| burg, 8, C. Herbert Milner, ninotoan, | & private, ‘of No, 257 Prospect Ave: nur, Mrooklyn, was delivered at Fort Hamilton yesterday after arrest by Policeman Adama of the “Fitth| Avenue Station. Milner, who wax found at his home, sald he Jett the | camp to be near hin wife, who re: cently became a mother, his repented requests for @ furlough havi: | dented, : ae Ree s—penainaieeipaaemacens Morn Vacation War Noltef. Cash contributions to the Vacation | War Relief Committae for the weak | ending Fob, 28 wore generoun, tho) committee = announeed yesterday, | Many larga orders were eont in cf cloth! fo be made up for women nd children who have tiinto In France, The week makes the (otal 9 COMMIttes began we William Kengel Was) Walter } eS we ‘ nl k, * inn Phil ' F . | He wa urlatte Sli Strong Was City's Ruler. Silting on Sill | had y we it te Ga lice Tdeut, Witllam Kennel fit | walter Schuck, twenty-two vears oid, [curtain bole 1 out § an, | 8 \ tahed his twenty-third consecutive) q naval militiaman on shore leave from | Owls | ud desperate effort to) New York Vo year as guard at the office of the | i ship in the Sound, fell from the|@’v® hime! 1, Samuel er or in City Hall yesterday. | window of his room on the fourt! / ‘ities ¥ He was assigned to that job from! of No, 2428 Univeraity Avenue, rio} DOUBLE SLAYER MUST DIE. Man Who Called Called to Give! the Detective Bureau March 1, 1895.) Bronx, and was killed at 200 A. \.| Aud has served under eight Mayors. | to-day | Mae Whe Slew Cos Century Theatre Guard |witiam 1. strong was Mayor when) “gchuck enlisted lust Avril, and ha cnt He! brother, Christian Jr. iv se B. Meclelian (for | mother and two sisters came home on a brief holiday THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, BY FALL FROM WINDOW "8!" 9005 eno oy wh Schuck, Home on Br Furlough, I the av Iie lived with bh Testor rvice. We emphasize that no other HILTON store offers this Sale! Fasten this Address in Your Mind: 94 TO 96 FULTON STREET CORNER FULTON & NASSAU Men's Suits & Overcoats Final Clearance/ Our entire stock has been put in two special groups for IMMEDIATE and final clearance. Absolutely no mail or phone orders accepted. No reservations whatever. Many garments in weights for early Spring wear. $30, $27.50, | « VOW, $25, $22.50, Fei) NOW $45, $40, $35, Oso 236 Heavy Weight Winter 5 a "5 OVERCOATS, Values to °35 °12® Liberty Bonds Will Be Accepted at Their Face Value on Any Purchase Hiltons Sale Only at Our New Store, cor. Fulton & Nassau Sts. Right at the Corner Formerly Occupied by A. Raymond & (Co. Stern Brothers West 42nd Street (Betucen 5th and 6th Avenues West 43rd Street A Remarkable Offering TO-MORROW, SATURDAY, Women’s Tailored Suits In the newest Spring styles at $37.50 These models embody the most. ad- vanced vogue in style, materials and colorings, and are very unusual values. ny the firat deerec. i the woinnn them both to death. ne 1918. Stern Brothers West 42nd Street West 43rd Street - Between 5th and 6ih Avenues of the Allies-Swiss Commission BEGINNING TO-MORROW, SATURDAY Important Sale and Exhibit under the auspices ] FIFTH FLOOR, OF | Articles made by the Allied Prisoners of War Interned in Switzerland The entire proceeds thereof to be returned to the men over there who made the articles. Included in the ensemble are Carved Wood Lamps, Toys of all kinds, lea Trays, Leather Goods, Picture Frames, Mirrors, Pearl Neek- laces, Bags and Purses, Paper Knives, Baskets, Flower Holders, Raffia Boxes, Mats and numerous other useful and ornamental articles A generous response to this appeal will be an incalculable aid towards the establishment of an outlet for the handi craft of these men who are more or less incapacitated and be are entirely dependent upon the efforts of the commission. The Spring Fashions for Misses & Girls present the most advanced styles At very moderate prices Tailored Suits Sizes 14 to 18 years Daytime Dresses Sizes 14 to 18 years With pony, Eton and medium Of Georgette, taffeta, foulard and length coats, strictly tailored or flowered chiffons, many beautifully handsomely embroidered; showing beaded or embroidered; Tailored new detachable collars, and vestees Dresses developed in tricotine, of silk or linen; in_ silvertone, wool jersey, Poiret twills, also Poiret twills and tricotine. | fine serges. GIRLS’ AND JUNIOR: Spring Coats, Suits and Dresses Sizes 6 to 16 years Suits and Coats Smart Dresses Suits have belted coats and Im Empire, The | | | The straight line and coat smart skirts; 12 to 16 years. models; made of linen, pique, Coats in Tail or Dressy styles, chambrays or ginghams. The ure made of tricotine, fine serges, Afternoon Dresses are made of velour checks and other fashionable Georgette, materials; sizes 6 to 16 years taffeta, also plaid silks, combined with serges. Women’s Untrimmed Hats \re shown on the Main Floor in the very latest European and American shapes and straws, together with Imported Roses, Fruits, Foliages, Ostrich Fancies and other trimmings. Very Special for To-morrow’s selling: Lacquered Chip Hats at $1.65 and 1.95 Attractive shapes; in black and colors. Caterpillar Braid Hats, al! desirable colorings at 2.95 Smart Tailored Hats , , at $2.95 and 3.95 || ee Boys’ Spring Clothes for Easter | Good, dependable Suits, Coats and Hats for all occasions, at the following moderate prices. SPRING SUITS in the newest |BOYS’ TOPCOATS, LITTLE FELLOW S'REEPERS models and fabrics, for dress; of desirable ma and Topcoats of blue serge, and school wear, some with} terial; sizes from! shepherd cheek and faney extra trousers; 7 to 18 yeurs 10 to 18 years, mixtures; sizes 3 to 9 vears, $9.75 to 18.50 $9.75 to 16,50 $5.00 to 12.50 Very Special for Saturday's selling: Boys’ Novelty Suits, 3 to 8 years, at $5.00 j Of knitted cloth, corduroy, white serge and other fabrics. Values up to 80.75 Main Floor Specials for Saturday: An Unusual Sale of Moire Taffeta Ribbons At Half Actual Values Women’s Envelope Hand Purses Of Real Pin Seal, in black and colors, also Vachetta Leather, double inside compurt ments; plated clasps; with tablet, pencil and mirror fittings, Values up to $7.75, me at wld 27c and 37c yd. 53¢ and 7 inches wide; in white, black and colors | «Sg ae rem