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JE DOW A FLAG; cuted by Misses Zulick and Schmaltz. * Miss Anna Zelick of No. 413 East 72d Street and Miss Elizabeth Bohmaltz of No. 411 Past 56th Street, \ Who had spent the day selling Laberty mds, and Joseph Volmut, a student, No, 48 East 76th Street, told Mag- Astrate Hrough in Night Court last might that as they were walking » through the Mall in Central Park “inst evening they saw a man climb up (on the Shakesperian statue, wrest a ‘ placea and throw it to the ground. ‘The young women sald they held Othe man while Volmut ran for a po. “Meeman, Their prisoner. John Dow- » sixty-one, of No. 248 West 22d A t, was changed with disorderly eondu He said he was born In GIALS GAPTURED HIM Mnsulter of British Emblem Prose-| Ireland, came to the United Btates | thirty-one years ogo. and was a his- torian, Ho pleaded guilty and was held Without ail for wentence Friday nigh thee 5 fia not mean to insult the British flag.” he eaid, “I didn’t think any | erabiem but that of America should | fy Licks een Sea THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, APRIL 265, “57 MIP IN BABIES, ACTRESS DEFENSE itish flag from where it had been af! STEFANSSON ILL 50 ILL 50 DAYS. WN KIDNAPPING CASE | Messenger Bringing Appeal to Doctor Makes Record Trip. FORT YUKON, Alaska, April 2 |Pringing an appeal for a doctor by Vib jaimur Stefanson, the Arctie explorer, who les dangerously ii! on Herschel Isiand, a messenger reached here late yesterday after @ record-breaking trip from the north, | In & message carried by the courter | tefansson told of being II! fifty dn r being stricken with typhoid and pneumonia, followed by complications, rthwest mounted policeman and pe Child She F She Had When Arrested Is Soldier’s Daughter —Held in $2,500, OChareed with having kidnagped ¢ight-months’-old Marion = Rossy, A daughter of Mrs. Katio Rossy, of No, two Eskimos have died of typhotd. while 336 East 117th Street, Blossom Harris, reveral others were Ill, the messenger ald, an actress, waa held to-day by Magis- 11a ts eae Tney om stateine set? trate Rarfow in Washington Heights aya no upon learning of BLetAnA- c+ 4m $9,500 ball for a hearing noxt Saturday Tho defendant, according to the |eharee, had pn the baby to Bridge- port, Conn. where @he was arrested by Uolice Licut.Edward Boyle and Dotectivo Sergt. George Thompson of the Fourth Branch. The defendant, | through her attorney, Charles M. |Rowenthal, of No, 1476 Broadway, | pleaded not guilty. To-day’s hearing | was adjourncd at the attorney's re- quest. When the Magistrate asked the de- fendant where sho lived, she said: “I have no more home than a jack rabbit, Wherever I hang my hat is my home.” With the defendant in court were) her son Florence, twelve years old, | and her mother, Mrs. E. Harris, for-) merly a resident of Kentucky. Mrs. Rossy waa in court with the! baby which, according to the police,| had been restored to her yesterday. Mr, Harris, senior, declares there is a mistake in identities and that thé baby ber daughter was caring for when arrested Is in reality the child | of a soldier now in France. Harris told a newspaper man ‘that her daughter had been asked by Pri- vate Robert M. Carr, a mamber of the | medical department located at a base hospital of the American Expedition- SPECIALLY PRICED—$6.50 ary THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY ONLY A military type Oxford. Specially priced for three These shoes usually sell for Calf. higher price. They gy demonstrate the Queen Quality’s steadfast In Ko Ko Calf are made of the best priced low to further policy of economy pricing in good footwear. BUY LIBERTY BONDS Queen Quality Boot Shop 32 West 34th Street ANUFACTURE Ram, Suit FORCED TO SELL] To The Public Dir t Our Factory Salesroom SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY G| 321 Suits, Dresses, Coats | Our Loss Oving to the back A decided to place $25 Sults, Dress fo the public " to clone out Suits . FUS FEL ¢ ELI OPPOSITE WALOORE One of Many Biles * Grand Street! Cor. Drigas Avo. EROORLY N $18 TO $25 VALUES ‘dir Dresses Coats UITS*ORESSE 339 Cor, Wyckoff St, [ Clothing for Your Whole Fanily on Easy Terms i files This Advertisement With y BABY CARR , i { ' ° : § ; f i f \ is now ready beautiful p: well made. | unt Off Your Credit Purchase When Openi Our new spring stock of >4 ki Good ones for You and Get Your TEN Per Cent, a New Account, me very Pick ont, your roeic. terns; all asian (8 ones tor a8 our Patriotism—Buy Liberty Bapds — ene OMEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS. ( Theresa. This was prior to his sailing | for France. Harris, her daughter did not take charge of the infant, father had gone away she succeeded in locating the baby at an orphanage at Crown Point. this la the baby which Mrs, Rossy claims as her own, Forees, to care for his baby, At that thme, according to Mrs. but after the The claim is that FIRE IN LAKE ERIE SHOPS DOES $500,000 DAMAGE Three Mysterious Conflagrations in Lima, O., Simultaneously —Flames Spreading. LIMA, ©, April 25.—Three fires, breaking out almultancously tn the Lake Erle and Western shops here last night, had practically wiped out the $500,000 plant and were still raging early this morning. Water pressure has been out at some unknown point, while Federal agen port that hose was cut In with a knife, One man is being held by the police, One fireman ts in the hos- pital unconscious, @ workman 1s serl- ously injured, Fire Chief John Mack badly cut and several others injured, Another fire, breaking out In a tant part of the town, is still burn! The homes of several foreigners are re~ ported afire. LIQUOR ROUND-UP AT CONEY. Six Charged With Selling Intox- icants to Soldiers, «:The Brooklyn police the last week have rounded up several alleged boot- re and aaloonkeepers in the Coney 4 district for selling liquor to sol- diera, James Brooks, a negro, of No. 2814 West 17th Street, Coney Island, was arrested to-day on the charge that he had obtained sf xbottles of beer from & aaloon for three soldiers Fort Hamilton, He waa identifie bartender, Other F, Whalen, No. ‘Thompson, ‘2817 bert Laffage, Street; a man known as West Jd Street, and @ jas Salerno, No, 1611 \ - a 1 1s er man known une Avenue, Day Pledge of Hylan. Jamatoa Gets STEAMSHIP ST, PAUL SINKS AT HER PIER, O00 MEN ON BOARD (Continued from First Page.) tain thelr footing on the sloping deck with no more attempt at escape. When, however, the list to port grew momentarily more severe and it was impossible to stand erect without a hand hold pante seized the Iandsmen. Some climbed to the davits and be- an to lower away coils of rope from the lifeboats, Others in their haste cut loose one of the lifeboats and dropped the supporting lines into the water. A coal barge which had followed close upon the St. Paul's entrance in- to the dock and was lying close to the starboard side offered a haven of wafety for the mechanics. swarmed down the ropes so fast that one man’s heels wero crowding his! fellow's head. In this way between 300 and 400 made their escape, Some who came up from the rear, hatehway and found no coal barge handy Jumped into the river, Boats from both adjacent wharves put out and these were fished out of the: water. The loud crack of the masts as they were snapped against the roof of the pier shed was the first intima- tion to the street beyond the wharves that something was going wrong. A | Policeman who forced his way through the line of soldier guards at the entrance to the pier and caught one glimpse of the great vessel top- piling at an angle of forty-five de. grees dashed to the office of the American Line and telephoned to the New York and Polyclinio Hospitals for ambulances. But he forgot to report to Headquarters, which did not know of the accident until after The Evening World had reporters on the scene, Passing tugs who eaw the St. Paul topple veered from their courses and rushed into the slip with the idea of checking the turtle act. But no haw. ser could hold the great mass of steel. | LIFT OFF CORNS | FREEZONE IS MAGIC Costs few cents! Sore, touchy corns lift right off with fingers. No pain! ; Ue a . Drop a little Freezone on an ach- In’ corn, instantly that corn stops doesn't hurt... bit, Yes, magic! Why wait? Your druggist sells « In a series of hearings he held yester- day on legislative bills, Mayor Hylan pleased a delegation of Rockaway res\- denta by announcing that he would sign |the measure providing for building « 1 across Jamaica Bay, The A is projected to be about five 6 liane news from |tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, su ent to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn be- tween the toes, and calluses, without soreness oF Irritation, Freesone {9 the much talked of ether discovery of @ Cincinnati genius, the Western Front means that men and guns are needed. To buy guns and to clothe, feed, arm and transport men—that means money, Your country asks you to lend your money fo) r these purposes, It offers you interest on what you lend as an investment, safest in the world, terest aren't half as important aa your plain privilege as an American citizen to buy Liberty Bonds, Liberty Bonds are the But safety and in- Jeytse Concer 45th Street & Sixth Avenuo New York RTS 8 RIL ee 1918, CARDS AND DRINKS INTENT IS CHARGE The tugs had to content themselves with cruising about and helping in the rescue of the mechanics who had ‘ieaped Into the river. As soon as the commander of the Barred Zone, which includes tho berth the St, Paul selected, heard of the ne- comp IR tee Arthur B. Donnelly of the fist Diviston at Camp Mills, who, according to a déspatch from Washington, ts to be tried by court martial, to-day dented |} that he was to resign under charges. | Just what the charges are have not been | made public. It is understood they were |}* made while the division wos at Fort | Now that the BIG SUIT SALE is on— They | hurting, then you lift it right out, It cident he rushed out his reserve bat- talion and put double guards across the wired trocha, Even passes to the zone failed to win a way through the | hedge of business-like bayonets, Capt. Du Bols of the West 2tst Streot Station, was early on the scene, but found the soldiers suffi. ciently able to cope with the crowd that quickly gathered and did not turn out his reserves. Passengers taking the Hoboken Ferry at tho foot of West 234 Street were the only civilians who got a view of tho big transport as she lay on her side in forty-six feet of water, with only her starpoard rail and part of her superstructure visible—for all the world like a stranded whale, Tho St. Paul is @ steel, twin-screw steamer of 10,230 tons, one of the largest American ners. She is 535.5 feot long, has a beam of 63 feet and a depth of 26.8 feet. She was built in 1895 by W. Cramps & Sons of Phil- adelphia and is owned by the Inter- {national Mercantile Marine Com- pany. She is registered at New York. Sho is @ sister ship of the steamer St. Louls, and both ships were em- ployed as auxiliary cruisers by the United States Navy in the Spanish- | American War, New York Deleg Rank for Nurse: WASHINGTON, April 25.—A dele- gation headed by Mrs. George B. Me- Clollan, Mrs, William Randolph Hearat and Miss Sophia Irene Loeb, of New York, appeared before the House Mil- itary Committee today to urge the hill giving army nurses milltars rane Labial: ¢ on the eld ts essential to fficlency of the 9,000 ervice, it was urged. en Milltary AGAINST GENERAL emails ai Commander Charged With Playing Cards With Junior Officers for Money. WASHINGTON, April 25.—A special court martial has been omlered for Brig. Gen. Arthur B. Donnelly, for- merly of Missour! National Guard, now under arrest at Camp Mills, New York. Gen. Donnely has been tn command of the 198th Infan- try, formed from the old First and Fifth Regiments. An official report made by an in- specting officer charges that Gen. Donnelly participated in gamea of cards with junior officers, in whioh money was passed; that the games were held in tho General's tent and that liquor was served to the players. Strong influence has been brought to bear on the War Department to have the charges dropped, but Secre- tary Baker refused to interfere. He is Understood to have told members of Congress who approached him that a general officer would be handed the same measure of justice as the raw- est recruit, but that the sentence in the former case, should, in fairness, be more severe because of the oppor- tunity the officer had to familiarize himself with army regulations. the MINPOLA, L April 26 trig. Go: Thirty-fourth Street Another Sale of Sil, Okia. William J, Waldro Civil War veteran, whan he fell off @ ratiroad bridge tnto He was crossing the bridge ‘olding an oncoming train, a creek. and fell in OMcers at the camp de to discuss the ca: cline to chore, 8 killed to-day, A A A A A, a : Liberty loan Low Sign Nowll- it sak With Practical Patriotism—Buying Liberty Bonds G. Altman & Ga. MADISON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Men’s Oxfords at $6.25 per pair higher price. Women’s in black only; at . . . . stick attached, will take place to-morrow and Saturday in the Department on the Sixth Floor. These Shoes have Just been taken out of stock, where they were marked at a much They are mado of genuine leather throughout, are modeled on a smart, welleshaped last, and may be obtained in tan or black gunmetal calfskin. , A New Selection of Umbrellas to be on sale to-morrow and Saturday will offer excellent values at these special prices: Loop-handle Umbrellas of excellent-quality silk in smart changeable effects . $3.50 Novelty-handle Umbrelias of union taffeta, very serviceable quality, $3.00 SERVICE FLAGS sultable for use in the Liberty Loan Parade, are shown In a very large assortment on the First Floor. Included are Service Flags of cotton, of the size officially prescribed (12x18 Imches), with very moderately priced. Thirty-fifth Street Young Men’s Blue Flannel Suits at $27.50 will be om Special Sale on the Sixth Floor to-morrow and Saturday. These Suits are in most desirable models, are well tailored, and, in fact, have until now been in regular stock at a much higher price. (The sizes range from 34 to 42 inches chest) The Boys’ Clothing Dep’t (also on the Sixth Floor) specializes in smartly cut, well made, and moderately priced clothing for the growing boy. There are now ready for selection large assortments of woolen and washable suits, sports jackets and light-weight overcoats; boys’ furnishings; and complete outfits of wearing apparel suitable for camp and general oute-door use. For to-morrow and Saturday there will be A Special Offering of Boys’ Spring Top Coats (sizes 3 to 7 years) made of rough-finlshed mixtures of gray or brown, at the exceptionally low price of $5.00 each Safe Storage for Purs, Rugs and Draperles oP)