The evening world. Newspaper, February 13, 1919, Page 6

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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 153, U.S. ARMY CRIMES FEW IN FRANCE, SAYS 4 tor $1% sof 5NATIONALS" utlet Store 119 We 24th St Near Oth Ave (Continued from Viret. Page.) and unde e We investigated reports of murders and robberies. Will Be a Wonderful “My senior officer in France was Goa. Bandhotz, the Provost Marshal, and while I hope to return to the Police Department mt an carly day 1 am he Jor an assignment to the Headquarters of the Department of the Isast with plans for the continu- ange of our work here at home. = “The American police force + Extraordinary values, carefully selected from overstocks of the National Yliken consisted of 80 officers and Cloak and Suit Co., that will make this Dollar Day Sale a Record Day. Hun- 1,490 detectives, Not ne the Seeret dreds of other lots of serviceable, wanted merchandise on every floor, equal if Service but t tective bureaus of | not greater in value to those featured every large city in the} come early, as many of the biggest values are in small quantities ites wa ghost yy another worked ith ed armies, At the reauest signed to the Holo Pasha ond othe py casey having an American ‘end! { “wherever there was @ unit of the Arnerican army there also was a de CAN'T BEAT “Tid WHEN FEET HORT : “Tiz” for Sore, Tired, Puffed- Up, Aching, Calloused Feet or Corns. You can be A DOLLAR DAY Clearance of 2,000 pairs of odés and ends of women’s and children’s Shoes and Pumps. Not more than 50 or 60 of any style, so there is not a complete range of sizes in each model. Desirable leathers. Some canyas shoes for youths; some slippers for men. Wonderful bargains appy-footed in a mo ment. U iz” and never suffer with tender, raw, burning, blistered, swollen, tired, sinelly feet. “Tiz” and . only “Tin” tukes the pain and sore- ness out of corns, callousness and | ress Bar Jains me As soon as you put your feet in a oe “Tie” bath, you just feel the happi [ness soaking in. How good your poor old feet feel. ‘They want to dance for joy. “Tin is grand, “Tia linstantly draws out all the poison- ous exudations which puff up your Ifect and cause sore, inflamed, ach- 1 ings swenty, smelly feet og | Get t box of “Tix” at a drug store or department store. Ge instant foot relief. Laugh at foot suf- ferers who complain. Because your foet are never, never going to bother | or make you limp any more.-Advt. Misses’ duntore Mine | Striped ter. Che mbray Mouns Dress’ Plaid Per- | Junior Dress Dress of Drean of House Linen eof £04 cals Cottame of Cotton x Black and we rvicendle 1th Aty | Dressiwhite Gabardine 9 white Shep tton Cat ripe jrepp. trim trim Q $400 0 Children’ % ss: ine DAY Bargains 6 "3400 #400 | FURNITURE CashorCredit Oven Evenings Till @ ©’Cleck, r| Holzwasser Home Talks No. 423 Mane LAte Beye’ toys W Little G ath Norfolk suit |" ham Drees Conta RBs . + Bult | triped ¢ Ina pra Kood gray | frecting of durable! ton suit teal wey mixture. | er tvirn.#1.00 | Linens #100 s1.00 6 French and fea Spoken Here | Write for New 18. Cati ar re (-Page Special Easily Reached from West Side hy Séth o 59th St. Crosstown Care, A3-Room Apartment dg 4 Teriod Furniture $375 A5-Koom Apartment ‘100 VALUK $585 — re Incomparably Rich Period Furniture = Natmaook _lace yoke and bar) be white jvalu | Deposlt Week) ) WW — Extra 10 aa Unbleached Sheeting oes extra special at A wonderful bargain! Good quality, Unbleached Standard LL Sheeting that will bleach out in washing pecial : and give satisfactory service, 36 inches wide, 10-yard wink Se t oo 's 38c Grade CAPT. BARNEY FLOOD : ‘and the ‘organized gang’ story, @ fj auty | sniping from @ tree near the 1919, tall of our division. We had men in NEW YORK DETECTIVE HOME x of the Angier, will give one of his Mingiend, Portuga!, Treland. 1u. A LS ANNUAL MEETING. tertaining talks on fish and fishing, \ . 4 |based on his wide and varied eaperi- SENT 799 UNDESIRABLES OUT WITH PRAISE FOR WORK AS Kerr A. Cratkahank, of the Jence and illustrated a series of te- / 5 tarkuble pictures from actual photos OF FRANCE Angier, Will Talk on Fisb. naka hot “rom the beginning to the end. HEAD OF ARMY CRIME BUREAU. ‘The United Anglers League will hold OTe Mier to keep ebreast of ine times nt out of France 700 undesir jon unusually Interesting mostizg to-!and other org zatio the league is s. We rounded up spies, and, —-- Ht in the auditotium on the fifth generally speaking, cleaned up the floor of the Pulltzer Building, beginning criminal element, “The percentage of crime and crim- inals in the American army was ex- ceedinglt small of our trouble Was caused b rails who settled in the Jarger cities of France “It 1s not to be denied that many men cume over with the Americano forces who were—well, lot ‘known to the police’ of our divi sion, So far as we were concerned, 1 am happy to say, each of them opened a new book on his arrival. They made excellent fighters. They went into the trenchas alongside clerks and bankers, and they did their bit honestly and faithfull lat that be put down to the! tit They gare my divisen ttle trombie. As to the ‘American crime w conjured up by @ sensational Fu newspaper, I oan only that all talk of organi American gangs| and so on imps a ‘bunk.’ “Possibly the end the brought its outbreak of assaults and robberies in Paris just as it has done I have no doubt in New York, Chi-| ts Say, very way wa cago, Washington and other cities at| 2 home, | can well imagine that ne jor the gentlemen I have referred to| 48 ‘known to the police’ may have aid: "Now thet we've dore our bit,! it Is up to us to see France.” The haven't the money to sce France) and it may be that they will lgick it up. Mere and there three; , or four of them may go about to-| ‘ gether, But th a no large num-| ber of American deserters in France | sey, ig not impressive | are not there because there are no privately | owned automobiles to steal Capt. Flood went with the Ame can Army into Coblenr. The doug’ boys, he guys were quick to adapt theaselves to circumstances. The fact that so many of them speak German, be believes, lictped materiai- in the territory taken over by Americans WON TWO PROMOTIONS FOR BRAVERY IN BATTLE. A. Woward Necly of No. 49 T mde Drive, a you lawyer who le | bis practice to enlist as a private December, 1917, came back on the Santa Teresa ea First Lieutenant. He was gassed at the Mame while serv- ing with the 107th Field Artillery on! 29, and for bravery in action in this engagement he was sent to an officers’ training school and became a | Second Lieutenant. On Oct. %4, in the Argonne, Lieut. Necly led bis men! through a heavy barrage and was wounded in the head by a high ex- Dlosive shell, which hilled several of the men around him. He led bis men So well that he was promoted to First Lieutenant. Neely is returning on crutches, as the guasing he received has developed Into rheumatiem Lieut. Thornton Hooper of Atlantic City was one of the bed-ridden offi} cers on the Santa Teresa. He and four! other flyers of the 11th Aero Squad ron were dropping “eggs” on th man lines around Conflans on Sept Us, when they were ali shot down by German aviators, Licut. Hooper and| his observer, both badly wounuded, | were the oniy men in the American party to eseape alive, and they were taken prisoner. Lieut. Hooper said lunost starved to death” Certainly ¢ ft Lester of Sarutoga npany th Divi arrived with shrapnel wounds he re ceived in the Argonne on Oct. 10. Mack B. Lieb of No. 59 Varet sir Brooklyn, who served with the a05th! Infantry, told of being on, shot through after picking off two Germans wh Meu on Nov. 4 ‘Timothy J. Cummings ef No. 40 Morton street, a momber of the 30(th Infantry, wag shot im the knee on Oct 14 while his regiment was capturing) the Frengh town of St. Juvine. Private Daniel Murphy of No. Box Street, Lrooklyn, came home with a wound ina his arm, received tu the general assault at Verdun Sept. 30, He served with the Infantry. ®Swathed in bandages and with an | erm jn a sting, Capt. FP. Wynant c No, 108 East 73d Street, after serv! with the 30 Regiment of Regulars. ‘To-morrow the Finland, from &t.| Nazaire with 8,354 men; the cruiser Charteston, from Brest, with 1,2 and the Danta Alighler!, from Mar- | seilles with 1,588 men, are due. 1th > FOOD IN STORAGE INCREASED, | |Meat and Batter Bupplies Far, Above 101% Viguri WASHINGTON, Feb. 18—Great in Jere ve Im the amount of meats and utter held in storage in this ce y the a ‘94th St, Near GthAve. Ne Mail Orders. f f revealed in United Ste rvicoable | ureau of is report for Seb ‘ r na Wide ort | As comp with the supply Ry: on } Lote and we increases are as follow Frozen Ws eater | froven ork, S88 per cent tro. | Direct to You np 72.8 per cont; miscellane Choice 129 | tr | eet, ta, Nou sea ea ee ere LM ny ert to, wltaala adgcarany. pork, 30.8 pe AL: Pp 1 pork i Wais ig Barga n : ‘i CHE CEA errata ts 10 Toilet Articles Jor $1.00 |r. Raha seed patent a Qdany styles, all of them good an fi " » _ Eggs, apples and Americ models of denirable feb- 7 Ro calla Gisth Onen decreases. having Honp “| many other had @ stealing automobiles over| the arm by German machine gnuners $30, Jam@ A. editor + SHIRTS FOR MEN At Semi-Annual Sale Prices $2.00 Shirts reduced to $1.55 $3.50 Shirts reduced to $2.65 | $5.00 Shirts reduced to $3.55 | $8.50 Shirts reduced to $6.75 In the first two lots, at $1.55 and %2.65, there are wide assortments of woven madras und percules. In the third lot, at $5.55, fine fibre silks and high grade madras; “and at £6.75 a choice tion of silks in smart ‘patterns. All of them, the famous “Metric Make,” the equal in fit and finish of any shirt made. BPRS SSS ES TEES F546 159 RS66 408666555 000-68 pseFeRERS Sale at Our Seven Stores Now rb Scola pone Metric Shirt Distributors in New York Maria, rorved cighteen is Chief of the Division nal | 1456 Broadway 125th Street, at 3d Ave. 44 East 14th Se. Investigation of 279 Broadway 2 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn 47 Cortlandt St. fice of Gen 1619 BROADWAY, AT 49TH STREET He help sofu desirables and has beer mended efficien American Charober of ¢ nt the Am n Mil taches with our Embe he Consul General, a number of | American banking = institutions, his former chief, Cot, Dennis No- | Eventos A. B. ¥.; Brig, Gen. Lewl | New York’s Largest Furniture, Piano and Phonograph Store mander of American tr | FEBRU, ry The high sc quality Provost Marshal General of furniture at lower France. | prices than elsewhere, FURNITURE SALE tense cir ios fore is the largest and because we own at old prices (60°, jess than at present) a larger quantity of fine furniture than any other New York store. Therefore, we can afford to sell cheaper at Cash or Credit Terms. Convince yourself. 5,273 INVITATIONS OUT TO LOWELL CELEBRATION of American Academy Arts and} cas Letiers to Honor Poet's tooth | af | [BS Anniversary. fA i The American Academy of Arts and q Letiers has 45,273 invitarions to the four-day celebra of the 100th annt- Vereary of the birth of James lus Lowell, it was announced | University to-day. The © be held on Feb, 20, expected will be held at at A M,| chancellor of . “ax er | Uptown Benatar ‘ooklyn hess. Nitted Noyes | 3D AVENUE AVENUE A BROADWAY in wh oe Ler Cor, 123d St. Cor, 4th St. At Saratoga Ave. heon Ku to tl cnta ‘of | at 1.30 BH. Altman & Cn. announce that they have made large price reductions in i ed House Gowns ets and silks, handso v embellish ed n th he large number of exquisite of the forei¢ oniy one of two of models, costume artists # style are i include some productions which (Department on Third Ficor) Madison Avenue-Hifth Avenue, New York Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-Lifth Streer

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