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3 — RUSH FROM TRAIN INJURES 7 PERSONS Passengers in New York Subway in Panic New York, Aug. 13—The storm played havoc with the service in the Interborough subways late yester- day afternoon. Water flowed into the tunnel and covered the third rail at a dozen different points bringing trains to a standstill. Seven assengers were injured in a rush from a train stalled near the Hous- aton street station of the West Side subway, as smoke filled the cars from burning insulation set afire by a°short circuit. The actual tie-ups varied from ten minutes to nearly an hour and a half, but the cumulative effect of them was to disrupt hopelessl company's schedules, and p. gers were delayed anywhere one destinations. Most of the centered in the Interborough’s west side subway. The east side subway had comparatively little trouble, while the B. M. T. though bothered by water, managed to keep its trains going on all its subway lines, The only actual tie-up on the B. M. T. was at the Bontanical gar- dens, the station for Ebberts field, where the water overflowed the eastbound tracks. This part of the line is in an open cut and not a from to two hours in reaching their tunnel. there was of comparatively short duration. Break Windows to Get Out The trouble near the Houston street station was the most serious. A southbound express train, which had been feeling its way downtown for nearly an hour, came to a sud- den stop a hundred vards from the station. The ash from a short circuit and the cars began to fill with smoke. Some of .t already passengers, worried by the slow progress of the | train, became panicstricken. There was a rush to get out. Windows in three or four of the cars were broken and pasengers scrambled through them. Others forced open the doors by using the small ham- mer placed there for the purpose to break the glass protecting the emer- gency lever in each car, a pull on which opens the doors. One woman was crushed when she was caught in a jam of frightened passengers trying to get out of the emergency it at Morton street and became erical. hy DEATH AND DAMAGE GOMES WITH STORM (Continued from First Page) early. More than a fell during a- little r in the New and ‘the total officially by was . More half inch of rain more than an Haven district downfall recorded the weather bureau of an inch. than 200 telephone lines trouble | were out of commission for a time in Waterbury and a staff of men worked all night to repair the damage. Crops were damaged considera- bly in the Danbury area and the streets were flooded. All toll tele- phone lines’were out of commis- slon in Norwich and a number of wires were blown down. | { | | Trouble in Bridgeport Bridgeport, Conn., Aug. 13 () — The storm which broke over Bridgeport yesterday caused con- | siderable damage to . propesty and | much traffic congestion due to | floods at several points. Most of the suburban towns escaped dam- | age as they were not subjected to the real fury of the storm. A 400 pair cable of the telephone company was damaged by the storm. A 50 pair telephone cable in Stratford was rendered useless by the rain. Six hundred sub- scribers in tha territory covered by | Bridgeport exchange were without | service last night because of dam- age done by the storm. Fire in Norwalk Norwalk, Conn., Aug. 13 (® — A lightning bolt which struck a tlee in East Norwalk started a fire which spread to the barn of J. Wallace Marvin of Pine Hill ave- nue. The tree blazed up and before the fire could be put under con- trol it had spread to the barn. | The barn was totally destroyed. Marvin was unable to estimhte the damage. Rail Trafic. Hampered Philadelphia, Aug. 13 (P—One hour's delay of all through traffic | between New York and the west | § + announced by the Pennsyl- vania railroad early today, follow- |ing last night's storm | Railroad observers reported that |in minutes a rainfall equal to ohe-third of the total precipitation [for the year had descended. The | Hudson river tunnels at New York | were reported flooded, while tracks 11, 2, 3 and 4 at Sunnyside, N. J, | were covered with water. Traffic between New York and Philidelphia was normal this | morning. Newark, N. I, Aug. 13 (P—The second death in this state from yes- terd storm was reported today. America Gallo, aged 13, of Eliza- beth, was killed by lightning as he came from bathing at the Boy |Scout camp.at Silver Lake, near |Summit. Stanley Carpenter, aged was killed by lightning near htstown. Two' Cars Damaged By Unknown Driver Automobiles owned by John Mi- kuiskas of 27 Konstin ' Place, and William Jacobs of 574 West Matn street, were damaged about o'clock last night at the corner of Park and John streets, when a car driven by a man who is alleged to have continued without stopping, sideswiped Jacobs’ car and forced it into the gutter, where it struck the Mikulskas car, which was parked Jacobs told Officer Feeney he w driving north on John street at the rate of about 15 miles an hour and the other car was going east on Park street. Jacobs chased the oth- er car but was unable to overtake it. —] To oRCMIGH ~—1 - : ~WEEMICT P QPAHIG“Hffi GMCE>, WE ARE GONG- I FORP GPAIGH SPANISH S BATG N SN - PG O\ QICERIRNG N~ \ - WY NOT GPMIGH COIRTONE? = 5 £ Columbus, O,. enteen council of churches, [goal with the services of a Combined in the evangelism, are the nominations: Bretn ciples of Chri Tvangelical § od, Episcopal, Reformed | vation army. United United Presbyterian. sembly made up of {Ohio, banded together as the adequate church OHIO CHURCHES FORMING MERGER Move Is to Give Al of Them| T g Pastor Aug. 13 (P—Sev- Protestant denominations in 10 {for every inhabitant of the state. taffeta robes de styles that make nominational officials should be di- |half of Ohio’s eighty-eight counties. R ania ot Rt H. Ingersoll|the most, araclous.of - il syening Ohlo |rected toward biipging this about at | the council undertakes to investi- | “4n¢ [ T toilettes. s have as their /the earliest moment. B o Lo ibios e : Smend =1 Pink even slippers the feet the [co equipmenty| “In smeil communitfes of less |SFaME 0N PUbIiC dueslions of moral| seeking to resir Calogiora Si- |mode, choosing satin for after sun-' {dent pastor |than 1.000 population one well- (significances. et ey | ecEA N ram trating himselt res UenY PASOr | equipped Protestant church _ with [ There I8 an annual pastors' con- |~ adequate residential pastoral lead- [ention which was attended in 1026 | dcvon campalgty of [ership shall be considered sutficient |UY 600 ministers from twenty-twa [ "5 PAF BHCCIR following de-|to meet the meeds. If additional |denominations. In the summer, an | int P at 2 ren, Christian |workers 4 the pastor |2nnual school for town and country | Arctic avenues. | |Church of God, Congregational Dis- angelical church, Friends, dist Episcopal, Methodist Protestant, | Moravian, Presbyterian, Metho. Protestant in. U, 8. Sal- Brethren and Governed by Assembly The council is governed by an as- denominational | delegates. Its work is financed in part by denominational appropria- Jin the community are carried on to- | tory. Bacteria were found in tions, but more largely by gifts of |gether. Soochow creek intake, in the individual contributing members. Its | In a survey, the council found |beds and in fau program reflects the judgment of imany situations of over-churching the denominational delegates as to the activities in which the churches should cooperate. Concerning adequate church es- tablishment, the principles of comity eclare: jand under of effort, churches and of jin the {nearly them. “Every community with a popu- lation of 500 or more should have one competent, full-time, well-paid, resident pastor, and the efforts of both the tommunity and the de- |C neil is see are needed, = might better have ® assistants for |Pastors specialized department operation with Ohio e university. | is in w!;.u.wx'- 3 yl.x i e G 4 Sl that when he sought to drive Urge Merger or Federation f REomiEn hojsign o A Where over-churched conditions | <vT-“"1(‘l{ ‘\ (!;’““I{(‘/P'.I"K'll{v)vl:;vlw [ “y"‘m'} :wl_;‘?v]‘?,‘ »1;::““‘” exist, the principles urge that the Shanghai, Au )—The - | defend: i I s churches ,,z’nrgfl NSt ine plan is ing cause of the cholera epi- on the roadway and defied him to believed unworkable, that a feder- which has ‘ravaged the Chi-|pass over The church be established. In the |nese population in this vicinity for | further charged that the de federated church, the affiliations |some time, taking an estimated | then got an axe and was only with national and international de. nominations are maintained by in- hing, a wvhere they ere are 1,100 abandoned churches e, with representatives of County Counclls Advise To supplement its work, the state | ing to establish strong aty councils and is conducted total of 1,000 lives daily, h traced to the Chapel water works | by nei ldividuals but worship and :mn-.-nws’ns:wh supplies the Chinese terri- of duplication | donment of | were needed Adlantic City Man Sued passage of an auto, succeeded in injunction suit befor here in co-| The ownership of the s been | vented chopping up AUGUST SALE OF PIANOS Gulbransen Trade Mark GULBRANSEN - REGISTERING PIANO An instrument of exceptio of tone, superior construot: LOW nal value, noted for its quality ion and beauty of design. PRICED TERMS: $25.00 Down $ 3.00 Weekly VICTROLAS AN EXCEPTIONAL VICTROLA VALUE $69.50 Just a few left Come in for yours NOW TERMS: $2.00 Down $2.00 Weekly Henry Morans 1365 Main Street PIANOS VICTROLAS RADIO RADIO THE BIGGEST RADIO VALUE SPLITDORF Five-tube . $92.50 Complete. TERMS: $lSoOO Down $ 2.00 Weekly e Opposite Myrtle Street LIES IN FRONT OF AUTO for Noyel t Blocking of Disputed Passage. Lying among City, Aug. 13 — | a seven-foot roadway is one i way of preventing the it developed in ‘[ATE_ST STYLES IN | 1 ‘Rubber Jewels Also a Popular ‘ Fad Today Paris. Aug. 13 (#)--Rubber jewelry |1s the abstraction of Designed for its popularity wear at the has cz pear even on the Boulevards in form of multi-colored brace beach wear imitated pearls of rub- composition or wood, bracelets anklets chosen. beaches, ire Buttonho bouquets of ach rubber or wear with costumes are 11'“» in high favor } Too Heavy for Lobes Ear rings are a conspicuous part |of the Parisian woman’s scheme of selt decoration this summer, The long pendants w h disappeared for a time are back in more exaggerated form than ever. Long drops of chas- |ed e 1, e or coral, nearly |touching the shoulders aremuch seen the race courses where Pari's m. est women congregate, | Jet ear rings the size of brace- lets were worn recently at Auteuil. Their size and weight made suspen- in the ears impossible, The ornaments were fixed at the edge of 1 close fitting turban of black silk, the effe being almost identical ‘t\:" that of rings in the ears. |at Seeds in Millinery London — Agriculture is getting very much mixed up with millinery in London Melon seeds and pumpkin ppearing on both and Miss Eva seeds gowns and Moore is wear- gown in the play “Cock of the Roost" str which is trimmed with s of rice dyed in various bril- nt colors. Barrage of Pink York — With mid-summer e hot breezes across New fashionable roof gardens. pink has descended like a colorful |pal' in a heat-deadened ci Pink blooms like wide-petaled roses on the picture hats or tulle or at nod over hing silk frocks. wide skirted Pink makes crushed strawberry ices out of the demure pleated sport dresses that crowd in among more formal cos- tumes. Pink so pale as to be little more than the breath of the color, glimmers like a pearl in the rich & LADIES' EARRINGS the moment. | For | Iset, ana anen or stram for nooms days hot side-walks. 50-50 Sport Models Not all-of-a-piece, but half-and- half suits the feminine wearer of early fall's sport models. Where coat and skirt were once wed in color and cloth, they are now mated in tone and misfit in texture, The sport suits of today have brilliant hued skirts of flannel cut with a chic swash of side pleats or center front fla e; topped off with little straight cut sweater coats of |knit material in the same tone, | Sometimes matching jerseys with “crew” neck-line take the place- of blouses. VIOLENTLY is your daughter happily s, rather! Her husband is scared to death of her."—Tit-Bits, London. Bathing Girl With All Her Clothes On N . Here is a very unusual picture—a prize-winning bathing beauty ‘who has the good taste to pose for the photographer with all her clothes or. She's Miss Joyce Jean Hurd, 1 ar-old Michigan State collegh d, who will represent Lansing, Mich., at the Atlantic City contest. the assageway | charges | P | , ‘the | plaintiff | efendant Its merciless ! T doesn’t stun..doesn’t stupefy . . doesn’t put ’em to sleep. It kills them—every fly, % every mosquito, &7 every roach. ddgé Not 1 escapes when you use - BLACK FLAG—deadliest of in- sect-killers. They can’t escape—BrLAck Frac kills in the surest way ever discovered. Bugs breathe it and die. They strangle—every last one of them. Why? Because Brack FLaG contains a secret, vegetable ingre- dient which is absolutely fatal to bugs— but absolutely harmless to humans and animals. Brack FLAG is sudden death to every kind of bug that home is heir to. It kills every flea, bed-bug, ant, roach and moth that gets in. Keeps others from coming in. Rids a place of these pests. Give this master insect-killer a trial. Buy the form you like best—liquid or powder. At drug, grocery, hardware and department stores. Powder is 15¢ up. Powder Gun, 10c. And just read the low prices of the liquid shown below. Compare them, SEE HERE— SPrayersscsssasasiannens oiss 456 Black Flag Liquid, quart, only . 85¢ Black Flag Liquid, pint, only . . 45¢ Black Flag Liquid, }4 pint, only