The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1907, Page 3

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» bad an engagement to meet De Angel | who, as & member of the rowing club, THE EVENING WORLD, SOLMLL STRUCK MISSING YOUTH ANDGIL I Athlete. and Fifteen-Year-Old zvetheart M Storm MEY SURREPTITIOUSLY First Thought to Ha but Girl’s Par e Eloped. ents Have Given Up Hope. With the disappearance of Gutdo De ‘Angelis, the young ctvil engineer, and Miss Beatrice Penton, both of New Ro- chelle, who wv at xeon fn De An Kelin's small sa the Microbe, on post, BOAT FOUR-ALARM FIRE NACED BLOCK WAREHOUSES | 'Flames Start in Top Floors of * the De Groff Grocery blishment. |ALARM FROM OUTSIDE. nye2zs Trying to Flames Driven Out feat and Smoke, | Emy Fight by A tour: the ro by tarm fire, raging high above level of the surrounding builld- ings, burned off the top three stories of the veven-story wholesale grosery |houme of Lewis De Grott & Co., at Nos. tos bh etrnet fore the terrific sto; Yelaped that the couple were . sweet- hearts, and jt is by no means certain that their lives were lost Genaro De A . the missing eagi- neer’s leves his on’ and Miss Penton are He argues that his fon jn an athlete and one of the|omphasize the danger of a akyecraper mironges: swimmers on the Sound. He j conflagration, which ts feared by insur- believes if the boat cipsize? his son, | ance men and the Fire Department. The With hia ablitty to swim In almost any the Bort of sea, was ablé to »epport nat they were picked up, Sint, and On the other a. the xfri's father, Thomas B, Penton, as) insurarce broker, with oflces at Nb. M Union Square, believes his daughter und her admirer are lost and that thelr bodies Will be found in the Sound —Scores—of—yachtamen and other resi- | Gents of Mount Vernon and New Rochiellc have searched the waters from New Rochelle to Bridgeport trace of the couple without result. Objected to Sweetheart. Mr. Penton objected seriously young De Angells as a sultor for his daughter. the engineer's character, and he had @ good position with the Belmont Tun- nel Company, but the daughter was enly a child tn years, and the father ebjected to attentions of the serious © gort. For months young De Angelis has been devoted to the girl A few woeks ego Mr, Penton warned De. Angel: that his attentions must cease. De An- gelis did not heed the warning, and several weeks ago Penton had the youth haled before Justice Van Auken in New ) Rochelle Potlca~ Court; charging” nin 7 with annoying his daughter. De Angelis was released upon his! promise to annoy the girl no more. Mr. | + Penton thought after this the affair had been broken off. To-day it ix said the S sweethearts have been meeting cian-| destinely since. On Saturday Miss Beatrice got her mother's, permission to go bathing a Hudson “Park, near the New Rochelle Rowing Club, but tt {s believed that she ie Jooked upon as one of the best yachts- men in tho organization, probably the most expert swimmer in the club mem- Derahip, and one of the most, thorough | av ground athlvtes. Set Sail at Noon. Before boarding the little knockabout ) with his sweetheart De Angelis changed | the coat and shirt for a bathing sult ‘blouse. About hoon the young coupie set wall from the club pier, They were mot seen by members of the club after __ feet. ‘The Inst person to see the couple was Whe Keeper of the light off Execution Point. About § o'olosk, when the wind gathering and seas rolling high, the Hight keeper saw the Microbe about two - males off the New Rochelle ahore, scud- (Ming for land under full pail, which \peemed to have become entangled and ‘was threatening to tip the boat over under force of the wind. Mé that time De Angelis could bs seen _ptanding in the waist of the boat try- tng to out away the satl. game down in sheets, ‘Then the rain blotting out all —@ight of the boat and Ita “occupants _When_Mias Panton did not return to her home Saturday evening her te’ first thought was Mat she and Angelia had eloped. Thomas E, Penton, jr, to-day or- gentned an, automobile squad, to search Westchester shore. With Samuel Seasell oc Pathan: he Went ina launch | es far as Port Chester. Members of the New Rochelle Rowing Ciub went “out-tn-a teunoh-to-searoh;—The-keeper “Se the Brecution Pou light reported that he had seen a schooner not far from the Microbe when the storm broke, stving the hope that the vessel might have picked up the young people. WEATHER NEWS SENDS COTTON PRICES DOWN. Weather news and weak cables sent prices down in the cotton market to- day, commission houses being heavy sellers, The opening prices were: October, 10.% to 10,9; November, 11.06 bid; De- cember, 11,10 to 1.11; January, 11.14 to 4L16; February, 11.9 to 1 March, 12.35 to, 12.28; Aneih 1.6; May, 11.3 to 11,96; June, hong; July, 11.40 did. Poor Robinson ‘Crusoe! Had he been able to-use’ just one “Lost and Found": Ad. The World how quickly he would have been rescued from his precarious predicament on the desert island! for some | There was nothing against | and_running | sehee:—er—sork will Side Children Chief Mourners at Eaton's Coffin. BOYS IN East SAVED RIVER. Suffering from Injuries in Pre Rescue, Shamed tant W: vious Reluc aichers. They will be b: to-morrow morning where he tenement The coMn witl be a cheap for the insurance only came to $0. and there were a lot of debta to pay and there probably won't be many carriages following the undertaker's hearee across the bridge to the come- tery. But every kid in the neighbor: hood who can steal or beg off from march throug! plain one, | | MONDAY, SEPTEM ‘Poor Hero Who Sacrificed Life Honored by Playmates of Saved CHLOROFORM ON Lit to Now. $86 and 588 / ngion street, to-day. The soak- Jing rain of the night had thoroughly |dampened adjoining property, and this contributed to prevent the spread of the fam On a minor scale this fire served to building of De Groff-& Co. rising above the others in the vicinity in the nature of & chimney, acted as a fue from which sparks and blazing embers | were spread tn all directions. The fire was in the heart of the wholesale gro- cery district, and the work of the fire- | men in confining {t to the De Groft es tablishment wae firet-clame, The 0 employees of the De Groff jecneern had’ been at work oniy a few | minutes, when some one from the out- j side telephoned to the office that flames were shooting Unrough the windows on the top Moor, An alarm was! sounded, and the employees. trained by frequent fire Grills, grabbed axes and hose ines and started for the upper floors. Ordera a Retreat. Supt. George Dixon waa the first to j} reach the sixth floor, and be saw the ity of attemptng to fight the blaze fram the -tnside Ordering all the | ployees out, he hurried to the office and [instructed the clerks to put away the books d records and lock the safes. By this tlme the firat engine had ar | rived, and the foreman promptly turned jin a second alarm. | ‘This brought Deputy Chief Guerin, land he turned in, third alarm, whion |brought Deputy Chief Binns, who, In the absence of Chief Croker, was in | charge. Binns turned tn a fourth alarm, sent a call for an extra water tower and summoned the fireboats | George B. MoClellan, Abram 8. Hewitt and New Yorker, Stretching away on all sides were bis brick oulldings—many of them very old —packed with isfammable material. The warehouse of the James Butler Grocery Co, ls at No, 390 Washington Street. At Nos. 77 and 7¥ Beach s(reet. next to the De Groff warehouse, is the storage house of the Nashyille Distrip- uting Co, packed from cellar te root with whiskey, and right across Beach ‘Sireet from the fire ts an oll warehouse Driven Out of Danger. One water tower Wad stauloned in tront--of the -buliding on the Beach street aide and the other on the Wash- ington street aide. Policemen went through the block driving out the ware- house employees and the inhabitants of the tenements. Until the fireboats ar- rived the firemen were barely able to hold their own: with vhe blaze, which worked Ma way down to the second floor, The fifth and sixth floors were stored with cereal: ent breakfast foods, which burned | papen Firemen with hose were stationed on the roots of thé buildings surrounding the fire and tt was slmply a question of drowning it. This object was aocom- plished after two hours of hard work, The entire stock was ruined and the loss will probably reach $200,000. firemen attached to Hook and Two der Con-piny No, 1 had their noses roken, William Warner's nose wa. smashed by a box dropping on It. Hi was attended to by Dr. Banta, the de- bertment surgeon. and went to quarters of his company one of Paatntatnose broken | in stopp! rses of the tender of Engine which easayed to run away. ; Josoph O'Hara, driver of the tender Engine No. 6 while on his way to the fire, drove into an "L' pillar at Vesey street and East’ Broadway to avold running over a pusheart peddler Who tried to cross -the-atreet fn the path of the horses, O'Hara and a Gre- man’ named Schaeffer were painfully ker. who spent Sundi dorais aed. a ce, at Good funday 9 ral Chief Crok country pla: reached the fire about an hour and a half after the first alarm was turned in. He was told'of the blaze when he alighted from the train at Long Isiand City and made a awift rumicross town In his automobil EMBEZZLER OF $8,500 GETS SHORT SENTENCE. Intercession“for Phillips Results inj Fourteen Months’ Term in Reformatory. the embexeling No. 7, Edward F. Phillips, cashier of G, R. Salisbury & Co, | brokers, of No. 52 Broadway, was to- day sentenced to Elmira Reformatory fourteen montas. old and Hoboken for not less than Philips is twenty-six years lived at No, 314 Sixth street, In July, while he wan on a vacation, his books were »xamined’ and found, 85 uillty grand lar legree? on. Specific theft of iss. ” And stocks of pat |¢ crowded east side mirests as far as the ferry in the funeral processioa. For, as they are saying to-day, “Wuan't Mister Eaton go0d to all the kdda on thls block? And uldn't he git drowned Sat'day afternoon, pullin’ © Jawnny Schock’ and Gawge Maloney?" Baton was a clerk at the Post Office and-on-his pay-he kept a hard-working Uttle wife and seven children in clean, decent poverty in the flat next the root, Saturday rheumatism bothered him a lot, wo that he got a lay off.. In the afternoon he went down to Inaf on tho Bixth street pler and smoke his pipe. Dove When Others Halted. He was sitting on a string piece “gassing” with three or four other men when the “Two Pals," John shock, eteven years off, of No, 25 Lewis street, and George Maloney, ten -6f No: 4 Kast Ninth street, who were paddling near the wharf, ot into the strength of the tide. The ¢urrent makes in toward shore these and runs very ‘pard. It caught the youngsters and qarried thom out Into deep, awift water. They com ld swim a little, but not enough to make head- way back to the plier. Eaton was the onty man ‘who really id anything. The others ran around. Jooking for a boat where there were no,boate, Eaton piled in, clothes, rheu- matism and all, without waiting to kick his ghoes off or shed bis waistcoat. He reached Schock first. He got his left | arm under the exhausted boy and, bidding him kee quiet. he struck ouc for litte Maloney and gripped him by the hair. Nobody-knows how -he-dit-ttbut thus hampered with the almost dead weight of two helpless boys, the post-office clerk got back an inch at a aime un- er the edge of the plor There were | plenty of hands to stretch down and Graw up the limp youngsters. Evary- body set te work to revive them. Then. of course, somebody raised a cheer for Eaton. Maybe the sound of the cheer Was the last thing Eaton heard When they looked to ace where he was he was just sinking. Forgotten in the excitement he had huns to the allme-covered piling for a minute or two. Then hia strength gave out. Ho Just let go and went down. Pulled Dead Hero Out. Two maz off with their conte and polued, ready to jump for when he should come up again. In minute his bead showed s0 close In that they could reach him with a boa hookThe hook caught fy his — coll and they @vqw hin oul. He had only been under a fow seconds, but he was r talked to-day [ing Work reporter. She wore her new mourning sown of skimpy, slazy black. She wasn't demonstrative in her grief Bhe aat by the pine coffin, with her toll-twisted fingers folded in her lap On he lid of the coffin were two little clusters of flowers, clumsily ted to- gether, ngome of the chtidren brought them,’ she afd, spcaking ‘of the flowers, the children around the neighborhood liked my husband, -He-was very tom of them: —Having—seven—of—his—owr didn’t seem to. satisty him. He was down in the strect half tie (me of an evening talking to the boys and xirls. “Then heki been lucky about saving them, too, He was a .food swimmer And several times he pulsed some of them out Only last” month re the river, he saved "Nettie StraGs, the little girl j that Hveeth-the house next-door,..frem. being run oyer by a truck. He got his shoulder hurt, but Nettle, she wasn't touched. Widow Faces Hard Triale. “Ho didn't drink or waste his money, William didn't, but it took all he made to take care of us properiy. You see, most of the ohildren are young. My oldest is @ daughter—she's eighteen. All the othera ere boys. The two boys are at work, and if my daughter gers to the bone trying to hold the fam. lly together, want me to do, “He left $500 in insurance, but there Were some debts, and then there's the |funoral. 1 guess [won't have much left after the funeral. The other clerks at the Post-Office have sent word they are goin ttle, boys that William saved came op te a here to-day helt papas, ro going Li Hecripuion at the Jefferson i nue. je ave- “Tt won't be much, +I guess, because rich people don't Hye down hera, but I'l be glad to take It. I don't’ feet like It will be charity, because William gave his own life for others and T feel Ike others have a right to help me tart a 8 ub, aroun Judge Crain, who sentenced him, re- celyed many letters urging clemency. One of tho letters was from Mrs. Bteyens, of Castle Stevens, Hoboken, who became interested case, ——es GEN. CETI. CLAY DIES ASHINGTON, Bept, 2Gen. Cecil Clay, general qgent of the Department oF Sustioe, dled here. euddenty to-day, in He had been weeks, , Gen,, Clay was. alxty-five yeara old and a native of Philadelphia. He war pea ali rifle shot, a member of Peni medic chtison notice oof Weaning * sania, poor health for dome | nell, now. But I'm not asking for anything. We'll get along.” Coming away, the reporter heant In in Phillips's [tho street of the plan of tho kiddies to march In the funeral procession. They think Ht will be what would want them to do, ————————__ “Mister Eaton’? SUDDENLY IN WASHINGTON BIG FIRE CRIPPLES ERIE RA‘LROAD. HORNELL, N. Y., Sept. 21—The coal pockets of the Erle Railroad at Hor- headquarters of the Susquehanna division, and 5,000 tons of coal were de- itroyed by fire last hight, causing lose of $30,000, ‘All wiréa to. the Bast wore burned : 9 and the étation ‘The heat arene u \ tracks and the hero + a} gone. The first his wife knew of jt was when they brought him up the} narrow astepa to her, on a@ stretcher, to an Even-| AN} oldest | gets a place I'm going to work my fin- | VLieht, thirty and with | four others, 1 to row the | makeshitt #% ere in “the snow: | } rare They rowed away, leaving the It's what Willlam would |. to Tajee some money and the | Rurgiars chlorofermed William rad, bbe mtfe ctr four ch: | early tempt to rob the revival scared off the thieves, who-wote BER 238, 1907. BURGLARS USE ENTIRE FAMILY Loot in Fashionable Home Section and Escape in Stolen Rig. Sherrad home ¢ n Heights, Ros- lyn, L. f The inhalation forced upon Mr. Sherrad was not strong enough to ceep him unconscious for long, and hi corse anu carriage in making their Sherrad lvea in the heart of the Roslyn colony and ta a hbor of Clarence Mackay, There ve been numerous burglaries in that ft of Long Island of late, but In the Sherrad case the firat use of chloro- ne STEUNENBERG IN PLOT WITH BORA IS CHARGE AMADE It is wise economy to buy a \ good piano, and in the WATERS you not only get a | sees piano, but good value for your investment. The WATERS appeals to all i \ihoae who desire a superlatively |}| fine piano, but do not want’ to | pay a fancy price, = Governor, for Whose Murder Senator Prosecuted Haywood, Is Named Frauds. in HOISE. Idaho, Sept. 2-In best | ning the work. hare to-day of jing @ jury to try United Siatey Sen- ator William E. Borah, charged with |conmpiracy to defraud the Government of valuable timber lands, District- Attorney Norman M. Ruack annour +4hat former Governor Frank Sisunen- berg was one of the men indicted with Senator Borah for conspiracy. Steunon- berg is represented tn the indictment as John Doe. Ex-Gov, Steunenderg was murdered by Harry /Orchard, now in Jall here, who confeaseg the crime, but claimed that he acted in @ conapirac: ded ! rm was made, The thieves are well When Tennyson Steamsht survivors Prussia, sae Heveroxerexerereni UNE SHOWSTORM: ONLY SEVEN LIVE: Survivors of Old Bark Tell Sea Story Full os Captain Dies After Wreck. ‘like home on your return, r return, Jown in the wreck 4 live on seal | others to walt for t All food had gone Tana y Were 0 meat, wiloh th red by Killing | eoals with their Byentually they remained and ity to chew remajnder ne rest of that ed in thele extren the seals seal skin during ¢ three weeks wit y was KWAY of the Observer's Death a Mystery. ed myn ‘As Ume wore on the shipwreel int id rowed a ean looking fo Sie TUSSI): signs of resciing par sailors, a F yman t lp on a moun- a Norwegian, to scan the of Horrors, i rs off and in the South American coaster | sich a terril mndition that he dled | a! tly afterward Tenders &—Holt men Power Away ren > rived Whaloboat at the end of i a hey brought provisions he brought six survivors ae | Island af the—toat 7 wrecked off Cap Fi ware! pike Oray ti and | here are arpentor~ do Beamen EE. Rainey, Ge s ‘ ed with the § Herman Haynes “and He pne(errnd te tine cabin-boy Tana Naha Oe ee anes tae The story they hoard the Tennyson ern Robinson Crusoes —_—_—»___-- sia, acconting to the wily wat owned by tio Estate of Willan (USED WHIP, SAVING GIRL | Renton, was built at Math, Me, in| FROM FOUR ASSAILANTS. 1868, ind been sxulling from the | Sh aes re ofS San rh deaieles UMPSreMTNDOLAIETAGT Seeing | were oak and her blank ici struggling In the clutches of four ron and “copper taste to-tay,— Nathaniet—Mer>+} eaten and slorvi-irTed W from -} from his buxey and ran a Fra 1 Wa Te On The r nid, Hie took with him a hea soutivern coasiof South America, Aiwa ne: used.vit we A winter squall, hammering the ed moon pat phe x bark hant er on the rocks of Mr. Mosrion is Fitnders Bay. Island, ¢ Horn. |ing the construction of on June 19. Roslyn and Port War + bromd ond czas en dlaoumyf Tn a blinding Cape !florn snowstorm Washington (o Mincola when the windjammers took the boats phe girl stru with the men, “While the bark waa j < twee teyihe to orey ter oft tre rend 4 on the rocks, Able Soa ond inte woods. ‘Thy ran, regiatlnix and Sahabatta, the Japanese cook, wore Sao ie Beent| drowned in the wreck and Capt tore Kirl said her pame was Marion master of the bark, was so xn, en youts of age and the | Injured and exposed in the icy wntora| cuughler of a farmer. Mr. Mersin Mf) and on the bleak sitore that he died on | fered ta TM a whe did not chink the following day. They buried Mim tp ‘s would attack her again and the anow and rocks of South America’s was not afraa! to go home Staten Island, | ue moraine valatey il The mei 1 by Mate Hunter, bullt Sheriff Gildersleeve a skiff, Hunter knew of an observa- t to learn the identity | tory,, known as New Year's Island! \y ty <r TH AHS ACUTE | without your accustomed White Rose Ceylon Tea | trom | They | home | hurled lot an extra session” of {trols thin Stage, by Wiliam D. Haywood and others of ecquainted—wit the sountry— Koalyn and know just how to but they have scant knowledge of the| way to hitch a horse. Mr. Wherrad woke up at 3 o'clock thin moming weak and {ll He strug- ied out of bed and to a window, which had been open when he wont to sleep. | The thteyes hal closed It. the sash hd breathed the fresh alr until ’his strain wus clear and then he shouted at’ the top of his yolce. Willlam Nostrand, who was driving by, heard him and ran up to the house, finding the front door wide open. Mr, Sherrad and Mr. Nostrand lt up the house and found Mra. Sherrad and the four children unconscious, There was a strong odor of chloroform in all the sleeping room: yerware had trendy shouts of burglars. While Pushing up to Mr removal, when Sherrad alarmed the Mr. Sherrad was reviving his wife and children Mr. Nostrand aroused the neighbors and organized a hunt, Fearing this, the thieves broke Into the barn of Edwird Cushing, about a mile the Collins place, and stole a horse and part of a set of harney could not Ket into the carnage s) they went on to te country Edward P, Cushing, a imti- Honaire, leadirig the horne. They atole a carriage from the Cushing barn, but house, i an awful mess_of hitching the! horse to it, having overlooked a collar rohim. “After driving about a mil they deserted the stolah horse and car- riage and took to the woods, $$ {KNOCKED FROM SEAT _ OF WAGON AND KILLED. Driver’s Skull Fractured When Lenox Avenue Car Ran Into His Vehicle. E, Wood, thirty-seven No. 42 Kant One Hundred ‘Thirty-neventh —rtrect, was off the driver's’ seat of an wagon which had been struck by a Lenox avenue car at One Hundred Charter old. of and 4 Thirty-sixth street crossing this ternoon. He sustained fractured ed in Harlem Hospital later, per, Frank W . of No, 118 Bast One Hundred and Thirty-wixtl street, was hurt, but-not serlously, The motorman of “th Stephen | lreraion, of No, 24 East. Porey-ntth | Street, Wax arrested, Wlinexses said th car Was running at the rate of twenty miles an hour. —_———_ ALABAMA WANTS TO KNOW. MONTGOMERY, Ala, Sept. 21.—Gov. |Comer has xed Nov. 7 as opening day {slature e purpore is to determine who con- the people or the rail= OF: Toads.” aatd the Gover Downstairs all the ail- | packed and was al! the| yearn} the Alabarna >? ]Uie Western Federation of Miners. At the recent trial of Haywood for the murder Senator Borat was bitter in his | prosecution of the miner. The case wax called to-day before Judge Edward White in the United | States District Court. The prominence | of Senator Borah in the politics of the | Sute,/ his personal popularity—in—this+ (hs ome) town, the leading part he | took’ in the prosecution of Haywood, j and the fact that more than one hun- dred well-known residents of South Idaho were alleged to be involved with him in the so-called conspiracy, com- bined to attract an Interest in the pro- | | Send postal for catalogue, | with reduced prices and terms on the WATERS 3-YEAR SYSTEM, giving you three years’ time on, a piano without interest. Horace Waters & Co, Three Stores: 134 Fifth Av., near 18th St. | | dings against him nearly equal to * Diaceouisimeriarkede thea nrst pote ths 127 W. 42d St., near Bway. Western Federation of Miners’ trial |] Harlem Branch (Open Evenings), [Biers 254 W. 125th St., nr. 8th A ‘The Cireuft Court was crowded to |} = overflowing when Judge White took the | jbeneh: The array of counsel on either of Detroit } H Gulinty, An a result of (hia alleged cone spi tC fe chatged that 108 residents | plmolse took out Umber claims und Swore in doing so that t ating srere Wh ctiieie own. interenia whereas thewe atatements are held to have been Pheen a ese inrolalpeditharamrrenants | had been entered ttn “Read Tt! Read It! i a ihe lll DR | side was Imposing. ©The Government, | whose representatives here freely pre- dict a hearing of 4 sensational interest, has practically taken the case out of the hands of District-Altorney — Ruick, | whom charges. of Improper co fore the Grand Jury have a Mled, and assigned the rntter to spe: a | attorneys trai n_ismber land law | ¢¢ é cS oo and—fresh- from successful’ proccutions § thi Pi eater warn pater ‘Save the Pieces etter et a We can duplicate any broken lens i 8. Ry Rush, of Omaha, 1 Gal avsisiants to the Attorney-General |tithout the original prescription, of the United States There “also was Bring the pieces to our nearest store ~ preaont to-day Timothy: dirk. the and learn from experience the qwicls nites fates isirict-Attorney’ Al Sree Cheyenne, who was seni to Boise to Mess, the accuracy and the economy. assist the Special Crane Jury now In | of our service, bor In its Investigation of the Gharges against District-Atiorney Ruick.| Factory on che Premises. Benatar, Bea. Attorneys include | Ehrich KS: Tar jawiey, senior Counael Tor ers | A. Frazer, 8. L. Lipton and Cart Pain ESTABLISHED | ali local attorneys, and-C.-F, Bundy Nearly 50 Yenra, | Eau Claire, Wis. The latter also rep- | 223 Sith/Ave., Below 15th St. resents the Interests of the Barber Lum-| ~ 380 Sixth Ave., Below 224 St, ber Ponipere the corporation that | 1274 Bi di aaid to have’ profited by the alleged} roadway, Be'ow 334 St. | frauds and sone of whose officers 217 Bway, Aster House Block. been indicted, 101 Nassau St, Near Asm ‘The indictment against Senator Borah | St, Near Asm St alleges that he, with twelve others | named as co-defendant conspire to defraud the! Government of many’ thou: H Y. idx of ores of Umber land in Boise} Count | ave ou SUPERFLUOUS hair is a cause of heart-burning to many women, and with good reason, for nothi be more unsightly, The Wi method eradicates it painlessly and per: manently, Call or write. Wi THE Joka He INSTITON = Dept. D, 22 We 23d St, New York York. This thrilling romance begins in) Fhe-Evening World Sat, Sept, 28, ' WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS: This characteristic of Coox’s Linoleum is in- stantly noticeabl able to the tread. Linoleum that is harsh— and_ brittle isn’t. serviceable, and cracks, and ‘To be sure you proved flexible for this name the back— Q@oks Lanoleam Therei pression If. your dealer has Trenton Oil Cloth & Linoleum Co., Trenton, New Jersey ' i Mole ed in one solid piece. entire surface. ; That’s why its sanitary. e: It is delightfully comfort- Tt chips soon looks unsightly. are getting an im- lincleum__look stamped on Cook’ Printed Linoleum is the economical house- wife’s friend. Itis printed extradeep sothatthe design won’t soon wear off and look unsightly. It combines == pliability with its stoutness, and won’t crack or chip when laid on uneven flodrs. Don’t ..simply ~ ask - for Cook's,’ but take no lin- oleum that isn’t so marked. Cook’s Inlaid Linoleum cant come ‘apart at the edges of the de- n_ because~it is isn’t a joint or de- throughout _ its n’t Cook’s Linoleum, write us for names of dealers who have

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