The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1911, Page 3

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THE £E VENING WORLD. THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1911. hl Ai - slice is bi FIVE T Mf h “ 39 t F | | TRAIN WRECK INJURED Y., and Mra, Mary Schloske, Phitadel § phia, | j ennisfor Jags at farm Cure ARE ALL DOING WELL.|"secet. corse 1. torers of the United » | States Army, one of the injured, yo : ~ leave At, Vincent's Hospital to-day for . [Bridgeport Hospitals Glve Good (38% {hateeni "tn funeral. of ale ate KY ano ew ine riate Oar | Reports of Victims of the —|and woven months’ old dauginter May, ¥ | ‘ ‘ 5 who wera killed In the wreck. | Federal Express Crash, | ‘The wor’ of clearing away the wreok+ | —e steht a BRIDGEPORT, Conn, July 12—Re- |AS0 of the exprens went forward today: \Light Exercise and Good W, H r CALLED ROBBERY P| NI ON LAWN vorte trom the hospitals indioated to heluw w report that wnotier bony” ment | Food Will Reform Most| Woman Head of Salvation Army, EVAL Inver ed ts. the Re fpr aoe Ue ae ee ’, * 5 , by . however, nothing developed to confirm o: ———.——_ Ne t | Drink Victimsand City; Victim of Overwork and Weather ew York, New Haven and Harttord | gig a i Then a Lone Woman, With| Will Save Money, Says . ‘i ; allroad here early Tuesday morning | abonion . @ Woman, Wit Cae ’ President Mitchel Says It In-|Also Has Driver Arrested Be- *r showing improvement and wntie/ HEAD OF JERSEY SCHOOLS. ‘ 2 Ne ir. Dorning. | ; several are classed as seriously !-"red, acinus Sniffs of Scorn, Drives volves a Guarantee of cause Horse Is Wobbly | 828 ts regarded as critical TRENTON, N. J. July Tt was an- Them Back H | At Bt. Vincent's Hospital tho sertously ‘ay that Gov, Wilson had f ac f ~ ’ * injured a y, e 1 ., " em Back Home. True, He Asserts, That | Watered Stock. in the Knees. fb loge peat Ae blanc ein vin N, Kendall of Seales - r J Ne i} Mise wertha Monro sommissioner of Ed~- | Wives Drive Many Men \vashington; Mie, Mary MoCann, Phi ail {a now Supertn- SHE PAYS A FIN > * . | Adelphia, and Mrs. Mary Walker, Wash. | tendent of Schools of Indianapolls. oS INE OF $2.' to Drink by Nagging—| INT.'SHE’S FROM ENGLAND, {2ston. At the Bridgeport H The position to which he is appointed * | : * ided at| | i 24 a4 "| perlous cases are: Jose was created hy: the recent Legislature | oe This Will Be Avoided at | | Nee Maven; Stra, Soran Clare. © The term ta tor Ave yeara and the gal, © o foi, y ion. | " * ' 2 ington; Loretta MeCroakan, Philade! Kendall are friends and the @p- tt ice Made Low Because the) Municipal Institution Head of Company Uses Big) Now Lives in Flatbush, and Is pnia; Mrs Lois Hartman, Newfteld, N.\peintment Is personal, * om luecoats i TK 4 lari i | oes: ts Had Free Milk | 5, srarguerite Mooers Marsball. | “D” in Declaring Against a Good Press Agent for bea oO ii At last the much talked of Board of | ver Night. : - ight Inedriety has come into existence, Just | Further Delay. Herself. * ereated hy Mayor Gaynor, its members ie yo Me. Virginia Lang of Wortman ave-|!n¢lude Dr, John Dorning, Dr, William ae ‘ j 1 nue and Berriman street, East New| Browning, the Rev. William Morrison, “This proposition of the Interborough| Now let those drivers in Brooktyn | w «-“York, drove thirteen nervous cows out the Very Rev. John J. Hughes, Thomas *apid Transit Company,” said President | and Flatbush who are impolite to their 18+ cof the stable of the Miller avenue police | J: Colton, president of the board, and | Mitchel of ths Board of Aldermen to-day | horaes beware! A new Jeanne d'Arc {station at noon to-day. With sniffs of the Commisstoners of Charittes and Cor- preening i Lt ad ne bi the en has thrown her banner to the breeze © \scorn over her shoulder she trotted | rection. According to the law this board as, "a WoLkIne rire here Yeas' Batl- | to-day and declared a crusade for the straight home to her backyard pasture, | will attempt to regulate the city ante Hight Bea Atal emancipation of suffering and down- J 1 Cl Ss. I The police watched her with wonder and | “drunks” ty treating them as invallde | watered tech of tho tarenitet,’ ara trodden harsefesh uly Clearance Sales { envy. rather than as criminals. It 1s expected th mie i. hes iS ak She is Miss Ethel D ; r | mit They want to use the Miss hel Dunn, recently a fe two cavalry cops and three biue- that a farm home will take the place ity as an umbrella to protect them|from “dear old England, where they Suits, Dresses, Coats and roated infantrymen had worked all yes-| of “the Island,” from the water in their own. corpora-|@on't do auch terrible things to poor A fancit potas tits tn wire case: artes "es |Senees can gS UN was i Fere hs atin Oe SOA | ae Seal Gath Sees ase | bie nic hats ‘ows unde! est. A Dorning, one of the members of tho this new proposition going through the 182 Kast Tenth street, Flatbush. Miss | . — 2 { » on the fact that there was free fresh board and phystclan-in-chief at Bt Hoard of Estimate." Dunn confesses that twenty summers | TOILES MOR OT BEE aD webaueied aaeaue 321 mill for alt the atitier avenue poticenen | Francis's Hospital, Brook avenue and | After Col. Tiinotay S. Willams, Prest- {have passed over her golden tresses sd RQUISETTES AND LINGERIE DRESS: a cee their friends last night and i oak Hundred and Forty-second street, of the B. R. T. Company came out | And more than that, {9 an actress, At Ab ly Re 1 Pri Festus could not bik out tuelindlenl: | DF. Horning Has handied many cases ot fA conference +'th Borough Preaident [At Present “at itberty."" To reporters out |, Regular Prices. En datll h eee ties servants ee ret a a has decided views as to McAneny, he was asked if he was about! Who greeted her in the Flatbush toe getting them to jail. | thetr ment to withdraw the B. R. T. offer, as re-|Court today she averred pon my POLICE GET REPORTS ABOUT) I think that the city will be accom. on the ground that the Brooklyn | honor as an Englishwoman,” that she | 1,000 Summer Dresses, $10.50 to $48.00 ieee ints were received at the ata. municipal farm for the cure of chrante | Cwangelical engax ts during the last he ain Bo! Tt was even hot. |? rae by the city for the Interborough mee Te eine re | r t 1 yesterday that ferocious and | victims of ine ; vlheclneeg |feW days, and even taking on additional] ter, if possit there, and she had | Compan, i 7 it may, she saw Arthur | 5 . marauding cows were devastating the |v! BF yaar wiebriety," he declared. | meetings, Commander Eva Booth of the|several fainting spells while in that| “Nothing to say yet on that subse | Shell of No. 510 Myrtle avenue driving 500 Linen Suits, $8.75 to $22.50 / public peace on Wortman avenue. First | oobi, We have been going at this | gaivation Army is to-day under the care| city . janswered Col, Williams. “President Me-| @ horse past her house to-day, The Former Prices, $15.00 to $45.00 f \ one man and then others were sent to Bee om the wrong end. Aman is|q¢ ‘ner physician suffering from heat| Much to her regret, Miss Booth had|Ateny asked me to come to see him to! horse, whe sald, looked longingly at epeated bulletins of exasperation | tittadete LRM Sot iquors. He|" see subordinate officers at the Army|the Christian Endeavor Convention in| 4elays will make possible most any-| Wanted to lean against something an ® * were received. at the atation. to. the | MM¥ N° MoFe vice in him than the habit lrraciquartors in Weal Fourteenth etreet| atianite City. Ter. phssictan wuld. to UMN Feats ut Shell kept right on diving 700 Linen Auto and Travelling effect that the cows would not go home. | Rely © ts simply out physi- | say ghe was pretty well tired out when|day that she would have to rest quietly Are y nz to let the matterrest | him, Miss Dunn ran out, commanded « Because the would-be herders did not legac tna aieice h perreraed te “a |the hot weati but insisted on some time, but he does not think | until the Board of Estimate Is ready to | LED . ibe ie ng the horse Dust Coats, $2.85 to $7.50 se "new to whom the animals belonged) lath A stead of | g right along with her progr: r condition us. | act, or are you going to stand pat?” | right In on her lawn. | * . a « RP Ay ‘could dot he Ariven hoste, buniahing him ML ECs IRE, Serene ose low abana LANG SHELL GAVE RHE HORSE AI FORMER PRICES, $5.00 TO $15.00. F “Then run ‘em in,” sald the Meuten- OPER CARE WILL REFORM, | “Not by a damn sight!” whs the em- TREAT. | ant at the desk, securely comfortable MOST VICTIMS. tle answer | : | “ “ i i | 7 b nto obedience, un- | / behind a large palm leaf fan and the “Proper medicinal tr | Then you think there should be im- | in 5 . . A authority of his job. ‘reform’ by far the giceterctegeh 4 | | mediate action” hitehed the horse-and led him to where | 7,000 Lingerie Waists, It was six hours later when the cow- ber of drunkards. | Yes; and It is scandalous that action | the grass was it and thickest NMAtig: SxdeAI(Won, Sacto tare tay He ould We delayed in this matter, The |The jaded hore had the foasa of ts $2.00, $2.45, $3.85, $4.75 * chatr raising tales of the way cows had| things, heredity, ineumMcient nour | Whole subway proposition should be act: | life then and there, and while he fed, : », ‘ngurged into tenement hallways and| ishment or unhappy environment, | ed on at on public is getting) Miss Dunn kept on talking to Shell. | $5.85, $8.75, $9.50, $12.50 up atairs and bad resisted arrest with| ‘Put the man in pleasant surround: eeee Beet ela elay Interborough | Meanwhile, her maid had telephoned to | FORMER PRICES, $3.80 TO $27.50 horne and hoofs. Bt: the final word | ings, give him plenty of good food, re- has rejected tts allotment of the new | the Humane Society, and just as Shell | of humiliation was pronounced upon | awaken his will power and self respece subways. ‘Tell me any good reason Why | wae beginning to Got wobbly from the r 4 1 . . o 4 ry « Ast Ala mee me = oan + —— oe ‘them when they were commanded to mk: their prisoners. «0% @uch comfort the proceeds, Mrs. Lang appeared at the stition at ‘micaight. Her cows, thirteen of them ha@ been gtolen she sald and if th : Police word only find the thief she wouldn't ask fo. any court proceedings; she would attend to his case herself. ‘The idea,” she exclaimed, “of any- body being heartle's -nd unscrupulous enough to lure awry those trustful, innocent playful creatures.” THEIR ROARS OF WRATH TURN- ED TO MOOS OF LOVE. ‘The lieutenant took her right out to the stable and showed her the herd— their gentle spirits all turned to mutiny orting up and down the corridor of the building. Their roars of wrath and outrage turned to loving moos of love But they did and they could out of when they recognized their mistress. » But she could not get them out. bes § you madam,” sald the courte- yas 1. centant, “how do you bail out aco M vate Naumer, when he heard * y in the New Jersey Avenue ‘our: to-day, afd the whole police force East*New York had enjoyed vee ilk last night. He therefore de- ided that a $2 fine was a sufficient unis: t for Mrs, Lang for having left the back gate open. Armed with a long lashed whip, the Lady of the Cows walked to the stable, snapped it commandingly and all thirteen of her charges trotted meekly in single file back to Wortman avenue and Berriman street. sccm rec HER CHOICE. (From the Warrenton (Mo.) Banner.) A fashionably dressed young lady en- tered the postoffice a few days ago, hesitated a moment, and stepped up to the stamp window. The stamp clerk looked up expectantly and she asked: “Do you sell stamps here?" The clerk politely answered: “Yes.” “I would like to get some, please,” was the un- usual request. The clerk dazedly handed out @ large shect of the 2-cent variety, which the young woman carefully ex- amined. Polnting to one near the centre T will take this one, please.”” The Greatest “‘Help Wanted”? Medium on the Face of the Earth 7,981 Positions for men, women, boys and girls were indi- vidually advertised in the “Help Wanted” columns last week of The World More than double the 3,540 published in all’ the six other New York morn- ing and Sunday newspapers combined. Do you realize and take advantage of the truly wonderful opportunities World Ads. afford em- ployers and workers alike? and you will have reformed him." “But, in detail, what treatment do you advise?” I asked. “Take the drunkard away from his immediate surroundings,” replied the doctor. “I think myself that the best location for an inebriates’ home vould be on a@ large island a hundred miies fram the city. “Feed him light but nourishing food. Beef and indeed most meats should be avoided altogether and fowl fish substituted. Cereals make a food of the highest importance, and there should be plenty of fruit and vegetables. He should not be allowed many sweets. He should be given milk and butter- milk to drink, no tea or coffee, Of course ‘n some extreme cases it Is necessary at first to make a@ liquor al- lowance on a gradually diminishing scale, as with morphia victims, "The patient should sleep at least seven or eight hours a night on a com- fortable bed In a 1 e, alry room. He Should bathe at least once a day .in or cold water, as best sults the In- dual “He should be given plenty of exer- cise In the open air, and tt had better be exercise with a purpose other than that of restoring him to health, Such purely mechanical work as calisthenics should be avoided. A game of tennis, @ brisk tramp or agricultural work is Infinitely better. That 1s why a farm would be an {deal place for the in- ebriate, “Binally, he must be surrounded by Qn atmosphere o cheerfulness and trust, He must feel that he ts believed tn and respected. “He can only rocover faith in himself by feeling that other peo- ple have faith in him, And he can rmanently reform without ining hi That is why a drunk often has the worst possible effect on him. Sho naga, and keeps the consequences of his sin forever fresh before his ey: For that matter, it is literally true that a great many men are driven to drink by thetr wiv GETS CRAVING FOR BITE OF FREE LUNCH. at “A woman pro’ n officer remarked Jon that fact quit ently. ‘The un- skilled housewife who cannot afford a | servant serves tardy, scanty, til-cooked meals, Her husband goes to work h gry and half nourished, and what mor natural than that he should stop at the corner saloon for a glass of beer and a bite of free lune “Other men are indirectly driven to the use of intoxicants by too much work and worry. ‘The overtaxed body demands a stimulus, the overwrought brain a passage of oblivion me of our best and finest types have fallen in this way.” “Do you think men should totalers?” I inquired, be tee | ‘oman should come to depend on | the dally drink,” declared Dr. Dorning, “ care whether {t's the French: }man with his wine, the German with his beer or the Amertean with his cocke | tall. In eny he takes It out of | himself, and ninety-eight out of a hune dred are tie worse for it, As for the other two, the sons, at least, are apt to | suffer for thelr ta indulgence, “But leaving for the moment the ben- efit of (ie Individual out of the ques tion, a municipal farm in value to the ¢ 1 do not see why it [cannot be mm lf-supporting neurly so, the work ,done by th tients pay running expen 1 the elt 1 the gr o nding n nd ntain famil 4 ) 1 tles, during the r per f ine carceration. And a term of only two weeks In thi fem: | ebriates. farm hospital will cure for of the so-called ehronig in- ’ | Bra f tie McAneny report | unceasing flow of Miss Dunn's t con- | . WOMAN 5 FINERY RIPPER BILL AXE should not be carried forward and co | vergation, an officer happened along and 1,000 Linen Skirts. Four New Models. race prenaree | arrested him. Pure Irish Linen. 1 ¢ iio puted seal 8. R. T. PICKED UP WHAT INTER-| “Whew!—tut I'm glad you came!" Made in our own workrooms.... i 5.85 y | BOROUGH THREW DOWN. exclaimed Shell to the officer, REAL VALUE, $12.50. t aa S| 4 tits Ke K iat : y ken before Magistrate H nnocence in Harlem) Writs Keep All Brooklyn Re-| Under the McAneny report in the} Shell was tal Protests Innoce! P y event of the dropping out of either | O'Connor, newest and youngest of Po- t F ath 5 ic By C f company, the rejected ro . Magistrates, who waxed eloquent 1 Court Till Detective Rec- Publicans Except Louis M. | so"virerca th ane coher Coneunye tri? [an approving las ‘Dunn's course, 222426 John Forsythe West 34th St : papain Ol 5 condition of the B. I. T. acceptance of | “Here Is an example for the women ognizes Her. Swazey in C!d Jobs. {ts allotment of forty-one odd miles of | who pamper poodle pups and waste new Hnes was tts agreement to operate | thelr time in bridge whist and the like such of the Interborough allotment | ‘This 1s work for women—the protec- j When Vera Cooper, who !s nineteen | Brooklyn Republicans were up before] routes as the city might offer the|tion of the poor, dumb beasts,’ and 1 h d B t ‘a i years old and pret was brought be- | breakfast to-day armed h numerous | Brooklyn company. Col. Williams, hav-|so on and #0 on sald the Magistrate. ea t an eau Vv Vice fore Magistrate Appleton in Harlem | writs designed to halt the general cast-| Ing agreed to onernte twenty-seven | eo “SHE MAKES COMPLAINT BY MRS, MAE MARTYN ; Court to-day she tearfully protested | ing out of Old G nen trom the| Miles of su 8 rejected by the In- | AGAINST BOSS, TOO ae MH that she was not guilty of the base in- | Soft Derths and fancy salaries they have |erborough, naturally wants his contract | ea : ‘ | Gertrede: To beautity the thros, Get ‘an Hl ther by Mrs, | eloyed in ‘Tim Woodruft's rock bouud | fom the city for the large proposition, |, Then Bost Infor ™ 3 the J dage thet he} Gere yom your’ Grwmglit cha doe Manhattan {Daillwick for years, | or for the smalier proposition with the | was only a driver and that the horse be- |” A i abit ineresroy peerage gr be Siatagee (eecmaete 2 i {sting of! ‘The writs, Issued by Justice Crane | Condition removed longed to hin boss, a baker, Miss Dunn, |i, gud pore impnritics, as well as clearing the| you on a Little at 0 time pres th! lonsting to Mra, @Md returnable to-morrow, call upon the, Meantime former Mayor Seth Low| who had found the horse's back cov-| juin ot tas, frites, tlotches and fine linen |cletnsing tather and when the scalp and. Male with fh Mra. Gates | to show cause why they should not |G?Ut working in ae fe | against Shell's ems and the divaeist ond ie cna | without stmaion, aime the hele dren eulahty h found her, hun and homeless, the Court of Appeals has | Mterborough, have succeeded in getting | was adjourned until July 18, when both | then adi two og, pair that is dull, betttle and had taken her in, onstituticnality of the {the clty ofittals away from the pro- | will be heard at once everal twits. Using thi erramelly able will become bright, eott end . hi allty of the | ¢ramme lald out in the McAneny report. I have only just Legun, satd Mine | '¢ skin and ives ta ve ange, Her tears and protestations of 4 bills, which Ie, Hente the ation of President Mit- |, Aba eine tn and charming tint without the ! peed cence ed Detective Pegney, who! some hundred Brooklyn Republicans | ehel, the « of Col, Williams and |OURD An ae wag TOMeINg the court: | cee of growing hair el was bending over the clerk's desk get-| out of office the wane ay tn action. be tha (room. “I Intend to put a stop to the ide Saf aL le: HME sila ine ting the papers ready in another case, | The writs saved all but Leader Louts| Board of Estimate upon the five tri. {tl en; of horses, W you v weal . wink sad white tint if you discord, poeter to raise his head. The votce had a|M. Swazey, a Roosevelt stalwart in the|Dorough construction contracts sent ever seo such “things done In England 1’ and dh y. stragaly hair. | Abd Whee ed as tie aliens Dowter weedy SAG t week by the Public nd I'm golng to do my best to put] naive and ng lotion: Dimolve familiar ring. cent campaign. Swa was over last week by the ‘ublie vice @ ) o pu ni ine four ounees max in oneshalf pin water r Commission an end to it here Me eae, Bt ach aa pint hot “Hello, Vera, in again?” he said, af-| misstoner of Records at a salary of |©2™ B 4 Senolve Ia A nalbint aleGiat | acca an tenet ter he had taken a good took at th [#00 until 9 o'clock to-day. If there | =—— Fer a eat alent: sittaniag te wall [ERE ic ae ON ¢ evotiy unl dr, Vera's tears dried up. When her cass) had been any way for Mr. Swazey's 5 then f eee, Saas Ce, el » powder because it Is im “ 29 requently with this stove when on, floew not rub or blow ol came up she pleaded guilty and Detec-| flock of process servers to reach Rex-| This Is “CN Week cadruff or excess oil, and pute the tn a] from heautifying the skin. and removing tia wet tive Degney told the Magistrate that ister Fred Lundy Swazey miht sti! veal ndition, Its cont! ted use the | freckles, gives a richness to the complexion working the sympath!es of acquain-| be in office, But there wasn't | hale enft and restores tht 1 color, | possible with powder, It is lally alee to tances and then steaing their clothes COULDN'T GET LUNDY OUT OF nd promotes a fine growth, ise in hot weatler because perspiration wil) mot was Vera's habit. Twice before she ME HOUSE | vot had been discharged in Poltce Court fT aya. guano Q Mes Act 1 don't think the condition wr - similar offenses because of insuMcient |), eee about Lund ven calle for glasses, The ache and smart of] Mildrel: tmpure bioot causes sallow, life evidence, A third time she had been ony Bay home all night, trying various N noto cures ° we reser aiaclrina ap ouaes ot |aredvalir coceradnet seat Reniar? Rica ate convicted and was at the present time) “AY even to telephoning that Mayor io arttonle, made iy dleolring ta ounes of | Gradually uodereines suwr Meellh. Betoes Wie fap capone Gaynor wanted to see him down at | restos tn a pin \ ; Kantene at the dmg store under a suspended senten NINIBIEUGH: Co Gat Hint aut aot etaae| na in'each ere daily. ithis toute ie very | end diswotve in a balf-pint alcohel. "To tte cas Mrs. Gates told the Court that she | pkey im ov aune {t soothes aching eye-muscles and | f cupful sugar and hot water to make on the street early last month and | 5 ae and was served with » them an unusnal beilliancy | This tonic soon ride the blood of impnetties, of work and without elther food or aharir ue The eee The only cleaning that really cleans See a pata en eae a an encrgicer and qe shelter, With her husband's consent | coring gervices “ve liye : is the cleaning that disinfects. Most |, DS her thos cbt: baltae ab Ie © Dale He Ae OR 8 OR eT ete rast | Conimleslon ords, He of us have bad house-cleaning habits, | 01 sa costly oueration. Get an ounce of elas! tise Mot iy not neveomary to vit mani all of her summer clothes had gone | “?* *vorn in at » See rd We sweep, thinking we clean, |( (™ "™ Pri and'| tou eget dia nea eee away together. | ai: Any Mee eens eae where: swecping simply trans- | two minutes mb off; wash ¢ when cold and take @ table: Yesterday afternoon on One Hundred | emuviican leader. of the iret Dieter poses dirt from one place to another, | si» 94 yo wil tnd toe ene, Dela e raeals, ‘ ; and Twenty-fifth 8 et Mra, Gates saw at $100) a year salary. Tt Is likely that polluting the air besides. CN used |"" 0" * " ; reves ogres cy Aveabeaicin hak dress and im | pis ee tae shee 1 in your every cleaning operation, y, 1. Your be kept dlomy and | call for dieting mediately cause rrest | the courts have re ripper” | $e kills germs, destroys odors, purifies |.) \) _vamoins vanoually with can) Meat Min pian RO Es 4 | i — ae omciat tives | At all the air—three things which make BAN ON ROASTING FIRES Sede arn “Jake” for health, Do not wait until r F " IN CHINATOWN YARDS, | Brenner: Jurors, and Drag disease comes before using CN— The Pioneer House urnishers seis: Bs ee ee eee oe ere Stores use it to-day and make disease an No More Can the Celestials Cook | ston's $3.5 It ty said that John H. absentee in your home. : * MoCo ounty leader, may win the Succulent Pigs and lr nner's p nd that James Mona- ° 66ye 9 Ahict han, leader of a w York dis- Y h disease f Chickens. [nausea teint war tha deputeal ip our home is proo Tho Chinexo restaurant folks who have |WgW BOARD HAG FILLING OF = A ben roasting pigs and chicken | ° open air in the rear of the four-story | PLACES NOW. if cleaned regularly with CN tenement pve places were fled by a board, - —_— — —_ in aian andaneer ated out of office, and formerly en Se f mur two Co! 8, who are , ‘ \ Lacie Ry : 8, and th uc. Since | This seems a big statement to The great lesson to be learned ran ae ; feouve ® make, but it stands to reason in connection with CN Disin- ESTABLISHED 64 YEARS mors of a ous relapae after vec¢pt operaion for appendicitis, her ter a 1 f ee aa : WOURIN METHODS, Foom the t i Those licken sandwiches were on rented for th evening.” that if powerful CN can destroy every particle of dirt by simply pouring a few drops into your cleaning water, no disease can enter your home, for it is this dirt—this very filth that “soap and water" and so-calledcleans- ers miss, where disease breeds. fectant, is to use it before trouble comes, and not wait until after it has arrived. CN is a disinfectant that disin- fects. It possesses the power to purify as nothing else will or can, CN is guaranteed to be five to six times stronger than pure carbolic acid, yet it is non-poisonous and non-combustible. | WEST DISINFECTING CO, NEW YORK SE a Lae NS, i 155-157-159 EAST 23D STRE&T ONE DOOR WEST OF THIRD AVE. Everything for Housekeeping Furniture, Carpeting, Bedding, Draperies, Ete. Liberal Credit Given On Strictly Confidential and Easy Arrangements $65 tor" $1 Week. $160 ice"? $1.50 Week| « for Larger or Smaller Amounts in Proportion,

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