The evening world. Newspaper, January 11, 1912, Page 2

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| oon ae \ IN@ WORLD, ta gm body oF even identifying it, bat the police believe It to be that of one of ihe men employed in the Gre room of the :@ a bundred men of the Building Department, guided by fire men, went to the lovel of what was the fourth floor of the Equitable Bulld- é to begin digging out the body of Battalion Chief William J. Walsh, who was crushed when the roof of the Pine VGatreet aide fell in, carrying with it the Svmarble stairway, under which he was “"Mast seen. Battalion Chicf Gray, who ‘Shad made an all night study of the *"eituation, said he thought the only way *@wan to begin at the top and dig down, "2 through fifty feet of stone and steel. ‘The searchers came upon a soft bun: ‘dle near the top of the debris pile at little before noon, Chief Kenlon and Inspector Cahalane at once assumed it was Chief Walsh's body and tole- | the First to Send His Phoned the report to Fire and ole Headquarters It wae contradicted a Check for $100. few minutes later when the object war found to be a canvas sack full of towels. a D | Police Commissioner Waldo Is Inspéector halane and Chief Gray - - - “ . . “ satisfied themssives that there was no LAZARD) FRERES GIVE $250 chance for several days of getting Watchman Campic hind the steel | ‘8 body out from be- yd seven-foot wall adway side of the duld-| Two Big Theatrical Benefits m behind is cut off Te isted wteet Are Planned to Help By virtue of authority conferred yes- ferday by the Hoard of Governors, the Law Committee of the 8 igeued an order to-day suxper Wveries of securities by all partion at- | rectly or indirectly interested in the Equitable fire until Jan, 1. POSSIGLE LIST OF DEATHS IN- CREASED TO EIGHT. The powsivie list of deaths duc to the fire was increaned to eight to-day when Lillian Smathers of No. 66 West) One Hundred and Thirty-ffth etreet Feported that Levi Brian, a night por: | ler, Who Doarded with ‘her, had not been heard from since the fire. ye north wall bulges perceptibly from ite weight of ice and the weakening re- @ulting from the fallen fioora, It te four feet out of plumb in places and threatens the tall building of the Amert- . Bank acroms Cedar street tional Bank and the Clearing House further east. The bank and other tenanis in the American Kx- ‘change Buliding have been driven out P'until the shaking wall is shored up, but they were permitted to enter their oMcea the Fund. 2. M. MACY & CO ALBZAT STERN. MABRY BONNER Police Commianioner Waldo'a check for $100 wan the first to arrive to-~ay for The Evening World's fund for the relief of the widow and family of Qdriefly to-day to get their effects. Battalion Chief William J. ¥ who MORE THAN $1,000 RAISED BY EVENING WORLD 10 CHIEF WALSH'S FAMLLY 4 4 decided to give a big ‘or the Walsh relief fu W. Manner of the benefit Robert firm of Hallgarten & Co., No. 6 atreet, ne of the best known “buffs” and Father GeGean, the fire 1 out this afternoon tn the financial diatrict to collect contrt- butions to the Walsh fund, These cot- lections will be tufned over to The Eve- ning World, Fire Commissioner John- eon will turn over to The Evening World Fund any contrfbutions he may Fecetve, A big vaudeville benefit for the Walsh Retief Fund will be given on the York Theatre Roof on Thursday evening Police Commissioner Wallo visited lost hin life in the Kaqultab fige. With the rulne late this afternoon, Chief | his contribution the Commissioner sent ,, Kenlon told him that every now inmpec-| the follawing letter “ton of the #tanding walls convinced him| Petlee Depart Piehat there was more and more danger ‘York, Jan. 11, 1918; » ef thelr falling, oapecially when the} The Svening World, New York <u@ohesive support of the sheets of ico Otty: He eaid he thought Dear Sire—Z ivclose my check be street walle were in as periious| @6 ® contribation to the Ohief pondition as those on Cedar street. ‘Walsh Pund decing raiseed by your Capt, Burfeind nas estabiisned a tem-| paper. City of New porary police station at No. road- 2 promotes way, with 100 addition to the | talion Obief of 4o4\4 0 clothes detectives from Headquar- | ment and pikire und ‘varions precincta and the pri-| goo@ under State detectives at work im the district. wae called upon to face. Me was INVESTIGATION OR FIRE 18 RE.| one of the oMtcers of that depart , SUMED. ment who ogy ged fire col. 2G.Fite Commissioner Johnston ana Fire ite Bak tak the caleiecee ot tee Jarebal Pryal resumed thelr inves-| 4060 ah mee will Be toe tigation to-day into the fire and a. ORY there was hulf an hour's delay in Dencing in an alarm. They have learned ‘that the blase originated in booth Qased by Philp O'Brien, timekeeper for the ¢ Savarin. Kmployess of the Oiresiaurant testified that there was a We was © oplendia fre dion Inside of a fow hours the fund had all pas wto in the room and that they saw O'Brien light the stove « OGhort time before the fire. They thougit ithe might have thrown @ match into ores © O'Hirien, the timekeoper, was before OuFire Marshal Pryal, He eald he got to 0 ee kquilable Building about 6 o'clock ‘Wesday mourning aud went to his room ("ie the basement, There is 4 stove and ® Waste paper basket ther He lighted the gas, he ways, and then, walking to { Sthe Goor, threw the maten on the Sphait flooring, He was in the room papeveret minutes later, Everything war } Bll right when he went upstairs, At Lis he was notified that his room was fire. He found a wastepaper basket and tof a chair burning, He turned the Contents of an extinguisher om it, bur ft did no good then ran for the yore: It was too short, and by thr time he had coupled on another length ‘the fire was beyond control, The only witnena before Fire Mar- ehal Pryal to-day was Gassa Dom inique. He told the same story as the Other employees of the Bavarin Cafe about the discovery that the butlding ‘wae afre, —_— JOHNSON, IN REPORT TO MAYOR, BLAMES EQUITABLE EMPLOYEES Xt Phe careles | Mghted ma Buliding fire, submitted to-day vy Fire Comm! '*Jennson to Mayor Gaynor, He a that the same heed act caused the east ‘riangle Waist Factory fire. If the employees of the Equitable Building, the Cominisstoner says, had throwing away of @ Equitable Prompuly called out the Fire Depart Ment the small blaze which started the conflagration could ‘The ly have been Comminsioner 5 extinguished. cites the Paying wpec Mr. Jounson 4 of the fires ar ‘Jase of matehe ing avay of I ¢ties / Mayor Gaynor also wrote to-day to SriCommissioncr Johnson on the fire, He nied cigars and cigar. : 1 desire to exprews the thanks of the Mayor and the people U Of the elty to you and the officers nd men under you who coped with the fire at the Equitable Building. ‘The bravery, intellixen fm thence and fidelity of all der the most trying conditions could not be excelled, Nor were ‘The herote William J. W Y tempting to save the life of oth only another example to show t devotion of the men of the Fire De- Pariment to the safety of the people of this city. Very truly youre, W. J, GAYNOR, MEA ..NO DANGER TO CARS, MILLER REPORTS AFTER INSPECTING RUINS. t President MoAneny, in view of the |», fmmmeral concern as to the safety of the | aven: of the Equitable Building, caused serio Superintensen to make Jumped to $1,070, The White Rats, an organization of vaudeville performers, met last night at the clubhouse, Forty-sixth street and an investigation to-day. In his report Mr, Miller saya: “T have made a personal examination of the condition of the remaining out- aide wails of the Equitable futiding, with a reference to the mafery of | the etn roadway, 1 ¢ Reed be no apprehension of street cars, “LT would, however, adviae that pedor- trian trafflc and other vehicular trafic be prohibited b eof the possibility of the falling of ainall pleces of tee or bullding material, whtc while it would Not be suite damage to the y danger to passing | tre 1 be serious for | ony recived word to-day that ctor Nicholas J, Reville fell through three floors of the Equitas le, butlding Iast evening while making an} Inspection of the structure for the | Butiding Bur Tho Inspector slipped, on an fey beam. He received severe in- | Jurfes about the head and body, He will} be unable to report for duty for two! weeks. EQUITABL -_ | WON'T BUY | MADISON SQUARE GARDEN! | OR BUILD SKYSCRAPER. The executive officers of the Equitable Life Assurance Society held a lengthy naw offices, No, 16 dent W. L. Day pre ed at noon the an Jefluitely made that intention of en | tering @ deal to buy (he Madison Square Garden property and that it had no plang for erecting 4 groat akyweraper, ax had been the intention in Li when the womaion to-day at t Hroadway Whe wlded, nounce iy Burnham plans were drawn te | Provision ta to. b |care of the families of | | Walsh aod the other fir this provint t the per pany tin for takton n Chief (Celewram when hat Was a drop of conno: The Wired he had writte with $20,000 the strength of the fact that the cor pany had Just toast its home, —_ MRS. M'DONOUGH SAFE. Mt Wes Feared She Had Lost Lite to Fh Mra, Johanna have lomt h | damage | butiding oy N j the Bronx, wa lice station this She told the p ‘one in the house at the tine of the fire Thomas Meboncugs, he woman's hus band, Ie imi ph MeDon. Donough afret thought t at did 8) three-story Jan, 18 under the auapices of William Fox, the vaudeville manager, and Pat Casey, the booking agent. Popular vaudeville performers have already vohimteered to agpear at the New York Theatre benefit. Particulars @a to the bill and other information con- erting the benefit will appear ¢rom Gay to day in The Evening World. The proceeds of the performance will be tuned over to the Waleh Relie¢ Fund, which 1p being collected by this news- paper. Although Mrs. Walsh and her children will receive @ pension from the Fire Department Fund the amount te not large conaldering that there ts a 63,500 mortgage on their home, five of the etx children are girls and the boy of the family t# only @ led. ‘The widow will receive tn cash $1,000, This sum ts paid to the wido f an firemen, The pension to be settled on the family under the rufes cannot ox- coed $1,000 a year and this must be ivided between the widow and the six children until the ohikiren become of age. Aa each child vecomen of age, that chilt'a share of the pension ts cut off. When all the children are of age the widow, If sho still survives, is entitled iy & pension of $300 a year during her ite. PINOCHLE AND CABBAGE 0. K. FOR COPS, BUT EUCHRE AND CHICKEN MEAN FINES, When Morris l. Downey, Jacob Low- enhelm, John F. Rafter and Albert Scho- bel, policemen attached to the East Fifty-firet street station, were brought before Deputy Commissioner Dillon to- day to answer a charge of playing carts in their dormito man, sald the We never play poke ‘It was Jt #nloner,"* aid Downey. sociable euchre, Mr. Com- fame of cards betw the Commissioner, “There In use for pinochle, but non 80 you are all fned one day’ . Policeman James 1, Mogan, up for having been absent from roll call Dec, % and for not having reported sick un- U1 fifty minutes later, gave the explan: tion that he had been to per the night liberally of a eh bride “It gave me terrible indlg Hogan, prepared by the tion," sald orn beef and cabbag foner, “One day's pay." }BURNS IS NOT GUILTY OF KIDNAPPING, SAYS JUDGE. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind, Jan, 11.—De- tective W. J. Burns wan not guilty of the erliwe of kidnapping when he cap- tured John J, McNamara here and took Me to California last April, Federal Judge A.B. A on indicated to-day that such would be his ruling, The Judge said (ho case ugainat urna was without im Jude Ande 4 to attorneya in the cas alone that Me Namara | pleaded gulity tn Cale fornia Wiped away any faults, If there the manner in whioh the 1d been tak vut of the eribed urns service { was imp a threat of tentlary sh nan who hia countr er having t uid stand to the pent atost him, Comlant Watt Not deslying te ing to Masaac vuld be ma orrine Bai at Boston a Cty Mail, where ten after obtaining @ the vuple Were made man and wife by Ale wait ve da usette law neston M. our Yeforo Booth a yoarded a train od Mar ! hurtled to the New York w din nao minutes ough’ saya he F outside the house and knows that he went t svine hospital to 8 burns dressed. Nine persons were rescued by fremon rom t) house at No. Bronxdale ‘The fire mreatened to be so Deputy Chigh Short went in second alarm, »* “Jim! Smith today The bride of John A. Barbour of View avenu Boston, She fg twenty-three, Booth is twenty-four, He ie} emt of the International Au- tomadiie Company of America. He gave his address as Technical Chambers, Borton, tha \Mrs. William J. Walsh and Children of the Heroic Fire Chief loft to right, Agnes, Anne; sitting, Loretta, William, Sirs. Walsh and Par, WALSH'S WIDOW ATWINDOW WAITS HIS HOMECOMING Grateful for Evening World’s Relief Fund for Herself and Children. Marguerite Mooere Marshall. Mra, William J. Walsh ts waiting. Yesterday 1 went to tell the widow of | the heroic fire chief about the relief fund which The Evening World ts ool- lecting for her and her ehildren, And I found her sitting quietly in her little home at No. 1170 Forty-second street, Brooklyn, waiting for them to bring to her the body that fe still hidden undor tons of twisted steel! and iron. Her bigh, etraight-vacked chair is drawn close to the window from which she can see furthest down the icy road, and almost at her elbow is the table with the telephone that will announce when “he” ts found, Children and netghdors press her with well-meant attentions And queries, but for them all she h the one answer, “I must walt till they | find him and bring him home.” She is @ broad-shouldered, motherly figure, a woman with a lap made to Her dark hair ts juat hold children. touched eyes h there are not many lines in her strong, sensible face—yet, She looked up almost dazedly entered the sitting room. In one y ironed pocket handker- chief, the creases in it still showing, et a > EOC AR ho Ne ccm VEBDAY, father,” Mra. Walsh went on, as her glance followed mine to the huddied Uttle group. “Even the by, that 't talk yet, always had a laugh for him when she saw him coming. And the girls have been saying over and over again, ‘Papa was such a 6 man!" jo gave up his life for his duty and to save others,” I remarked rather tritely. “Yes,” Mrs. Walsh assented in the game quiet, almost monotonous vo! “Of course, he couldn't have done an: thing greater. You know it’s in the Bible, ‘Greater love hath no man than this, that he tay down his life for his friend.’ And he laid down his life for people he didn't even know, just be- causo they were people whom he h promised to protect. And even when he saw his own danger he did his best to warn the others, the men who worked and risked their lives with him, “Of course 1 am proud of him. and T’ve always been proud when they suid he was one of the bravest men on the force, and better acquainted with his letrict than any other fireman. If he | had to—dle now, he couldn't have done ‘Vin any finer way; he couldn't have jeft a greater name for his children, AND HE GAVE PROOFS OF HIS COURAGE AND FAITHFULNESS. “But these are the things that every- body can't help but know. He's given every man and woman in New York proofs of his courage and faithfulness. But somehow those aren't the things the children and 1 think of first when we, say to each otner, ‘How good he was!’ y husband was a home man ways. Whenever he had « day off he didn't go up to town for a good tim but he etayed right here and did things that would make us all ter.” And I recalled the neat, white-painted fence ar gute which marked out the Walsh home from its neighbors when I was two blocks away, and the little square Hi r the piazza that months ago. the lawn so green and smooth,” Mrs, Walsh continued, as I thought of these things, “and the pi floor always clean and the paiyt “Have you come to tell me that t @ found him? she asked. But before I could answer she shook her pointedly, » of e you he murmured. almost to her- "They promised to telephone, 1 hope I won't have to walt much longer.” “Every one wants to help you,’ I said, TOO DAZED BY THE CALAMITY TO THINK CLEARLY, ‘1 know,” she assented, “and I'm eure I'm very grateful to The Evening World and all the other people. Only I can't think very clearly Just now. You see, we've been married twenty-two ye and I have stopped being afrald. think that's what makes ft hardest There I let him go away without a cai tion, without even # doubt, Just as if I didn't care what happened to him. And God knows It wasn't that, Bui you see T had got used to the danger, And he was always so strong and brave and cheerful, At first, when we wore married, I used to be frightened every time he went out with the engines, But he always laughed at me, not in a nasty way, but Just to cheer me up and make ashamed of myself for doubting him. He always raid he knew how to take care of himse'f, and that he wouldn’ let anything happen to him that wouki take him away from me amd the chil- dren, He knew how hard things woul. ve for us without him. "You have several children?’ J ques tioned. "Six," sald Mre. Walsh, “not count- ing the ttle girl that dled, Ther May, who's the oldest. and Anna, two y younger, and Agnes, and Luella and the bey, Billie, named for his father and just ten, and the baby, Margaret, who's two. Thelr fathe: worked so hard to keep them all tn schoo’, and not one of them has ever gone out to work.” Were all together in one vo! the room, near the erib where Margaret slept. They are slender. with thelr father's brown eyes and hair, all excopt baby, who ts as fair as the others are dark, Billie, too, hus Dive eyes, like hie mother's, “PAPA WAS SUCH A GOOD MA BAY THE FATHERLESS. “Shey wore ell vo fond of FRIDAY, JANUARY 12TH Auto and Carriage Robes MADE FROM THE FINEST SEALETTE, with best English C ular and extra large sizes, 68 inch and Prana dey and $45.00. STEAMER RUGS—The best grades makes. FINEST IMPORTED MAKES, IMPORTED SCOTCH KNITTED WAISTCOATS, fn fancy designs. Specia! for Thursday, the 11th TANCES ORANGE ] Oc * POUND BOX. HET BAC Assorted Milk Chocolates AN our pest kinds packed in each box, TeteAe” BOC | pleste everybody. JANUARY 11 1 013 3 | Father Brady Finds Blaze on Third Floor and Prompt Ac- | tion Prevents Spread. i} The opportune discovery of a fire in a classroom on the third floor of the oo! lege bullding of St. Francis Xavier's College in West Fifteenth street and on after & disastrous blaze this afternoon, The | lundred dotars, although the ma, nificent ibrary on: the first floor of the buliding narrowly escaped flooding by water, | This was a holiday in St. Francis Xavier's, and there were no schola! {n the school buliding, Father Brady, Instructor in phyates, at work in the laboratory on the fourth floor, smelled smoke at 3 o'clock, detected an odor of smoke and proceeded to investigate fm- | mediately, “Tra spectal class room on the third floor he found smoke sifting up through the cracks of the flooring. Runnin downstairs, he pulled the special bu! Ing alarm and summoned all the priests and brothers he could reach and also several workmen who werre engaged in making repairs on another bullding. Armed with extinguishers and hand Rrenades, the volunteers kept the blaze in check until the firemen arrived, By {that time the floor fire had spread through the entire space between the celling of the freshman classroom on the second floor and the floor of the special classroom above. The fire patrol arrived Just in time to spread tarpaulins in the Itteary and save the collection of books from a ducking. It ts thought that the blaze was started by defective insula- tlon of electric wires, An immense crowd gather 1 in the vicinity of St. Francis Xavier's, The policemen on post in the yivinity could nat handle the gathering and the re- serves from the West Twentieth street station were rushed to the scene, pebble TAFT IS MUCH BETTER. Hin Cold Breaking - bat He Sticks to His Study. WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—President Taft's cold was much Improved to-day and although he remamed in his studio in the Executive Mansion, he was able renewed, and he would always have some flowers. I never had to ask him twice to mend any little thing for me around the house, or help move furni- ture, or put down a carpet. IN DANGER OF LOSING THE HOME HE WOPKED FOR. “He always wanted to own his own house ever since we got married. But, you see, we had to live on a leutenant’s or a captain's pay for so many y and the children kept coming, and they were mostly girls, and it takes so much for girls. But finally, ten y moved over here and he began to make eral hours in he'd never do anything to I pondence. and so fall back on the payment we've felt from the start as if we really owned our home. But now there's the rest of the mortgage to pay up, and if we can't do It wi 11 to: put im and have to go away from the place that meant sc much to him. “We have been so happy here! were together #0 mu many of us and nobod; without the others, so we stayed here together. And besides not going away expected to attend the Cabinet dinner given by Secretary of the Treasury, MacVeagh to-night. | Consumption Any one Interested in the Cure of Consumption should get one of the booklets telling of recor. eries by the use of Eckman’s Alterative, Coughs, Stubborn Colds and Pneumosia may We There were s0 kd to go off NAVE COLEGE BABY HAD LTE ~ DAMAGED BY FRE the discovery of | erted what might have been | college escaped with damage of a tow | to receive a few callers and spend sev- | disposing of corres. | It was satd the President | be the beginning of more sertous troublee—Ecb: | | OF WORST KIND | In Great Pain. Arms from Wrist to Elbow, Legs ftom Knee to Ankle, Like eat. Tried Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Now Cured, 346 Witkins 8t., Rochester, N. Ritelg 4 eon Edward, when he was two moaths old, hed eczema of the worst kind. It began with » rash in blotches and it itched so that 1 bad to make him sight clothes with hands enclosed like mitt and keep them on day an nt. He was in great pain. His arms from wrist to elbow and his leg from knee to ankle were just like raw meat and you can imagine what the poor baby cura Soap and Cul times a day I bathed him with as hot water as be could stand and Cuticura Soap. I would put on the Cuticura Ointment and bandage with linen cloths, 1 did this about Balzer, Nov. 27, 1911. Not only are Cuticura Soap and Ointment mest valuable in the treatment of ecsemas and other distressing eruptions of skin and scalp of infants, children and adults, but no other emollients do so much for pimples, Diackheads, red, rough skins, itching, scaly ecalps, dandruff, dry, thin and falling. hair, chapped hands and shapeless nails, nor do it @0 economically, A single cake of Cuticura Boap (25c.) and box of Cuticura Ointment (50c.) are often sufficient when all else hes failed. Sold by druggists and dealers through- out the world. A liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. book on care and treatment of kin and hair. Address, ‘Cuticura,” Dept. T, Boston. Tender-faced men should shave with Cuticurs Soap Shaving Stick, $4 A Week Opens An Account, 1 CREDIT TERMS $3.00 Down on 5.00 « “ 7.50 10.00 15.00 “ 25.00 “ APARTMENTS FURNISHED Complete from $49.88 to $560.00 OPEN SATURDAY UNTIL 10 P.M, 104TH ST. L STATION AT CORN! FISHER BROS. COLUMBUS AVE, BET.103 & 104% ST. from his home and working hard for it, my husband was so kind. Ali the years we've been married we never ha quarrel. We cared for each other in the beginning, and {t's Insted all along. He couldn't nardly bear to scold the children when they needed it, and he never spoke sharp to me. “1 suppose we Were too happy for it Soinehow the people who grow her always seem to be the ones p ac each other, But this has quick, 90 kind of broken off in the middie, And he w good—1 can't see why It him to die! Sometimes I can't seem to realize he in dead. But I suppose I shall when they bring him home.’ ‘And the tearless blue eyes tu; again to the window and the Icy ro: ALBANY, Jan, 1.—As @ of the Equitable fire, Senator Loring M. Black jr. of Brooklyn introduced a bill to-day making it a felony to compel any person to remain in @ safe deposit vault where no means of exit is pro- vided. UALITY ENGLISH backs, and inter- SALE hice of domeste 8.00 12.00 18.00 » 33.00 6.00 Trade Mark.) |Special for Friday, the ith ‘ES Tercrewae, LOC ror Bn jane watt AE otetoe ove! The itled wi apecititades man's Alterative ts the effective remedy, Rea’ Mr, Kanaly’e statement: Serators, N.Y. | “Gentlemen: For five or ols years 1 war troubled with congh and expectoration. 1 als had a high fever. My case was declared Cov- sumption by amy physician, 1 was given Cod Laver Oil, Creowte and other medicines, all with benefit, “At Christinae time, 1906, I was not expectr! to live, Calling Dr. R, H, MoCarthy, he ad vised the use of Kckman's Alterative, which 1 took with excellent results and was entirely cured, During the past sear I have gained 18 pounds, 1 go out im all weathers and hare bad no congh or cold whatever. I give these facts to eucouraze others to use Eckman’s Alterative.”” (Bigned Affidavit.) JAS, W. KANALT, Kckman's Altorative ts effective in Bronchitis, Asthia, Fever, Throat nnd Lung Troubles. and in upbuilding the system, Does not contain | COFFEE, Held Direct to tne Consumer AT WHOLESALE PRICES im 5 1b, lets, as low as folsom, oniates or hahit-forming drugs, Par ave by all Hegeman and Riker Drug Stores and other leading druggists. Ask for booklet of cured cases and write to Eckman Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa,, for additional evidence. _NEW_ PUBLICATIONS, THE TWO-GUN MAN GILLIES COFFEE Co, MICHIGAN FURNITURE CO G ree Furniture ‘Vith Your Purchase iberal Credit Terms $3 Down on 350 $ 8% 7.60 Ld * $100 OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8, 2174-32 AVE BETHBSNIST Mus ICAL. SA.SOLI *: WARPIST, ” / By the Author of The Range Riders. |AT ALL BOOK STORES $1.25 net, /OUTING PUBLISHING CO. NEW YORK ——— HELP WANTED—MALE. ——— eee rienced on printing ayle, Albany. Apply New York City, ot Cardinal Farley Colors, Free, A coupou mu be panied In the | Mageeue section of next Sunday's World which will secure for you a ten-color Mthograph portrait of Car- dinal Farley. Don't forget. ‘This picture can only be got in this way, Order from newsd Edition Muted. Portrait in HELP WANTED—FEMALE, “oP ian Pau Orr

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