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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1912. CHASE OF BURGLAR \Zdeal Woman Irom the Men’s Viewpoint READS LE STORY ~ NADINE NOVEL ve!) é Henry Eludes First Captors in Jersey After Being Wounded é 14 and Handcuffed. THEN FOOLS A DOCTOR. Hides in Home on Pretense of Needing Quiet—Sleuths Trail {Wife and Find Him. After a chase of two weeks Frank Frenry of No. 22 MoDougal street, Brooklyn, @ burglar who has terrorised fm the last fow years a whole string of New Jersey towns—including Morrie town. Metuchen, Rehwey, Convent, Wiizabeth and the Oranges—and has stolen more than $5,000 worth of house- hold goods, jewelry, plate and money, thas been captured in the home of Dr, @amuvel Fien, No. & Dennington ave- ue, Jamaioa, where he hed hidden him- @aif to recover from gunshot wounds he Feeeived on July 15 in an effort to es @ape from the constable of Metuchen, N. J. ‘It was as exciting @ chase ae could Be found ina dime novel. The tugitive’s use of railway mileage books was what Jef Girectiy to Ms undoing. ‘Hemry’s last two crimes were com mitted on the night of July 15 at Me tuchen. He began by robbing the house of Wittam Peck, on Rahway road. Peck waked up shortly after the burg- tar had left, and telephoned to the town's Chief of Police, John J. Fiah- qty, When Flaherty arrived, Peck took hie double-barreiled = shot-gun and started with the chief on « hunt for the wargiar, They say they jocated him in the house of Mrs. Mary I. Wailing, in Rahway road. The man slid down « porch pillar, in the chase the chief using Dis revolver and Peck his shotgun. The fugitive dropped with @ load of shot and a bullet in his leg. GOT AWAY ALTHOUGH HE WAS i ‘WANOCUFFED. ‘The captors took from him « gold watch which Chief Flaherty identified an his own—and some inileage books. | ‘Then they handcuffed hm and left him lying in the road while they went to telephone for a taxicab to take him into town, But they did not know that they were dealing with an old-timer. Frank has alrcady served five years in | the Trenton prison. While they were sone, he managed to get to his feet and disappear. It was learned that ho got to Rahway, where friends helped him saw off the steel bracelets and helped him on to Brooklyn. But he was clever enough to realize that his home would not bo a dit materialism). Take for in- safe refuge. 11s gunshot wounde were | *@Y ® #9F' j communication n Jous, so he hit upon the acheme| stance the following eq! seriou ne pon the acheme| stance the. of representing himself as needing medi al attention and quire: and then getting physician to board bim as well treat him, Dr. Eden was the and the police are sac plaeed implicit « tlent's story that an he selected fied the physiclan dence in his pa- he had accldentally amining a gun. dn th he Chief of Metuchi suspended b ing the Watch which he taken from Frank and which he clat as his own Subsequently was identifled by Willlam Dealing of Ridgewood, his property aid it was stolen from his home on the night of Dec. M last, Detective David 0! the Newark police was called Into the care and after running down the clue of the mileage books with De Martin! and Conroy of Brooklyn to aid him, he set out to shadow Henry's home in Brooklyn. LOCATED BURGLAR BY FOLLOW. ING HIS WIFE. They roon } that Henry’a wite and an unmarried ¢ 4 at the house. The fuwitiv habdit of in ‘They whadowe weeks, and ycst fternoon they followed her to Dr s house, They Waited outside until whe had gone, and then went up to the door and rang the ell. by n came to the door “What do you want” he asked. We are detectives,” they answered, “and we want the man you have been concealing for the last two weeks.” The physician seemed dumfounded, *Concealte fe true that I have a heen staying with me for the sak qulet, but I have not been con: ing him.” “Has he got gunshot manded Detective David. “Yeu,” the physician said. “He told mo he whot himself quite accidentally,” “Well, where ix he?” demanded De Martini “Upataire in the garret Faen. * wounds? de- | replied Dr ives, and y “Who's there again. ‘The detectives broke in the door, Henry stood across the room them, trimly dressed, but with « #) y two-weeks’ peard on his face. He leaped for the window. De Martini graybed him. Henry is a powerful man. Despite his wounds he put up @ strenuous fight be- fore De Martini pounded him into aup- missio ‘He was arraigned to-day in Gates Avo- nue Court before Magistrate McGuli and held for extradition papers to ne able Detective David to take him to New Jersey for trial. In appearance he is one of the tri st looking hurg’are the police have ever encoun- He looks und acts like a pro- feeajonal ma —_—— ‘ ONE OF THE ORATORS, (Prom the Chicago Tribune.) Phis,” said Mrs. Lapsling, who was exhibiting the photograph album to the qalier, ‘le @ picture of a second cousin mine who has & Government position a bot Beiibiallts wits Naty amine and WHAT der and dr has commu HE 18 HUNTING WALL COLLAPSES, And Qualities Girls Admire in the Men\ BURVINGIWENTY; TAMPIRE ONLY GETS THOSE WrocaNn v i.5 one The mien nek Bounngns. tHe TADS WAY BY SHAM BeAUTY ” BRAT” ‘I Called on a Young Woman and Gave Her a Box of Candy,’ Writes a Poet, “and She Fed Most of the Sweets to Her Dog to Show Me She Was Accustomed to Receiving Bonbons Every Day.” in inform! WHO CAN KEEP HOUSE. Dear Madam; Permit me to say a few words in behalf of us young men who are so-called “pike t am a young man, twenty-one years of age, dress neatly but not attr tively, am fairly good-looking, good clean-minded: and sensible. To the correspondent ust oan Ordinary Girl to may: I think by admitting she uses pow- wea attractively and atun- ie not an ordinary girl. We young men of to-day are not narrow-minded and are not attracted by painted and stunningly dressed dolis or “freaks,” as she states, ‘What @ you 1s @ modest, good, cl woman, able to keep hou a square meal. A woman with such qualifications {= worth a dozen of those painted ar “tarnished,” {f you wish to call them, M. M. ningly, sl Much more complicated is the !deal of @ short story writer and poet who ont me the following interesting Joation: WHO 18 NATURAL. Dear Madam; My mother died when I was four years old, my father shortly after my tenth birth- day, Notwithstanding the fact that my schooling did not go beyond my seventh year, 1 have won @ fair reputation as @ short story writer, poet and essayist, But never have I been happy. 1 have had many, many love af- fuirs—happily untouched by #eandal— but I have not yet found that gi who is in any Way related to the heroine of the poets, And, honestly, 1 have tried so hard to find her, I do not believe I demand too much, The most essential characteristic that I demand of her ts that she be natural. Let her be free trom hypoc- risy, deceit and 1 do not » who she looks at, or how devilish she But J am safe in making that for the girl who is fr from decelt, affectation and Ingratl tion will, because she !# natural, dress simply, remain faithful and act tn accordance wil the naural, there. fore pure, dictates of her own free conscience. I have not found the natural «irl, and I know rica girls, poor girls, beggar girls, thief girls. 1 have not dared to talk of idealism or literature or politics or religion or sociology to any of them, for L early discovered that such subjects bore them immensely, A man cannot entertain @ wonan unless she can Bo through the thrilling performa of having him break down her mod- csty, unless she can draw away her hand tn mock shame, and unless she can blush becomingly when he, with arms «bout her and burnin tells her what women of all ac assertion, ges never tire of hearing. 1 have danced with @ $0,000,000 heiress and I bave @anced with the slum girls qf many, ‘ 18 NEEDED 18 A GIRL FOR A GIRL { | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Perhaps the most astonishing fact| never mind). which ha (male and female, for we must ad- mit that man has no monopoly of the type) 1s that such a vast deal of dissatisfaction and contempt can be felt by one sex for another and still the Marriage License Bureau does @ rushing business, the birth rate soars and the stories of Robert W. Chambers and Gouverneur Mor- ris sell faster and quicker than the latest preparation for losing thirty pounds in thirty days. Doesn't this obvious, palpable ph: of the situa- tion suggest that necessity should should be the mother of optimism, that the Discouraged Girls should cheer after all men, though “perhaps all alk material for husbands, and that the young men should take a kindly view of the only objects provided by Nature for the making of a home? ‘This Giecussion has been valuable at any rate tn acquainting young women with the ideals of mei young men of the qualities which girls vices they abhor. Some of the demands of men show a pathetic moderation (or perhaps the girls will are the only available ‘Dig cities. IT have kissed the warm Mpa of the Southern beauty, and the tale of love has been mutely im- Pressed upon the cold, cold lips of the girls “up North.” In the shade of the old apple tree, down lovers? lane, by the light of the allvery moon, among the rv and the Maca, have I sought the Perfection of a Vision, I have not found Her. My quest ft» unfinished and my fs much unto that of every time she stopped to rest, was forced to keep travelling by the very stones under her fcet crying out, “Go on, Go on!" Some day, perhaya, 1 shall find 1 who has other thoughts of dress and “good other ambitions than those cullne conquests, other charms than those of powder and roug other talk than that of “goo-oi other {deals than those whose sum generally constitute matrimony, In the mean time, because I'm attll searching for Her, I shall, I pree sume, have to content myself with laces and silks and hobbies and peck-a-boos, with flattery and gen- eral all-round asininity, with “play. ing the ga with artifetal or shallow beauties, with nonsensical conversation, with watchful mothers who only add fuel to the flames, The Gir! whom The World, through the columns edited by you, ts strive ing to protect and make sacred #0 mysterious and elusive that all the modern voices of a New Con- selence crying through the great unknown, baftling wilderness of pur- ity, truthfulness, sincerity and natu- ralness, take to @ that this big, old giddy world has need, much need, of Her C. U. GUESS, To this post and all young men who find tho haunting of thetr reams, the maiden of flower and flame, with the wisdom of st. Teresa, the purity of Bt, Agnes and the diabolo fasciuation of Becky Sharp, I can only that it te the quest that ts worth while, not the girl; that one must be a sport and play for the game, not the prite, Even jayist and to but do not jalavad must have admitted to himeelf that the glory and dimculty of the quest sometines obliterated all thought of the Hcly Grail, But the de- light of possessing an ever filusive {deal has never been so exquisitely expressed as by Andrew Lang, who died the other day, but whose immortality ts en- shrined in the verses beginning Who Wins his love shall lose her, Who loses her shall gain, For still the spirit woos her, A soul without a stain; And memory still pursues her, yearnings not tn vain. . . . . . . In dreams vhe grows not older, Jands uf dream among; all the #tars grow colder, all the songs be sung; nS he shall behold hi: Still falr and kind and young, That the young © no mor nopoly of loneliness, heart hunger, &c., is demonstrated by many letters I have received from women also engaged in the quest of ¢! “TMEV ALL WANT TO AW OLD MANS DARLING” | | Golden Boy (to the young men it's the Golden Calf, bug Lessa “TWAVG DANCED WITH A $40 000000 HEIRESS AND WITH SLUM GIRLD OF MARKY Bq ciTsas BUT EHAVE AGveER! PeunD THE PeRvect Vision” Here 1s a typical letter been developed by the| trom a tonely girl: discussion of the New York Johnny) LONELY BECAUSE OF THE PER- FIDY OF MEN. Dear Madam: I, too, have been lonely, am lonely, and just because, in this old world, I cannot find a man who does not want what Dis- couraged Girl called “a big return.” One cad writes: “Eve gave Adam the apple.” Yes, I know, but Adam didn't have to take it, you know, unl he wanted it. The vampire doesn't go around roping in men, real men; she only gets the bound- ers, the trash, those of the sex who are weak enough to be carried away by sham beauty, and then who turn and say, “The woman tempted me.” I nee ahead of me a life full of lonelinens, voit of men friends, dull and dark, and a!l beca) there is in me the shredu of self-respect which I have been able to keep in spite of the characters of the men I am compelled to come in contact with, THE LONELY HEART, I close to-day's discussion with a letter from @ young man describing what he considers @ typical call on @ New York girl. = must ask the girls to comment the typical young man calls on a irl. All Z can say to him is this: That if he knew how much dogs adore o Owners adore their pets, he would not be so bitter against the young lady who fed his bonbons to Fido, Perhaps she was merely endeavor- ing to persuade Fido to share her tender foslings for the bearer of eifte. $3,000 000 BBY DUE WT WEEK AT ASTOR HOME Physicians and Nurses in At- tendance Upon the Late Colonel’s Widow. ‘A $3,000,000 baby 1s expected within @ week at the John Jacob Astor hom | No, #0 Fifth avenue. | an expert, 19 1 | tendance. Astor in shifts of eight hours each, and) Everything 1s ready at the big house for the interesting event. Dr. Edward B. Cragin of No, 10 West Fiftieth street, dy to move in at @ moe If nothing happens be- fore Sunday, on that day Dr. Cragin will take up residence in the Astor home and remain there until the baby arrives. Dr. Reuel B. Kimball, the Astor fam fly physician, {s also in constant at- Three nurses watch Mrs. ment's not! on Sunday the battalion of nurses will | be increased to elx or seven. Mrs, Astor has now given up her | usual nightly rides in Central Park, and | will remain in seclusion until the long- But judge the girl's intentions for| yourself: JEALOUS OF HIS GIRL’S DOG, HE HURRIES AWAY, Dear Madam: J am a gentleman of twenty-eight, of good habits, good position, good bank account, nd considered good looking and broad min with great ect for a “good girl.” 1 have a ciated with all clasnes of girls, but find they vary but little. No matter from what class they come, u do their utmost to riake their men friends beneath them, feel They are never willing to meet you half way. Their single purpose, strenuous times, is to and @ home better than they leave, overlooking everything would all like to rope 4 rich man with one fgt Brave, and they don't hesitu: tell you that “they would rath be an old mi jarling than a young man’ If you can find any sfncerity, gratitude or love among the weaker sex these days you will need @ telescope to locate it. I had the pleasure, or rather displeasure, of calling on a work- ing girl a short time ago, who earns about $8 per week, From my personal observation (my eyes and eyesight being — pronounced fine), the girl appeared as though she had never enjoyed many pleas- of life Taking delight in nd trying to cheer ed permission up, Upon I found the family @ large one and apparently in astraitened circum- stances, I thought it would be nice to give her @ box of candy, and when tt was passed around I noticed Fido, the house dog, was getting more than his share, Miss Nancy creating the {mpression she was used to these luxurtes all her life, with little thought for the two solid hours yours truly had to hustle to acquire that 80 cents. During my short visit T had to sit and ieten to this girl and her sister planning an auto ride the following evening with @ couple of millionaire friends, who are fond of keeping their car from gett rusty, A cold storage plant nothing on the cold feelings swept throngh my anatomy, anc stagvered home bewlliered, fully realizing now why men were driven to drink, Unquestionably — the Kreater part of the present day loss of character is due to the advent of the auto, Girls are willing to make great sacrifices in ord isty themselve Tf conditions a1 it fs up to t come more Senites. : iy . to be respec ey must resi “NEVER ‘AoAIN.” themeclvea, Governor to-day. | and Bowels, heralded baby {s born. Steps were taken to-day to insure the utmost quiet in the neighborhood of the big house, On the Sixty-ffth street side workmen have been tearing up the street perparatory to laying gas mains. Unless this work can be completed im- mediately, it 1s Ikely @ request will be made that !t be discontinued for the time being. It 1s Mrs, Astor's dearest wish now that the Astor heir shail be a boy, who tn that case probably would be given the historic family name of John Jacob, Whether it is a boy or girl, however, its fortune {s already provided for in the will of Col. Astor. Even should ther ‘be more than one ohild, the carefully. drawn document covers that contin- cy also, as it read ‘ bequeath * * ® such number of of $3,000,000 each * ° © of my children who shall survive me other than my son Willlam Vincent Astor and my daughter Ava Alice Murtel Astor.”" ‘aimee NOT SPEEDING, SAYS DIX. ALBANY, N. ¥., Aug, 1—Gov, Dix's recent experience with a motorcycle policeman who attempted to arrest him at Amsterdam on the charge of speeding was the subject of comment by the “I am always careful to drive slowly througn cities and in- corporated villages,” said the Governor, don my recent trip through Am- erdam I was driving at the rate of xteen miles an hour. The officer who stopped me Was none too courteous, I came back through the city and s PI to inquire about road to Schenec- tady. If there charge against m ‘on the police docket I have not been tm. formed of it by the offictals.”* TWO MEN DYING — | New Building in Busy Section of Brooklyn Crashes Down on Workmen. RESCUERS RISK LIVES. Men Under Masses of Bricks Aided by Firemen, Surgeon and Priest. ue A score of workmen were hurt, two fatally and four so seriously as to need the attentions of hospital surgeons, when @ portion of the brick wall of a bullding under course of construction at Hoyt and Livingston street in tne midst of Brooklyn's busiest down-town section, collapsed to-da: ‘The accident gave rise to some re- markable demonstrations of heroism on the part of ambulance surgeons, firemen and voltnteer helpers who risked thelr lives under tottering walls to drag the injured men out from the piles of brick aud plaster, Those seriously hurt were: JAMES VETALIA, No. 68 Sixth avenue, Broklyn, ekull crushed and 11- ternal injuries; removed to Seney Hospital, where his death {s momen- tarily expected. OSDPH MOORE, foreJman of brick construction, fractured skull, concussion of the brain and fractured leg; removed to Brooklyn Hospital, where he may dis. DAVID OLSEN, No. %6 Dean streot; fractured ‘left leg and internal injuries. FLETCHER DUPUY, No, 810 Lenox road; struck by falling plank and badly cut on face and hands. LOUIS NOVA, No. 15 Rapelyea place; lacerations, ANGELO STENYIA, place; lacerations. All of ¢ named were removed to varlous hospitals. COLLAPSED BUILDING A PAYER STRUCTURE.” ‘The building where the accident hap- pened ‘taxpayer building” tn the trade phrase of the rea! estate business; that Is, a structure designed to house stores and cover property until an ad- vance in price justifies the erection of & permanent structure. It was being constructed by the Desmond Dunne Realty Company of No. 176 Montague street. Two floors had been erected and the wall of the third floor had been raised about ten feet above the level of the second, A ao-onlled “falas frame" set in the wall above the second floor sud- denly gave away about 10 o'clock and a steol girder seventy-five fect long buckled. As the grder bent a lange section of the wall fell inward upon tho brick layers and other workmen on the second floor, Tho roar of the failing wall brought people running from every quarter. First among the rescuers was Dr Lawrence Aitken of No. 169 Benzen Street, who Was passing in his auto at the tlme the accident occurred. He bumped irom his machine, ran up a ladder under the still tottering section of wall which remained standing and dragged Moore from under a pile of bricks, PASSING PRIEST HURRIES TO AID INJURED, Father Patrick McNally of St. Charles Borreneo Church at Sidney place, was on @ passing street car. He, too, hurried up @ ladder to the wreckage strewn second floor and knelt by the side of one unconscious man after another, read- ing the last office of the Church, Policeman Minion of Traffic Squad D. whose post ts at the Livingstan and Hoyt street corner, turned In a call for ambulances from the Seney, Cumberland street, Brooklyn and Long Island Hos- Pitale and then he headed the work of first ald to the injured men on the floor above, When firemen came with « lad- der truck they had to lower the most seriously wounded in fire nets because the staire had been swept away. Joseph Moore, one of the most seriously wound- ed, is #0 heavy @ that the firemen had diMoulty tn getting him to the ground, During all the time the firemen and volunteer rescuers from street and hos- pital were at work small seotions of the wall which had been weakened by the collapse of the front wal kept falling, endangering tho lives of all SCAFFOLD FALLS ONLY TWO BLOCKS AWAY. ‘By an unusual coincidence two men were seriously hurt on a building at No. 4% State street, only two blocks away, at almost the same minute that disaster overwhelmed the workmen on the Hoyt street corner. A scaffold on an uncom. pleted building there dropped from |is slings, throwing three men to the ground forty feet below. Two of the men, Patrick Tierney of No. 18 Garfield “TAX. | | ja | | [No om Myrtto avenue, and 3torris' BACK ON “BUMPERS” ty-elghth street, | Sweldig of No. 74 Manhattan, were seriously hurt by tho i; but Henry Luse, third on the scaffold, fell squarely on the bodies of the other two and escaped unhurt, though he added to the Injuries of his fellows, The WO tnjured workmen were re- moved to © tand Street Hospital B. R. T.'S BUSINESS HAS THRIVED IN PAST YEAR. Profits of the Ir are breaking ail report for the fiscal y G earnings an increase of $1,200, Net were $10,614,491, against $9,su),1 the net surplus was $4. to 8.82 per ¢ Last year Rapld Transit according to ar ending June The report exp! plan for financing its subwa new company will be formed for con- struction and equipment. Gontracts have been made with the Central Trust Co pany, Kuhn, Loeb & Co, and Kid Peabody & Co, to sell for this us t $0,000,090 in 5 per cent. notes of the new | company, to run six years. The notes will be option of the holders into 6 per cent. first mortgage bonis of the new com- pany up to Jan. 1, 1916, after which they will be redeemable at the company’s nat 101 and accrued interest on any annual interest day, on ninety notic op ys Soeiniiaenilipeiamnans BRONCO LEAPED OVER AUTO. Jumped 0 Speeding Machine with Rider to Avoid Collision Nathaniel L, Diaz of New York, who is spendigg nis vacation in Denville, N. J, went out riding yesterday on a bronco, While a: a gallop on a nar- row road the little horse suddenly stopped in the road and @ big touriag loomed up around a curve, going at igh clip ape from collision seemed tmpossl- ble and Diaz closed his eyes. Suddeniy the bronco Jumped and Diag found Lime self, still in the saddle, sailing over <h automobile, He was not hurt. He says he will buy the bronco and pension it for life. sales i SHOT SELF FOR SYMPATHY, “I shot myself to frighten my father,” said Max Deiner, thirty-six years old, of Beechhurst, Whitestone, L. I, when he was arraigned before Maxistrate Con- way in the Flushing Police Court y terday on a charge of attempting cide. “My father cut down my allowance," continued Deiner, “and I thought he would feel sorry for me when he heard I was injured. T do not want to die and am sorry for what I have done.” Deiner, who said he was formerly em- ployed as cashier in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, shot himself on July 21. He had lost his position at the Ritz-Carlton. Magistrate Conway suspended sentence. —_—>__—_. LIGHTNING HITS HIS $42. (Gpectal to The Evening World.) LONG BRANCH, N. J., Aug. 1.—-LAght- ning played havoc in this vicinity last night. At Monmouth Beach Cook & Kettle had two barns struck and de- stroyed, and In addition Cook's {co house was destroyed. A driver for Cook had $42 in cash hidden among the rafters in the barn for safe keeping. It was burned, At Kensington Park, this city, Charles McCullough's barn and hennery was struck and destroyed, burning between two and three hundred chickens, ts ———___ “A Shocking Bad Hat.” (From the London Chrontele.) Henry Melton, in his entertaining “Hinta on Hats,” gives the origin of a once popular saying, “What a shocking bad hat!" A Mr. Franks—the Parlia- mentary Commissioner who first drew attention to the employment of women and children tn mines—went canvassing for his friend Mr. Wilson, the Reform. candidate for Southwark, who was a hat manufacturer, To each elector he remarked:, “Dear me, what a shocking bad hat you have there! Pray permit me to send you another.” ‘This little ruse got talked about and became a common joke at the hustings and then travelled through the metropolis until it was in every street boy's mouth, jout he declares that in Los Ang onvertibie at the} TO GEORGE REPUBLI Hard Ride Across Continent for Boy Who Wouldn't Break Promise to Founder. L—Rather than break der of the in MeRe, bumpers” 8 to ithaca in order to get back to Freeville by Saturday. He in Ithaca yesierday and went to ile last night, He clainw to have made the trip across the continent from Los Atigeles by the freight train route t days. “Key no a close fr ne day ne ever TAN ay sixty-five 4 ITHACA, A f he miade to the for Junior R in the Republig| of Founder George im that if be given to while nd atter told ay he get Mr. is and back to t by the lid not return, away from the tmstt- nd went to the coast, nis consclence troubled him and he could not forget his promise. His quick trip back gave him a couple days to spare. lence to show that he had Los Angeles. HASTINGS, N. ¥., Aug. L—The body of a fireman of the tug Ellen M, Ronan of the Coraell Towing Company, who was drowned Monday night, was brought (o Hastings to-day by the tug Terry of the same company. The man and an engineer were in a friemdly scuffle when oth fell overboard ana were drowned. The engineer's body bas not been recovered, ITCHING SKIN COMFORTED BY POSLAM Take any case of ecsema, aug ealt theum, itch, scalp-scale, ete, however stubborn, and Poslam will stop i as soon as applied, bringing i relief and comfort. These troubles cause acute distress particularly in hot weather when bodily ease is difficult under best conditions, In curing sunburn, rashes, pim ng ivy-poisoning, mosquito bites, ae, Patan more effective than any- thing else, driving away soreness at once. An_ over-night application will clear undue redness and inflamed skin. Depend upon Poslam to exert its wonderful healing power whenever and however the skin 5 POSLAM SOAP, medicated with Pos-- lam, should be used daily for toilet and bath, particularly when the skin is tender or shows any tendency to erup: tional troubles. Absolutely pure and safe, free from irritation—the soap of healing goodness and real benefits. All druggists sell Poslam (price, 50 (price, 23 For free samples, write to the 82 West 25th cents) and Poslain Soap cents). @elictous Pepperm!: Blood Purifier makes youl and bright in James McCreery & Co, 23rd Street 34th Street UNUSUAL VALUES NECKWEAR AND VEILS On Friday and Saturday Morning, . ‘ Stocks with Jabots attached, effec- tively trimmed with lace. 45cand75c¢° values 75c and 1.50 Plauen Lace Collars............65¢ value 1.25 White Lace Veils......45¢ and 75c values 75c and 1.25 Chiffon Veils in various colors. ,.1.25 value 1,75 What is Castoria Oat fs a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, Its age is its guarantee. It | | destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhea, imilates the” Food, giving healthy and natural sleep, | The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. Ld The Kind You Have Always Bou; 80 years, has borne the signature of C! his personal sup rvision since its infancy. Allow no on It regulates the Stomach t, and which has been in use for over All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘‘Jus' .H. Fletcher, and has been made under to deceive you in this, but Experiments that * ari trifle With and endanger the health of Infants and ren--Experience against periment, Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of \ “ “¥ * FREE WITH NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD (FOR THE COUPON) A Photogravure Portrait (Sire 15x20%) WOODROW WILSON Same Style as the Famous ries Twi dents’? Photograyures, rt but Move Thee Li HEAVY INDIA TINT PAPER, HOT PRESSED sunracr, ee plendid photosravure from photograph ever taken of @ Democratic candidate for President, For Full Details See First Page Mag Next Sunday's World & photog Dh by Pa Oh Broe.—the dest azine Section ee nl