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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1918.” MOTHERS DUTY \No Flirting, No Gossip, No Puffs, No Frills; TOKEEP AN EVE ON DAUGHTERS Parents Should Go With Girls on Outings, Says Mrs. C. H. Israels, WOULD BE LESS CRIME. City Should Employ Women to Act as Chaperons in Many Cases, “It mothers would make confidantes of thelr daughters, enjoy the same Pleasures and visit the same places of amusement, there would be lees crime in the world, and girls would Brow up to be obedient and loving daughters.” This statement wae made to-day by Mrs. Charles H. Isracis, chairman of the Committee on Amusement Re- sources of Working Girls. Mrs. Israels has done much in looking after the recreation of working girls and in see- ing to the morals of the dance halle, “There are more than a quarter of @ emiliion girls in New York between t! ages of fourteen and twenty years, eald Mrs. Israels, “The majority work from nine to ten hours a day at an average wage of $6 per week. Once a girl begins to earn her own fving she feels independent. She no longer con- siders herself under her mother's jur- indiction, and never consults her mother out her companions or her places of amusement. Mothers grow old before their time and know little of the where- abouts of their daughters. Often they care } exclaiming, ‘Oh, my Jennie is all right. She is a good little girl and doesn't want to burden me with her cares.’ PARENTS THEREBY MAKE A FATAL MISTAKE. “This is a grave mistake among par- ents of the working gi should make it her business to become acquainted with her daughter's com- panions. She should make up family Parties and chaperon her daughters on all pleasure trips. I have noticed that the excursion boats which run to “Bridgeport, New Haven and up the Hudson, seldom, if ever, carry any one except young couples, A girl never takes her mother along. That te why we say there is a crying need for @ chaperon for the steamers. “Our society has tin mind @ woman who will admirably suit the purpose. She is a gentlewoman of refinement, who has the power and the tact to rep- rimand in @ ladylike manner, If this woman be appointed she will have a watchful eye on the mothers with bables, and suggest to them that there {ea large retiring room where there are free berths in which they can lay the children, instead of making beds on every chair. It has been suggested that the ship companies do not rent state rooms on the-trip up the river, but only on returning, and not to young tray- eflers. One transportation company which chartered two boats running to Bridgeport and up the Hudson from the Long Island Ratlroad Company last was not allowed to renew the charter this year because they did not rigidly enforce the proper kind of disci- pline, ‘Another place where ® chaperon is sadly needed {8 on tho recreation piers during the dancing. In many of these places dancing !s not allowed, Where it is permitted {t is a great success, five cents admission being charged, It proves that there is no reason other than preju- dice for not allowing the young people to dance on the piers. I am sure the dancers would be much safer under city supervision than in the dance halls of which we know nothing. PUBLIC DANCE HALLS AND OTHER PLACES FREQUENTED. “There are about five hundred public ballrooms in New York, to say nothing of summer picnic resorts, excursion boats, mption pictures and cheap variety shows, which the working giris use as amusement resources, Something must * be wrong with the girl who, after the strain of a long day's work, does not look forward to an evening of pleasure and companionship in the public ball- rooms. ‘The firl who has worked hard all day to exist ‘has to play to live,’ Evening finds her in the public batt room. Here there is no introduction, no social chaperonage. She sits by until she ts ‘copped.’ 1. &., @ man places him- self before a girl in an attitude of ex: pectancy, or two girls dance together until a couple of men ask them to ‘break.’ Frequently these men are teadets.’ The girl 1s whirled around, breathless and exelted, and !mpelied by the music, her instinct to break away from the constraint of her cramped, un- emotional life exerts itself, The girl pays for her ‘good time," “All this tRagedy could be averted if the mothers would take an Interest in thelr daughters. 8 they won't, how- ever. the city must, We must have more protection for our young girls, and so many chaperons are needed.” GIRL ACTRESS ARRESTED. Accused of having assaulted eleven- year-old Edward Smith of No, 319 ‘West ourth atreet, Gladys Taylor, eix- teon years old, who said she 1s an act- of No, 415 West Forty-fourth , was locked up I Miss Taylor as returning home when’ several ohil- dren, including the Smith boy, Jeered at According to the police s she passed the house where the lives. Sane picked up a marble froin the sidewalk, the police say, and threw it, striking the Smith boy on the head, The boy ran home and told his mother, and she complained to Patrolman Galla- gher, who arrested Miss Smith, he Adamless Eden Where 30 Eves Obey Rule Girls From Back Bay, Guests of Miss Helen Clay Frick, Wear Gingham Gowns and Speak to No Man Save the Minister—All Keep Secret Except One, Who Tells and Runs Away. The only genuine Adamless Eden in existence lies behind a big stone wall at Thompson's Four Corners, Beverly Farms, Mass. There, hidden away from spying eyes, twenty-year-old Miss Helen Clay Frick, only daughter of Henry C. Frick, banker and multi-millionaire, is conducting a summer colony for girls, where there is no gossiping, no fibbing, no | flirting and no frills, There thirty young Eves from the Back Bay, minus rate and switches and dressed in gingham gowns, have romped close to nature all summer with not a single Adam to disturb. When strangers puss on the road every eye is lowered and only min- isters are recognized. At night the young men of Beverly who cannot see the seriousness of the experiment drive by the entrauce to the “garden” in traps, playing banjos and calling on the young ladies to come forth and “spoon by the light of the silvery moon.’ But there is never & sound from within Every one és sup Poned to be asleep at 9 o'clock and, al- though they are very wide ewake, the young women meike no sound te tell the @ingere of their utter indifference to masoulinity. What goes on inaide has long been & mystery to the residents of the fash- jonable North Shore. From time to time rumors of the (aws adopted dy the colony have leaked out, but those who could find out by a single word have never asked. The Frick servants, adopt- ing the frigid demeanor of the stee! mil- Honaire, whose advances have been coldly met by Massachusetts ariatoo- Tacy, would say nothing. YOUNG WOMAN TELL8 AND RUNS AWAY. But the secret is out at last. A young woman who wouldn't tell her name, and who dashed back into the “garden” when an Evening World reporter tried to photograph her, is responsible for the revelations, Her entrance into the story was an accident. In fact the lifting of the veil of mystery surrounding the Adamless Eien came about by chance, ‘The Frick estate, oocupying both sides of the road for half @ mile at Pride's Crossing and fenced in, ts rarely en: ered. Neighbors of the millionaire are not often seen on the grounds, The au- tomobiles that pass up the great drive- way have the “red numbers” which are 80 unfavorably received along the North Shore. Tt is sald that Henry C. Frick cannot bring the Quincys and Adamses and Searses and ‘Winthrops of Severly Farms to recognise chat a fortune made in the olf Galem Gays of full-rigged ships, Medford rum and slave trade ie no better than one made in the Pitte- burgh trade in coal mines and steel mins, It is further known thet H. C. Frick has offered the fortune of any one of his neighbors for @ smal! strip of beach which would let his estate border on the ocean, The answer may be ween any day when the Frick car passes two miles down the road to a public beach which Nes a hundred yards from his estate. So, lately, the mil- fonaire has not been in good humor, It was in this frame of mind The Eve- ning World reporter found him. He had just alighted from his Umousine, ac- companted by two guards. “GET OUTI” 6AID FRICK—NOTH- ING MORE. “Get out! Get out!” he exclaimed when asked about the Adamiess Eden, “I forbid you to go near the house.” He entered his mansion ag though the matter were settled. At Thompson's Four Corners, through @ break in the high stone wall could be geen several young women in gingham gowns that hardly came below the knees. They were rocking and reading on the porch of an old-fashioned New England house. Several gtris in bathing sults and carrying blankets were ap- proaching from @ pond which could be’ seen through the trees, As they caught sight of the reperter they fled, throwing the blankets over their shoulders and exclatming: “Heavens! It’ man!" In @ moment not a eign of life could be seen from the outaide, save for a very stupid looking gardener who went on cHpping a hedge. The blinds of the house were drawn, Out on the road a moter cycie police- man told what little he Rnew of the place. Just then @ felr hatred young woman at the wheel of @ monster dust covered car whiazed by, She waved her hand at the house and turned her head from the policeman in the road On two wheels the car turned around one of Thompson's Four Cornere and shot up a hit, “That's Eleanor Sears,” ead the po liceman. “She's driving Harold Van- derdilt's car to the Myopia Hunt Club." According to the policeman, Miss Bears ie in danger'of @ summons if she turns many more corners on two wheels, But to return to/Mise Frici’e colony. For a time everything remained quiet. Presently there arose a few giggies from ‘behind the hedge, but no faces could be seen, As the reporter went down the Toad, quite a distance from the house, a girl in gingWam with hair combed ‘back simply and..tied in @ braid came strolling actoss the field. She had not witnessed the disturbance of a tew moments before and agreed to tell about the colony, saying it was eo “Interest- ing to be the fifet one to give out the secret and that the summer was over anywi GAYS SHE SHOULDN'T TELL, GUT DOES. “Ot course I. should not tell," she pouted, “and Afies Frick will simply be wild, but we've iad such @ jolly me and the cofony.de so successful that it ought to be. tolf. “The plate ia:gWned and run by Miss Frick, ThpZ ome from Boston and Miss Prt the expenses. She christened fo ‘Iron Rall’ to signify how steadfasty we were going to keep our resolutions, We agreed not to wear rate or puffs or frills of any kind; never to gossip or tell fibs and above all not to flirt. We have gone all summer without speaking to @ man ex- DON’TS FOR 30 EVES IN ADAMLESS EDEN OF HELEN C. FRICK. Don't airs, Don't av. Don't gossip. ‘Don't weer rate or puffs or frills. Don't speak to strange young Don't stay up after 10 o'clock. Don't sainte any man but © min- cept the pokey old gariener and the minister, When strangers pass on the Toad every girl is eupposed to lower her And: the young woman looked ve @olemn, apparently seeing no tecon Sruity in the present situation. ‘When we go down to Beverly,” she continued, “we dress up, of course, but we never epeak to any young men, even though we have known them a long time, Miss Frick doesn’t care a bit about young men, and we don't elther. We have our games and domestic train: |! ing under instructors. On the 160 acres comprising ‘Iron Rail’ there are tennis courts, & golf links and a baseball dia- mond. Gome of the girls can play good ball, too. You'd be “But don't you see any young men all summer? was asked. ‘We eve them, but they don’t see u: replied the fair informant. ‘Nearly evening some of the boys from Beverly farms drive by singing and playing on danjoes, but we never make a sound, we eet along very nicely without them. When men are away Sirls never have any little differences OF Jealousies. Of course some prefer Moonlight walks and spooning and all thet, dut this way is eo much more eanstble, “The best of food ts served at ‘Iron Rail’ and we have @ magnificent - brary of popular books. So, you see, there tent a thing wanting for a perfect qummer.” ‘The young woman refused to tell the names of any of her companions in the Adamless Eden. “Why, the idea!” she exclaimed. “In- eed, no! That wouldn't be o bit fair! Tell you my name? Horrors! I've told you enough already—far more than I ebould have; but I'm so ourtous to see the story in print, I'm going up now. Miss Roberte—she's the chaperon—wi!! de looking for me. And please send over @ paper with the story, Oh, my! ‘Won't there be excitement trying to find out who told!" And the girl who “peached” ran e@orese the field toward “Iron Rail” AUTO BURGLARS WAKE BG HAULS IN EXCLUS MOUNT VERNON HOME £10,000 Heirlooms and Jewels Taken From one Residence; Others Entered. Ernest Zoretehr, Brooklyn, INMATE OF ASYLUM DIES AFTER ATTACK BY ANOTHER PATIENT Aged “Trusty” Pounced Upon and Beaten Over Head With Fire Hose Nozzle. Andrew Serom sixty-six years old, an inmate of the Long Island State Hospital for the Insane for the past six- teen years, ied today from the effects of « fractured skull, which he received at the hands of another patient of the hospital, merly of No. 8 North Fifth street, who entered the institution two months ago and was never sus- pected of mantacal tendenctes, stehr was @ mild-mannered old man} who suffered only from certain delusions | of a fantastic sort and who was known nd trusted by all the hospital was considered in the light of a and as such wi permitted @ certain amount of liberty and allowed to do| cleaning jobs and run errands about the balls of the buildings. Burgiaries attempted tn the past couple of days have brought to Mght the fact that $10,000 worth of jewels and heir- looms were stolen from F, M. Dun- baugh of No, 177 Summit avenue, Ches- ter Hil, Mount Vernon, on July &3. Mr, Dunbaugh has offered 600 for in- formation leading to their recovery, George EB. Cutler and his wife, who live at No, & Claremont avenue, were awekened Thursday night by « burg. lar, who covered them with @ revolver and escaped. He had taken $14 and eeveral ecarfpins. After the burglar left Mr, Cutler says heard an auto start off. ‘The Police Department discovered also that the residence of 8. Xk Taylor at No. 02 Cedar street had been ransacked, Mr. Taylor and his family ere out of town, and it ta not known what was stolen. The home of Wayles B, Bradley, No. 175 Elm mue, was robbed early im the week. neighbor said #he saw «@ large touring car standing before the Bradley resi- dence that night. Burgiars entered the home of Robert No, ‘emont avenue, late Thureday night, but were frightened away by Mr. Herbst. It ts reported an attempt was made to enter a house on Archer avenue after the attempt on the Herbst residence, Neighbors chased the burglar: Wife Jatled Him Too Often WASHINGTON, Aus. 10.—George Wil-| ¢ kine of Brightwood, D. C,, who w. ntenced to eerve six months in the orkchouse for non-support of hin wife and two children, has complained to Judge Delacy that he has not had time to make a living for his family, He deciares that @s fast as he gets out of to Ju jail his wife has him put back and wil) sor attenward adjudged ipsane, Rot Give bim time fo support her, with the hi hose which tie a from the hot gubdue him. 6 from ed by obliged On Thureday he was sweeping one of the corridors when Seromo leaped on him from around the corner paseage and struck him over the head y brass norzlo of a fire lant had unscrewed ine im its rack against the wall, The old man dropped without a word, and he never recovered con-| eclousness. Seromo gave one wild shrick of ex- ultation that filled the whole bullding and brought the guards to the scene on the run. They found him gloating over the man he had struck down, they tried to remove him he resisted thelr efforte and it required several men He {# now in solitary confinement, and Coroner Giinnen 1s in- vestigating the case. the Coroner will recommend that the! Grand Jury cominit the murderer to the Matteawan Asylum Insane. It was later learned that Seramo had come to the He went in June 2% at his home, No. 127 Berry stroct, Brooklyn cut his throat room, stabbed hin wite when she tried to take the knife away from hit, and then ran out into the street and toward tho freight yards nearby, where he was found and arr It I likely that for the Criminal ital with alcoholiam PRIME BEEF 20 CENTS Because New York Will Take Gilt Edge Meat. The highest on prime cuts. Ordinary cute, in the last month. thirty, for- prive, Inquiry to-day showed that Zor) yorkers a aft, He trusty,” | will take about all the of the! put on beef by the poorer people. grazing districts of the Weet. ports all plenty of cattle on the ranches, chops were 25 cents a calf's liver was 32 cents @ pound, Fish \d when Friday. a BRINGS MILLION IN GOLD bad record, on Discovery Also on Way ede boon to Tacoma, P claim will average #10 @ pound, r AND NOT PLENTY EVEN AT TOPNOTCH PRICE Trust Boosts Wholesale Rate price for best in New York City has been reached to-fay im the advance of half a cent, wholesale, how- ever, are no higher than at any time ‘The very best pleces of beef are now selling here at wholesale around 18, 19 nd 20 cents @ pound, an unprecedented ating prime beef as freely now at the top notch prices as they did when the cost was % to 8 per cent. less, ‘This town, according to the Beef Trust “itt meat it can get at any price owing to the great number of well-to-do people here who believe in eating the st meat no matter what it costs them. ‘The result 1# @ scarcity of prime beef, ‘As to the cheap cuts, the trust agen have available here as at Chicago more than they can sell, owing to the boycott ‘A decided drop in cattle prices 19 ex- pected in September, when the yearling hetfers come to market from the great The re- indicate good grazing and Prime rib roasts sold to-~lay at re- tail in Washington Market at 28 cents @ pound and the same price ruled for loin chops of lamb. Veal chops and pork pound and prices averaged @ decline of @bout cent pound over the previous FROM FAIRBANKS FIELD. Many Made Rich by New Placer TACOMA, Aug. 10.—One million doNare in gold from new Alaska piacer camps will arrive to-day on board the steam- ship Victoria, which ts also bringing 283 sengers from Nome and St, Michael's, FALLS TO DEAT FROM FLAT WINDOW OF HOMAN FRIEND Architect Had Been Calling on Mrs. Dayan, but Had Left, She Declares, |OUT TO SUPPER PARTY. |Police Believe Victim Was Trying to Re-Enter by Creeping Along Coping. A womaws shrill ecream én the night— @ eolttary pedestrian’e hat knocked from his head and @ suitcase dashed from his atone pavement. Such were the ewitt incidents of a second shortly after mid- night this morning when Jobn D, Mo Donal, @ young architect, met hie death by falling from the fourth floor of the Manhattan Court apartments, at Nos 10 to 16 Manhattan avenue. Mra. Sarah Dayun, who at first denied ever having known the man who plunged through the dark to his death, collapsed when she was brought to look at the broken body, and in her hysteria told an unusual tale of a supper and a clandestine visit. Together with Mar- garet Lambert, who eays she is an art- ist'a model, and Mary MoNIff, @ sten- ographer, both of whom ghare Mrs. Dayan’s apartments, the woman who admitted having seen the young archt- teot last before he met his death, were held as witnesses, Coroner Holtzhauser, after hearing the statements of the three women dis- charged them and attributed MaDon- ali’s death to aceMient. + | While Mira Dayan and her two |compantons, Mies Lambert and Miss | MoDuft, were awaiting examination NEW YORKER HELD hand—then the thud of body on the| MRS, HENRY HUTT SUES AS SLAVE BY BAND | HER ARTIST HUSBAND OF MEXICAN REBELS William Bender Tortured Eight Months, Escapes After Being Condemned to Death RENO, Aug. 10—Charging only ton and asking for the custody of eight-year-old child, who ts with her, in Reno, Mra, Edna G. Hutt, today filed @ suit for divorce from Henry Hutt, the well known artist and {lustrator, Rumors are to the effect that Mr. Hutt will make no centest, although he represented by counsel, Mra, Hutt asserts that her deserted her in 1910, They were married in 1908, Soon after they were married Mr. Hutt proudly deciared that his wife was “more beautiful than the Venus és Milo." ‘Their marital differences were made public two years ago, Mea. Hutt filed a suit for separation im New. York. She was awarded $100 @ week allmony and counsel fees pending the trial. She charged that her husband HE TELLS HIS STORY. Snakes Thrown Into His Prison to Kill Him—Walks 400 Miles in Getting Away. @AN FRANCISCO, Aug. 10.—A tale of adventure and suffering In Mexico was tala here by William Bender of New ‘ork, who said he arrived from the Gouthern repubtic by way of Nogates, Aris, He told of his capture as a apy, f having teen held aa @ slave by his rebel captors, of being condemned to death by « court-martial, of his escape and of a tramp of four thousand miles to seach the United States. Bender sald he was bom tn Germany, ‘but became an American when his father ‘was naturalized. After graduating trom Cornell University he became a first Moutenant in the Ninth Regiment of the New York National Guard, Later he spent @ year as a volunteer in the Ger- man army, Bender, according to his, account, re- tured to Mexico and went prospecting in Mluahua, He was stopped and arched by rebels. They found his ‘ational Guard uniform and arrested him as an American «py. ‘Rho rebela held him captive for eight months, he said, and made him do the menial work in camp. “T had heard of the foulness of Mex- feo prisons, but I never imagined there could be a place ao awful aa that in whtoh I was thrown,” he sald. “One day the guards threw into my aell two rattlesnakes, with the hope that they by Coroner Holtshauser Mrs, Dayan told her story to an Evening World reporter. Mrs, Dayan is @ demure little | woman, quite pretty; ehe wae dressed tastily in @ Diue tailor made suit. Miss Lambert, who is not above nineteen, is also very pretty. Miss McDuft, slightly older than Mrs, Dayan, & also | of refined appearance. “I met Mr. McDoneld last June,” she oaid, “and I always found him « quiet young fallow of charming addrese; he Was not to my knowledge a drinkin; man. Lant night he called on us at about @ o'clock and later he asked me to go with him to the St. Brendon at One Hundred and Third street and Coi- umbus avenue to havea supper. We re turned from the re-taurant about 11.4, “Mr, McDonald came tn the apart. ment with me and stayed until a few minutes after 12. Miss Lambert was then asleep in an aloove off the main room and Miss McDuff was im nor bed- room in the rear. after Mr, McDonald bert scream. Then I heard a fall. ran from my bed to Miss Lambert's side. She told me she had heard the noise ef some one working at the soreun outside her window and that when sue screamed whe saw the screen fall out- ward.” HAD SEEN MAN GOING ovr WITH WOMAN. Wiltam Calhoun, the colored nigh elevator boy, was the first person the police examined. At first the boy dented that there had been anybody in the house would kill me. I killed ¢he enak: The same performance was repeated later.” Finally, Bender eaid, he was con- demned to be shot, but made friends with one of his guards, who afded him ‘to escape, In making hie way to the ‘west coast he had to cross r eiver on & log, but the current carried him alone for ¢ighteen hours before he could reach the opposite bank. Bender said thet after many hardships he reached Ma- matian, but, being unable to obtain work, ar to Nogales, where he earned his railway ¢are to this olty. MOTHER DIES IN VAIN ATTEMPT TO SAVE SON. Passaic Woman Leaps Into Water From Yacht, but Clothes Weight Her'Down. BUFFAIA, Aug. 10.—Mra, Clock of Passaic, N. J., lost her life in abi but unsuccessful effort to eave the life of her two-year-old eon im the harbor here last evening. Mr, Clock, an adjuster for the Fidelity Casualty Company of New York, came here last Tuesday with his family oo the yacht Atlantic and anchored at the breakwall off the foot of Porter avenue. Mrs. Clock and the boy were alone on the boat last evoning woen the ittle fellaw tripped un a rope and fell over- board. M Clock jumped into the water, but, hampered by her clothing, she was unable to rescue the boy, Men at the Buffalo Yacht Club heard MATCHLESS LIQUID GLOSS becaase tealtis dust instead of scat- tering it, Edward and grease and brings that night answering the description of the dead man, but when tho policemen forced him to look at the features of the young architect he qualled and ad- mitted that he had known the dead man ae “Mr. McDonald,” that he was @ friend of Mre. Dayan and that he had seen him going out with Mrs, Dayan, Repeated knocking at the Dayan apartment at first fatled to draw any fesponse. Finally @ young @nd hand- eome woman, with @ kimono hastily thrown over her night-dress, came to the door, In «@ steady voice a! dened having had any visitor that Mant, denied ever having known any- body by the name of McDonald and de- nied having gone out earlier in the eve- aing with two men, LOOKED ON FACE OF DEAD AND FAINTED. But Lieut. Dunn made hor dress and descend to the street. An electric fash was turned on the face of the dead man. Mre. Dayan looked at the face once, ebrieked and fainted “"¥ee-—yes,”” she sobbed when ashe had recovered control of herself. “I know him. Lt fe John MoDonald, and he and 1 went out to @ late supper, When pressed to explain why the man with whom she had supped should be lying dead on the pavement, Mra, Dayan aid that she and MoDonald had re- turned to the apartments alone, Mo- Donald had stayed until after midnight, she added, and had only gone reluctant: ly when she insisted that be should, The last she eaw of him was when she bade him good night at the door of he? epartments, But the policemen noticed that the body of McDonald had not fallen be- neath the windows of Mrs. Dayan's rooma, but directly below that of her friend, Miss Lambert, A screen trom this window lay beside the body, the woman's cries and were alongside the Atlantic In fow minutes. Mra. Clock was floating near the surface, All efforts to revive her wore futile. ‘The body of the boy was recovered an hour late! aliens WOMEN IN BURNING AUTO, Occupants Unhart, but Friend Sprat Ankle Ranaing to Them. An automobile belonging to Mra. H. L, Rutter of No, 110 Lincoln place, Brooklyn, wae partially destroyed by fire Inst night near Jamesport, L. 1, and Mrs. Rutter and her daughter, Miss Littan Rutter, had narrow escapes. They were driving toward Shelter Is- land to join Mr, Rutter, who was on his way there by train, When in front of the home of George A. Fleury, President of the United States Title Guarantee Company, of Brooklyn, the oar caught fire. Mins Rutter, who was drtving, shut off the engine and both women jumped out. They had no fire extinguisher, but John H. Hagan of Riverhead, who wae Passing in his cer, put owt the binge, Mrs. Floury, who witnessed the fire from her home, fell and severely epratned her ankle in running to the assistance of the other women, back the original brightness, lepar oteres Standard Oil World Advertising Brings Receipts Bigger Than STATEN ISLAND BEACH LAND beady rng i'd oe uth Beach, N, August 1, adia, Slided ‘tat. we would” have a. digas: frousaeaain "to “far aa “necelpts are concerned. toed coberes hare come the our a : the : ihe Beate Se ted in ‘The tied ‘ Mytin ea "es | hy of losing money, remain, very tn youn gland Beach Lead Tmprore. TO REACH THE GREATEST NUMBER OF PROSPECTIVE ‘host wonven Ua VAN'S NORUB— DORS THE ny Sunday World VAN'S NORUB gives better remilia, with lowe work, than ee Neat mh h of the way back Many have just recently come into vast|, Back they went into the apartment There, it was found that his wife had | fortunes through the discovery of placer |BOus® and awakened Miss Lambert and n removed to a hospital, while his| gold In the Fairbanks dtetri is MoNIff, who occupied adjoining three emall children weré crying from| They are coming to enjoy sights ana| %edroom@. Both women appeared to loneliness and fear luxuries mot yet afforded in Alaskan | have been awakened from @ sound sleep mm the following day while a pollce-| camps, Some will order mining ma. {Md professed to know nothing that had an was altting in the front window} oninery and hurry back before naviga. | transpired, Finally under hard ques ot Seramo's apartment on tho ground! io closes, Others will remain outside | tioning Miss Lambert admitted that ah or Seramo grabbed h threw Llin} winter. hed heard som e fumbling at hhr odily into the street, j 4 after him | ¥ A | hi same: h and ran to the dock at the foot of North thern Alaska is excited over the | Window and had screamed, She demed Seventh street and Fast. River and {discovery of quarts at Tickel, near Val-|that sho had risen from her bed to ped into the water. Several long-| des rugning $100,000 tn old @ ton, Ex. | investigate, but maintained that after en rescued him, He wag shortly|perts sy tho entire “dump” on one the noise at the window had subsided jebe had gone right to sleep again. a RNB ts VAN ZILE COMPANY, 500 Bummit AvgW, Hoboken, NJ To -Morrow FR A END DOE