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> ‘ae! REDS VICTORIOUS, BLUE ARMY NOW IN A SEROUS PLEHT Brooklyn Troops, on Right) | Flank, Retreat Ten Miles to | Bridgeport. LEFT WING DEFEATED, Abandons Hawleyville To-, Day After Hard Fight Against Superior Force. REANQUARTANS CHIEF UMPIRE, | STRATFORD, Conn. Av 1—This was a disastrous day for the Blue de- fenders of New York. The right and Jett flanks of the Hiues were forced to Fetreat and Gotham's predicament grows mere serious every minute. ¥ Shortly after 8 o'clock A. M. the Riue brigade on the right flank near Naugae tuck Junction, east of the Housatonic River, broke camp and began a retfeat to Bridgeport. The First and Second New York Cavairy covered the retreat! | Capt. Hennesny. BE the three Blue Regiments, the Four-| eckwith Havens, Inte last evening feenth, Twenty-third and Forty-sevent® | atrempted a spectacular fight. H of Brooklyn. caused the soldiers in Red and Blue The retrenting brigade was haraseed|wamps to hold thelr breath as he pl- by small detachments of the Reds, but | rouetted along air channels, spiral the retreat was an orderly one. Thelt| dipped and spun in diaay circles. Capt. march covered about ten miles, and the | Honnessy watched the flying with @ Brooklyn soldiers were a hot and dusty sinking heart, and when the death- Jot when they reached Bridgeport. On the left flank the Blues’ fighting began about the same time the Blue right flank retreat was under way. The ‘Blue left flank, located in the vicinity of Hawieyville and Firth United States Infantry, Firet Ver- mont Infantry and a troop of the Tenth Cavalry, found itself arrayed against the First and Second Connecticut In- fantry, First Maine Infantry and two troops of the Tenth Cavalry. BLUE ARMY Now IN A SERIOUS i PLIGHT. { The defenders, finding themsetves opelessly outnumbered after two hours of fighting, began a retreat toward Dan- bury. The plight of the Blue army 1 serious one as a result of the Rod wement. Danbury is the base of aup- for the Blue army and will be the nk Of the Biues. The Blue artu- ve been concentrated in this vi+ @fd thus may prevent the Rede Pressing their advant: being enforced with the army birdmen, daring Havens reached the grounds he was warned never again to allempt such stunts in war time, that was glad to get into camp and reat insisting of the | its Brooklyn. regiment was forced to hike four miles more than necessary and last night on top of all of it was the advance guard. were some distance from the regiment and to sleep in the open without even a blank: a Frank H. private were This is a great country for chixgers. The combatting the little delving pes: eS. “* THE EVEN ING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1 912. Scenes on Battlefields ot Connecticut; Artillery in Action; Cavalry on the March NEAR There was one New York regiment] | welf—the In weary Twenty-third yesterday's battle of this leoted to act as The wagon trains 8 @ result the officers were forced This morning the regiment awoke with vere case of chiggers. From Col Norton down to the smallest in the rear ranks, all hands scratching their smitten hides. fi olliers are more concerned in than | ¢) in. fighting jthe high brow military problems designed by the nation's war lords. Information was received to-day BRIDGEPORT + Perne tities ARMY AVIATORS tempting to carry out thelr orders to in Connecticut regardiess of weather! Kirtland of the United States army met with an accident in Plymouth Harbor disabling of thelr hydro-aeroplane, ‘The machine fell in four feet of water and they were rescued in a short time PHo BY PLUNGE INTO BAY; CRAFT DISABLED deuts. Arnold and Kirtland} Meet With Mishap on Way. to the War Game. (Special to The Brening World.) PLYMOUTH, Mass., Aug. 12.—In at- ly to the acene of the war maneouvres onditions, Ideut, Arnold and Lieut. his morning which resulted in tho Neither of the aviators was injured. neGwe IF TT WAS A JOKE, WHY CARRY A JIMMY? Immigrant, Who Wanted a Square Meal, Is Held In- If anybody can tell more of a hard- be) TO GRA PHS INTRRENS TIONAL TeRVICR | ZERIERSKY IS ASKING, stead for Burglary. SQUIRRELS’ FRIEND, Justice Suggests That Aged | GUILTY, DISCHARGED; HIS PISTOL A RELIC Naturalist Give Mexican War Weapon to Museum. Dr. Joseph Simms, octogenerian, au- | the boatmen, showing « particular par- jtlality for Goulet and the man who sub- |}dog home with him thére was a row jand First avenue, where they had an- Ninety-sixth street, started to help Goulet, but inside of a minute he was | stretched out beside Goulet, and Pa- BOATMAN IS KILLED IN FIGHT OVER DOG; SKULL IS CRUSHED, Friend Who Sought to Aid Him Also Knocked Unconscious. Assailant Makes Escape. A fight over a homeless fox terrier last night was the cause of the death of Frederick Goulet, forty years old, @ boatman, living with bis wife and family at No, & Bush atreet, Brooklyn. Goulet, with a number of other boatmen, including the unidentified man who killed him, made his headquarters at the foot of Hast Ninety-sixth atreet. Yesterday the fox terrier strayed down to the waterfront and made friends with sequently Killed him. When Goulet an- nounced that he intended to take the that at that time did not get beyond words. Goulet took the dog home with him, however, but shortly before midnigiit he returned and met the man who claimed the dog at Ninety-sixth street other altercation, which resulted in a fight. The man lifted Goulet off nis feet with a jolt on the jaw that sent him crashing to the sidewalk. Another boatman, Joseph Edgart, who lives on one of the boats at the foot of East trolman Flynn, of the East E! ‘y-aixth street station was unable to decide at first which was most seriously hurt. Goulet had a fractured skull, and he was taken to the Metropolitan Hospital, where he died this morning. YACHTS, ON FINAL RUN OFN.¥. CLUB CRUSE HEAD FOR NEWPORT With Hatches Battened Down, They Get Away From Vine- yard Haven in Fine Wind. VI 18. ARD HAVEN, Mass, Aug. SISTER OF THE KAISER WHO WAS ROBBED OF JEWELRY IN LONDO! PRINCESS FREDERICK CHARLES HESSE FIREWORKS EXPLOSION KILLS FIVE PERSONS: THREE ARE CHILDREN Bodies of Victims in Auburn Crash Are Blown to Pieces and House Is Wrecked. AUBURN, N. ¥., Aug. 13.—Five per- sons were blown to bits in an explosion of fireworks which were being prepared in the Italian colony here to-day for & celebration. The dead are: Cosimo D. Carmelengo of Fairview, Ju manufacturer of the fireworks and Mrs. ‘Mary Cheche and three children, Emma eleven, Armando nine, and Carmela seven. Fragments of their bodies were found scattered about the house in IKAISER'S SISTER ROBBED OF EELS I ROYAL THRONE Princess of Hesse Loses Gems of Enormous Value as She Takes Train,in London, THEFT KEPT SECRET. Scotland Yard Men Fail to Get Trace of Casket Stolen a Week Ago. LONDON, Aug. 13%—That Princess Frederick Charles of Hesse, the Kais= ers eister, was robbed of jewels of enormous value as she was leaving Lon- don for Germany last week, leaked out to-day through unavoidable publicity growing out of the efforts Scotiand Yard and the German Embassy are making to recover the gems. Apparently the Jewel casket of the Princess was stolen from the royal car at Victoria Station while “goodby's’* were beink exchanged between the Princess and her relatives of the British royal family. Not only were the gems intrinsically valuable but sentimentally their loss is irreparable. eesti emene ROOSEVELT AND ARCHIE TAKE AN “OLD MAN’S WALK.” Covering 20 Miles To-Day, Paus ing for a Picnic Luncheon at Noon. OYSTER BAY, Aug. 13.—Col. Roosevelt set forth from Sagamore Hill early tos day with his son Archie for what he called “an old man's walk.” Waving an Alpine walking stick, he struck out across the fields and said he would be back by $ o'clock this evenin, “The old man's walk” wag to be prob- ably twenty miles, with a’ picnic lunch- eon in the middle of the day. Mrs, Roosevelt and several others started out a few hours later by automobile to overs take tho w: Col. Roosevelt ld that to-night he might have a few visitors from New York to talk polities, Since his return from Chicago he has given little time to politics, preferring to take a complete rest before beginning his campaign trips, ——— 5 : ce who, |—The New York Yacht Club fleet start- | Wich the crash ocurred. cna Wack headquarters from Beverly that Pre: , 5 . luck story than Louis Lerlereky told | thor, book lover and naturalist, who, bs Aue Fire Marshal Coneybear ts positive Mass a \e eens Fitth Hed atates dent ‘Taft, Secretary of War Stimson, | Py life savers. mmeaivtely upon land: | to-day to the police of the East Fifth| with hts wife lives at the Hotel Empire, an tor Ne nc annual cruise under | that prohibited explosives were used | With the hearty co-operation of the Br coltcacn “plain ora Majorstien. Laonsrs wood ‘kad Mator Heats ey en aera 4) atreot station he had better step around | Sixty-third street a Broadway, plead- a dled that indicated a thrash to|and found a bomb in the Rays Wak Donovan, ah ee St. pee . oud, id ‘s ary aide, ag exe im ete ne d guilty before Judge Crain in General Lee $ fs oe 4ck's Chureh, Richmond, 8. 1, a come Third United States Infantry com-| would arrive here to-morrow, Gov. Dix. and hold communion of sympathy with ¢ windward of thirty-seven miles, The re a asc Ria . Manded the Biue forces. The greater | who had Intended leaving camp to-day,| The two Heutenants left Marblehead | the aforesaid Zerlersky, who Is at pres: ey ene maay, te Mantacee sti wind hauled well ‘into the west during ihn tee ae ee ger weit Be ere. he eaVeriil beeen on t Of to-day’ r he Preside y atternnc ent Ina cell. J 5 sand this morning was piping . Ga, Aug. 1%—Three ite b : ; mase: tween Zoar Bridge and Sandy \ Hook. —etmenniroeevenene avaningt. 7 DlLy sao ruine vance “genre who has hardly ‘been long enough in| Dr Simms was arrested Aug, 6 in Cen- | power enough behind it to reach Afteen | sented by Mrs. Charlie Almand of this eee ee ese ee ae een enane The Rede ad eronset’ inte the oes | BOY SCOUT RAN AWAY Aighte were made to ince the vecthinns!| this country to get bie feet on the| (fal Park on the complaint of James| or twenty wetore the day was over.|ccunty so her husbend’ mene vases saorent of the Hotel Lincoln has off territory at Zoar Bridge. Ae Which continued to, behave matty | ground. He has @ bed at No, 68 East Sullivan of No. So West Fitty-ftfth | Small sib topsalla were hauled out for| yesterday in honor of the three daugh.| fered’ the use of the basement dining ‘The practical result of to-day's move. TO WAR, PICKED UP HERE.) "Arter having experimented with the | Ninth street, but no steady Job, For | #t¥eet, who alleged that the naturaltat | the first Fiue on ene Grulge and on the | ters of Woodrow Wilson—Margaret,| hall, ‘The first mass will be sad at the 8 “ 4 , sal 2 : sm os 4 2 sunnay ments was that the invaders made — + plane for an hour, the two Heutenants | two days, ao he told the desk sergeant eae pentee a dee = him See threat- sou) bonik ae a tcike an day or fisting | Eleanor and Jessie, ‘The bables all aro| Lincoln on next Sunday morning by Gmother long stride toward the water-| Asked Policeman Where Connec-| started down the day. When they were|at the station amid tears, he had gone (ened to kill him because Sullivan's 5 healthy. Father Donovan. spray. The start was off West Chop, the small yachts leaving at 10.15 and tho large sloops five minutes later, Many of the racers were bothered somewhat by the spectator fleet, for there must have been a hundred Cape cats and powerboats buzzing about the line. ‘The large schooners went away at 10.% and then @hed of New. York to-day by throwing Practically all its infantry and cavairy Scross the Housatonic River and clear- ing a passage over which tt can take « Rortherly route into the Hudson River Valley below Poughkeepsie. The check Siven the left wing of the Reds at Mil- ford yesterda: evidently convinced about half a mille from the plant of the] without @ meal until ldst night he met, Clad had frightened some birds and Plymouth Cordage Company something | Frank Bova, an Nahieun peated ‘Youth, |Sauirrels which Dr, Simms and his wife went wrong and the machine dropped to| o¢ xo, 338 Kast Eleventh street, and | Were feeding. | the water like a plummet, phe e * Lawyer Edward Carpel of No. 346 ‘Memb the aaa: saving | William Banko of No. 215 Hast Eleventh | | embers of the Gurnet Life Saving | Broadway, who represented Dr. Simms, | Station went to the ass 0 ‘|street. ‘They told Louis that they were | La tayallty Arsistance of the |told Judge Crain that the pistol was a| aviators In a power boat. The life sav- | going to Play a Joke on a newly married | lic of the Mexican war. “The defend: couple and that if he would go along |" : eo Getend: ers then towed the hydroplane to the a Dole boat yard, where it was found that| with them and guard the door of the Mr. Carpel told the Coup, “has ticut Was, Intending to Walk There, but Is Halted. William Grider, fourteen yoars old, who sald his home was at Mountain View, N. J, was tn the Obildren's Court to- day ax ® lost boy. He wore the uniforn ant,’ dames McCreery & Co. Slena, Irolita, Sea Fox and Brig.-Gen. Frederick A. Smith that tho|f & Boy Scout and said that ne had} the propeller end of the left pontoon| newlyweds’ apartment house untH the carried this ancient rello forty years | came the Blena, | rolita, Sea Fox a Blues were too strong to be pushed| eft his home Sunday afternoon intend-| Was dmashed. Jake could be prepared there would be |4n4 has never discharged {t) | The de-| "mie" Etena caught the start in fine 23rd 4 34th Street ‘aside on the direct route to New York. |Jng to walk to the war manoeuvres In ‘fa rear seat at @ wedding feast in it for | fendant served in the y-seventh | sane hard on the starboard tack, but rd Sticet ree He used his right wing to-day to secure | Connecticut. He was picked up by Pa- pharouts ‘4 rate M Louis. Ohio Regiment paste Gea, arene during | tacked tmmediately to port on getting @ foothold on the west bank of the|trolman Martin of the Charles street rr pail eee iad Policoman Dorgan of the Fifth street breed ght hag eh Matec aces ee over. By 11 o'clock all the yachts were river at Bennett's Bridge in Southbury | station at Hudson and Thirteenth ATFORD, Conn ane station was padding the pavement an/| o (eating down Vineyard Sound with a and Zeer B Oxf 2, STRAT » Conn, Aug. 18.—The travelled extensively, lecturing all over| favorable tide, but against a twelve- TRIMMED HATS. it Bridge in ford, twenty-five | streets at 1216 A, M. yesterday. The] ives of a score of visitora @t Genera! | hour after midnight this morning when | the world. .He has written many books,, knot westerly ‘breeze, and it looked like 'e Beare worth Cf. here, boy walked up to the policeman and] teadquarters were tn me saw two men hiding In @ doorway. | and is now engaged in the preparation Peril to-day when the engine of Beckwith Havens's aeroplane went bad and he was forced a late afternoon finish for the small | sloops. The Elena was leading when the fleet passed Tarpaulin Cove, ‘Under cover of this move Gen. Smith was able to send all his Red infantry @né cavalry, which had been massed at asked in what direction Connecticut lay. ‘He “buzzed” them a bit. They said A few questions and the young scout they were waiting to spring out and | of an exhaustive study on bird and animal life. MOURNING MILLINERY FOR FALL. charging Dr, Simms, Jud was taken in as a runaway. to descend at an angle #0 sharp that sive the horse-laugh to a newly married | In dischars' | pale" lv a Orange, ove the bridge at Derby and| Justi ina, who presided in the|the aviators death al ac : marrie’|crain warned him that it is against places tt at Long HM, tn Huntington, | Children's Court to-day. for the Art| The lending Weld was crowaee ith jon, Vo ere due to arrive any line taw to SueGRt Gereteecatineg ta FOUND $10,000 IN GOLD. On Wednesday, August 14th Where it can threaten Bridgeport. time, asked the boy about himself, He| visitors. ‘Tho crippled m.chine passed| ‘The policeman might have\moved on | Sc#ted, that it might be a goog idea to —— r While the battle raged two circling| #8! hs father was a member of the|over thelr heads and fel. with a crash ie he hadn't heard the noise of sume. | roe, te ancient pistol In some) money Be the PI of one 8, <seroplanes at altitudes of 2000and more | Mfth Regiment of Paterson and had|into Lien’. Foulols's machine standing thing dropping behind. ‘the door wus. | ee ——age Missourt Bandit. Exhibition of Imported Models in 4 gone to Connecticut with the regiment. [on the fiek arby were twenty men | ‘ Been witaene eat peeenane Bore He had walked from Paterson to Hobo-|and women, They were shoved back | Posed to be locked. He pushed in the / ANNOYED GIRLS, GETS YEAR.| .iperty, Mo. Aug. 18—Ten thon. Toques, Bonnets, medium and large Hats. a ry — ken, he said, and crossed the ferry to Twenty-third walk to ¢ told him it York, He w it had been jimmied, and he found a thin’ man—Bova—hiding under the stairway inside. A jimmy and an electric flash were in Bova's pockets. Dorgan covered the three with a re- bodily by officers and cavalrymen just as Havens's machine fell, Havens escaped without tnju the left wing of his flyer wag ‘The tall of the Foulois machine was sand dollars in gold, belleved to ha been hidden by Willlam Anderson, a bandit who terrorized Central Missouri immediately after the civil war, has ‘been found in the old manor house on ines sat Lieut. Fouloly and Lieut. ing of the Aerial Squadron who had been ordered to journey from the Strat- feré headquarters to the scene of hos- Court Says Many Com, street, and expected to necticut, kome one having was not far from New remanded tn the custody mte Are Made from City’s Parks, John Ryan, thirty-elght years old, of | % Ultties and report in detail all that oc-| of the Children's Society until his par-| Of volver, while he blew his whistle for yo 946 West Forty-sixth street was | Buren bary tena Coane Missourh, WOMEN s HOSIERY. ta Heth Etaree nts can co! f a oe bib No, e oh, lo’ ‘ounty, % curred. Tale is probety one of the | et# can come for hii MOTHER ABOUT TO FLY fg. Bo Teil Raereny mi charée | sentenced to one year Mm the penitentiary be ba en now {8 the property of C. ardest problems ever given American POLI 6 EE coat at the wedding fous Mteet Of 4) por annoying little wirls in Central Park |F, Yancey of Liberty. Employees of Pure Thread Black Silk, — elastic DE cccitce tasat, si OLICE CLERK DIES. WITH HIM, PLANE SMASHED. |““** * ‘2 “Stclng Foust _ |wien he was arraigned in the Court of | Mr, Yancey are remodelling the old . oe ed e ng Lieut. ng = . w oe | hed made a forty-three minute fight | Stricken While Dri — — Special Sessions to-day, hous triple tops, double heels, soles and toes. to Attena “Law, HIT BY AUTO; WANTED HAT. Knobloch Got It, too, Before Going to Hosp: In announcing sentence Justice MoIn- erney said that it was tune the police and courts acted more vigorously in cases of this kind as many complaints were being made from all the parks in According to those familiar with the story of the death of Anderson in 1368, he was wounded after robbing a Cen- tral Missourl bank and stopped that night in the manor hor of the Burch Over the war zone aif spotted the posl- tien of all the troops of both armies, ‘The flyers also prepared elaborate mili- tary maps from their lofty perches, Boy Aviator Has Close Call, but Says He'll Take Parent Up Yet. usually 2.00, 1.50 pair Gauze weight, White Lisle Thread \ Francis Travis, Ofteen aged sixty-five, for rs clerk of the Gates avenue The olice stati 3 y . z the city. Ryan was prosecuted by As | plantation, dying several days later. A monic. Bere tee ONY. | eee per ease ne oe MINEOLA, L. I, Aug. 1~Coct! Peotl,| Samuel Knobloch, @ cloak maker of| sistant’ Superintendent Moore of the | It was in the room in which the bandit with double tops, heels, soles and toes. EASILY LOCATES THE SOLDIERS | {'¢% fof the funcrat of hts brother-in. | ¥HO™ some call the “Hoy Aviator,” an-| No. @ Patchen avenue Brooklyn, was | Children's Society. as eh Ge Boney Was sunt usually soc, . 35¢ pair nounced yesterday that this morning he would fly to Governor's Island with his mother as a Passenger, If he makes the trip it will be on some other day than to-day, It will not be this week, unl |#0 intent upon recovering his panama hat from the Manhattan plasa of the Williamaburg Bridge to-day that he ran in front of an ai omobile and was thrown ten feet in the air, When he unusual | Managed to sit yelled, “Ge: my speed 1s used in making repairs to his| hat; get my hat,” and then he fainted, machine, A slight fall this morning{ The car that hit the cloakmaker 1s | wrecked the ship. There had been in-|@wned by John Floyd of No, 16 West | law, Southwick Hebbard, which was to take place this afternoon at the Aurora Gratta Cathedral tn Bedford avenue, IN THE HILLS. When Milling made his early morning flight he was handicapped by a haze | While dressing Mr, ‘Vravis was taken but later this was dispersed and he re-! suddenly ill, and before Dr. Winter ported that he could scan the gountry | from St. John's Hospital, could arrive, for miles with remarkable cl@lrnoss,| Mr. Travis was dead, The deceased Beckwith Havens, the young New York | leaves a wife ehild, He was a civil) National Guard flyer, made a twenty- | A" Y an and @ prominent member Black Lisle Thread with insteps lace woven or embroidered. 25c pair usually 35c and 50c The Safe Way to Remove Corns hee minute fight and succeeded in| Of the Seventeenth Assembly District a ghty horse-pow Fifty-sixth street, Manhattan, and wa: . . A ay Milica sai die ‘protien of locating | Dmmoeretie Club, Or, Travia was eo | Cees 8 eM SIghty Norserpower seine |e ey rinses Nelooe at ho. te Paring a corn with steel is danger HOUSE GOWNS&GNEGLIGEES. 1m Both stores, troops. Havens did not attempt any | Min wan i tyne pmoation to-morrow. | ths wing wurface, To try those out the | Fortysixth street, Brooklyn, | ous. slip of the blade means a Gitcus stunis to-day, Capt. Hennessy of | ue past fow weeks (he funy In Oe nan started q preliminary. fight | 48 ambulance was summoned trom | gash which may result in blood I Ae Naalicaes oti lbatenan the Aviation Squadron having issued | =a ca shortly before 6 o'clock. Gouverneur Hospttal for the InJured poison, . mporte Bligee: G ‘tross, smb orders that no trick fying Mare and Stripes Orde | He skimmed along through the air a|man who recovered Peiigeistrsi Maot qureatinga corn with unguaranteed rene with satin collar, hand-embroidered and . ATOON, Sask. Aug. 13—The | short distance above the ground. Every- | ¢ J e- edies is F oa f Minor engagements between Reds and) Royal mounted police, headed by w| thing seemed to work well and -he| ered to him. Although Knobloch again if neat ant ‘And Han ong Hi lace trimmed. value 12.50, 8.50 Blues began early to-day to the west-| number of citizens of this city, caused started to mount higher when @ wanted to go home the surgeon ad- ry may not, y Gol Ward of Derby. The Red army ts con- | « sen centrating on this point and the attack | th Made on the Biue flank was evidently | circ for the purpose of distracting the atten. | ce tlon of the defenders from the massing of the Reds at Derby, The two Massa- ation in the streets here during parade of @ Visiting American * when they stopped the pro- mand ordered that all Stars and pes be removed from the wagot leaving nothing but the Union Jacks to running to the rear rudder snapped and | Yised him that he better go to the hos- caught in the propeller, The maching | pital, as he was badly bruised, came down with a thud that smashed — > the running gear and damaged one of WOMAN TORE UP $800, you are money out of pocket. Pierce’s Corn Plasters Are absolutely guaranteed to cure. If they don’t, the druggist divep.you back your money, Negligees of Albatross in a variety of models. values 8.50, 12.50, 6.50, 9.50 Kimonos of Flowered Silk,—Empire the wings. The driver was not injured Had the machine been a hundred feet | 1 latsu- float in the Drcexe, ‘The polices while OF 0 1 the alr the fall would probably | Heat Viettm To at Sam tm 920 e pain ceases quickly aft lying the first Plaster, and loose models. val H 9. Ghusstts brigades and the Tenth United |igiing down the flags, were ‘bots HAYS been serious. Teoli mays he wilt Bills, In ordinary cases, the 'eora, foot am ike be removed \ “ ue 32:80, 50 Mates Cavalry have crossed the Houss-| hooted and cheered by the crowds in the tonle at Derby and the First New York | street, soon make flight with his mother, who was not In the least put out by the| Mrs, Lily Liberwitz of No. in 48 hours. With corns of long-standing 5 day are rex Crepon Kimonos 2.25 and 3.50 Remaining stock of Bathing Suits of Satin or Mohair, at greatly reduced prices, 8 Tomp- ‘ Brigade, consisiing ‘of the Seventh, accident. kins avenue, Brooklyn, apparently ov- gulag foto arery Sane core wire and lasting. ‘Twelfth, Sixty-ninth and Seventy-firat ‘Twin St ercome by the heat, to-day was taken Th corn which you think can't be cured. with hysterics and began destroying ple: money, savings which she had secret- d under a cor Rewiments, are ready to follow AEROPLANES PROVE HIGH int surprise in store for you, Remember, we take the risk--not you, Harry Mont ie r of the carpet. i 1 222% Broadway, inspector on the New| ro VALUE IN WAR, time, were brought to the asylum for . v fore she could be stopped she had torn 0. Sppe ‘army. aviators absolutely | the Jasane here to-day. ‘They are Lilly York, New Haven and Hartford Rat (yy ‘gg in $20 bills, She was taken 10c and 25c per box and Louise Schatgman of Maysville, Ky. The women are remarkable for tholr reat aize, their aggregate weight being rly 70 pounds road, was run ov nd instantly killed early to-day by @ freight train in th Oak Point yards near Leggett avenue, the Bronx, The body was severed, to the Kings County Hospital in an am- At all Drugdists (or by mail) bulance by Dr. Piffar of the Eastern THE A. F. PIERCE CO.. Springfield, Mass, District Hospital, who said that her mind might be permanenlly deranged, . , | 23rd Street jonetrating the practicability of the P aor aa & war scoumin this cam- Belen. Gelety is one of phe Srat rules 34th Street