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Are a Year, Women Report. ‘There are Fork which smell suspiciously iike| b® landed his blow on a plate of ice “Boone.” They carry no label as o Voucher for @eler is non ode water ‘This was F MR. Gates who here. af Peers ag0," Weebing of a mercial syrups complying with the law fia the label were found to contain dyes end aduiterants. pounce ees THE “OIL” FLOWS. STILL age by the te 62,009,000 holders’ meeting at Neodesha, Kan., and followed this with a declaration of a @aeh dividend of $10 per share an: stock dividend of $100 per share, a \wis } SODA WATER “BOOZE,” *\ UNCLEAN FOUNTAINS, FOUND BY HOUSEWIVES | Sanitary Conditions, However, @@ the Housewives’ League who started @ut yesterday to campaign for pure without serious damage Bounced these compounds alcoholic. Giscoveries made by Mrs. Julian Heath, |in & sens and the lower east side without | ‘oer, mont ” absolutely clean dill of health ie much cleaner than {t wae two | darky stories. fe otill alarmingly unsanitary. In some $ 1 admitted frequent inspection Board of Heath. It was at First Rottles efther leoked labels or ‘The cubsitiaries of the Standard Ol) Company, whieh was Gissolved @ year tinue to declare extra dividenda, both from earnings and from capital stock ae Chesebrough Manufacturing Com- pang yesterday declared an extra divi- end of 4 per cent. in addition to the ‘woual quarterly dividend of 6 per cent. ‘The Standard Oil Company of Kansas Increased ite capital etook from $1,000,000 FAMILY HUNTS MAN WHO VANISHED AFTER GAVEL WIELDER HITS M’ANENY’S ICE CREAM. Toastmaster at Booksellers’ Dinner Proves to Be a Poor Marksman, The members of the American Book- sellers’ Association wound up their visit to New York last night with thelr thir teenth annual banquet at the Hotel Astor. About five hundred men and women were present. When Walter L, Butler, the toast- master, arose to intraduce the speakers, there was a slight disturbance in the rear of the room, and Mr, Butler brought his gavel down with @ hearty Little Better This coda water syrups in New| thump. But instead of hitting the table cream which Borough President Mo- Aneny, who sat next him, was eating. | od characte nh hes racter and thelr | me plate was @ total wreck and the! descript, but when bepeeel cream Was somewhat subdued, but Mr. MoAneny’s composure survived took & whiff, they pro-| 4 momet Mr, McAneny, as the first 9) de the guesta welcome | the most startling of the | to M He described himself as he lineal descendant of Peter Carraway and their asso- | Minult, the first Dutch Governor, and re- explored the upper marked that the Indian name ‘Mannat- sees “place of general intoxica- Percy Mackaye, the playwright, also spoke, and Irvin & Cobb told eome MAHLON M HARMS ————.$.-— Mexican Road Refuses Freight. MEXICO CITY, May 16.—The National said Mrs, Heath, “but the the glasses and the spoons appearance of her son, Mahlon @€ the best places soap powder te weed, Resray, company has notified shippers| Harms, who has a wife and three chil- it will recetve no more ¢reight for|dren living at No, 12% Elder evenue, tat @ 0 ipweaphent? Pe Naas hoe transportaion. Scarcity of fuel and alt /*he x New York. y water ceed — makes-the operations of trains diMmouit|@uffered from a nervous breakdown “The law demands running | and the activity of the rebels end tie mother induced him to viait her wees, and @t Atlantio City for rest. (asec He wes last ecen by friends tm front water eater, There cboutd = @ mertiatng gisesee CITI mM mil FOUNDED 1856 [lll mmm mn Game tye of wétvidval drinking > demanded” ‘The crusaders made their fret ex- > Glorations above Geventy-fourth street. 1 wes found that many candy stores MENS & BOYS CLOTHING HA FURNISHIN ‘Make their own syrups, which are prop- TS & IGS and apparently gure. All “Turn on the light,” the stronger the better. There is nothing we wish to hide in the workmanship of our Spring Suits and Over- coats. Honesty in fabrics, tailoring and value has been our slogan for fifty-seven years. Our store faces three wide thoroughfares offering the advantage of unobstructed day- light as long as the sun shines. ’ There is no corner of our display floors where you cannot see exactly the coloring and character of fabric of every garment we show you, We never hear complaints about our clothes looking ‘‘different’’ after they are taken home —but our great variety of styles and patterns affords ample scope for satisfying every desire for “‘different’’ designs and models. Foorth street that the first t= otrange syrups were Supreme Court decree, con- on Wednesday at a stock- Astor Place & Fourth Avenue SOBWAY AT THE DOOR-ONE BLOCK FROM. BROADWAY (lava MMMM MM Goes on Easily Coat Cut Closed Back Convenient UNION @it> SUITS OLUS Patented Union Suits have these three features you cannot find in any other underwear. 1, COAT CUT—opens all the way down the leg. 2. ACTUAL CLOSED CROTCH— Actual Closed Crotch the only one—no flaps, no bunching, only = one thickness of material. J 3, CLOSED BACK, perfect fit from shoulder to crotch. OLUS is made in sixteen plain and fancy woven fabrics, including nainsooks, linens and silks, also plain and mesh knilted materials, Price $1.00 to $3.00, at your dealer's, If he has not yet stocked OLUS, write us and we will tell you where to get them. Booklet free upon request. To Dealers. Your wholesaler carries OLUS. Actual Closed Crotch \ THE GIRARD COMPANY, Sole Mfrs., 346 Broadway, New York | LUD | Gud | GiyD | Gu | iy) vp | Giv Dd) NERVOUS TROUBLE. Mrs. Fannie L. Harma, who lives at the Santa Rita Apartments, Atlantic City, 1s greatly worried over the dis- M THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1918. ! of Hubin's Theatre, Pleasantville, N. J., on the afternoon of April 15 His fam- fly fear that following his mental break- down he lost his memory. farms is thirty-six years olf, his hetght five feet eight inches, weight 160 pounds. He has dark curly hair, brown eyes, smooth face, straight nose, and is rather good looking. His mother fears that he may have wandered into the woods about Pieas- antville, or may have done himself some harm. He is a member of the Newport, Ky., Lodge, B. P.O, E. Any information concerning his whereabouts would be gratefully received by his mother. SHOTS AT A FUGITIVE NEGRO SCARE JERSEY NORMAL SCHOOL GIRLS Chase by Police Led Across Campus, Quarry Makes His Escape. revolvers, tive, sending and escaped. _—_—— Postmaster Quite on Request. mitted. Postmaster Henry Fackner of Port Richmond, 8. 1, sent his resignation to Washington yesterday, by request of the Post-Office Department. According to hie version of the cause, he bore on the payrolls for five weeks a letter carrier who bad fallen ill and whose family was dependent on his salary for support. Fackner sali other carriers had Gone without finding a trace of the neg Gcores of young women of the Mont- clair, N. J., State Normal School were startled into screame and fight from the campus into the schoo! building yes terday afternoon at eight of « wild- eyed, panting young negro, Als clothing torn to shreds, his face bruised and dloodstained, running madly across the ing, when Ratlroad. He again escaped. auddenly confronted Thomas Spear the sick man’s work, al! of them feeling that the Government could afford to pay the money. ~-QNEILL-ADAMS Ca The pianos for this co-operative sale were personally selected at the fact and won arrical are being tested Milla had @ long knife in his hand trustworthy character. Good, dura- ble, substantial pianos in which the real value is put on the inside, rather than on the outside in fancy cases with a whole lot of ‘‘gewgaws” onthem. Weknow the Newton to be as reliable a piano as was ever put ina home. It is made by good, sturdy labor in one of the best manufactories in the world; by men many of whom have been work- ing in the same shop for twenty to twenty-five years. These pianos are worth .. They sell emule for $350. Scores of them have been sold right here in New York City and surrounding territory for more than $350. Hundreds are being sold every month all over the United States at $350. They are worth it. They are worth it on our floors, or on the floors of any reputable piano dealer in the country. +S The co-operative price is $248.75, There are no extra charges on account of the easy terms of$1.25a week, and no additional charge for interest—the abso- Co-operative lute five-year guarantee Guarantee —the privilege to ex- We, Kobler & Cam; bell, change within a year— manufacturers of Piano or the fact that your un- paid payments will be cancelled in event of death before you have completed paying for the piano. i These are special priv- mber...... a undersigned sellers jointly feeisies the said piano for the period of five years from date. Any defects in material or workmanship appearing within that time will be repaired, or the piano replaced with a new one of like grade, without cost, upon its return to the undersigned, (S si "Ne ill-Adams Co, up this great co-operative see the ease with which you can own a piano Can't you see that you can own your own piano as cheaply as youcan | rhe pluyer-pisno will also Le delivered rent the “other fellow’s''? Can't you see the eage with which you can [sited Wt ‘iw imueditaly epee te pormen 29 week educate your family, musically ? Let us show you something: Suppo —paying ten dollars a month for it. least—for piano lessons, least two and one-half to three years. Green with two members of the Mont-| he demanded clair police force In pursuit with drawn The young negro dashed past the frightened girls and straight for the woodland beyond the campus. The po- icemen walted until they passed the girls and then opened fire on the fur more than twonty shots after him as he dived into the thicket ‘The fugitive ie Walter Mille, accused of the murder of Millie Munday, whom he mtabbed to death jn Pine street, Mont- clair, late last night, the police charge. They say that he la now armed with the dirk with which the crime was com- All night squads with lantorns and! heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. hounds threaded and beat the woods | +0 until about § o'clock yesterday morn- | two policemen saw him drinking from @ creek near the Erie The wild figure of the youth then the cafe of his Crow's Nest Hotel, just : north of the State Normal Schovt | Genuine Castoria always bears the siguatare of ONEILL-ADAMSCo. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22d Street, New York City by Mr. C. Alfred Wagner, President The Lyrachord Co., inepected by Mr. Nahan Franko, for yeare Conductor and Concertmeister Metropolitan Opera Company These pianos are worthy of a place in any man’s home — "THEY are of a most reliable and pEzae ee Copyright, 1918, by O'Nelll-Adams Co, ileges and conditions of sale which go to make ee weet pore Ah and are dust as * much a part of the plan and of just as much ad- greiggernines old aede“tah'S2etee? vantage to the buyer as is the low price, (#248.75) This plan makes it as easy to own as to rent a piano After reading over this plan, after digesting it thoroughly—can’t you se you bought a piano in the regular way Mle Add to this ten dollars an additional five dollars a month—at This makes fifteen dollars a month you will have to invest for music—for at got It quick. ly and a of the hotel (Prom the Newark News.) Rut Spe telephor hief of Poltce | A bust of Shakespeare in « Sprit Gallagher, and it was he and two alds| avenue shop window ts wearing @ dive who chased the negro across the Nor-|undershirt this week In advert! mal School campus. of a special sale, To what base The hunt for him Is wtill on. we may return, Horatio! Out of Sorts TS 1S, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell . ust what it is. All mothers recognize the term by. the ‘ itude, weakness, loss of appetite, inclination to sleep, are the toms of sickness. It may be fever, congestion, | ‘worms, wou, diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute, 1 Give the child Castoria. It will start the digestive crgane ints a operation, open the pores of the skin, carry off fontid { matter, and drive away the threatened sickness, | in as QONEWL-ADAMSCO Ta - 1 Player-pianos for 395 dollars each on the same co-operative plan One hundred player-pianos will also be sold on this co-operative plan. The usual price of these player - piance is five hundred and fifty dollars each, The Ks relive, lo will be three hundred and ninety-five dollars, with } The payments be two dollars a week—giving you one hundred and |} : wee! in which to make your paymente—the same aa ; on the piano, Th onditional guarantee that is given om the a piano is given on -piano, You can also get your m ot any time within thirty days, You act the same privilege of exchanging within a year as that given with the piano, All of the unpaid balances will be voluntarily cancelled in event of death, t-piano bench and nine rolla of musle (your own selection) without extra charge, ent will be made with each purchaser whereby mew re brrepesaat il be fade wiih mma) froin sortie eet BATS tandard 88-note players; that Is, the: play every - initial io to obtain ‘one of FIVE DOLLARS. fare in ded necessar, Diane ‘Tho five dol- the price-— RED AND b DOLLARS But buy your pane on this co-operative plan and it will cost you but one dollar and twenty-five cents aweek. Now add the five dollars a month for piano lessons to this amount and you have only ten dollars a month invested in music. Youarestill buying and paying for your pisio—paying out RAND ENTS @ weok, or further re. when the music rollisinimotion, ‘These pla; rereplanes rity dollars more than thesc will not pla have lendtubing. Most playoreplas of rubber is one year—nt most. L wer, Tt cannot wear out and the tubing in thoao playor-planos Is so placed that n cannot bo broken, the same amount of money for musical instruction—and yet dollars a year left to spend in some other direction. ve sixty