The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1913, Page 2

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lor Faurot, who later carried a meseage | from them to Commissioner Waldo. | MANY BOUND BIBLES AMONG STERNEMANN’S CRATES. ‘The jumbled furniture and crates of (aliliner's feathers and artificial flow. fre etanding in the two roomn occupied by Biernemann in the same position | In which (hey were dumped when mov- | tre delivered them on Thuraday in @| Wagon marked “Berg.” yielded contents to investigutors to-day which threw added light upon the disordered mental fetivities of Sternemann and something of hie past life. A multiplicity of Bibles and sections of Holy Writ bound coupled with @ eurtounly forded dedication of one of the Bible: to his now missing daughter Ei feemed to Indicate that Sternemann's mind had a atrong Jeaning toward @ teligious mania Sternemann had hired two rooma from Girs, Mathilda Weiss, a widow. He slept in the front room amid the box bales of his disordered por & paltet a few inches abov "Phe bed he had brought had not been umpacked, On Vriday night, after re- turning late, he was heard by hia land- la@y moving avout the rear room, and to-day it was discovered that « kitchen table, which had been unpainted when ft arrived, had been printed with a freah coat of white. The report t! ‘vrown stains on the under side of table had been found and were taken ag significant by the detectives was discovered to be unverified. There were |” Re Gtaine of any kind on any portion Of the table. HAD COPY OF PAPER TELLING OF FINDS IN RIVER, On top of the table lay a clothestine, Gti] Wrapped as it came from the ator: dull uatchet and @ copy of an evening Paper of the date Sept. 6 opened to the headlines telling about the finding of the first portion of the two fragments of & Woman's tody now lying in the Morgue in Hoboken. Many skeins of milliner's Were, such as that which bound the por- UOns of the doy found in the Hudson ave that the thread covering was black inatead of wiite, were among the man’ effects. Perhaps the most interesting exhibit fa @il the weird collection of junk was the inscription and dedication written oh the fyleat of a New Testament and Book of Psalms which had evidently ween the property of the missing Ella. For one thing, this inscription showed that Sternemann has been using cnty ® portion of his name in this country and that “Sternemana von Gonten" is thie whole patronyinic, ‘INSCRIPTION WRITTEN BY THE GIRL'S FATHER. The tnecription, written in English and in @ crabbed hand, reads: ‘Do right. Be firm when se you do and have faith in God. To my beloved danghter, Miss Elia Sterne mn von Gonten, in remembrance her filustrious = M. Caroline Gusanne Bt. v Gonten, who departed this life 2 April, 189, N. ¥. City. Of your loving and affilcted Pa, P. H. (Suffering) Mternemann.” low this strange dedication was written, as if @ part of It, these lines: “Ive been an altar boy and did fot think when at the age of seven was to meet in Iife eo many un- @hristian. But, dear, you must now teara tosfight for existence. Be an ‘American. Most foreignera are. 1 pent all I had to safe Mama Lina (presumably Bternemann's dead wite) but it should not be. His, God's will be done and not ours.” On the fly-leaf of another Bible was This random note: “I @ Lena 37 Penta t day.” Through all the pages of the holy books were notes in German and Eng- fish, some intelligible, some in sense- Jess gibberinh. One scrawi read: “iim- Ny is in Kings Park Asylum.” ‘This evidently referred to his sec- ed daughter, Emily, who is said to fave attempted suicide a few months @go when she lived with her father on Olive street, Brooklyn, and was taken an asylum. . & policy book of the Prudential Life Easurance Company—such a policy as held by paying five cents a week, the eft belng $100-—was among the ef- fects. 1 upon the life of Emily Gternemann von Gonten and was érawn by B. Goest, agent, at No. 608 Spring etrest, West Hoboken, STORIES TOLD ABOUT THE STERNEMANN GIRL. ‘Die injection of the figure of Sterne- who seems to have been a roofer a milliner by turna, Into the in- trigacies of the murder mystery, and his Angistence through four incoherent let- ters sent to various officials, including the:German Ambassador at Washiny tom, that his daughter Ella wae the merdered girl, han brought report of the migsing daughter from half @ dosen dif- ferept sources. These cover @ range of pig an five years and carry gown iwhteen to's period a» recent months ago. Here is a chronological compendium of the information, so far gleaned con- cerning the movements of the missing eink: Detective Bernard A. Ditech of the Bast Fifty-firet street station, who says he has knowo Sternemann and his fam- ily for fifteen years, declares that 5 bas been missing for more than five years and he believes she is dead. Mts. Amelia Shaefer, a costumer at Ne, 2245 Third avenue, says she took Bilg Sternemann tn to live with her work in her shop five years aga, ‘b@chuse the pour girl needed @ home.” Ella, who seemed to be in fear of her father, disappeared from Mre, Shae fers after living there eighteen months, withdrawing a amall savings deposit in the Hurlem Savings Bank. WEIGHED 100 POUNDS VE : YEARS AGO. wir] went, eo Mra, Bhaeter be- HeWed at the time, to live with relatives ne@t the Lutheran Cemetery in Middle Village, 1. I. She was “a very little thing, weighing not more than one hun- dred por at the time she lived with Mra. Shaefer, Der. William Mosier, who lives at Third avedue and Elghty-ninth street, says dgoghter Elia about three years ago, but Decause of his eccentricities Bterne- ™manp was soon notified to vacate. Dr. Mosler, whose name was one of the mentioned ip Sternemann’s inco- at No, @ Third avenue, says hie nieces knew Fila Sternemann two years ago @nd that Mila weed to call at the store to see them. She soon dropped out of thelr eight. On April B 19%, Peter Sternemann called at The World office and asked the paper to help him find hie daughter Ella, Who had disappeared from a | loyed in Jer- | sey City. A paimiet bed told him, | Sternemann sald, that his daughter had | | been injured wan in a hospitad | womewhere, i | 7. C. Smediey, @ photographer at No. | | 2 Bowery, says that eighteen months | | ago 1 Who gave her name as Elle | | Sternemann and whe appeared to be very nervous and excitable called at his gallery and eat fer her pioture, | SISTER OF ELLA STERNEMANN TRIED TO KILL HERSELF, Willtam Mayer of No. 2% Olive street, | Brookiyn, says that for niie months | Prior to last Thursday Aternemann and | | @ daughter, Emily, had tived in @ house in the rear of that address. No daugh- ter Elia was with them during their | residence there. Emily Sternemann tried to kill herself by jumping from a sec: ond-atory window three monthe ago, and | she was taken to an asylum, M be | Hever. Emily used to allude to her al ter Ella, who wan working somewhere | in New Jersey, and she often spoke of Ella tn a worried manner. Mayer put Mernemann out last week Decause he was behind with hie rent, # had been bad lately, Sterne- Mmaon told his landlord. The neighbors regarded the feather maker as @ harm: {emp cranky man. He had pothing to leay to any of them and talked loudly ‘and sometimes violently to himeeit aa he | Was Koing to bed or getting up in the! morning. He usually went to hie rooms about midnight, and hie light went out & few minutes He rose anit left the house every morning about 6 o'cluck, The neighbors are positive that no woman has visited the house since Emily was taken to the asylum. Mra. Mathilda Welse of No, 113 Globe ue, Jamaica, rented a room to Peter ernemann ten days ago and he took up his residence there laet Thursday. He went alone, Mrs. Welsn did hot know that her lodger had any umhters, TOLD STRANGE STORIES ABOUT HI@ DAUGHTER. During al these years, both at the times Btermemann knew where his daughter Ella was and at the other times when ghe seams to have disap- peared, he was constantly telling ac: quaintanoes strange storiox of how his daughter had been murdered, Detective tement York Sternemann instantly jumped jo the concluison that it was that of tie mixing Ella, though he never made any but made ne explanation, ner did it seem to affect him in the least. By that time his eccentricities had made such an impression on Mrs, Wetes that she paid little attention to his asertion that the body was that of his daughter, WASHED COAT, MURDER COMMITTED NEAR WHERE PILLOW WAS SOLD. But as far as they have gone the de> tectives are working on the theory that the murder was commited in the vicinity of One Hundred and Forty-sizth etrest and Highth avenue, because it was in that neighborhood the only two pilows like the one wrapped about part of victim's body in New York City were ot, A search in launches has Deen inade | of doth shores of the Hudson, but no! trace of the head and limbs of the murder victim has been found. The| body of & prematurely born child was found floating near where part of the torso was found last Friday, but there murder, Inspector Paurot's men are working in squads, One la searching for boat with etaing such as the boat used by the murderer may contain, and for the missing portions of the body. A second squad is investigating the lst of girls and women who have been reported inissing ently. Im this con- nection Mra, Mary Spillane, of No. 210 East One Hundred and First street, will go to the morgue In Hoboken to- day to eee if she can Mentify the torso of the murder victim as that of her mister, Kitty Shea, who disappeared more than ® week ago from Larch: mont efter having been in thie country only four months, ANOTHER GIRL MENTIONED AS POSSIBLE VICTIM, Last Tuesday Mre. Spillane received a postal cand saying Kitty had hurt by @ fall from @ car and was in a hos- pital. The girl was @ domestic in a Larchmont home, and on investigation | Mra. Gpillane learned that she had left | Larchmont the week before She bas Leen unable te learn of any accident, and has not been able to get a trace of the girl since abe lest Larchmont. Detectives assigned to the case say they ascertained Kitty was soon to be- eome @ mother, but they trace of he J. Dooling will be the hoat orrow evening of was nothing to connect it with the) |. The Evening World’ sand Welfare Association’s Serna ru a THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 19138. City-Wide Series of Better Babies’ Contests Mothers Shed Tears of Joy as Their Babies Receive Prizzs Won in East Side Contest THOS. MOORE 93939 ke BMONTHS. 21.88. C.Lass 1. 2 &: 237 ——— Congressman Goldfogle Praises The Evening World for Its Noble Work as He Hands to the Little Winners the Bank Books, Each Re- cording a Deposit of: $15 Contributed by This Newspaper. ST) Ze Zz ) CLASS 4. Winners of Money Prizes, Class L—Three to Nine Months, $15. LMA’ NOVITC! To 4NR-EMS> 118-37 HELEN Ware 99% 22MONTHS. CLASS 3S. MARKS PLACE Dower, the strength, the glory and the) THOMAS MOORE, Irivh, No, 402 East Twenty-third street, som of William and Tillle Dillon Moore; eight months, 99 1-2 per cent. Class 11.—Nine to Eighteen Months, $15. SACK HALPERN, Hebrew, No. East Twenty-first street, son of Sigmond and Elsie Herold Hulpern; eleven months, 97 1-2 per cent. € e IN-—-Elghteen Months to Three Years, 615. HELEN WALZ, German, No, 170 Third avenue, daughter of August and Rose Christianson Walz; twenty-two months, 99 per cent. whter of Coltna and Annie months, 99 per cent. is 1V.—Three Years to Five Years, $15. ZELMA ZENOVITCH, Hungarian, No, 118 St. Mark's place, | foth Zenoviteh; four years eight | might of the American nation. YOUNGEST PRIZE WINNER THE FIRST TO GET A BANK BOOK, The youngest prize winner, blue-eyed Thomas Moore, got his bank book first, and @ generous round of applause along with it, Helen Wals, # prety little wil} in @ white dreas and pink stockings, | was aleo clapped heartily when she took her bank book in her own plump fiat, | Unfortunately, the other two prize win: | ners, Jack Halpern and Zeima Zenovitcn, | were not present to bask in ther glory, but everybody heard their names, and thelr bank books ure waiting for them at No. £% Second avenue. ' Ernest K. Coulter, founder of the Big Brothers’ Association and a great Vorite in the district of the contest, Their own mothers pridefully amiting | the same prize have had the same acore, | Where his home {s, distributed the and other mothers generously upplaud-| we have given the prize to the on ing, the babies came into their own at| hese measurements most closely @ No, 26 second noon, For to eighty-neven healthy, | happy youngsters the ages of| three months and five years were given the awards of excellence offered by The Evening World to the winners in the Better Bavies' Contest arranged by this Paper and The Little Mothers’ Ald As sociation, Three hundred und six chil- dren were examined by a board of physi- claps. And after the most careful seru- | tiny almost @ third of this number scored % per cent. or over, Besides thi four winners of money p five babies had records of 97 per over and received blue-ribbon honorable meations. And forty-cicht bali percentages between 9% und 97 per and received red-ribbon bonorable m tions. THRONG OF ANXIOUS MOTHERS AND SMILING BABIES. All the mothers whose babies were nined in the cont nd the prize distributions, and the big parlors on the second tloor of the hoadguarters of the Little Mothers’ Ald Association Were crowded to the doors, The mothers w anxfous and excited, red how distinctions could je between them, Mrs, Clarence Rurna, Prestdent of ‘he Little Mothers’ Ald Association, intro- be ton with this contest epirit of the mothers and the con- dition 0. the babies. Mothers have | ome here and waited two and three hours, patiently and pi 00d, fino have fallen below the general standard of ex- ceptions! excellence. UP BY THE JUDGES, thousands of his friends at Manhattan Casino, One Hundred and Fifty-fitth herent letters, describes Ella as weigh- et more than one bundred pounds atthe time he knew her, . Gimoa, a thesision) caspemer street and Bighth avenue. The oc- casion will be the aunual outing of his association of the Ninth Assembly Dis- “T want to explain to (ne mot that the score card according to whi we have Judged the babies is a stand rd get by the Bables’ Welfare Association, not by the doctors, Bur if two child: t were invited to! but the babies were amiling and re- markably quie;, Clean and rosy in their fresh white frocks, with tneir | finger curls or litWe dr 8 tails and thelr plump arma 4 ks, they were @ fine looking Jot of children, and one @uced the first apc Dr. Arthur G. | Bretz, who for three years bas given service and medicine free to the asso elation, and who was in charge of Judging the babies. He sald: “The t Which HOW THE SCORES WERE MADE, score card, Ww ‘ could do nothing el hty-three honorabl® mention certifts! ‘ates to @ crovd of jubilant mothers.) enue yesterday after-| Proached the table of standards on the | And even those who didn't get an hon- emblematic of the square deal, orable mention were not entirely cast | For exampie, suppose that two bables, down, for they knew that tn six montha| aplece, On Ni pounds. bables, “Some | each six mont land one 17 pounds, welght for a #ix-montis' Therefore the prize would be given to the sevenieen pounder of the two rivals. Old, scored 100 per cent. | aby Weighted 2 pounds Now the standard id child ts But both would be fine mothers may be wondering { why thelr babies did not rcore 10 when | the doctors suid they were perfect. zes, thirty- | Probably they were perfect; vhat ts, they | ator! Were physically all well, with no alck- | hess, no sores, ears and eyes all right. | had | But In a ele | weit ‘other year, big hence. east side, olty | pro people. n | healthy, At these lectures we shall be very giad to explain why “their bables have down In the test Jum; while, 1 want to thank you all for your | patience in bringing the bales In order to find out Just CONGRESSMAN GCLOFOGLE GIVES OUT THE PRIZES. And then Judge Henry M. Goldfogle, #ressman from the Cweilth District, uroge to give out the priz | “E want to congratulate these Bur well-formed, finely developed | 4m the oame class and compeiing for | babies! They will grow- wp to be. the “As soon as cooler weather comes we | an almost pert have lectures here for the mothers, | 4s them how to dren and how to prepare them for the wnprovement re for their chil- | \ contest #!x montha to the mother been marke Passed. Mean- what thelr condition i jira they will have a chance to try again. When Mrs. John Morrissey re- colved a re honor for her fon Walter, who te one of ten ohil- Gren, she cried eagerly, “I want to _ Sy how very, very grateful we all.. sxe to The Bvening World and the Little Mothers’ Ald Association and the Babies’ Welfare Association for the splendid things they've done for ust’ At least one reunited home ie due di- rectly to this Better Babies’ contest. ‘The picture of one fine contestant, the youngest of a large family, was pub- » examination one of these ‘The B + 1 s | babies would have to be marked down [ished in Tho Hvening World, he pic [if Its head wasn't the same all the Way | nag not lived with his family for several round, The brain Inside the head might | years, Now he han returned home, be an excellont one, and ed Ite ; 4 taken the pledge and promised to sup- night Yecome symmetrical in an-! port his wife and children—all becaune to find that be had ct baby. ie TRUST ACTION NEXT SESSION WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—There will be no anti-| jst legislation at this, the ex- sion of Congress, it was stated to-day on the highest authority, Piest- dent Wilaon wil: recommend to Congre soon after the beginning of the regular session In December the strengthening of the Sherman law, Between now and then he and his ad- visers will o over the Sherman lux, dig into the histury of its operation and make @ cureful study of what has boon Jone with the law and its effect on buale he was #0 pro “PIRATES’ FLAG’ EMBLEM ON REPUBLICAN BALLOT Looks More Like It, Says Justice Delany, Passing on Claims of Goodwin and Sanders. The “Square Deal” emblem which the Republican organization proposes to put at the head of its coluinn on the tickets [for the forthcoming primaries was lik- ened unto # black pirat flag to-day by Supreme Court Justice Delany while he was hearing argument on application for an order compelling the Board of Elections to let the “Sanders” ticket in the Twenty-sixth Assembly District have the first column, Leonard J, Obdermeler, attorney for one faction of the Republican organisa- tlon, opposed Abram Goodwin, who con- tended that the Sanders petition had been filed aheud of the Krulewitch pe- tition and was entitled, under the pri- mary law, to the first column and the emblem, “I understand that you want the na:nen desixnated by the Sanders petition to xe pol replied Goodwin, emblem do you desire? quired the Justice. “The same as the other faction of ¢ nization wants—the black squ: replied the lawyer. ‘9 be candid,” said the Justice, “it ' to me more like @ pirates black ine or tha; Justice Delany granted both sides ad- ditional time to Mle briefs. Ne. THANK YOU—GET OUT! Capt, Rehm Observes Ku Capt. H. Rehm of the North German- Lioyd ner Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse yeaterday celebrated his twenty-fifth an- niversary as a member of the line's sall- ing staff, The firnt cabin passengers, learning of the anniversary, obtained a larke nu ber of torches and organized a torchlight Procession, whelh took them to the bridge of the liner, where the com: inander was. Although he apprectated the court ship's rules are not things Capt. Rehin takes lightly, so he or- dered the passengers from the bridge und the torches extinguished, Last night, however, he was the guest of honor at @ huge banquet in the first cabin salon, and was showered with con- Gratulations, —_—-——_— Colliston Kills Mai Horses Crushes Wagon, NORTH WOODBURY, N, J, Sept. % Parker Heritage, forty, a farmer of Pitman, N. J., driving into the city with @ load of farm produce, was instantly killed when struck by @ north-bound West Jersey und Seashore electric train near w badly mangled, both horses wer Bvening World is entitled to much praise for having conducted this campaign of education. It means much to the community at large. ‘The physical and mental | mens of the children is of the high- | est importance to the city, the State and the nation. J believe that Deantiful children will gr Nope “These children come from the great the cong and their very presence gives an anewer to what the unmindful, the un- {knowing and the unthinking aay about ithe great east aide | Who say that unfortunately this aection ucea helpless, ted section of the ‘There are many weak and anaemic look around at these ORIGINAL GENUINE ground to pleces and the wagon Was de- mollshed, HORLICK’S $ Avold imitations—Take Ne Substitute Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. More healthful children. i For infants, invalids and growii here early this morning, Heritage BNG TIM” HUNTED | | | BY HUNDREDS OF FRIENDS AND POLICE Sullivan Missing a Week Since Slipping From Attendants in Dead of Night. SOUGHT IN OTHER CITIES Vanished From Home of His Brother in Williamsbridge, With Only $1 in Pocket. Alderman John White, @ close friend of “Mig Tim Suttivan and who has been closest to him since the oncoming of mental trouble led to his being put r reatraining care, admitted to an ening World reporter this afternoon that not @ trace of the “Big Fellow” had been found since he disappeared from the home of his brother on Fast- chester Road, Willlamabridge, at o'clock last Tuesday morning. This is the third time since he was j first put under observation of attend: | jants that "Big Tim has managed to; elude them and drop out of sight, | White said. On each previous o sion | he had remained away three days ana| j come back voluntarily, but now he hi | been # @ week and not a single clue }to his whereavouts has rewarded the| most diligent Search of aw score of | friends, | GOT AWAY AT NIGHT WITH) ONLY $1. The most astonishing feature of the famous politician's disappearance Is that when he managed to Ket away {rom his brother's home in the dead of night he had only $1 with him and yet no! word has been received of his having | secured funds from any of his host of frienda—to any one of whoin a request would ha been virtually # command. His friends do not fear that the Con- gressman has sufferd any deprivation, knowing full well tha: he might eaatly have secured money from @ friend and Imposed a promise of secrecy in tak- ing it “Every possible source of information which might be relied upon to give us news of ‘Bix Tim’ has been covered,” sald Alderman White, “As soon as he got away, the word was passed to every Tammany leader in the city and scores of men in the Police Department who knew him and a hundred men have been on the quiet hunt for iim in the city and ite environs. “We even called up all the hospitals and visited the morgues, in the possibil- {ty that he might have been accidentally hurt or killed. We now believe that he han Mipped away to some other city, where he has friends and Is there in hiding.” 1G TIM'S” CUSTODIAN 18 NOT WORRIED. Form rporation Counsel William B, Ellison, who is one of the commit- tee of the Congreasman’s person ap- pointed by Supreme Court Justice Hen- drick, sald at his office to-day that he was not worried by “Big Tim's" ab- fence: “Mr, Bullivan wan here a week ago Friday and Saturday with Larry Mul- Mgan, going over the affairs of Bullt- |van & Krays from the time the com- mitteo took churge of hi» inter His mind was never clearer since I have known him. He understood every- thing that had been done. We were arranging things to put his affaire in his own hands again. He had his old- time easy smile and seemed to me to be himself. “It te misleading to describe his at- tendants as guards really. He was un- der no restraint, went on long walks and exercised about the place by run- ning the Iawn mower. No one slept in the room with him. At 6 o'clock Tues 'day morning, when he was calied for | breakfast, it was found that he had |changed all his clothes and had gone ‘away. T am inclined to think it was hia idea of a Joke to take a little trip without telling anybody, Thinking he might have gon the affal circuit, 1 telegraphed to Mr. Considine, who replied that he ts not there. “While we only know of his having @ dollar or #0, it would be eas? for him to get all the money he wanted. He is & little weak from a recent severe at- tack of diabetes, but Js far better phy- | Special for Tuesday ACIDULATED FRUIT TABLET#— aesortinent of 6 4. &) Hd ed I taffy-like Kis havored. with —— aically than when the comnnttes took charge of his business.’ “Big Tim" did not take his seat in Congress after the Ist clection. Be- fore ne could go to Washington he had 1 and mental breakdown. A jury decided, on the testimony of alfeniets who told of “the ble fel- Jo deiusions, that he wae ineom- petent to manage his own affairs. Supreme Court Justice Hendrick then appointed a commit! of four to take charge of his person and estate. The committeemen are Lawrence Mulligan, Frank J, Farrell, Emanuel Blumenstell and “Big Tim's” brother, Patrick H. Sullivan, It was atated at the time of these proceedings, which took place in Feb- ruary last, that Sullivan's estate was worth from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000, It ine cludes large real estate holdings and theatrical interests which have been very profitable, TRIP ABROAD FAILED TO RE- STORE HIS MIND. “Big Tim’ complained eorely at nie " ‘onfinement in the period imme- diately following his being adjudged incompetent. On account of ble de- pression of spirits, the “big fellow’ waa taken abroad by his brother Pat+ fick, They remained several months, and r @ cabled to thie coun- try that ig Tim" was improving rapidly and that he would soon be entirely restored to both mental and physical health. But when he arrived in New York’ in on the Imperator last month those who knew him saw at a glance that the hopes aroused by the reports from Europe were not to be realised. The former leader wae dull and spirit- leas. His mental condition, It was ap- parent, had not brightened. He seemed in better physical condition than when he went away, but even in that respect he was far from velng his former robust 1s: and Until bie o he was Big Tim" was born in started life as a newsboy. reakdown of some monthe the idol of the cast side ——— mead BEST OLIVE OILS | LIKE BEST WINES roduced tn France. In an@ aroune the southern slope of the Alpe id's most wonderful olive where ollves grow to per. also the home of M, Antoine Chirla—produc the famous CHIRIS Pronounced She-ris OLIVE OIL, —a product of first presel fruit—the purest vei tained. ‘Bend 10 conte, stampa tmok of 15 naied recluse, aud ol direct. tn Chiria la sold by first-class ANTOINE CHIRIN COMPANY, Devt. W. aut Druggiate tar HAIR TONIC Tollette Prep. Co., 294 Peart St., N. Y, BREUNIG.—WENDELIN BREUNIO, ages 43 years, husband of Freda Breunig (ae* Etrmann) Funera; wil! take place at the chapti of William Necker, 497 Bast 1 Ey Tuesday, Bept. 0, at 2 P.M, Interment ft. Raymond's Cemetery. HELP WANTED—MALE, Wanted—Y oung man for machine saw piercing on silver. The Watson Co., Attleboro, Mass. | STRANGER THAN “TARZAN!” |" You remember “Tarzan of the Apes?” | ftranaeet most fascinating story ever rinted tn w th (Ldear Rick Burroughs) ten a new story even etranger and more fascinating. Ite “THE CAVE GIRL, | “THE CAVE GIRL” hae all the ee nents of wild jungle ie that made Tarsan" ao entiralling. And it (i janything, a better story. “THE CAVE GIRL" wii! begin seria: publication In The Evening World, Men- day, Sept. 2. Read tt. moet rea y Si andattantion fos ing ea few Ebxp wo B5C \

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