The evening world. Newspaper, June 25, 1915, Page 12

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ge TREATMENT FOR & HRINS R ULOERS| ny cave Sep De toed year Wingtoot Cae] TO END CROWIG OF GERMAN ROSTER mands Bird Be Executed at Sunrise, ‘Whether a German rooster has a it to crow in these parious times ‘The Recorder has had the weighty question under consideration since yenterday. Tt arose in a controversy between Mrs. Mary Butterman of No. 679 Hudson Avenue, West New York, the rooster, and William Heels for $2.50—no higher. SHOE STORES COMPANY NonnS, ‘4 doors cast Parkes t.. near Wash- 100 Newark Ave. 104 ten ie Y Branch—101 Breadwar. 1 Open Nights to Accommodate Our Customers. Mail Orders Shipped by Parcel Post. . “18T Mores in OF Cities.” Sav! of From start now—the credit 33 wond the ordinary, too, for it is satisfied customers will tell you that whether you GUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS THE LOWEST long before ordinary crowing time. If that rooster isn’t muffled be te likely to cause me to lose tenants, and if I Jone tenants and can’t collect rent how am I to pay taxes? I want that rooster put out of business.” Hislet quoted the town ordinance, which provides that any person keep- | Ing on or about his property any bird, ‘om or otber animal likely to annoy persons is gulity of a nuisance. “That rooster of mine is no nul- ance,” broke in Mrs, Butterman. “T'll tell you the trouble, Judge. I've had that rooster five years, and for four years he has been a crower. There never was any trouble about my war FNGLISH ROOSTER son rooster until the war started. Then this man, who is a Scotchman, while I am a German, began making things dinagreeable for me. If my rooster had been o Britisher he could have crowed night and day, for all this Scot cared, but he didn’t want to hear a ual, or as long as ing with a man when some he said: ‘Ain't those ‘That remark has got all ngled up and I don’t know o: ly jow to classify Mra, Butterman’s rooster in my dectston.” QUAKER GITY FINDS GRETNA GREEN HERE, Two More Philadelphia Couples Married on Hurried Trips to Big City. Two more Philadelphia couples escaped to New York yesterday and got married. This makes three couples im two days on such an errand bent. Samuel Brown Collins, aged seventy, & lawyer and « widower, of Thirteenth and Spruce Streets, and Mise Beulah May Matter, fifty-four, of No. 364 South porate: egw tary Company, came were mar- Ete Church Around the Matter con- a 4 lenry Otter }, ‘without of aald bi eorsininadilpshiseenany FALLS 5 FLOORS, BUT LIVES. Uncenecious After Plunge. in Phil ia lest John Daley of No, 9 Jefferson Place,| Kitty Gray was calm and did not the Bronx, was found unconscious to- day on the root of the one-story bulld- 1 Mast Ninety-sixth Street, Hf Bat‘wason the root of the tenement house et No, 0, and’ he. ie bel! to have fallen forty feet “Ne was fake nto Flower Hospital wit a fractured shull,-internal injuries "and both arme broken. i {N FURNITURE SME tin to Furnish Your Home Complete|*\*S==«" “atiaall to 50 Per Cent. fez lerful assortment of our enormou tocks tire Proportion. Everything We Sell Is Guaranteed Durable and Well Made have the'furniture.. Our trillions of for cash or on Bay BOTH STO OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK Net Confuse Us With Other Stores With Similar Name WE HAVE ONLY Avenue, 35! Street, Between Seventh and Lenox Aves. ARE ACCOUNTS OPENED FROM $5 to $5,000 Weekly or Monthly Payments Sagaretiont GBEAT OLEAN-UP GALE erators TWO STORES: ith to 36th Street Complete 2, 3, 4 and 5 Room Outfits At Savings of from 33 to 50% outfits tn thie tot. usual opportunity fer EGU tt eart Sukea tay atten Your transactions sbeslutely ccatidential=”™ “7° AVE MONEY! Sale of High Grade Suits for Library, W SMALL ACCOUNTS ESPECIALLY INVITED pele advertised without any SALE OF REED PULLMANS AT REDUCTIONS OF FROM 25% TO 35% Hundreds of ral, 81.50 Weekly Delivers This Bult to Your Home, Piece Quartered Oak Dining Room Suite, first of Buffet, Chim six Bide Cha‘ DOUBLE AMPA \NINGE We Give Free NT dod == Becompy HAVE ONLY TWO STORESt#~ _ Between 7th and Lenox Avenues 3 4 aA Let ING! STAMPS AFTERNOONS fe Insurance carriage in our \ and pay et A_WEEK. OUR CLUB PLAN Has No Club Fees; No Interest Added; No Extra Charges America’s Greatest 50c WEEKLY Delivers any article or many as you want upto §25 West 125th St. 1 ing bond of! SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING INSTALMENTS. OE ye tole tee io ‘King’s treasuree— : ag tO (Oopreight, 1018, by Wright A, Patterson.) She and called up her roommate in the city, telling her of her own unexpect- ed return and She also made known the sudden shift in her own fortunes. “T to go to-morrow, Claire. Yes, it's three months. I'm on & great story. I'll see you downtown at night for supper and tell you all about what has happened h: CHAPTER IV. HE great liner Anne of Aus- rT | tria lay in her slip at the Everywhere men and wom- @n were hurrying to and fro in the eustomary orderly confusion of the last fow minutes before the departure of an ocean steamer, Trucks thun- dered, porters and stewards shouted, oMcers commanded, red-faced men and women became excited as they Wo, |strugetea through the jam of trucks and servants and other passengers summoned by the deep thunder of the boat's whistle, whose volume set’ th the bride Barents, ae | Buman stomach a-tremble. The brass- | buttoned officer at the gangway mo- toned to the hurrying throng to hurry yet more. The gangway itself was filled, and along the decks the} passengers besieged the stewards in the usual mad scramble for the best deck’ places for their chairs. burry. She had mailed five dollars the day before to the deck steward of the boat. By some process of bis own be picked her out when she ar- rived and showed her to ner chair— on the shady side and out of the! smoke, one of the best seats on the vessel. Calmly, Kitty Gray on her way to the boat's office and asked for her mail and her keys) As abe turned, she almost stumbled against a man who had just burried aboard—a dark man, thickset, for- eign in appearance. She had the strange conviction that she bad seen him before, but in the confusion of the mement, and in the Lada and repassing persons, the eoales left her mind, She called ber room steward and found everything shipsbape. It was a first class state- room which Kitty Gray had chosen, One worthy of the Evening Star and k news writer starting on a three months’ vacation—the Jong hei to discover now. Vase on the little, table uet of flowers w joo any her as @ boat greeting— ste cg as tie e knew— 5 a hand which aiily Cutler, city editor. m the card sald with no she placed in the add: “broken colin Saeed proken hearw bebind, From i eerhey are good rte, that’s what they are,” sald Kitty Gray, sa Tie Dear old Cutty! Bometien ba ‘sorry he’s # married haps have been divined in her own day and ge Pain truth ahe @ young per. son who held herself w 1} in hand and kept her own alms and ambitions igh. Vaguel; she hoped one time to be someth! better than @ re- porter on the Evening Star, Who Could tell when opportunity might ? had al MW - e last thun- jteamer shook Bhe looked buildin, of alide slowly '. eo ‘eat liner out From her slip. Th ks and passage- ‘The passengers Sometimes it may that Miss out an® the dock and smoothly was crawling hurry of fget on i began to qu mostly in th th the stewards engaged about their duties, The calm of the voy- age had set in thus soon. And now the lassitude of the reaction from all this hurry and excitement came to Kitty Gray. From habit she stood before the mirror and dabbed a bit of powd n her long-suffering —which never had needed any, bel @ perfectly normal and very itkal nose indeed. ‘Then turned to settle herself down in her quarters. So far as she knew, ahe had not an acquaintance on the boat. She was a person of no importance in the public eye. Evening Star had placed her in the captain's care—with good results thus far. But she was tired now and will- Ing enough to be alo face of the stranger, the dark-visaged foreigner whom she had met at the Best Home Treatment for All Hairy Growths (The Modern Beauty) Every woman should have a small package of delatone handy, for its timely use will keep the skin free from beauty- marring hairy growths, T hair or fuss, make # thick paste with pome of the powdered delatone and water, Aj to hairy surface and after 2 of 8 minutes rub off, wash the skin and it will be free from hair or iHensich| To avoid disappointment be alia dock, her giant pulses just}, throbbing now and then.) rooms by this, ca EMERSO 7 HOUGH ‘lads, | her her package when she dropped it|. pavement |in the little antique shop! Why should he be on board this boat? Why should be recognize h r—for that—he had—he did. Yes, he had . Again @ cold feeling of apprehension clutched at Kitty Gray's stout little heart. She rose and tried to fling off her depression by means of a visit to the dining saloon. She found and cared table and chair, and long enough to nibble would be more comfortable—or more safe—in her own room. Here she lay down upon the single berth, which waa directly beneath the porthole. ‘The latter kept open that she might feel the fresh salt of the sea which ie loved. “In angular yergant"—murmured Kitty to herself —“thesaurua Regis"—“the rer of the —, She dropped off to sleep. worn out by the excitement of it a roke—she knew not when nor ke with her eyes staring. in the instant from sleep to A face was looking in upon her! A man had been looking at her, or try- ing to look at her, as she lay asleep— @ caddish, ungentlemanly thing to do. Sho caught but the profile of the face as it passed—could not, indeed, be sure, but etill retained her swift con- viction. Kitty Gray’s instinct ») aome to her not tel bag he: m, and, emptyti its main treasures into her han placed them in that oth house of women—her stocking—a. she turned down above her little treasures. After this ashe restored the bag to its customary place, They would be safer thus, she felt, for—why she could not tell—she felt’ assured that the man who had looked in at the window was trying to assure himself of the whereabouts of @ certain object. Was it the broken coin he sought? But Kitty Gray, after all, was « young woman of poise, or nerves well |in control. She reasoned that per- haps her anxiety had been groundless, She explained to herself the safety of the management of this great, smooth- ly conducted affair of the ocean line: declared to herself that she could not be safer in her own home—no, not eo safe as she was here. (To Be Continued.) SIX ARE KILLED AS TRAINS CRASH ON HIGH BRIDGE Scores Are Injured in Head-On Collision on Western Mary- land Railroad. THURMONT, M4, June 26—Six persons, four of them Baltimoreans, were killed and a dozen more or less seriously injured when the Blue Mountain Express and the fast mall of the Western Maryland Railway to the telephone stand /for the head steward here, found her | crashed together on «@ bridge, 100 feet high, over Owen's Creek, a few miles eand: of what she had found.| But for some reason she felt she} west of here, last night. ‘The dead: Mrs. W. Edwin Chipchase, No. 1817 North Calvert Street, Baltimore. ‘Walter N. Chipchase, her eon, twen- ty-seven years old, Baltimore. Coleman Cook, engineer, Baltimore. C. R. Fritz, Hagerstown, travelling fireman. J. R. Hayes, Baltimore, fireman. Arthur Hull, baggageman, Hagers- town. Injured seriously: J. R. Zendgratt, Baltimore, fireman, leg and ribs broken. The Blue Mountain Express, west- ‘ound, known as Train No. 11, was late. If on time, it would have passed ‘the fast mail, No. 10, east Locked together weight held both to t prevented a greater ca’ baggage car of the Blue Mountatm Express, in which Mrs. Chipohase, who was an invalid, was riding, was torn from its trucks and thrown to“ the bed of the creek. rr ‘The Pullman parlor car, immediate ly back of the baggage car, veered perilously near the edge of the bridge Dut did not leave the rails, its obou- pants escaping practically without tn- jury. —_——_———_. CLUNG TO CHILD IN COURT.. ‘Tailor, Committed for Inqatey, Hela B-Year-014 Despite Police Efforts, John Cook, @ tailor, acted strange- ly last night while walking with his three-year-old son John in his arma home, No. 4081 Third Ave ‘as arrested, but refused to with the baby and still had him in bis arms when arraigned in Night Court. He was committed to Bellevue How pital for examination of h Dut the police could not part from the baby and silken, shapely stocking, which now \ \d clasped in a roii| Mererl hh sana RSIR al Generous Trial Glass Jar, 15¢. Jar, 35¢. Sea-food Fried in SAWTAY Digests Easily If clam’ fritters, fried soft-shell crabs or fish distress you, kep in mind this: It is not the sea-food, but the * hog-fat, cow-butter or oil with which it is p that is indigestible. Further, they rob the sea-food of its delicate flavor and give it instead a greasy taste and odor. ||| SAWTAY co | , 100% PURE BUTTER-OF-NUTS For Baking, Shortening, Frying and Candy-Making is easier to digest than even cow-butter. SAWTAY will neither | give a taste nor absorb one—sea-food fried in SAWTAY is firm, | moist, sweet and retains only its own delicate flavor. i RECIPE FOR BAKING OR FRYING FISH BAKED. Clean and dry the fish tub with salt inside and out. Stuff ith soft cotton thread. is ak cies 9 lin SAUTE PRODUCTS CorRP, Woolworth Tower, NY. After the sea-food has been fried, strain the SAWTAY, and use the same and over, or for baking portion over a pie or delicate cake,

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