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“CODE WORD ENDS Sraphic advices late yesterday to the |‘ MISSING MAN” AND effect that Mre. Marry Clarke Coe Jr.) Wwypy WHO FINDS HIM had reached her husband. The mes- saghs were in code form, the code WELL IN ALASKA TOWN. having been arranged before the younger Mrs. Coe left for Alaska. The information received by Dr. and Mra. Coe from. Fairbanks assured them that their son was in good shape Physically and apparently normal mentally. It was stated, however, that the young man, even at the time of his meeting with his wife, was unable to realize ly how he hap- A MISSING MAN" Harry Clarke Coe Jr., Who a ee eae 8 | lent ry Disappeared Jan. 30, Joined | ot Mt ioe ‘ “Everything is all right now,” said by Wife in Alaska. Mrs. Coe #r. Inst night. “My gon and his wife are reunited and are happy. BODY AND MIND SOUND. Their little baby is with us here and we'll take care of her until her = Can't Tell How He Crossed now and has an excellent position in of him. His home life had been very Marry Clarke Coe jr, who disap-|happy and he had no ‘nancial DEEP MYSTERY OF parents 19 back to New York. Bhe ia growing rapidly—weights fourteen pounds. My gon had a form of ner- Continent—Will Live in | PeTunke * The disappearance of H: Fairbanks. Coe jr. Coe i, wan doc 7 tapstorieus, me yous prostration. That is why disappeared. Ho's practically iby and boarded a strest car, and it was the last seen peared from his home in Allston, Fairbasks Ly hoe” sia For] ‘ ‘a ober: Lad ie! Mass, Jan. 30 last and was found Inte of the Burns Detective B a of in April by a detective in Fairbanks, | Boston. Alaska, bas been joined by his wife.) The young man’s wite recently Mrs. Coe reached Fairbanks yester-! Started for Alaska to join her hus- day, and the joy of the young couple op Seveease ‘BH —¥ LiGene over being reunited knew no bounds. They were in New Haven attendi: ‘They will make Fairbanks their home ~ graduation at psa of & Bon ting | } Arodition, the less soap you use the for the winter and possibly longer. 9, nephew. Being friends of the Cos fami iy, they ily to accom- ‘Young Mr. Coo has a responsible po-| py pany the young vite Want eventually sition with a concern which supplies | extending their to Fair. mines with equipment. banks. Clarence mite & aon of Dr. and Mra. Henry Clarke Coo of |3udge and Mrs. Smith, went with the No. & West Seventy-sixth Street, the/ Mrs. Rod ir, throu her oode mes- young man's parents, received tele- her mot i Bhe . ! Cocoanut Oil Makes fended to buy @ ittle home in Fair- A Splendid Shampoo DOCTOR, BY WIRELESS, | s:vay ot portorar ‘Mf you want to keep your hair in good éral remedies were applied, but the TREATS PATIENT AT SEA) “*rssittts Witeiees operator was in- wetter. fame" jhampoos structed to search the seas with = alt This dries the faxes for a doctor. ‘After the operator isealp, «agg Braden brie and is very| Aid Given by Physician on British| he located Bean waren. an \barmful. | Just p ge coscanet ‘ refused to give its name or location. a Se sock ese taps bayer San. Warship Fails to Save Sailor | The Captain of the warship stated he je juld not leave his post, but asked fi lag elon you can use for shampooing, on Distant Steamer. a description of the symptoms of tbe can bly injure the hair. sailor. Simply poe an Your hal with water!’ PHILADELPHIA, July $2.—The| There were supplied, and in a fow and rob it coats story of how @ fruitless effort was| minutes the physician on the battle- will mab ‘precio a in| Ship sent by wireless s prescription. " L Tels and scale scalp| by applying a method of treatment] days later Bortori dir The lather rinses out eas-| prescribed by wireless by a physician | was brought to Philadelphia, the remowes every particle of dust.|on q British warship many miles Cr egbend end ea ports pool ged tg away was told to-day by Capt. Lane} Baseball Lottery M. kly INCINN. cr ATI, July ‘hen bright ufly and Sooned at Point Dresser WHIM! nerdy, arrested tn onnection wih the country-wide campaign sonnte, iS 86 sureacian of the Bras | faeries, wae gl ee in’ Munielpad on priest Cou Court Forterday.. Th {minimum sen out from Tuxpam, Mexico, Capt. Lane oon ten daye th being remitted got out bie medical books and made Eoktacarea senders ta » Ricoro ‘are the Pride of the = 4 Famous Cigar Makers of Porto Rico Juan. Senor Luis Toro, President of the disiasaieee himself a master of the art, picks the native Spaniards for the work as the Ritz-Carlton picks its cooks. The RICORO Cigar (Cabinet Size) 3-for-25¢. or by the box of 50, $4.15 is an example of what these wonderfully gifted cigar makers can accomplish working with Porto Rican tobacco, planted, cultivated, ripened and cured, in fields where every condition prevails that favors tobacco growing on any island of the West Indies, The RICORO Cigar is imported FREE OF DUTY. The one difference between Porto Rican and Cuban tobacco is the delicate mildness of the former, due to its cultivation on high altitudes, under shade (as shown Mm the illustration above.) Nowhere in the world—not even in Havana—is more skillful work done on cigars than in the Ricoro factory at San waz UNITED it CIGAR -. STORES THE EVENING WORLD LUSITANIA VIGHIM'S, WIDOW INTIMATED SUICIDE TOFRIENDS “Nothing Left to Live For,” Mrs. Vernon Told Last of Them to See Her. Friends of Mrs. Inex Vernon, widow of George Ley P. Vernon, Lusi- tania victim, sald to-day they be- lieved she had been contemplating suicide for several weeks. Her body was found yesterday in her apart- ment, No, 81 West Eleventh Street, and beside her was the revolver with which she had killed herself. She was last seen alive Monday, and phy- sicians who saw the body think she committed muicide that day. | Ralph R. Govin of Rosedale, who is in the of] business at No. 90 West” Street, said to-day Mra. Vernon had asked him to serve as executor of Mr. Vernon’s wil. “Ghe remarked frequently during the last three weeks that she had nothing left to live for,” Mr. Govin paid to-day, “I did not at that time, however, believe she contemplated suicide, I am sure she had no finan- clal worries, She received $20,000 insurance on Mr. Vernon's life, and her account of $19,000 in the Hudson Trust Company is intact. Her busi- ness affairs, I feel confident, were all in good shape.” Mrs. Vernon, who was thirty-two years old, was a sister of Miss Rita Jolivet, the actress, who was saved when the German submarine sank the Lusitania. Miss Jolivet, Mr. Ver- non, Charles Frohman and Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, it will be re- called, stood together on the liners | deck as she sank. WOMAN TAKES POISON, THEN WIRES TO FRIEND spectator, sitting on a front bencn plung- TO COME TO HER AID = Pharmacist Finds Her Dying] and Rushes Her to Belle- vue Hospital. Mrs. Rita Phelps, twenty-six years old, who came here from Canada three months ago with her six-year-old daughter, Marguerite, was reported dying to-day at Bellevue Hospital of dichloride of mercury poisoning. She was taken from her lodging, No, 849 West Thirty-fourth Street, after Dr. Benjamin Love, a Detroit pharmacist, had telephoned for the police. There is little chance of her recovery. Dr, Love said that he had known Mrs. Phelps for ten years, He is vis- iting friends in Great Neck, L. I, and late last evening received a telegram asking him to call on her at once. He found her in great agony and she told him she had determined to commit sutolde, The pharmacist explained that Mrs. Phelps recently divorced her husband. The decree gave her custody of the child for six months of the year, She had come to New York to turn over the little girl to the father for the coming six months, but was possessed with a fear that he might not give her up at the end of the period, Owing to the fact that Dr, Love staye at tho Herald Square Hote) when he is in New York and has all his mall sent there, he gave the police the hotel as his address, and there was some doubt as to his identity when his name was not found on the regieter of the hotel. Learning this, he at once came into the city to set matters straight. —_—_———— FINDS HIS TWO SONS’ BODIES IN THE MORGUE Called to Identify One Victim of Drowning, Lynn (Mass.) Man Sees Second Body Near First, | BOSTON, July 2%.—Summoned to | the Morgue to identify a body toynd in the Charles River as that of bis son, Edward R. Bowley of Lynn last night recognized a second body, found within ten feet of the first, as that of anothor son. The boys, Clarence Henry Bowley, twenty years old, and Daniel Down- | ing Bowley, sixteen, Dr. George Bur- | gems Magrath, medical examiner, be- | Heves were thrown into the river from a Boston and Albany Railroad freight train by a brakeman, and drowned, The boys left Lynn on Sunday for Ayer Junction to seek work with circus, and jt is believed they were stealing ride home on Tuesday morning After the first body, that of Clar- ence, had been discovered, the father of the boys predicted that Daniel's | boay was in the river. | “The boys were always together in | life,” he told the police, “and I feel | that they died together.” Six hours later be was called to identify the body ef Dania. i MRA, EEN Tee ater SET T ie IDAY, JULY 28, 1 “Sotoow wae xrcxy_ |VAUDEVILLE AGTOR WELD! TELLER PLEADS GUILTY vcneacteateee. HERSELF FOR GRIEP. ligence and Driving Auto Without License. e Felix was held in $1,600 bail by Coroner Healy on a ci im |criminal negligence. The police , held him on a charge of driving wi MRS. G, L, ®. VERNON. suenddukenondode MAN WHO CUT THROAT IN COURT IS IDENTIFIED |rsce sit jz, ‘ts, ,Consne Frank Steinhaufer, Whose Attempt sci gapalaed automa ‘ae ee at Suicide Created Panic, lamplighters and some men May Die in Hospital. other automobile. Dr, Scott, Kammerman’s cousin, timer Levy of vr 601 Weet dred and Forty-e were held by ne Ceroner ae Ha } tif ham Hospital, said Miss Kemmet. A middle-aged man who created a| man had been instantly killed. panic yesterday in the Hoboken District] According to the police, the two Court, where he was « spectator, by cut- ting his own throat, has been identified in St. Mary's Hospital, Hoboken, a®}and Forty-fourth Street and Broad- Frank Steinhaufer of No, 89 Adams! way, and Felix volunteered to drive Street, Hoboken. His condition ts|it. They had been making a tour of Washington Heights and the Bronx critical. While Judge Charles J. Carrick was|when the accident occurred. in the middle of « decision he was ren-|road there is skirted with under- where cars dering in @ Civil case in the Meboken brush and is near Fy Bennet exclaim mg Me clare: Her-| trom. Baychester Avenue, ‘The Goa! e's man cutting hie|® large illuminated sign wi throat.” When the Judge looked where | aurtoists to drive slowly, and it Bennet pointed he saw a middle-aged oo a@ign bw Oe san sate em- ment. It is eve ‘ix was as Eaire apenazes sine F his_neck. | not familiar with the road. ‘The gtr!’ ‘BS \age, has been in the Government ser- nteter [vice tice eevee. Malted Milk at Haat Oranery 70 ar Pigg ghey hay ne body was taken to the Weate Sereamed Bull echere, ment urs Police Station. from the room. Attorneys ‘La Porte —__>__. 4 tor and ited to tke NEEDED ONLY A HANDLE. Fie! Knife away. Ho tougnt them all the place before they 4 ie, He had no interest in the case on iciaaacateiiamaaapat . Driver Out of Work a Sulcide, TORE, bows, tee Henry Adler, alxty yea: 8 driver out of work, end lite By gay at M you No, 227 East Fifty-first Street to-day, Lg pe id have A ioaded revolvi his side. vee GIMBELS “ignega These Fine Summer-Day Specials From The SIMPSON-CRAWFORD Sale ou need quickly tomorrow morning—before the half-holiday dash begins—is ready at GIMBELS. The Sacoes rawford Sale provides much of it A HALF PRICE! of Women’s $4.95 Bathing Suits at $3.95 New lot because of the insistent demand for them. Slip-on model in black worsted; wide sashes of Roman stripe silk, short cap sleeves. Women’s 95c Soft White Felt Outing Hats at 55c Soft drooping brims that can be rolled into any shape. Third Floor Women’s $16.50 to $25 Cloth Suits, $7.50 Gabardines, Serges, Checks, Mixtures, Linens. ‘These clearance bas ered Madly Pome hl ho giaclig 2 re Blacks, Tans and Black-and-White Checks; All sizes in the lot. Women’s $1 Colored Sateen Petticoats at 50c A limited peretion of colors reduced the price—cherry, and blue. Splendid model with a sectional tailored flare flounce. Floor Women’s Cotton Vests, 3 for 50c Regularly 26 each. Swias ribbed, plain tops; regular Beh sate staes, Women’s $5 Low Shoes, $2.45 Pair Smart Summer pumps; patent leather or metal with gray, fawn, white, putty or colo inlays; also black-and-white effects. Women’s $1 Silk Hosiery, 68c Pair “Kayser” silk, black, white and fashionable colors. Main Floor Women’s 50c to 75c Belts, 30c Black-and-white and white-and-colored checks and stripes; 2 to 4 inches i Main Floor wide, Parasols, $1 to $3.75 Regularly $1.60 to $7.50; new styles, shapes and effects, Main Floor $1 German Silver Dorine Boxes, 50c Fancy engraved designs; finger chain and ring. Main Floor $3.50 “La Markette” Corsets, $1.50 Brocades and Coutils in broken lots; low and medium bust, some boneless, others well boned. Sizes 19 to 30inthelot. Pink Shop, Second Floor Men’s $2 Silk Collar Sport Shirts for $1 The demand for these popular Shirts has been astonishing. However, we still have plenty, Mercerized bodies and silk collars, with ‘iripe effects in colors, Main Floor $1.25 Genuine Chinese Shantung, 68c Yd. Natural color; 82 inches wide, Second § ATER OER TOREBNG AIRY Charged With Criminal Neg- An automobile driven by Seymour Follx, & member of the youthful vaudeville team of Feliz and Oairé | 4. Sub-Treasury on Wall Street, embessiing Government funds to the Miss Irene Silverman of Baltimore, | : Fi HE ke. Do you notice any- ell,” led the man who had fea $e | by at n * feevis love, honor, obey nny Pry wit Government Willing That; Tanner Serve Only Two Years for Thefts. Wiliam B. Tanner, chief paying teller of the minor coin division of after being indicted to-day by the Federal Grand Jury on the charge of of ¢ Largest House in the World. In our nine stores Ay A ocahe: Lag bar Ming and pay the amount of $8,000 by substituting tweny-siz bags containing $50 pennies for a like number of bags cation on July 18. He said his sole Gestre was to “take tris medicine” and have the whole thing over with. “Yon, but I must consider the right sent to the if sent to Atlanta the; #0 because of lack of plained that the Government had not lost soy iiteg. being protected by Tanner's Judge Howe said that ae the aen- 9 tence would have to be more than a year he would have 4o send Tanner Te ne sno v0. teetyvoma: Weeder al ORIGINAL , Drown. parm be ped body waned waward Rodoreed by oe e a. Mothers as Nurses the Growned this afternoon white blender ie ian oi coger in eres ae paar es ir “4 required. a pody wae toung?ey Tan] Agrees when other Seeds ofiee tl, er of Ne, 406 Haat Twon' Sample free, HORLICK’S, Rezine, Wie, ' oes k irhirty-ihied (Street r OPS WERT, tes BET a Se lle PP sa nec fe Half Price Sale Bedroom and d Living Room Furniture «cha Sor cou are six a iy ad $2.75 Grass Rugs at $1.75 Willow and Waite makes, in 4 {t.6in.x7 ft. 6 in. sim, es ae Pantie value. Men’s $8.50 Suits of Genuine Palm Beach Norfolk and tin moot, ¢ $5 jor: ie gad pila manda, Cool, manaets ty sailly 258 Mapemee Men’s $2 and $ $3 Straw Hats, $1 The best Straw test—in New York today at She arian Popular weaves, od ep pm mye ploaci Panel Sf Yourth Boys’ $3.50 Imported Wash Suits, $1.65 cellent Sa Ce retty models, in if smart binations. iis biaaloinied inias Fo Floor = ze oS we tecsiee A Golfing Sensation! “Colonel” Golf Balls $5.95 Dozen, Regularly $9 This unprecedentedly low price is “bogey” for these favorite and excellent golf balls. All three weights—27, 29 and 31 dwt. Not more than two dozen to a customer. For a Good Round— GIMBEL “Lenox” Golf Clubs They are built for us, by a firm of Scotch club makers of long ex- perience. The club heads are patterned from models ed ge Taylor, Braid, Vardon and Ray -four famous English golfess, Shafts are of selected hickory. Finis is of high grade. Wooden Clubs, $1.85 Each Drivers, Brassies and Spoons, Iron Clubs, $1.65 Each Iron Clubs—Cleeks, Midirons, Lofting Irons, Mashies, Mashie Niblicks, Niblicke. Jiggers, Putting Cleeks and Putters--many of these in several styles-—$1.66 each. Experien re will recognize from, the “feel” of theesclabehow adialraily they aretlenigned, Weurth Fleet. ®