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' ae \ J a LOND & boxiny conte { . wen rel lice Lieut. Hayes’s Home esse FOR COURTING CALL A week, ball being allowed. knocke oot tn the four. last nixht and died early James 1. Sullivan, a young man of Co a , Mes, Parris Dies nt 102 Yenre, ae ar ota de PARIS Hilt, Me, Juno 20,—Mra,| Ul-timed call on Miss Grace Hayes, ba gba was Mins ‘wo dougbter of Police Lisutennnt Edward . diet here yesterday Moa pear she was born on Pod. 17,|8: Hayes, who ttves at No. 99 Tast 414. Mer husband, Virgil D. Parria,| Polk Avenue, Corona. sullivan forced and aay nevere re we f24] pin way tnto the Hayes homo at 1.20 Weniy District Attorney and Tax Com.| Cock this morning, wan confronted miesioner tn New York, by Hayes, who grappled with him, For 10 Cents : Charles Bye, a neighbor, who came to Hayes'a assistance, having bean YOU CAN TRY aroused by the acreains of Miss Hayes Thee Modere Remedy '01 and her sister Mary. J @Gullivan, who Hves at No. § Brady 4 M4 Btrest, was taken to Mt. John Hospl- tal, Long Island City, @ prisoner, charged with entering tho Hayes home. A bullet from Byes pistol, which Bye says was accidentally die- gharged, penetrated ullivan'a eft groin aod emerged on tho right sido of the amall of his back, Bye wna arraigned in the Flushing Polloe Court on a charge of felonious as- sault and held without bail Lieut. Hayes, who ts attached to the Police Training School, said Bul- livan was drank when he attempted to enter the house. Hoe heard Sulli- van trying the door and went down, When he asked what wis wanted, Sullivan replied that ho had come to call on Miss Grace, Hayes's twenty- two-year-old daughter. Hayes told him tt was no time to come to the houre and told Sullivan to go away. The latter refused, however, and be- ing a big man, succeeded in pushing past Hayes, Then the two grappled and a noisy strugsie occurred. The two Ha: girla screamed for help, and Bye, who lives next door, heard. Taking an automatic pistol from under his pillow, he ran to the rescue, Virst he fired @ shot in the alr to arouse the neighborhood, and en entered the Hayes house, Find- ing the police leutenant and a man struggiing in the dim hall, he tried to separate them, but became in- volved himself in the tangle of arms and legs. It was during the struggle, he says, that the pistol was dis- charged and Sullivan wounded, Sullivan collapsed when he was truck, and as soon as the police ar- Tived in response to a telephone mes- sage, he was taken to the hospital in @ semi-conscious condition. Sullivan, who for a time was con- TAKE THE WE OF ALFALFA, And Get Flesh on Your Skinny Bones. Carnes’ Alfalfex is the Concentrated Juices of Alfalfa and Other Tonic and Nutrient Medicines Com- bined in a Sweet Chocolate Teblet. @ny skinny old horse can be made tm a short time by feeding him ty of alfalfa he the juices, and they form meat end om his bones. Alfalfex is eracy extracted and concentrated for ekinay man or woman—you don't Kove to “eat hay.” No, indeed, you eat and corn, but it doesn't make you Neither wl ey baste ti poor, But la} aad old horse, because it q@ontains the clements necessary to do eo. Carnes’ Alfaifex fattens people icker than anything. Try « guaran- tea bos. Weigh yourself, and gain weight and better health.—Advt. \ Sy aN ww \ cA, oe ? N x Wa flavor at once. up goodness of the grain, Postum Cereal Co., L THE EVENING WOBLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 320, 1916, G. W. OLNEY, EDITOR OF THE WORLD ALMANAC SINCE 1870, IS DEAD. “W OANEN Geu-go Washington Olney, who as & war correnpondent ascribed the fring of the Sret shot In the Civil ‘Wes, dio4 earty to-day at his home, No. 4@1 West One Hundred and Fifty- ninth Btreet, in his eighty-firet year. Ho had been ailing several years, but Up to @ month ago contributed edi- torlals to the Weekly Underwriter, an insurance paper of which he was editor, Since 1870 Mr. Olney had been editor of The World Almanac and even dur- ing his illness he showed keen in- terest in the progrese of the publica jon, At the outbreak of the Civil War Mr. Olney was returning from news- paper work to his home, Charleston, 8. C,, when he was ordered to Fort Sumter. He reached there in time to witness the firing of the first ahot. Mr. Olney was born tn Charleston, 8. C., of Rhode Island ancestry, He was graduated from Harvard Uni- versity in 1855 and entered Journalism 8 @ publisher of the Dally Day Book. Ho ts survived by a slater, Mra. Eliza Pittman, a widow. ee ———————————— fined in the Combs Sanitarium at Corona, has been considered peculiar. ‘Two years ago he made an attack on Dr. Anthony Kline and ts understood to have threatened members of his family. Miss Grace Heyes said to-day that in the last month Sullivan, whom she knew only by eight, had passed her home four or five times a day. They had met in the street, she added, but he had never made any attempt to speak to her, She said also that aa she and her sister frequently are alone in the house at night, their mother being dead, she thinks Sulll- van supposed them to be alone last The United States Patent Office has recog nized that fact and granted a patent both on the form and the method of making NEW Post Toasties No other flaked corn food on the market shares this honor—no other equals Several distinctive features characterize this new and economical food delicacy, Old style “‘corn flakes” do not possess much real Old-fashioned methods of mak- They depended largely for their taste on the sugar and cream or milk you ate You were never asked to test the flavor flavor of their own. ing didn’t bring it out. with them, by eating them dry, We want you to test New Post Toasties by eating some dry, fresh from the package, You'll get the The new way of cooking, rolling and toasting under quick, intense heat brings out the sealed- New Post Toasties do not mush down when milk or cream is added. They don’t crumble or “chaff” in the package or in the dish. There's substance to them, and so wonderfi ully delicious as to make youcall for more, A Single Package Tells the Story At Grocers—10c td., Battle Creek, Mich. M'CORMICK HERE: OPENS OFFICE FOR Prospect for Victory Couldn't | Be Brighter, Says National Vanee C, MoCormick, new Chair- man of the Democratio National Com- porsension of @ lasge euite ef empty oMfices on the @ecend floor of the Forty-wecond treet building, cor- ner of Madison Avenue which Banker Henry Morgenthau hag had in reserve for eome time. voted principally te furniture men, with @ net gain of two desks four A complete ovtit ts coming te-mor- row. ‘The first member ef the stat! em- Played and assignet to duty wee a oharming telephone girl operator. Dudley Field Malena, Collector of th: Port, and Vrederte C. Howe, Oom- misstoner of Immigration, took vol- day. An athletia, sturdy aggressive figure twenty-three years since be was a bootball hero at Yale he tackled bis new & to-day as though bucking the line for ten yards gain. In appear- ance he is quarter-back alse, plus some added waist measure, dear-eyed, smooth shaven, and youthful in energy and enthusiasm, “I have just run in here for the day.” he eald to The Evening World. “I've got to go up to New Haven to-night (there are college doinga going on there), but I will be back on the job Thureday. We will have things run- ning here and a regular campaign going fast in a few days. “What about the outlook? With a united Democratic party the prospects for victory couldn't be brighter. Iam going to devote my whole time to this business and you will find me here in these headquarters until next November trying to re-elect Presi- dent Wilson.” Not all the Progreasive vote is go- ing to the Republican candidate, de- (Spite the expected declaration of Col. Roosevelt in favor of Mr. Hughes. The Democrats are counting on get- ung @ large accesalon from the lead- erless Bull Moose. It is understood that at the meet- ing of the Progressive national oom- | mittee in Chicago next Monday a statement from the Colonel will be read declining the party nomination. A majority of the committee will then fasue a proclamation advising sup- port of Mr. Hughes. A minority of the committee will dissent and some very etrong protests will be made by the rank and file. George W. Perkins, Gifford Pin- unteer posts of office clerks for the | is the new ohairman. Although it ts! slchot, James R. Garfield and Hiram | Avenue Station, POLICE RESCUE SIX their two young children from Che FOnnqap are reported headin, fer the Dunit discovered the fire under the} second floor, and an a trip te the of Chicago, who was Chairman of AT BROOKLYN FIRE “iam on the gr@und floor, After] third floor assisted John Edmyhd and the convention, and Bainbridge Col- jgiving the n he and Carroll| his wife to safety. Kdmund weighs by of New York, who nominated eee broke int cifar store of John! 250 pounds. All the second and third Koosevalt in the eanvention, OppoKe| Bix persons were roscrie’ floor tenants had to be aroused from ie Per! programmes and are] p, ‘eneme 59 Broad- 0 " | deep slumb likely to call upon the faithful to re. | OUFPINe tenement at 69 Broad: |h hall being filled “The Are did a damage of gbeut rent the attempt to deliver them over | W®Y) Willlamshire, o-day by) smoke, the policemen went uj & rear! goog, froth policemen were almont to the Old Guard, preferring to| Policemen Dunn of th Avenue (fire excape and brought down Vin-| knocked out by the smoke they ine march toward the Democratic camp. | Station and Carroll of (he Hedferd|cenze Preeda, his wife Cecilia and} hated WON CAPA Chairman. | | | | mittee, came to New York to-day to, start the political campaign for Presi- | dent Wilson's re-election, Me took | ‘The fret day's operations were de- { cheire and @ telephone ewitehboard, , it in form or flavor. === —==> SSS Subway at off roadway at Ninth Astor Place Station Street, New York Turnsthe Clock Ahead One Hour tomorrow, Wednesday, the longest day of the year, and opens the Men’s Store ' At 7.30 in the Morning | to accommodate early patrons of the Annual Sale of Men's Clothing. See what a golden hour this may become to YOU, and perhaps the United States, too, may decide to economize on daylight. 4,167 Suits at Savings of Sa 00 O90 Co) 0) p07 OF Og O00 0g W035 09 Hac) OT oon ni} st Bz? GG aa 008 800 ait! OO GAS CI oats ag $3 to $16.50 on a Suit Sale of Men’s Suits 450 Suits, $30 grades to go for This June Sale is the clothing 390 Suits, $32.50 grades, to go for 93 50 iat Cer, Peis ‘ lt richer i qualities, choow $10 Suits, $37.50 grades to go for (1,855 Suits) Oty aavinis (han for’ eevenal 295 Suits, $40 grades, | to go for = FO ee aeRO ae $75 Suits, $22.50 grades, to go for a ae of the Suits Were 480 Suits, $25 grades, to go for $18 50 ade to Our Order 210 Suits, $27.50 grades, to go for oN Mog of our, regular manuiee- 180 Suits, $28.50 grades, to go for (1,245 Suits) suits fcr our regular stocks. The rest were made by six manufac- The foregoing in the Men's Store, Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. turers in four cities, who know the 114 Suits, $18.50 grades, to go for high standard of merchandise in 15 50 our June Sales, and how eagerly it 310 Suits, $20 grades, to go for $ e ia taken by our customers, and who 207 Suits, $21.50 grades, to go for (631 Suits) Waa) be represented in the Sale. 95 Suits, $16.50 grades, to go for $13 50 92 patterns at $23.50 $41 Suits, $17.50 grades, to go for 44 patterns at $18.50 (486 Suits) Blue serges at each price 400 suits partially silk lined You might close your eyes and pick out any suit in your size group, and be pleased with it. There are blues and blacks with stripes, gray effects, tan etlects, checks, a brown or two; patterns that young men like; and patterns that appeal to the man who prefers modest dark mixtures, These fabrics come from the best American mills. The suits are cut in Fifteen Models to suit the varying requirements of the young and the conservative, These in the Store at Broadway, corner Eighth. A Rare Sale In past June Sales have been included a large quantity of suits bought by us made up. This year most of the suits were made for us. A year ago we anticipated the present shortage of good woolens and dependable colorings. We bought when prices were 80 to 90 cents a yard lower than today’s prices—some of the materials were acquired under the then market price. The suits were made up in between the work on our regular orders—made the same way as are all our suits—and thus cost us less. Had we not made these early preparations, there would have been no June Sale, for the market is bare of the better grade of suits below regular prices. All Fresh and New The suits will be grouped according to sizes. Extra salesmen will be on hand to expedite speedy selection. The Suits at $13,50 and $15.50 include virtually everything a man could wish for in the matter of color —excepting black. Blue serges, grays, browns; blue flannels; stripes, checks, mixtures. Made up in 5 models for young men— 2 and 3-button soft roll fitted coats, with peak and round lapels, some cuff sleeves, some patch poek- ets, some pinch backs, one conserva- Extra fitters and tailors have been engaged to insure proper tive model, and one semi-conserva- tive, with lapels soft rolling to see- fitting and early delivery. ond button. The Men’s Store opens at 7.30 tomorrow Suits delivered in the order of their purchase =