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‘ment, and one of a guard detail at the Y pitt near Scudder’s Falls, on the Del- if al Sersey Geardsman Dro TRENTON, N. J., May 21. vate Wichard Erwin, twenty, of Jersey City a & Member of Company E, Fourth Resi- drowned there late washing his under- Comrades who acow recovered River, ht wh aco in on th sex |N LOFT BUILDIN <stiaielpiens DELICIOUS Flames Break Through Roof of New Bore and Alarm Girl Workers, MALT EXTRACT Taken with Meals | Adds an indescribable flavor to food and builds up the system. Drug Stores Everywhere} which started in some burlap tn portion of the new subway bein y-ninth Street, spread #0 rapid) PUTT LU LLU LLL LLL wT ATTENTION! The “White” corps is execut- ing its regular morning and evening drill. One, two, three—brush! You'll find full instructions about how to brush the teeth in our book- let ‘'Good Teeth; How They Grow And How To Keep Them.” Clip and mail the attached coupon and we will send you a copy. Give each of your children a BROADWAY SUBWAY constructed at Broadway and Twen- ee Just before noon to-day that in a short time the flames had eaten their way through the wooden roof of the subway, The dense volume ployed in the alx-story building at the northeast corner, directly over where the fire was discovered, All the girls reached the street safely, as tho result of cool-headed- ness on tho part of policemen, but half a dozen fainted on the way and two had to be treated for hysteria. Laborers came out of the emoke-filled cavern in a fi scramble and re- ported to the firemen that one of their |number, Antonto Zitello, thirty-one Fed by tar and dry timbers, a fire years old of Woodhaven, L. I, had a been left behind, — Zitello waa not rescued until the firemen battered in © the planking with a battering ram and brought him to the surface. He y was taken to the New York Hospita! suffering from inhaling smoke. The ground floor of the loft hulld- Ing, which formerly was the Gilsey House, ts occupied by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad Company's agency. The plate glass windows on the Twenty-ninth treet aide of the offices were broken by the flames. ' The United States Realty Company is constructing this portion of the subway. In finishing the station the drying process necessitates the pres- ence of a fire, Large quantities of tar, waterproof paper and burlap were in the station and they gave the fire a rapid start. Policeman MoCar- ren of the Went Thirtleth Street Bta- tion, aided by other policemen, re- moved a big vat of tar from the danger zone. ors in novelties, have a floor in the old hotel building and employ agout 200 girls. As soon as the fire was iscovered the fire drill signal was given, but many of the girls were too frightened to proceed to the street in an orderly manner, Dora Kinsky, nineteen, of No, 1210 Vyse Avenue, the Bronx, and Florence Oldstone, nineteen, of No. 104 West One Hundred and Fifteenth Street, received medical attention, 0. ‘HANNA'S GRANDSON TO WED. | | Dan Jr, Now in Camp, Will Marry Roth Randall, Actress, INDIANAPOLIS, May 21,—Dan Han- pa jr, grandson of 09965-6506 POOP B8Oteee KIDDIES DANCING THE. * SICILIAN Ae | '94804.8.4-84-1 99920 6-56-5.H046-4-945.94099O8O6D9999400-99-0-9949 090000006446 2494-95999 nor’s Little Wards, | : | One of the reasons why Park Com- | missioner Cabot Ward has been so | Jenthusiastic in doing everything the |pageant “Young Manhattan,” to be produced by the Kiddie Klub of The | | Evening World at the Central Park —_—— playground at West Drive and Sixty- | INoriiigin: (Oivinion: of CHUreh| Sire ororn ue mee Be beleeee ie will help children all over the city to Agrees to Become Recon- | understand that the parks are thelr | “ A proper spaces for fun and romping. { ciled With the South. |” Bor generations the idea has been | jallowed to grow that children must | DALLAS, Texas, May 21.~/Tho| be kept to the walks and off the grass | General Assembly of the Presbyter- | because they are apt to rub down jan Church in the United States of | bare spaces and break shrubbery in| ‘America, in session here, to-day vot-| thelr play. Until very lately tt had| Jed unanimously in favor of reunion |ot occurred to anybody that it) | for the two branches of the church—|Would be very easy to teach chil-/ the North and South. |dren to have care and consideration | A copy of the resolution was or- | for growing things, which would per- Park Board can do to make the ‘ It them to romp through the parks ent to the Southern Assembly | ™ eda ‘ | and still not damage the lawns or the |flowers and bushes, Commissioner | now in session at Birmingham, Ala. A resolution favoring national pro- 5 S = Al tube of S. S. White Tooth Paste for his very own, and they'll acquire the tooth brush- ing habit in no time. It’s a pure, wholesome, non-medi- cated cleanser, deliciously flavored and as pleasant to use as it is efficient. Your druggist has it. THE SSWHITE DENTAL MFG.CO, ONAL UU COUPON jj: Wet Ryser et ho oie White Tooth Paste * [Nemne....0--encenennee-senersseceersnnsceseene: seatecatensessteneenwnms UU Hanna, now liquor traitic was training camp at Fort Benjamin Harrl- |adopted to-day by the General Assem~- json, to-day confirmed a report from bly of the Presbyterian Church in the Chicago that he Js engaged to marry | United States of America in session Mias Ruth Randall, an actress, Misa "er The resolution said the Assem- Randall 19 in Chicago, \gix million people who most earnestly came here with the Cleveland tnyokes your influence and authority nt of prospective oMcersa ten to secure national prohibition of the ays ago, accompanied by James Mc- | beverage liquor tratt Dermott of Cloveland, who recently anon married Hanna's sister, and who also is & member of the camp. ‘lam going to marry Miss Randall, said Hanna, “but I think that the di tails regarding the marriage should|sion here to Klected. CLEVELAND, Ohio, May 21.—The Northern Baptist Convention tn ses- y elected George W. come from her. Conditions are #o|Coleman, a layman of Boston, as chaotic at the camp that I hardly know| President, Other officers ted . |were: Firat Vice Presiden G. what to say about my personal matters.” | Were: MERE Wee i Om | It was rumored here that the mar-| dent. Rev. W. W. Buatard, Cleveland riage may take place at @ leading hotel | Corresponding Secreta Will Briday liam ©. Bitting, St. Lo: ee = | Secretary, Rev, C. A eat Chester, Pa., Record § ov \M°A. “Leavy, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Treas: ——.——— AND STABBING CRIPPLE WHO RACED Seedy tran" BEACH LIFE GUARD wr Commol WEDS GIRL HE SAVED Compound. | “I suffered from female troubles which caused plercing pains like a| knife through my back and side. finally lost all my strength so I had to go to bed. The yr advised an | operation but I would not listen to it. Ithought of Despite the Loss of an Arm and a Leg. When twenty-four years old Lud- bly represents “a constituency of fully | Officers of Northern Baptist Church | Boston Youth Swims Like Fish| Ward 1s eager to have the children feel that they are welcome to the | parks and that the parks are worth while treating carefully, The dance of the children of Ital- ian birth who are to show tn the pa- brought into New York's “melting | pot” to have its part in true Amer- ieanism, is full of the gayety and freedom of mind and movement which are typical of just what Mr. Ward would like to sce in the parks all the time. The picture shown here is that of the Itallan section rehears ing the dance “Siciliana” in Tho! | Jefferson Park playground at I geant how the spirit of Italy has been | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 21, 1917." New York. Kiddies Rehearse Italy’s Joyful Spirit | eant Dance of “Young Manhaitan”’ 4844444 O09O9O0064 04-4 4004090000004 00490404 2O0O HOOP Hho number, two torribly mangled, : BOF-2-96-346-4-649 90909 EVERYBODY CAN EAT FISH AT THESE PRICES: OTHER FOOD STL HIGH Flounders Quoted Wholesale at 1 1-2 Cents a Pound—Cab- bage Takes a Drop. ‘The Food and Drugs Bureau of the Department of Health to-day issued this report: “The following ts a lst of prices quoted this morning in the wholesale districts: “MEAT—Beef, 16 to 171-2 cents @ pound; mutton, 25 to 26 cents a pound; jamb, 28 gents a pound; pork, 21 to 22 cents a pound; veal, 20 to 23 cents a pound; fowl, 24 to 26 cents a’ pound; roasting chickens, 26 to 33 cents a pound, “FISH—Fish is still very plentiful at Fulton Market. The cheapest kind of fish selling to-day are flounders, which bring 11-2 cents per pound. “Whiting and ling find no market and are consequently being put in cold storage. These fish can also be bought for 11-2 cents a pound. Various other kinds of fish are pienti- ful and the supply is far greater than the demand. “PRODUCE—Potatoes still remain high, prices showing practically no change since last week. Cabbage shows @ slight decrease in price and spinach 4s plentiful and cheap. Lat- }ant Avenue and One Hundred and Fourteenth Street. The youngsters |have gone at thelr rehearsals with laughter born of sheer love of the | dance itself. Cousin | that long after the p. ing but a memory they | golng to the the “Sicillana” to other children, whether from the tenements or from the apartments of the streets nearer Central Park, and themselves learn democracy and cheerfulness, graceful- ness and innocent recreation as they teach, To those who have seen the rahear- sals under Field Supervisor Misa F. will still be arks to dance and teach | Naftalen, at Thomas Jefferson Park. {the youngsters flashing and jang! their tambourines, whirling their brightly colored Italian costume seem to be in a spot as far vemoved from New York as Palermo {tself. All the other groups, from the In- dian aborigines to the group of Kid- | die Klub youngsters who are to pay | their final tribute to the Stars and |Stripes in the finale of the pageant, enter on thoir last week of ret to-day. By Saturday an ex ger Cagne of No, 20 Westland Ave- | will be ready of which nobody in the| Kiddie Klub, not even Cousin Fl- B Mahogany Finished VNLY BRONX, STORE AUMANN8 (? 149th Street @ 3rd AVENUE Apartments Furnished from $50 Up "TOyU NO EXTRA CHARGE For CREDIT i ' if SERVING ; TABLE 35 in ; CHAIR and § SiDe $ 98 . CHAIRS, with slip seats of genuine 119- fi Weather; 10 pieces, at.. ro { ri dow { { a . what IT had read about Lydia E, Pinkham's Vege- table Compound pases and tried it. The first bottle brought great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me. All women who have female trouble of ny kind should try Lydia KE, Pink- a's Vegetable Compound."—Mre, ETTA DORION, Ogdensburg, Wis. Physicians undoubtedly did their best, battled with this case steadily and could do no more, but often the by the medicinal properties of the good old fashioned roots and herbs contained in) Lydia Vegetable Compound If any complication extsts it pays to write the Lydia FE. Pinkham Medicine for special free ad- OPENS AN ACCOUNT #1 A WEEK OYA. Little urniture snd Bedding 3 Reome turnished $59.98 Two Big Htores—OPEN EVENINGS CORNER “156 I. most scientific treatment {s surpassed | KE. Pinkham’s | | nue, Boston, was just half his pres: | wanor herself, ever dreamed when | ent age, he was considered an infant | first plans were made | prodigy tn aquatic sports, His swim- | “ ss janing and diving record was one of | FQRCE FUNERAL TO-MORROW. | the best tn the State for a lad of his} - | years, Gagno’s young friends thought | Services Will Be at ce Church his career in the water was atanend, and Bartal at Madison, N, J. | when he fell beneath the wheels of | Funeral services for William H. Force, the was who died of heart diseaso Saturday a freight train and lost his left arm) iiine at his home, No. 11 East Sixty and left les. leighth Street, will be held to-morrow I nordor ti disabuse the minder of jnoon at Grace Church; Broadway and : de ‘Tenth Street. The pastor his rivals, Gagne made @ bee line| Lonth Strat, | The pastor, th Dr, from the hospital to the waterfront | ment will be at Hillside Ceme ery, Mad- vere healed t ison, N. J | | when his wounds were healed. Bos Mr. Force was the senior member of ton Harbor was full of white caps | the ‘shipping and. forward pheaages§ and storm signals were set | William Ft ree & at NO. 76 Front | “Where are you going?” asked a| Staten curious watchman. | ‘ad acht “For @ little morning exercise,” re- sluby, tne Automebl) ub of America, - eo handed bis c the Hamilton Club lyn and the pited Gagne, as he handed his crutoh | the Hamilton Club of Brooklyn and th Ito a friend and dived into the bay.|four years old, Mrs and two He swam without trouble to the Bos- K, Dick and Kather daughters, Mfrs. W ine 1, Fore jton TAght, which is #ix miles out 8 married to | Last summer Gagne, who ts dark, is life on well built and good to look at, was to marry talking to @ life guard on the shore of > = MINSTREL SHOW TO-NIGHT. Beach, when cries for help dls. Revere }eame from the water. Q tance out a girl was struggling Gagne beat the life gpard ro It and reached the side of the drowning girl of Church of Incarnation, as sho was giving up. She was Miss| ‘The Young Ladies’ Sodality of the Loutse King, twenty years old, of No.| Church of the Incarnation, One Hun- | ea | Success Assured of Parish Reanton told of shells which burst six feet 2% Salem Street, Winchester, Mass. | dred and Beventy-fifth Street and st fenttne bald edie a a A romance grew oUt of the rescue} Nicholas Avenue, will 2 its an-!peCKS THRONGED TO WITNESS Jane anc ing became en-| nua strel sho and Gane and Miss King became en-| nual minstrel show this eve TARGET RRACTICN, gaged. The parents of the young| McKinley Square Casino, No. Mt | mh a casldene Mannenad iades des > avor th ateh, but they| One dred and Sixty Stree - woman 4 the mat at they} Que Hundred and Betyeninth: Sin ‘| matic elreumstances. Word had been thought Loulac + to walt unt) the Bronx, The affair will be ip the! aiseg through the ship that the she Was twenty-or eae al eee tere tae un | Passed 0 But the young couple didn't think | ae ee ee “i naval euanere were avout to fire the pecomensien Vy | i lots that It will bo a big|DI8 guns at objects tossed overboard, od in the city am | success because of a large demand for| Everybody on the ship, except those tickets by tuce, radishes and kale are plentiful |and the supply in good condition, and Jare solling from 4 to 7 cents per | quart. “Wholesale prices and approximate weight—Potatoes, $9 to $10 per barrel, 160 pounds; cabbage, $5 to $7 per barrel, 150 pounds; lettuce, $1.25 to $2 per basket, 35 pounds; spinach, $1 to $1.25 per ‘barrel, 80 ‘pounds; ‘white turnips, $3 per crate, 125 pounds; kale, $1.30 per barrel, 80 pounds; peas, $2 to 5 per basket, 35 pounds; string ns, $3.60 per’ basket, 35 pounds; | cauliflower, $3 per crate, 49 pounds; asparagus, $2.60 per doze RED CROSS NURSES ~ VICTIMS OF DEFECTIVE _ SHELSN STEAMSHP | (Continued from First Page.) | . from Northwestern University etat- | ing that many volunteers have of- jfered to take the places of Mrs, Ayres, Miss Woods and Miss Matzen, It ts not Hkely that we shall watt. for them and our unit will sail three short." The statement of Major Besley, coupled with knowledge of the location of the guns on the ship, indicates that the shell exploded just as it left the muzzle of the gun and as it was passing along the side of the v | at a dis- tanoe of possibly fifty or 100 feet. The first statement of the accident, which was of a semt-official nature, said that the shell struck the water and exploded at a point 175 yards from the ship and that fragments of flew back on board. Naval gunners and officers of steamships In this port state that the gun crews on the trans-At- lantic liners and freight steam- ers have been furnished with a lot of defective ammunition. Gun- nere coming ashore in American ports after trips to Europe have actually engaged in working the ves- sel, flocked to the decks, The Red Cross nurses, few of whom had ever PP? ee Sas land. No calm. Orders came for the firing of aj and sent to gun on the starboard side of the ship. | lowed to leave the ship. but the oftte The sound of the explosion of the shell| cers and esctantt HA harge < almost immediately followed by | v'-tims of the acc! . E vhich the accle ree of| The steamship on W acir wember, two serrmly a dent occurred did not resume her voyage after the victims had bees gent ashore, but steamed up the hare bor and anchored. It was reported that she was in need of slight repairs. CASTORIA In Use For Over 30 Yeas whe GQ f/litda the | Signature of fell to the deck. Mrs, Ayers and Miss Woods had been instantly killed. In the Red Cross contingent were & number of surgeons. They probably saved the life of the wounded nurse y their prompt ministrations Owing to wireless restrictions, the captain of the steamship was unable to send a message to shore, He de- cled to return to the American coast. The bodies of the dead and the wounded nurse were transferred to a tender when port was reached Growing Children and grown-ups too, find nourish- ment ate a delightful areetat in dainty HOLLAND RUSK—the golden- brown delicacy—madeentirely different from all other toast. A Dutch product made by Dutch bakers who have owned the recipe for centuries. Nothing but the very finest ingredients—best flour, fresh eggs and the richest cream. Can be eaten dry, with butter, or served in dozens of ways with fruit, for breakfast, luncheon or dinner. One taste and you'll get the habit for all time. Try Holland Rusk for breakfast tomorrow morning. At Your Grocer's or Delicatessen Dealer's Made only by HOLLAND RUSK CO., Holland, Mich, Makers of the famous Windmill Cookies, evicieet J () tnd most Unusually darored Cookies ever produced LUC NEW LARGE GENEROUS PACKAGE Aoon rom THe winomnes. i The 13th Chair” Holds no bad luck for the who banishes euperstition with an olden mix it at home, GARRETT & CO. Est. 1695 New York Office, Longacre Building—Telepbone Bryant 2906 ASK FOR Munsins WEAR UNION SUITS because— Lt Ny ttt bila of their perfect fit, fine quality fabri smooth finished seams-—simple, practical, non-binding crotch---non-gaping seat and shape-holding qualities. Wea MO All sizes for men, women and children, ‘ Many different styles and fabrics to choose from. Ld ] PERFECT. UNION been afloat before, were fluttering people outside the parish Mun as well as within , In addition to the minstrel show, Bird 8, Coler will make an address of The new pastor of t Incarnation \used an out-| parish is the Rev. Joseph F, Delany, ain tg va; Who Was formerly pastor Mal Street, with excitement as they clustered at he rails, The alr was warm and the sca was’ Vb) FITTING N MUNSING FR Geer Swit,” tie ¥ ohe was ale it gs