Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Four Insane Men Loose tn Jersey. Parties are deprching the country- | side about Morris Plains, N. J, for \ | four of the five insane men recently committed to the State Hospital from the Rahway Rosormatory them, Louis Bated!, was arrested on a | frain at Dover yesterday. Although all | have criminal recortis, it is not known | One of} that BY are dangerous. Bad For the Hair || Soap should be used very carefully, | if you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. | This dries the scalp, makes the hair) brit@e, and ruins it : The best thing for steady use is just ordinary malsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and greascless), apd is better than the most expensive soap or any- thing else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse | the hair and scalp thoroughly. simply moisten the hair with water and rub it It makes an abundance of rich, lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp sift, and the hair fine and in. cream silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. © You can Mt mulsified cocoanut off y, it’s very cheap, and li supply every mem- ber of the fantily for months.-Advt. cigarette in the world. wo was made into asany other tobacco. Fir. there's wo tobacco bike Virginia Piedmont is the biggest-selling Virginia DARINGFRENCHMAN TELLS OF BOMBING BiG KRUPP WORKS Flyer Under Fire During Al- most All of 466-Mile Flight. GRAND HPADQUARTHRS OF THE FRENCH ARMY IN FRANCP, July 10-—The most daring air raid yet carried out against the great Krupp Munition Works at Exsen was recounted to a staff correspondent of the Associated Pros to-day by Sergt, Maxime Gallols, who defied all the German afroraft de fenses and bombarded the heart of the German armament producing faetories, The whole flight lasted seven hours, during which the intrepid French aviator was guided only by the moon and stars and the compass, as the voyage was made in the darkeat hours of the night, the destination being reached exactly according to THAT'S RIGHT THAT'S. WHY VIRGINIA’ TOBACCO GIVES You BETTER QUALITY IN An all-Virginia cigarette — garette, And Sergt. Galloia narrated his He | plan. story in the eimplest manner, sald “Four of us—Licut. Ardisson de Perdiguler, Sergt. Durand, another jcomrade and myself—left our base at nightfall Friday with the intention of reaching Essen. Soon afterward we ran into foggy weather and lost sight of each other, I flew at an | aititude of nearly a mile and passed jover Mets and Thionville, following the course of the River Moselle, | which, however, rapidly disappeared in the mist. “The batteries fired at me crossing the Rhine, and as I passed over Mots searchlights played about the sky. At Thionville I heard another atr- plane nearby, but made it out to be Ardisson's, Afterward I was com- elled to travel by the ald of the compass, the stars and the moon. | | “At Treves I saw a heavy bom- bardment, which 1 calculated was directed at my comrade. Therefore I knew I was travelling in the right direction, I did not aee Coblenz. 1 saw the reflection of the moon on the | Rbine and found Bonn, From there to Duesseldorf there was a regular | sea of electricity, Which increased as 1 got further north, “Cologne was @ blaze of luminosity, and at Duesseldorf there was all kinds | of Nghta, blue, red and white. All the time the anti-aircraft guns fired as 1 DOESN'T HE KNOW ABOvT GOOD OLD Does your cigarette-money buy Import Duty or Taste ? Grown in America, Virginia tobacco gives smokers a/! quality in their cigarettes, because there’s no Import Duty to pay for. Also, Virginia is the only tobacco that has character—that good-taste “sparkle” that makes a cigarette a cigarette. Piedmonts are VIRGINIA TOBACCO, highest grade, The clerk has them right at his elbow—simply say “a package of Piedmonts, please.’’ Lizgatte Myers Tobacco Cn IO for 5¢ Also packed 20 for 109 passed, and around Cologne the gun- ners were very accurate in the range. “Leaving there, I saw, like cliffs on the horizon, @ brilliant jilumination which seemed thousands of yards in length stretching to the left of Essen, while southward was another long line of lights coming from the fac- tories, Arriving over Essen, I rose about a mile and @ half. | circled around, searching for a place where the ee from the workshops ap- eared densest. Then I threw the first bomb. “After counting ten I dropped the second, and then the remainder of the ten I carried at similar intervals, { could not tell whether the bombe ex- ploded, but they probal id. It wae impossible to distinguish their effect owing to the flaming furnace chim- n not having seen my Comrades again. 1 and was fired at many times, earing the base, owing to the darkness, I could not tell exactly where I waa. I thought possibly I was still over the German lines and decided to continue westward as long as the petrol lasted. Suddenly I recognized a prearranged signal and managed to land just at dawn at the same place from which I had departed, The distance covered was about 466% miles,” His comrades, French base, having gone as far as Treves, where they found that their supply of gasoline would not permit them to reach Essen, 80 they dropped bil their bombe on Treves before fy ing home. It is belleved that the fourth man turned to the bas y duty done, I turned homeward, | me back exactly the same way 1) Lieut. Ardisson and | Sergt. Durand, both returned to the j reached and bombed Essen, but he Ay | | | to bring his command to war strength. | | | RUSH OF RECRUITS BRINGS 12TH NEAR ‘Ready and Waiting by End of Week, Says Col. Foster— | “Beating Draft to It.” | Officers of the Twelfth Regiment, which is making @ dfive aided by Tho Evening World to reach war strength, were much encouraged to- day over the number of men who are for admission. Yesterday wing were accepted: ats, William P. Geoewnde, ‘ Faindoit Her William Dobson, Patrick J. Tannin, Apthony Grande, William Sage, Thomas Bayle, Henry Jars, John Wirbrond, john Soho vi Klatfory Bart Herman Barbosa Thesdore Delauae, Fraitk Donley Col, Reginald Foster of the Twelfth said to-day, applicants are coming in | #0 rapidly he hasn't enough doctors to keep up. Last night there were 200| applicants at the armory, and it may be that from these he will get enough Frank Beennen, regiment will be complete and | waiting before July 16," sald Col. Foster. A There were indications to-day of «| last minute rush to enlist in the army before the draft, Yesterday 152 men were accopted here, Fifty men signed to become bluejackets, The Britiah recruiting station got 131 men, Col, P. E. Traube, in charge of re- cruiting for the officers’ training Amps, expressed disappointment to- over the small number of ap- pations for the second series of mps to open for work on Aug, 27, There should have been three times as many applicants," he sald. ‘[ believe this is due to a misunder- standing of the position of the Gov- ernment, We want for this second series men ranging from 25 to 36 years. This ay be the last chance for such men to get commissions In the army. After these camps have filled their quotas and graduated their classes, future officers will ‘be se- lected from the men called by the draft.” A big recruiting entertainment will be given at 8 o'clock to-night on the decks of the battleship Recrult in Union Square. Through the courtesy of A. Paul Keith headliners in vaude- ville will present thetr acts. The en- | tertainment will be free and the en- | tire park will be auditorium. There will be ert between 7| and & 0 jarine Band of | the New Y Augustus The 1 John Philip Bou i1ts to-day at the ef the Minute bers Street he Boys’ Band of Orphan Asylum and Mr, Thomas and Mr. Chapin will p for enlistments. A miniature city, built tn a week, stands almost complete in City Park, Brooklyn, opposite the Navy Yard It will be used to house naval re- cruits who cannot be accommodated in the y Yard, Mayor Mitchel lent the park. A committee will meet him to-day to urge that another site njamin Chapin | will help get n-day meet- Men at No, 67 Sousa will di- Malachy's be used. To compensate for the loss of the playground, Park Commis- sioner Ingersoll has promised to hasten completion of @ playground In Fort Greene Park. ereeiesd eee jan Drowns in Bay, Valentine Whitman, thirty-one, an electrician who lived at No, 711 Prest- dent Street, Brooklyn, was drowned yes- terday afternoon at the Raunt in Ja- maica Bay. Whitman with his wifeand family was spending the day at the Raunt. He was standing on a float when he fell overboard, Two men tried to rea cue him, but the swift tide carried Whit tof their reach, The Har- bor Sauad recovered the body, Blect 57- DOWN $4.00 WEEKLY Will Bring to Your Home This $50 CORTOFONE Talking Machine and $9.00 Worth of Double Faced Records (24 Belections) $59 WORTHS 4.900 | Special at Made in Mahogany and Golden Oak COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS | $1.00 Down —31.00 Weekly Cort Sales Co., Inc. 330 SIXTH AVENUE _ || NEAR 20TH STRBET. NEW YORK "Gy CRANDALL'S, KERCIAL BARGAIN PRICES for the Summer | 593° | fo} Found” articiee Vorid or reported 1 Bur for thirty days. aren ate ¢ The W and Found left ate Advertising telephoned Cal! 4000 Brookiyn ¢ THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1917. i DEATH COMPLICATES FIGHT FOR ‘POOR LITTLE RICH BOY’ Father of White Plains Lad Out of Two Years’ Legal Battle, With the eighth legal battle, not for the custody of rossman Lee, called — “the ” of Whit c ttle Rich Boy’ made. $15.60. or kids plair. colors. acting specifications. 1,044 Men’s Fine Suits--all from regular stocks (*;,28") Now $19.75 Yes sir! all taken from regular stocks. You know what that means. plain blue serge suits now selling at $25. The rest are fancy suits—fine quality of fabrics —splendidly Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. 605 Men’s Suits, $15.50 (Corner Store, Broadway at Eighth.) Formerly $18.50, $20, $22.50 and $25 grades — that were in sales at $17.50, $18.25, $18.50—now marked to All sizes, but in broken lines. grays—most of them fancy mixtures in this Summer’s quiet styles for men and young men. Men’s Low Shoes, Our $4.50 Grade for $2.85 1100 pairs from our regular stocks —in patent, dull or tan calfskin <in—so good that they should fairly walk out of the store. 9,000 Fancy Shirts— $1.50 to $2 grades at $1.25 é Including 1800 mercerized woven Russian cord shirts of $2 grade, in fancy woven stripes on white grounds. 1800 GENUINE “Soisette” shirts of $1.50 grade, in £400 other fancy shirts of $1.50 and $2 grades. All made for John Wanamaker—according to the ex- Sizes 14 to 17. Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. JOHN Broadway at Ninth, New York lains, undecided, the boy's fat iiliam Mille of New Rochelle, ‘died suddenly Saturday night. Among lawyers and others who have followed the long fight over the pos- and seasion of the curiosity was ex- | Pol hi freceat. vooteseus property of the boy to determine who the iitlestion of th should have actual custody, of him. Mills's wife divorced cesten Ws Geeueer & He, i eae Ago, and after she was Street, formerly attorney for Mills, who Thomas Frederick Lee changed her|commenced the fight, said yest fon's name. She left the litte boy an| ‘I doubt whether the death of Mi estate of $850,000. The stepfathgr tool will have any effect upon the out letters of guardianship and admin-|of the case. The father was istration on the boy's estate and the/that Lyons should remain guar; ani father took the matter into court. Joined with him to preserve the status e §=6T ne fight has continued more than id quo. two yea! als, fre ‘decision, e and De Witt H. hester, whom the inted guardian of the p 3 There are a number of In the Sports Store Domestic golf clothing. 150 suits, knickers or lon trousers, fancy tweeds. Scote! zephyr weight $22.50 to $30 grades, $16.50. 76 sport coats of $7.75 grade, in knit check and fancy weaves, at $5.50 (less than cost). pecial lot of pongee silk golf knickers, in odd sizes, 82 to 36 waist and 40-42 stouts; a $10 grade at $6.50, Sporting Goods— Seventh Gallery, New Bldg. All English and American STRAW HATS of the $2 grade Some: plain blues and ure down to 90c And Underwear Specials 55c for ribbed lisle thread sleeveless shirts that “pull over” and have closed front. Athletics, The same style of mercerized ribbed lisle at $1. And the same styles of fine ribbed silk at $2.50, Gool union suits of fine ribbed lisle, sleeveless and knee-length or short sleeves, %4-length, $1.75 suit. WANAMAKER HAY BEV BRAGE,. Our boys in the Navy enjoy their Bevo, The Navy De- partment has put its official seal of endorsement on this triumph in soft drinks, by allowing it to be sold and served on all Naval Vessels, Ashore or afloat, you will find Bevo a palate-pleasing, refreshing and nutritious beverage. Just the thing to take along for sail or cruise—auto trip or camp and for the ice-box at home. = CAUTION $3554, Ty Bevo—the all-year-’round soft drink Bevo is sold in bottles only, and is bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH—ST. LOUIS ewark, N. J. Anheuser-Busch Newark Agency, Anheuser-Busch Agency, Ne A. Busch Bottling Co., Brook: GENERAL DISTRIBUTORS Families supple us mn