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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1918, gst AN MOTHERS SIT UP _ Al NIGHT AWAITING NEWS (Continued from Pir and orig of the “Rus Hrow pletures, ts one of the ita aed thes we Na elve Flushing boys who were on + vinitee Tus At the Outcault home. | ack Wak 1% Madison Avenue, Fiushing. | 6 ‘ ad been received thie me We had ¢ exsages telling of the ean t Sthera of the Flushing boys sa basis for hope farnity e the other Flushing s ei ds Ranvenys-w Mrivate Anthony F. Abang, ® privat ne of " Willow Street; Private Will-| ai ve tBu 1. Chat 10 Hicks Street " w . ate Joseph W Crawford, No. 18} 146th tre good F Private Lawrenen 1 Ramaoy's f ¢. No. 16 Taylor Avenue; Private Jecant Ons edward J. Duffy, No. 80 Linden ave His mother and ger brother ba Private David M. Lowere, No received fo word regarding hitr 4) Linden Avenue; Private Lestor McKenna, No 6 Taylor Avenue to Frederick F. Mathgeber, No. | Edward ©. 7 ‘ 17 from No, § m saM Avenue; Private Joneph 7 ni : . " No. 18) Washington Streer Ev rer and Private John J. Trapp, No. 107] 6 1 niiated,” | Amity Stree Ris 5 ease aera, 4 cablegram reached the home of eae they (Private ‘Trapp this morning signed i xet | wit) not|by him and containing only two Drcaavece vaewwn een words Despatches from Gen. Pershing’s headquarters in France may Ameri- t wan| can troops are holding part of tho a-| front tothe north L of Toul give up hope. J am con ing his name on the list of Teffeau n electrician and ¢ listed In the 118th Aero Squad t ng at San Antonio, Tex, and la raded throug! then | went ty Mineola fo enlist in the| hospital at Mineola only about ten Hampetead: gle ae ae i. Aare n as me-| days before he left for the port of em- | a n iS code sa They accepted and| barkation, She sald he was an en- ¥ expected to be together during |thusiastio American and had been the war, All were me of the | lad to go, even in his weakened con- | NO TIDINGS CONCERNING FATE | Wohneta Boat Club, expert oarsmen |ditton. One Sea Cliff resident said: Ho is an only son OF TWO NEW YORKERS. | | “In one way It's a fine thing. Some) and awimmers. f No, 440 West 48th + fat a member of the O'Connell ¢ nossage that reached Flushing homes | pro-German was one from Private Rathgeber. the fact that they had boys who felt concerning ron, He enlisted « ago in the Coast Artill hifted and nephow of Supreme Court J to the aeroplane division at Mine rr Faber, was on the W. A. Ru ts another co! ear and ¢ jee | Solug to rate, the way Sea CHM feels no’ Lea us | tain ng in this town," Tho report th orning Whom no word | nis home in Jamaica, L. 1 ws come either direotly or through | The Mineola boys on the Tuscania | he War Departm Mis wife, at! were John Martin and Dougias No, 348 West 47th Street, sai y| wast. J. K. Bast, father of Douglas, y were married on Sept, 16] heard the nown when be came to the 9 a member of the 18th Aero Squad drafted cight days afterwarnt, next train to Mineola He was about] ClOUS MESSAGE IN HER LIFE. < Friedman of No. 7 received a cablegram from|inguiry when the Mineola operator) First Lieut. Benjamin S. Ellswort England to-day Informing him that} told him he had sent a message to} was awakened at her hi son, Walter Friedman of the 21%th| Mrs, Banat from thoir son, saying he| West 108th Street Acro Squadron, had been saved. Wal-|was safe. Mrs, Hast bad not heard | messenger boy with a fer ia twenty-two years old and en-| of the sinking and did not understand | "Arrived safely.” and was from her luted six month: “Ho was anxtou its father said, “ iad the significance of the cablegram un- | husband lo get to France,"| ti) ner husband ran in and told her.| Mrs. Blisworth did not realt ow that he hasar-| wire 1g NOTIFIED HER HUS-| deep significance attaching to the rived I hope he will even up for the BAND 18 SAFE. two simple words until friends called Mrs. John Martin also was made|her on the ‘phone at breakfast time of the sinking of the ‘uscania attack by shooting down a hundred German airplanes. And bo's t Mineola office when abe |and told be the boy that can do it, too.” glad in the jc received @ message from hor bus- | Tuscania PARENTS FAIL TO GET ANY [band that he was safe. Lieut, Elisworth, formerly a mem- WORD FROM YOUNG OUTCAULT. Sea Cliff, it is known, had seven men | ber of Squadron ©, N. B. N.Y, en Richard F. Outeault jr. non of the |On board, Flushing had twolve,|tered the OMcers’ Training wood one each. mission in an artillc ‘Teo boys from Sea Cliff who were| had been detached res! Chace, twenty-one, fon of 8, D,jarftilery school tn France. |Chace, a grocer; Frederick Sackett} A cablegram “Saf anit we Chellborg, twenty-five, mon of C,/ Private David Wolff of the Change in Time Bea Cliff; Kenneth Kay, twenty-one, Table, Sunday, son of James Kay, a carpenter: Harold Rt. Stevenson, twenty-one, son Mrs gad Bt said to-day. It ee Wolff of No. me yest | bridge building firm in New York | anxiety City; Winfleld Norris, son of James| ter son gave up The A. M. New York-Hornell cbant; Richard F, Dreyer, twenty- | even, son of Mra, Richard Dreyer | Acro Sauadron at Mineola, : Train, No. i; and Tobert Kissam, son of Robert} James N. Norris, who is in the will be discontinued. | Kinwam of Sea Clift, | produce busine: | All the Sea Clift boys were mom- | Market, said t he had received bers of the 213th Aero Squadron, They |10 word of his son, Winfleld 8. Nor The New York-Chicago had tralned at Mincola and had made |ris. He said his son is twenty-six ° frequent trips buck to thelr bome! years old and joined the 213th Acro Train, No. 3, |town In uniform, None of them was |Sauadron in Mineola two wecks ago. will leave New York married aid none had rank higher |e was formeriy a jont in the nh that of frst elass private, |Poekakill Milltary Academy, The 10.30 A. M. ge Hammer lived with his par-|Norrin home ts at No. 703 Greene jente in Glen Cove. Avenue, Brook SINKING ENDS ALL PRO-.GER-| Wynne ID Abel, also of the MAN SYMPATHY. twonty-four years old, Prior instead of 2.35 P. M. MINOR LOCAL CHANGES Mrs. Dreyer told as sho wept how |listing lust November at Mineola he to en |Mer son hat enlisted while not tn the. tr best of boaith and had been tn the produce commission Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. An Unusual Sale—Saturday MISSES’ WINTER COATS | With Large Natural Nutria Fur Collar The s» but an entirely new winter model just received from the tailor’s hands _are not reduced coat A -martly belted coat, made of genuine Pom Pom Bolivia cloth or vicuna velour cloth—the remainder of this season's high class winter fabrics; with natural Nutria fur collar; tailored flap pockets and novelty lined throughout. Sizes 14 to 20 years, 29.50 ‘0 word has come to Mrs. John J.) phe only additional “arrived safe" |of the people bere have ahown strong h Aero Bauad-| Private George Faber, 218th Acro{4ifferentiy, Now that the war ts thus halt} Squadron, son of the tate Philip Faber | brouh? close home to them, they are) joon notified hiv son had bean sav it differently. At any! Ty f MM be no me i momber of the 213th, !oania. No word has been received at! ‘hero will be no more pro-German| t Henry Olsen was Jon tho Tuscania was in error, Olsen)” tw fon and did not gall with the 213th. ar and her husband was|city yerterday, and returned by the|"ARRIVED SAFELY,” MOST PRE- | } last Octot exington|to tetegrapt the War Department an] Mrs, Charlotte Ellsworth, wife uf | him saying he w ¢ Intosh was employed in the truck de nt of the Packard Automol |Company, Ho was formerly a | partns tamp at | Brooklyn three, Mineola two and|the Presidio in San Francisco early Oyster Bay, Glen Cove and Ridge- | last summer and obtained his vom- nt, He om his battery ERIE RAILROAD }on board the Tuscanta included Fred | and was on his way to the American * from Sth Aero | Sackett Chellborg, former Mayor of | Squadron was the most precious bit she day at. Feb. 10, 1918 jot H. R, Stevenson, employed by a/o'clock, whet she was racked with Nis position in a Norris, @ poultry commission mer. | downtown brokerage house to enlist n Dec. 18 and was asnigned to the in West Washington h, is for bis father’s fruit and biishmont, Ww This would th are on a # Mite! all the Bernard Abel Co., Inc, Duane Street, He ts of the McKenzie School at N. Y. His parents live |Choster, N.Y |PARENTS DIDN'T KNOW LIEUT READER HAD LEFT. Abel is an athlete and ndencies, in spite of jie iy a member of th Keach Club, and is noted te a swimmer Mr, Abel sald Lieut. Charies H.R parent it 4 Wort Washington Avenur © of Cornell, and 4 4 Mason and ly r , wecelved a dent at Columbia Univer REFUSED FINE POSITION ENTER U. S. SERVICE. “My boy bad just been offered a Porition as assisiant bu ager In one of the Packard « suid Mr, Mcintosh declined two months #ervice abroad in the avi sion. Ho ix our only aor we are relieved beyond: shock ts still upon us ‘The only commissioned ¢ board the Tuscania tre ws far us known, wa J. Blackman of No. 619 Lieut stitutions. aon Barracks # nix, who lived with th Aero Corps, Tt Klyn and & gradus public rchoots. nah. N.Y. ie w ‘ Harvard, of the class ¢ the time he ent the Untversity | ployed in the Private David Mau ty-two yours old, became aeronautics soon after clared, but it was 1 last that he finally « 213th Aero framing at Mineo! non of his widow K. Wolff, with w West Nine to entering the schmidt, stock ne Street Private James 1. 4 last with the Lbsth a Jafter an unsurce | BROOKLY? N BOYS ON | CANIA EAGER Well Worth $45.00 S ARE FIGHTING ez3.ccL tel @ they f the famous which has been the scene of many hard battles 1 leather money belt, that time "he wa CROSS-COUNTRY} RUNNER WAS ON SHIP. © Squadr two sisters at Ne Htreet, Brooklyn, also an Tuscanla, He entisted December and was attac NEW YORK OFFICER WAS THE TUSCANIA [AME of Bitte Acre Sq > Eat More Corn Says BobEy You dont miss wheat when ‘POST TOASTIES ‘SPECIAL! | “Give Me an Old Fashioned Melody A crackeriack vill and basketball! NEWAT &—No word tayer has come Beully of No. Hdward Giffin, twenty-five years South th Street from hia son i Warn for August Belmont omas of the 100th Aero a sl iminer,. ae eee { WhO, was on the ‘Tuscana. y , TO eee ve ere lily with his-brother Paul, town to the d eTrmont | and was dismissed : | € , George Hamm 1% Pighth Ave 4, Was int > ja given aa the friend of ‘n Cove when | Julian. In pudlighed lists of imaelf a sol- -lthe men of the 2th, co for a long dier and has been in F time. GETEABY NERVES Your troubled, unsettled mind, your inability to concen- trate, or yodr fatigue from ordinary work simply shows that the drain on your strength is greater than your system is supplying and you need the powerful, nourishing force in SCOTS EMULSION | to speedily replenish the deficiency and avoid a breakdown. Soett’s is all nourishment so skilfully emulsi- | fied that it is quickly assimilated without taxing | digestion and gives strength in place of weakness. | No Drugs—No Aloohol—No Oplates. ' Scott & Bowne, Bloomfcid, WV. J. ie Fifth Avenue at Thirty-fifth Street : NOW ts the time to buy Young Men’s Winter Overcoats ' Here are models for storm, street atid dress service. ; Models conservative in clean, clear-cut lines, good for next year. The fabrics are soft, warm-without-weight woolens, smooth finished velours, and melton weaves in good shades and mixtures. i? Such garments bought now when prices paid for woolens were 33! ;°'; less than the same garments, same materials, cost at present; and mean an opportune money-saving investment. f Sizes 34 to 39—for young men and men who follow young men’s ' styles $17.50 $21.50 $27.50 Going Also : ’ : Boys’ and Children’s Suits and Overcoats Wear Overcoats in snappy trim styles that the younger fellows like: up and coming for the | boys at the growing age. Reefers and mackinaws with dash and pep for the best or worst | o' Winter days. i A limited number of smartly fashioned suits, too—dapper styles and fine materials 5 , together “hit their stride.” | All at a very considerable savings over prices that will obtain next season Looking Over Shoul- ders at the New Valentines The Valentine table on the Main Floor is a busy place these days ecen a good look over someone's shoulder is considered HARD TO GET, Why? Because all Valen- line senders—big ond little—have found out that Best's hace JUST THE KIND OF VALENTINES THAT THEY WANT. There are sweet little bright-col- ored nothings that open wide the eyes of the kiddies at the romper age, over the way. More Valentines i A limely card with a humorous greeting for out-of-lown. Some new puns—and good ones for those tha! appreciate them Best of all—Valentines of dainty taste that really carry a genuine message of love and friendship without being (rile or hackneyed— just think of that! Breezy, rigorous greetings tha! will bolster the courage of the men in khaki—others for sweethearts and soldiers’ families, too An Important Event I s ’ 300 Children’s Sweaters For Boys and Girls When Spring ts really here, ey are just the weight to wear over gay colored tub dresses, They suit small boys’ togs too! ; Light and alluring shades of pink, blue, white. tan, Alice, corn, coral, turquoise, nile, rose and apricot. as well as khaki and heather mixtures, they are just the shades for | coming Springtime. Sizes 1 to 7 years. $1.95—Regularly $2.75 a SPRINGTIME ; is the mood expressed in i Three New Misses’ Dresses THE ALWAYS YOUTHFUL Healt. combined with the always refined and dignified navy serge. The plaid appears as a sailor collar and as an important part of the skirt. The skirt is skilfully handled to give the effect of the Eton. It 1s a perfect } Spring street dress. 14-16-18 years $27.50 \ QUITE DIFFERENT FROM THE ORDINARY—is this dress of chiffon taffeta. It has its neck cut square, and the bodice is cut straight across in a daring line that is irreproachable for the debonair school girl spirit. Deep pockets cling to the side of ne e skirt, and shir the independent charin that is claimed by the rest of the dress, Navy, Copen, Rose, Green, and Sand, 13-15-17 years $23 50 FOR THE YOUNGER GIRLS—there is good news. Fresh, charming plaid which we selected is made in a pretty youthful frock with trimmings of harmonizing plain ' gingham, ft 8 to I4 years $5.95 i No C. 0. D, No Phone O.ders secareeenaioat enn eh eee Te I ote il eee fib anoainsle, tae Le elody’” ————— Words and Music From “Odds and Ends” of the Popular Song _ at the Norworth Theatre With Next Words by Musie by Sunday World || Bide Dudley _James Byrnes