The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1918, Page 9

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| THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, “WEDS TWO HOURS =,igua WILL WEAR ON DUTY Dodoo AFTER HIS AUTO KILLS BOY AT PLAY --——> | William Axelrad Runs Qown Child on Way to Ceremony and Faces Court To-Day. ‘The wedding bells finally rang out| > for William Axelrad, but he must appear in court to-day as a result of an automobile accident that caused | Oride and wedding guests two hours| of anxious waiting. Axelrad is twenty-four years old, tives at No, 1357 Boston Road, and) 4 was hurrying to his wedding last night in his touring car when Samuel Rosenzweir, eleven, of No, 203 Brook Avenue, Bronx, was struck while playing at the Bronx end of the Willis Avenue Bridge. Axeirad rushed the boy to the Li coin Hospital bul as he was lifted out of the car he was found to be wad. From the hospital Axeirad went to the Alexander Avenue Police Sta- tion and told his story. It was then ‘The police held him more than ap hour and a half for questioning. Meanwhile Axelrad's bride, Mildred Gold, nineteen years old, uf No. 110 Ae oeceey Street, was wailing ests for the bridegroom in Frosress fiat ‘all, No, 28 Avenue A. Tele- Phone culls to his home gave them no dlue to his whereabouts. ‘The nearly 200 guests grew restless | ‘ ioe the best man instructed the band roceed with an informal sonoatt| © walle they "walted. Patriotic ‘and | popular music was played for an hour | and a half before any word was re-| n 0 celved from the bridegroom. ‘Then he| Enright’s gent in a short telephone message,| aids of the gerMler sex have eaying: adopteA a natty garb. They are gaya, Aelayed and will be there any| Grilling every dey and ero ready PPPOE ID CER ERE AEROS S ELE SSE SPL PEO PEEP PE Ponaeitine Police Commissioner tminute.” . for emergency calis made no charge st him, and his | Finally he arriv and the cere- mony was pert: ed. The police |tender, clerk, hotel attendant, | perience at farming and he is not | ployment, | | Dloyment ha MEN AFFEGTED “ eighteen years ago in onnection with the efforts of Laure Digear, the actress, to obtain the estate Employment wit Randy Answers of the Pittaburgh millionaire Henry Mf. ennett, and who subsequently married They Wil Be Selected for | sires Sisear, ied suddenty ine Dunel- Labor They Choose len, N. J, drug store to-day from heart trouble. Dr. Hendrick, who had been living in “What can I do—how can | do ii—| New York, recently went to Dunellen to where do 1 do it—ehen de I do It and Jopen a sanatorium on the Bob Fitsstm- ,| Mong farm near there, His widow, to what do [ get paid for doing i?" | whom he was married May 11, 1916, is ‘This is the battle cry of the “non. \now in Lox Angeles essentials” who ure flocking to the| The death of Dr, Hondrick recalls the |wensational developments attending the United States Employment Agency | will contest brought by Laura Biggar in at No. 22 East Twenty-second Street, | 1992. Claiming to have been the secret wife of the Pittsburgh millionaire, she where Supt. John R. O'Leary has his’ brought sult to set aside his will, de- headquarters, and at the various claring she had born a child to Bennett other Government offices. On July 1| after his death. Samuel Stanton, a {t becomes imperative that the men | former Justice of the Peace in Hoboken, tn this class do something that will |attested to the marriage, and Dr, Hen- show results on the war side of the drick, then operating a sanatorium tn Fayonne, attested to the birth of Miss Governmental ledger, and with this | piQonne vig. wh ta dees Wak in mind they are appealing daity to! oniy ritteen daye. Uncle Sam's representatives with an| fies Biggar and the two men were idea to getting in on the ground floor ‘The waiter announces that ho hus been “waiting” for fifteen years and wants to know his status. He promptly finds out. The waiter is in the class with the elevator man, bar- book - keeper, stenographer and a dozen |k a others who for years have been more or less essential to certain local in- dustries which are not at all warlike. He must go to work in a munitions factory or go to farming. What will the new job pay? Mr O'Leary's office force explains in de tail. The waiter hasn't had any ex- DR, 6. C. HENDRICK DEAD; | SUIT OVER WILL RECALLED) « ed Notoriety June keen about returning to indoor em- 80 he chooses farm em If he has had no experi \ence in this line he must begin as a novice. While he has earned $25 a | week as a waiter, he will be obliged {kj all styles, ‘to take up the shoval andthe hoe ‘o 34 length legs, $35 a month with board and room. If per suit. he knows something about farming National War Savings Day Buy W. S. S. To Back Up Our Army and Navy Men’s Underwear and Hosiery at McCutcheon’s ao Amho Union Suits in ribbed or flat Lisle in including Athletic, at $2.00. arrest the tion who had Wi are lator, don # charge of conspir but 6 never resulted in a convic Hendrick married the woman en his co-defendant fourteen vel Noor Over Vrs] LAND QUITS AS. MEMBER OF FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD Has Offer for Railroad Construc- tion Work in France—Wilson Has Not Accepted Resignation WASHINGTON, June 26.—Frederic A Delano has offered to ident Wilson his resignation as member of the Fed- eral Reserve Board, to accept @ com- mission in the army Engineer Corps to do railroad reconstruction and manage- ment work in France. The resignation has not been accepted This ts first resignation of & member Federal Reserve Boart since ite organization four years ago Owing to the number of important ques- tions of policy now before the boant, some doubt {# felt as to whether the President will relieve Mr. Delano of his duties. It is understood Mr, Delano has been offered « high position in connection with military railroad superviaion In France. Before his appointment to the Reserve Board he was President and receiver of the Wabash Rallroad, His home is in Chicago 28th regular, and 2.50, 3.50 and 4.50 || Be Careful in Using Soap on Your Hair Most soaps and prepared shampoos | contain too much alkali, which is very jurious, as it dries the scalp and} Wakes the hair brittle. * The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for it is pure |gine have Justified the prediction that it It’s very cheap, and beats the most expensive and entirely greaseless. soaps or anything else all to pieces. | You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is) all that is required. Tt makes an abun- America Can Push Its Production | he will get $45 with board and room nd that is about the limit. With Every Confidence Says Air |"On the supposition that he has some Ministry Secretary. | mechanical knowledge, he is advised LONDON, June 26.—‘Tests which re- that work in @ munitions plant or cently have been applied in France and aeroplane plant factory would bring him better results financially. Mr. O'Leary says that there are more | ends to the mechanical industric: would prove a most valuable contriba-|than could be told about in a laree ction with every confidence,” aid sir| Ab tnvestigntion along this line | Witham Wal?, the new Secretary of the|S00ws that a certain man, listed as Air Miniet who presided at the Wil-|@ mechanic, received $6 a day in a bur Wrig delivered by De, | cortain automobdile factory for screw- Durand, scientific attache of the Ameri-|ing on a nut on the left hand rear this country to the latest American en- Two-piece Garments at popular prices. Vassar Union Suits made of fine Naincheck, Madras, Aero Weave, and China or Jersey Silk are priced from $1.50, 2.00, 2.50, 3.50 to 10.00 per suit. Athletic Shirts and Knee Drawers of simi- lar fabrics at 6§c, $1.00, 1.25; also all Linen at 3.00 per garment. Men’s Interwoven Half Hose, plain Black, White, and solid colors in Lisle or Cotton, 40 and §0c per pair. UNUM dance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses |°2" Dmbasy, In the Central Hall at spring of an automobile, In the mu (Re te ena te 1918. Stern Brothers West 43rd Street Between 5th and 6th Avenues West 42nd Street A Special Clearance of Porch Rugs To-morrow, at these Decided Reductions: Kixtra Heavy Oval Porch Rugs, very attractive, Sive 8 ay 10 ft., ; $13.50 Size 9 by 12 ft. Regularly up to $19.75, at Japanese Rush Porch Squares, 60c per square Squares 18 by 18 inches, made into rugs of various sizes. American Grass Rugs High grade, in artistic designs, Size 6 by Oft., - - at $5.90 Size 8 by 10 ft., - at $8.25 Size O by 12 ft. - - at 10.75 | Toobyi2ft, Blankets, Comfortables, Muslin Sheets and Pillow Cases Specially Priced for To-morrow: White Blankets, $7.75,8.95 | Fancy Blankets, $3.50, 4.75 In Jacquard and plaid effects. Per pair, double bed O. D. Army Blankets extra fine grades; at $8.95, Hemmed Pillow Cases, . . Hemmed Sheets, . . «4 Imported Embroidered Pillow Cases,. 2 . size. pure wool, 9.50 and 12.50 With attractive 35e, ee Regularly up to $29.75, at Homespun Rag Rugs A large assortment in dainty Summer effects, Krom 27 by 54 inches, Comfortables, double size, at $2.95 and 4.75 45c¢ and 75c 98c, 1.45 and 1.95 We Sell Thrift Stamps Every man, woman and child should buy, own and save Thrift Stamps. $18.50 at $1.10 “ 19.75 coverings, 75e thoroughly, soft, fresh looking, bright, wavy and easy to handle and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is| fluffy, Resides, it Westminster last evening. Great as was (he advance in aero- nautics in the first two yeans of the war, Sir William sald, the past year had loosens and takes out every particle |™arked even & greater progress and the of dust, dirt and dandrnff.— Advt When your nerves are all on edge and sleep seems out of the question take— at bedtime—one or two BEECHAMS PILLS in boxes, I One Treatment with Cuticura Clears Dandruff terest Sr ae Bee bee ww rate of advance was being accelerated Allied technical position in relation to the enemy by saying that the Allied technical superiority at the present time was equal to the superiority in the hu- man qualities of skill, enterprise and endurance displayed by Allied pilota. Every engine, even the best designed and in a country with the greatest re- sources and facilities, cannot escape a period of what may be called ‘teething troubles’ before the motors can be produced on anything like a large {ecale,” said Sir William, ‘The Liberty engine ts, accordingly, an example of what the Allies might expect in the matter of aircraft production from the clentists and designers of America." —_ John K. Gowdy Dead. IVTLLE, Ind., June 28.—Jobn K. ed seventy-five, died at his jhome here yesterday of a complication diseases. Te was for many years inent in State and National poli- having served six years as Chair- man of the Republican State Commit- ‘tee. Ho was Consul General to Paris, here he served eight years, On a count of distinguished service, he was | de an officer of the Legion of Honor by the French Government Brooklyn’s Bigg: 219, 221, 223, 225, 237 Grand Street Cor. Driggs Ave. _ est Credit House | 168 and 170 Smith Street BROOKLYN __Cor. Wyckoff St. “Bring This Advertisement With You and Get Your TEN Per Cent. Discount Off Your Credit Purchase When Opening | a New Account [3 | 3reors, 976 |\- Chitfonters | | 60 Weekly Library , Tables | ip all woods Genuine | 1a | Fine Cotton ed 12.754 pen Monday and ‘Seturday Richi.” ual teiloe ‘what the Cght-mmaa abeuy Mattresses 50c Weekly “Clothing for Your Whole tamily on Easy Terms s |. wooD Well made all 0c Oar Meck of Daven Breda” includes ‘any ‘ern at tly Yeduced *| ical department, fill shells and other Sir William thought he could define the} | nitions plants there are men to load and unload tru.s, work in the chem- occupations that would pay than a waiter's salary plus tips and thereby assure him of a comfortable living. The employment agency points oul that the work that a man wants to do is the work that he will be solected to do. His physical fit- ness is a matter that must be reck- oned with, and the man who has been doing clerical work for many years will not ‘be called upon to perform a task that would tax an athlete As far an skilled Labor is concerned, Mr. O'Leary is sure that there will be no difficulty in placing these men. It does not follow, he says, that a man who has been working as a riveter on building construction wiil be a good man with the “gun” in| a shipbuilding yard. However, it he is put to work as a riveter in vyuch al plant he will not only receive the wages called for by his union, but an | increase as well. ‘This money is paid | him from the time he goes to work regardiess of the fact that he may | have to spend a week or two watch. | ing the new work. Another question which is asked is, | “If Tam sent to Bridgeport or Balti- | more ur any other point, who pays! the transportation?” Mr, O'Leary states that the Government bas an appropriation of $260,000 tu take care of the men who are not able to meet this expense. In small payments | this railroad fare will be deducted from the wages. ee | TUBERCULOSIS BARS 30,000, | That Many in This State Declared Rejected in Draft. SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y,, June 6.—Cver 30,000 men of draft age in this State have been rejected for mili tary service because of tuberculosis, « cording to Alexander M. Wilson, Di rector of the Bureau of Civ American Red Cross, who ade State Health Officers’ Conte to-day. Mr. Wilton sald that the Red Cross branches are doing their best to ision of the cases. more secure proper supe ae FIGHT DUEL IN STREET. | Brooklyn Men Rattle With Knives! Until Both Are Unconscious, Scores of persons at the trolley trans- fer point, McKibben and Bushwick | ‘Avenues, Brooklyn, saw two men fight | @ duel with knives during the rush hour early to~day, The duelliste met near the middle of the street and with- out pretiminaries began stabbing and slashing, continuing until both fell un conscious In St. Catherine's Hospital they de- neribed themselves as Almara Car- mello, thirty-eight, of No. § Humboldt Street, and Nicolas Ferando, thirty-five, of No. 173 McKibben Street. Fach ie in Morleys and Allen Solleys English Half Hose, plain Black, Lisle or Cotton, 75c, $1.00 and 1.50 per pair Imported Novelty Half Hose, to 3.50 per pail Men's Silk Half Hose, McCallum’s make, in Black, White, and solid colors, $1.65, 2.00 to 3.00 per pair Interwoven Silk at $1.00 and 1.50 per pair. Golf Half Hose and variety W/AAU 8 from $1.50 Stockings in good Fifth Avenue, 34th and 33d Streets AANA AOU NO AU AUT NO ING DAO e is closed daily at saturdays at 12 noon, | The Rug Department has ready for selection enormous assortments of Oriental Rugs and Carpets iding large and unusual! sizes) (inci at practically pre-war prices In view of the great increase im the cost of all merchandise fabricated of wool, the low prices now prevailing in this Department offer a rarely advantageous purchasing op- portunity. Madison Avenue - Fifth Avenue & serious condition from wounds in the | Buy War Savings Stamps A VACATION NECESSITY! THE WORLD’S 1918 Summer Resorts Annual Bigger, Brighter Better Than Ever! Six Pages of Automobile Tour Maps Hundreds of Announce- ments of Hotels, Boarding Houses, Resorts for the Summer Vacationist Price 5 Cents By Mail 10 Cents For Sale at All World Offices and Your Nearest Liggett Drug Store Address “The World’s Summer Resorts Bureau,” World Building, New York

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