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ae THE EVENING WORLD, merry SEPTEM ER 11, 19 ONE KILLED, ONE MISSING, NINE HURT IN OIL BLAST rt ' The proprietor of the St. Charles Hotel at Atlantic City also avers that ‘ he cashed checks for the girls amounting to $118 Warrants on a ch f grand larceny were tesued Emanuel! Sonheimer of At- and sent to the Brooklyn | who jaat es located them in} TOTALUNG $2087 the New ‘Jersey authorities after ar- Accused of Presenting Them in Return for Purchases Made LOYALTY LEADING ISSUE in Atlantic City. IN ILLINOIS PRIMARIES | Principal Fight for Repubfican Sena- | torial Nomination Between Mc- Cormick, Foss and Thompson. CHICAGO, Sept. 10.—Loyalty and a * fight for Congreés of the party mach!- 7% Riverside Drive, according to the |nery are the issues in practically every police, were arraigned to-day im the| contest between candidates and fac- Adama Street Police Station, Brook- | ONS to be decided at the Tilinols Btate : | primary election. lyn, on the charge of passing bogus! The principal contest te between checks on jhe Hudson River Branch | Congressman Medill McCormick, Con- of the Corn Exchange Bank to the rpg Ng ad ooharer Saukes he 2087, FY am Hale Thompson o} ‘0 for amount of $2,087. Fifteen complaints | ih Republican nomination for United appeared against them. States Senator. McCormick and Foss ‘The younger of the girls, Alice Val-| made their campaigns on their patriotic entine, twenty-one years old, said| records, while Mayor Thompson was that she was the daughter of wealthy | accused of numerous anti-war activi- parents of Providence, R. I. She Two girls, who were living in a lux umMously furnished apartment at No. | ties by his politic! opponents. came to Now York recently and regis-| Senator James Hamilton Lewis was tered at the Hotel Imperial. ‘There, Jean Mullin, twenty-three years old, night telephone operator. Ralph Mizahi, proprietor of the French Shop, at No, 1!1 Boardwalk, | Atlantic City, charged that two days ago he 4 check for $700 on the Corn Exchange Bank, which was of- fered by the girls, giving $300 in change after numerous purchases. Jules Cowen of No. 116 Boardwalk unopposed for the Democratie nomina- fi ite State . th it ts charged, she made the acquaint. | io” for United States Senator. Tn the ance of the elder of the accused girls, | Ninth Congressional District Represen- tative Fred A. Britten's war record was criticized by his opponent, Fletcher Dobyns, candidate on the Republican ticket, a Seeks Abandoned Baby's Mother, Acting Captain Ayers of the Missing Persons Bureau to-day received a letter from Byron Rumacy, Probation Officer of the Juvenile Court at Davenport, In, requesting bie aid in searching for the mother or guardian of @ three- Tidewater Company Still at Bayonne Blows Up—Workmen Battle to Save Plant. One man was killed, nine injured and one is reported missing in an explo- tion and burning at 1.30 o'clock this morning of still No. 17, @ 1,000-barrel oll container of the Tidewater Oil Com- pany, Constable Hook, N. J. The still blazed for two hours, 500 workmen of the plant battling to keep the flames from spreading. Thomas Retlly of No. 23 West 2st Street, Bayonne, was killed. Other workers said he was standing near the still and the explosion hurled him 30 feet. John Sintson, also of Bayonne, ts re- ported missing. The nine men taken to Bayonne Hospital suffering from burns and minor injuries are: J, Meyer Mannon, No. 95 West 33d Street; Ed- ward Norwood of No. 47 West 47th Street, Edward Gibson of No, 670 Ave- nue C, Broadway, John Sweeney, James Mc- Donald, John Wilson, and Joseph Finnerty, all of Bayonne, ted, that the still had been leaking. tarted the fire 1s pot known, has not been determined. ee FIVE YEARS’ LOOT OF JEWELS Night Watchman Arrested After Miscellaneous Assortment Is Uncovered. Detective Barney Ditsch of Head- quarters yesterday discovered a Jewelry store tn the chicken coop of William Grover C. Owen’ of No. 810 Edward Doyle investigation #0 far made shows, it is FOUND IN CHICKEN COOP FOR, yong ron a Ape waid that after purchasing shoes of him the accused girls tendered a nished room house in Daven; check for $187.50, which he cashed. = weeks ago. ‘The woman came from Boston. Mother’s Pet Needs a Cascaret Baby is mad! Doesn’t want the favorite dolly, or the horn, or the picture books—but don’t scold! Look at the tongue! Then hurry! Give candy Cascarets to work the nasty bile, souring food and constipation poison from the little liver and bowels, MOTHERS! Clean the clogged-up places. Do away with the bile, sour fermentations and constipation poison which is keeping yout little one cross, feverish and sick. Children love Cascarets, because to them it is like eating candy. Cascarets act better than castor oil, ealomel or pills on the tender stomach, liver and bowels, Cascarets | Advt. Size 1S. x 14 \ Extra aa far framing sa NEXT YorK ONLY | from Meyeinae in advance. } Ta of Cen. John J. Pershing begins in the Evening World Next Monday. year-old boy left by @ woman in @ fur- Lebright, night watchman for Lambert Bros., jewellers, at No. 968 Third Ave- ue. The firm has been missing goods for the last year. ‘The detective followed the night watchman to his home in Maspeth, 1. L, yesterday morning and @ search of the chicken coop revealed, instead of Leghorns, Plymouth Rocks and eggs in the nests, watches, stickpins, wrist watches, silverware and innumerable | trinkets. The night watchman was His method was ingenious but stm-| ple, Every time @ blast went off in the neighborhood, which was frequent, the delicate mechanism of the burglar alarm system was disorranged and the | confessed. himself, On his confession Adolph Goldenberg, @ pushcart peddler, of No. 100 Stanton Street,,was arrested for receiving stolen goods, of which Goldenberg made stren- nous denial. He is @ Lieutenant in the Police Reserves. eb aA ENERO TWO HELD AS DRUG SELLERS ing Narcotics to Soldiers. Investigations following an increase in the number of drug users among soldiers at Camp Upton led last night to the arrest of Joséph P. Sanelli, twenty-four years old, and his brother, Tony, Ganelll, twenty-two years old. proprietors of a pool room ‘at No Grand Street, while, the police deel lewo detectives and'@ uniformed sclater laid the trap | GREATEST RADIO AT WORK. * From Annapolis Sta- it Allled Ministries, WASHINGTON, Sept. 1L—The new [naval radio station at Annapolis, Ind., the most powerful in America, is pow in operation. The Navy Department Announced that the first messages sent were from Secretary Daniels to the | First Lord of the British Admiralty, |the French Minister of Marine and the Italian ‘Minister of Marine, an operating our thousand miles, cost | ‘The ‘station. which has never gripe, never injure, and do not disappoint the worried mother, | Give harmless Cascarets to children one year old and upwards, Each ten cent box contains full directions. ~ 000, i ee H. S. HARKNESS JOINS POLICE Millionaire Owner ef Speedway a Colonel of Reserves. Harry §. Harkness, millionaire owner of the Sheepshead Bay Speed- way, who lives at the Hotel St. Re- gis, was sworn in as a Colonel in the Police Reserves yesterday. He PIANOS J] |mmurare +395 new denicit #.qq USED UPRIGHT §85 $3 Monthly Untt! Pald. USED UPRIGHT $ 110 #4 Monthly Until Paid, | USED UPRIGHT $ 125 | $4 Monthly Until Paid. \PINCLUDING forties Minis’ We'st With Each Upright Piano PLAYER ROLLS TH LATEST WITS Smiles ° Me Bc Me MAE seers Om, Oul, Mario... April Smiles Walit 2000 ROLLS 3 PO ROS: GOETZ & CO. 81-87 Court 8,, Brooklys taken to Police Hbaduarters and there | thief went into the store and helped | Brothers Are Accused of Furnish- will serve on the staff of Special | provisiom chamber of baked white enamel. Deputy Commissioner Wanamaker, Mr. Harkness has been. a student a Ba Height — Ico Pra el Now of police affairs for several years Tin. 48 in, $15 and during the recent police field isin, 50 in, 17 days at the Speedway he was in- 19 in, 52 in. 20 Piked te Reaonie Aa ROROFATy mame 194 in. 4 in. 100 Ibs. 75 21.75 21 in. 60 in, 125 lbs. 87,00 27.75 New American Models in Autumn Millinery "THE dignity of the new millinery is impressive, High tur bans lend an added elegance to the smart woman. Hats that flare exuberantly give an opportunity for striking effects in the realm of the picturesque. (And there are times when one may dare to be picturesque.) BROWN tones predominate in a large hat of hatters’ plush faced with sand-colored beaver. Here the trimming is very simple, consisting merely of a loose fold of changeable orange | Store Hours: 10 A.M. to 4.30 P.M. velvet caught in a knot at one side and enclosing in the knot a sheaf, of burnt ostrich. eee LARGE black hats are exceed- ingly satisfactory. The tendency to a high rolled side and back makes them eminently becoming to a smartly gowned One such hat of panne velvet has a cascade of black ostrich falling over ee flat side. {y) Woman. fur edgings—often much more style.of hat which appears in v4 the b deli icately. many variations. The brim is sajlor shape, usually with a soft ee edge. ‘he crown is large and ‘TURBANS dependent for | folded. One hat of this type is style on a group of ostrich |]| of hatters’ plush in a lovely wine feathers ascending to a high red with a red velvet facing. pola above the crown are seen The crown is strewn with flat th in black and colors. The red velvet flowers edged with same idea is carried out bj spirals of burnt ostrich and more novel, perhaps, in a turban that has Napoleonic sides of velvet. First floor, Old Building Fur Sale Ends Saturday “T want to tell you my experience in buying a fur coat for my wife,” said a visitor the other day. y angora. Such a hat as fais demonstrates one of the Many uses of angora on mil- linery. It takes the place of “T came here and saw what you had and to check you up I went around to other good stores and found no coats that could touch yours in quality and price. I then went to a manufacturer—had someone introduce me, and saw what he offered to sell me wholesale (on the quiet). Even he could not touch your low prices. The nearest coat I could find that compared with yours cost $50 more.’ Our entire winter stocks to choose from— coats, muffs, scarfs, sets—at 25 per cent. less. This week only. Second floor, Old Building “Everywhere housefurnishings have advanced in price continually for the past three years. To find them today in the Wanamaker Housewares Sale so low-priced is most remarkable”’..........000 —this from a woman who carefully thetediid every housewares sale in New York and found far beyond her expectations this | September Sale of HOUSEWARES It includes everything needed for cleaning or re-furnishing the kitchen and household. Prices Down 10 to 33144 Per Cent. on Aluminum Tinware Ironware Enamelware Cutlery Woodenware Sewing Machines Nickelware Vacuum Cleaners Refrigerators Brushes Dusters Bathroom Furnishings Special Lot of 100 Puritan Refrigerators at 25 Per Cent. Less Apartment house style with ash cases, galvanized steel linings, Seventh Gallery, New Building All Dinner Sets Less in the September Sale | To take 25 to 8314 per cent. off their regular prices in the face of rising prices is something everyone will appreci- ate. Examples—- American porcelain dinner sets at $13.50, $15, $17.50, $20, $22.50 and $30, which have been until this sale | $17.50 to $42.50; all complete sets of 100 to 105 wri French china dinner sets at $30, $37.50, $52.5! $135. Complete sets in variety of rich border Buen some with handles treated with gold. | English porcelain dinner sets at $27.50 and $38.50, | which we have sold regularly for $35 and $50; complete | sets including bread and butter plates. New border designs and shapes. Second Gallery, New Building ‘Perfection’? Oil Heaters for First Chilly Mornings They will help save coal. Be sure of getting yours now. ‘There may be a searcity later when their need will be real urgent. “Perfection’’ oilheaters—japanned finish, $5.65; $6.70. Mail and ’phone orders filled. tore, Seventh Gallery, New Building. same TT TVA “I don’t have to worry about the high prices of big cigars—the new tax and everything! ‘’ve switched from big, costly smokes to the Piccadilly Little Cigars. And I’m glad I did. ‘““You go on throwing away 5c or 10c worth of the big cigar you smoke because you haven’t the time or the desire to finish it —when you’d enjoy a Piccadilly just as much, and there’s no waste to them. “You find Piccadilly have the same rich flavor and give the same smoke-satisfac- tion as their Havana big brothers. ‘“*Pass 12c across any cigar counter for a box of 10.” 10 for 12c Stop that od ty Waste! é Ou: a Thrown away the rest of the Buy War Senin ye eo by a man who wanted to see Stamps to Back Up Our Army and a Z “Inno di Garibaldi” * (Garibaldi Hymn.) EXT SUNDAY, the NEW YORK WORLD will print a colored music page (in the ale ’ ee’ N ian National colors), presenting the complete words and music of the Italian Na-./ tional Hymn, “INNI DI GARIBALDI.” Italian words—also words in English. This music will be full sized and perfect, well printed, with plain notes and words, The New York Sunday World edition is limited to demand; order from newsdealer in advance