Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Ee es , WINNING FIREMEN OF 1919, |S2:s-s2eesess"s.si= j is ; * Capt, Richard H. Collins of Hook! 4. "15,5. DES EVERY ONE, CITY'S PRIDE) :::'*:-" ==; rot matt in year gone OF Hal eamp, Dani 3. Haney, Wiha ’ pany No. 109 r iP . Hanley, New York. Again the craw of Hook Company No. 10 in Fulton the Fire College Bihelency Medal. Capt. Michael J. O’Donohue and hie men have now won it two years jCompany 15, who resides at No, 17 most protracted) Tieman Avenue, Brooklyn Citizen's medal for assiat- ing in the afore. mentioned teacue on board the tranaport Lack- enbach. He too was partly over- come from smoke tution, No. 10 Thomas Contl- after hydrant pressure is first sup- Ladd mM pan: a No. 7, Company | medal. ‘The crow line. 6: completed twenty evdlutions In 15 Seunel nets minutes and 62 seconds, Capt, O'Don-| many wearers of the blue when it Mourth floor of | hue fe the Acting Chief of the First failed to contain the names of ex- by fire, he passed the trio to comrades telow, Fuchel was burned and he suffered trom smoke. The Thomas A. Kenny Memorial Medal and a department, medal will = fo to Fireman ? On two planks |* former medal winner, Recently|evoked the most laudable com- Francs Parks of | PJ.) with which he | While leading his meh into » Jott ¢n| mendation to the third floor, bE rd floor, where they he Amsterdam Ave-| witiding, as escape through the bulld-| ‘The crew of Truck 10 ta otherwise| fom, Tulin Tae unasoed 0 onlnes nue. He is @ for-| ing afire wan impossible. componed of the following, who mwill| tom the fumes-choked hold of « road wax i Vso aan James pid a ira recelve the medals; Lieut. (now Capt.) ship, . . 17, at] and jer Company No, 7 will et | q-eeeemnnene - ‘the arrival of the } No 436 Ninth|the Crimmins stood on @ lintel Avenue, with the| medal and a de ithe Sealing OF phirenlag fie 7 une of @ acaling| partment medal ‘acrom@ to the adjoining win- Indder he reach-| for the rencue of Kripped the woman and ewung/ed the sixth floor, where Mra. Lida | Ida Erenberg and O'Leary will get Mahon had been cut off from eacape.| migie Dintell at and Department medal, | Bhe was seated on the window ledge, Py medal and a Depart. | Der clothing And-bair afire, With one| the same Bre de Meginee? band on the “spine” of the ladder he| at which Mise ff wi go to Bs grabbed her with the other, and while} Butcher was ff Timothy J, Fits | desconding the hysterical woman| rescued. Turbidy If patrick of No. 60| grabbed rka by the throat, The od ‘th Visitation Place, | /reman managed to free her bold and | *4ved the girls Brookiyn, as-|°%, that time comrades reached him | from the window Chet | 3 nce “4 wets laeged cemend panned the atr- [Cortlandt Street, tho Captain fell] mene tas bsoome head of the New ‘me = a, whe ert lanai in wbatt he carried |through the turned floor, but -enme ant a8 Fo on at No. 111) tne unconscious git! to an adjoining | out unscathed. Pr eres ae te the nolghborbood at No. 81 _ Montgomery “moene before A Large Wholesaler Offers to You i AT RETAIL BEAUTIFUL SILKS The Sale We Promised You ‘to nafety. medal ‘The Bonner modal ith mnoth pix PRCT SHIRTINGS Pu timed to Bogite | ber to safety, ns ' MrOOeht| alll to which they REY se way|{ | JERSEYS Extraordinarily No, 224, for his| To Capt. Leonard Gebhard of Bn-| through smoke heat to the rear GEORGETTES Priced courageous res-| gine Company No, 233 will go. the| where they were, and he panseh them CREPE DE CHINES ri =< Mra Litiien maggot W. Van | “ce Blepnenon’ medal even an-|] TAFFETAS Me ny nvally for the best disciplined fire SATINS Canda, @ dement- ‘and a department ‘durt FANCIES St wenn whe modal for the roa the year goea to|! WASH SATINS Ter Sesetieg son cue of an uncon- Capt. Henry &|| SILK LININGS e Mtcctenihose of te 1estel Doseert, ees Sreahs Sullivan of a-|| PRINTED GEORGETTES jotel Bossert, | F . Montague and Hicks Street, whore tg calgenttid ‘gine Company STRIPED TAFFETAS Widths 36 to 40 Inches declared No. 17 in Ludlow Btreet. Capt Sullivan has been a fireman twenty- nine years, serv- ing all that time that if anybody broke . port K, I. Luck- the locked room she would leap the window, Fitapatrick was| erga Peach about the waist with a etoat| & nolseleasly, from the window Street, Brooklyn, the above. ho was dropped * . on the night of &@ shot for one floor, where he Mrs, Canda into the room and|**% 17. Capt. Gebhard volunteered The above wonder values will be continued on sale all this week for those who did not share in this wonderful opportunity. UNITED MILLS With her ae the oor while | te, descend into the smoke and zouth of 14th] 2 a a ay eh cae Sy eg Der further, hmustion and amoke he returned, to| Chief of the Fourth Battalion. He New York Showroom Open from 8.30 A. M. to 7 P. M. Kurt Fuchel of Engine the deok for a rope with which he de- | worked at the Baltimore, Md., fire as! will receive the fuer : Vort, Augustine ¥. O'Connor, Walter the Administration Medal, awarded heretofore for the west, most progres- sive and practical firemantc sugges of the year, has been deferred. One of thé strongest contenders was and fumes. in wencession. For Chief James W, Hefferman of Brook- " oMolency and drill % lyn, who invented an automatic switch y ‘ ‘The Hurley medal and a depart-| Company evo- valve for connecting the new atyle ment medal will be pinned on Fireman ‘ ganoline pumping engines to hydrants, H Truck’e men will plied, without interrupting the supply gene, oom and | on geve @ Bas | of water through the hydrant hose The officiad tlet handed out at Fire Alfred Tennyson, the English poet, wrote an epic of 6000 lines before he was 12. Headquarters was disappointing to At 14 he wrote a drama, Battalion, which includes the district | Chief Walter Jones and Chiet James B , Wi N rf Ik S ii Ne a wavs, [south of Chambers Street. Ho, too, ial heres wives seacuen tase Year hed oys earmoor INOrto uits With Extra Knickerbockers—$20 % , Same Quality was $27.50 Last Fall ¥ Ww RMOOR Clothes for Boys are so exceptionally : j made that they have already done a great deal towards reforming boys’ clothing standards in many shops, thongh Wearmoor workmanship is ‘still far superior /to anything else one can obtain for boys today. These Wearmoor Norfolk’ are designed with yoke and 4 plaits, and shown in gray, brown, and heather all-wool tweeds. Sizes 7 to 18 years Franklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue; 37th and 38th Streets CHILDREN’S HAIRCUTTING SHOP — FIFTH FLOOR The Store is closed daily at 5 P. M. B. Altman & Gn. MADISON AVENUE = FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street a ILLER-KINS are shoes for little girls designed M in the inimitable fashion of I. Miller, enna a eats There are Miller-Kins for tiny toddling tots, so quaint, so cute, 80 cunning that they are worthy to be Ag ll first-step” shoes of the baby girl. For older children, there are sturdy Miller-Kins for romping about—dressy Miller-Kins for i formal occasions—Miller-Kins for town and country. For the sprightly Miss there are Miller-Kins for dress and sport every whit as smartly styled as are Miller shoes for grown-up sister, Anatomically correct, Miller-Kins encourage correct posture, assure ease and freedom, and guide growing feet in ways that make them well formed and strong. . It is with confidence of the real weleome which Miller-Kins will receive that I. Miller has created a special department for them at 15 West 42nd Street, where it is intended that a very special spirit of service shall prevail. THE MILLER-KINS SHOP 15 West 42nd Street I, MILLER SHOPS FOR WOMEN 1554 Broadway 50 Church St. 15°W. 42nd St. SE | derful effect. Special for to-morrow (Saturday) Boys’ Autumn Suits (Sizes 8 to 18) made of fine-quality woolen fabrics; with two pairs of knickerbockers * at $24.50 | The models are Norfolk and semi-Norfolk; the tailoring excellent throughout; the value xceptional (Department on Sixth Floor) COMB SAGE TEA IN FADED OR GRAY HAIR If Mixed with Sulphur it Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell. oF bus in the ‘nar pinte ready ) Grandmother kept her hair beauti- fully darkened, glossy and attractive with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. | {lfvieo. and doing It Whenever her hair took on that dull,| used for extracting and faded or streaked appearance, this} AN Languages Bpoken, Lady Attendants, simple mixture ge ne to WATERBURY Venta. COMPANY BAS ec Satrer ek store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Incorporated Compound,” you will get a large bot- Butablished 1897 tle of this old-time recipe, improved 29 W. 34th St., New York Adds that epiey and pum the additi of other ing jents, creates Oe een ine, at very little cost | 414-16 Fulton St, Brooklyn more, This simple mixture can be depended| Mourns: 6 ro 6 Sunpavs: closes Use it in sandwiches, upon to restore natural color and | = -- cold cuts, in pi | beauty to the haly, ; ‘ dressings. A well-known downtown dru ied says everybody uses Wyeth’s ieee feady pA faosttiog and Sulphur Compound now because on eng at | wien Veer] it darkens 80 nexareliy ‘ond ovaniy Literal he World oF raporta paki that nobody can tell it has been ap- © ! plied—it’s 60 easy to use, too. You yee, Word melding. Fi be tae It's on yourdealer' shelf, ty simply dampen a comb or soft brash bese af tax St rhe World's Oftices draw it throu, our hair, taking and Found” jertlvemenu AN she virand. at’ time. By. moraing| | guy iat a any ol Boo Wor FP ay the gray hair disappears; after an-|] Advertising Agencies, pr Gzlteo's Don Carton 8 ‘World, other application or two it assumes|| Cail 4000 Heckman, New York, of its natural Seley A Neamt glossy,|| Brookiyn Office, 4100 Matin. a - | Established 1867 > ERIM 2 NU Se Ta ER i ELSIE G CPPOPRS EM TH) SSE Nora se ec a ss eniieanicishleilt wae arieimevea tints bien diidnsn injerhhilchaiidile sialon a