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FIREMEN BRAVE "Thousands of Evening World Fans Getting First Game Play by Play Through the Magnavox ‘DRY’ FORCE HERE: ™ she MANY PERILS IN BLOGK:LONG BLAZE ——<, Scores Buried Under Falling Ceiling While Crowds Are in Danger From Explosions. MANY SUFF FIRMS Work of Water Towers Ham- pered by Faulty.Hose That Breaks Under Pressure. Firemen early to-day won ® figh that for several hours had subjected them to almost, all the dangers and thriils of their calling in the five-story building a block long from W Broadway to Wooster Street. Five ®iarms were sounded, bringing ‘ww ne tyesix engines, six ly and ladder companies and a variety of other ap- paratus, and Fire Commissioner Drennan. Downtown Brooklyn com panies were held in readinoss to respond other alarms, hough a ceiling fell on more than trvo score, a back draught nearly blew many firemen f the ladders on which they fought the fames through third-story windows, there were thou- sands of gallons of alcohol in the vel- lar, there great blazing water tank on the roof, only one f man was seriously hurt, The blaze could be seen in Brooklyn, on Staten om and was a Isiand and in New Jersey Fifty firemen were buried in the second floor of N Wes Rroadway when the ceiling fell on them and opened the great pit of fire there. All struggled out and saved their hose On the third floo there the blaze first was seen in the etreet at 10 ¢ Be first fire engine arr.ved the flames had run through the 200 feet of loft to Nos $1-63 Wooster Street, the other end. Occupants of the building are the ff Furnace Company, the Golden Fruit Company and Louls Am- berg, distributer of talking dolls. James Spaulding & Sons, fibre prod- ucts, occupy the six-story bullding No. 484 Broome Street, adjoining Nos. 61- #3 Wooster Street, The Spaulding building was damaged by the red hot walls of its blazing neighbor, and on its roof the great water tank was in fames. Scores of policemen were sent from every downtown precinet to keep ¢ spectators far back from thi buildings because of the danger of un explosion. lines. lock. ore the at biazing imminent Many hose lines burst Broome These were drenched when m: West Broadway and accidents Phousands of persons in City Hall Park heard the details of the Yankees’ victory ovet the Giants in the first World’s Series game yes terday through the “magnavox” which magnifies and reflects the sound Gf a human voice over thousands of square yards At one time there were more than World Building and as far back as half wa: 10 “fans” grouped in frout of the to the City Hall steps listening without any strain to the play-by-play story read to them from the sporting editor's rooms on the twelfth floor, Hundreds in the crowd took advantage, of the score-card printed in The Evening World to record the plays as sent 0 Polo Grounds. ‘Traffic was kept moving despite Two meunted policemen and more t! ver by the sporting experts at the the crowds which had gathered, han a dozen on foot kept the side ‘THE EVENING WORLD, THU RSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1921. a ‘YELLOWLEY HEADS BG SHAKE UPSURE | New Director Here Expected to | . 7A f" \ | ” Gei Rid of Some of the “Weak Sisters.” CLEAN-UP’ CAUSES ROW} |Flying Squadron’s Advent in | New York Said to Have Started Bickering | WASHINGTON, Ort 6-4 penne] ganization of the Fed walk ai the entrance to the World Building clear and saw that vebicles kept moving through the street. On the west pavement, however, the curb to the park fence except for a two-foot lane kept open by the | police. The people were grouped fre south almost to Spruce Street, and half way to the City Hall steps. again to-day, beginning about 1.30 cident at the game. PHYSICIAN FOUND “MRS. GRISWOLD'S. MIND UNBALANCED Testifies in Will Contest That) Rich Patient Appeared Flighty to Him. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, mony tepding to show the men- Oct, 6: tal nso: hampered the fire fighting, . ted in Orphans’ by the water towers, and Kenlon and Deputy Chict Helm | Court _to-de y th ly exasperated by such | tuted by the Countess Anna St. Clair of infer pparatirs. | * a . From the stru rot the Bixih| = Conmmriia’ cat Milam, ttaiy Avenue “L,” where tram service was| »reak the will of Mrs. Griswold, hb suspended for some time, as wel 43; mothe The will cut her off with from lable roofs, t n 1eN | g500 and left th $500,000 estate to Meee ae et pier atoriee ctave| Mrs. Mary H. Drischman, former wife its point of origin and swept down-| of an Atlantic City buteh: ward through the ground. floor. The most imporant witness for the eee ee eee store house faz | contestant was Dr. Thomas Young- paper pulp, that material began to; man of Atlantic City. He test float and fall to the street, soon fill- | t he first treated Mra. swold ing the streets, showering down and] in 1914, at which time she complained | ticking on fire apparatus ani clut- tering up the working of the en- gines: \ He said he attempted to prescribe Everything in. the building 18 a} for } but that she demanded a} complete lc Chief Kenlon said, and ensate: . nye later, the p! is fue dasiags will exceed aay massage, Two days later, the physt William me fireman © En-|cian said, Mrs. Griswold told him gine Company No. was severely | nothing was the matter with her ex- injured by falling from the second) cent that she wan to be amused. See | Dr. Youngman testified that two LLARD i arg later Dr. L. H. Bewley of At- BABY FAITH WI ntic City asked him to examine HAS CHANCE OF RECOVERY. Condition Greatly Improved, ays Honp! Physician Faith Willard, the tiny waif left upon | the doorstep of the Rey. Percy Stickne Grant, rector of the Church of the As- cension, and who was reported as dying in the Presbyterlan Hospital, now h a fighting chance for life ording to announcement made to-day ‘The. five-months-old girl's condition ie greatly tmproved, according to physicians, who now hold out hope that she will recover. Yesterday the hi pital physicians had almost abandoned ope, but last night the walf took a turn’ for the better and now has a chance for recovery, In the meantime the Rey ts recelving of let ers in all parts of the country offering hdvice for the treatment of the child, who is suffering from a complication of diseases. by her fr littlé one's eyes are brighter, olor has started to come back and shows every indication ther ant fight for life may be a winning said. a hospital physician this n ng. “Her condition is greatly tn proved over yesterday eet beer? {WHAT'S GOING ON HERE Dane The shortage in the Mariners Harbor (Staten Island) National Bank, closea In June because, of the alleged has tipns of Sylvanfs Bedell, grown from $300,000 to $547 ace cording to Frank Verdon, a director Dr, Louls A. Bauer, director of ter- restrial. magnetism at Carnegle Insti- tution, Washington, sailed by the liner Santa Elisa for Ball to 4c the non-magnetic ship Carnegie, home: ward bound from a two years’ cruise, Steam from a defective valve seriously alded Ferdinand George to-day in the hl t¢ the companies do this, Mr. ildes Segcc oom of the bullding of Arbuckls man the deed of trust, dated Aug. 2%.| j.14" the men will return to work Prothers.. coffee merchants, foot of 1915, testified that in his opinion thi ayor Hylan will give the “ Pearl Street, Brooklyn, His condition estate which he turned over to Mrs. |“ Jenta” a rep} this afte was reported critical, He lives at No Dritchman was worth $500,000, He| pendente’ a ly thle. atte 1765 East 4th Street, Brooklyn said the gross Income was approxi- President La Guardia of the Board of mately $30,000 @ year and the net Death of Howell Stillwell Aldermen was_ reported resting com- income approximately 000, Howell Stillwell, a @irector of the fortably at Roosevelt’ Hospital this Mra, Drischman again failed to ap-| pordentown Banking Company, died in| my . par at the hearin Mr. ie ister e h e id re ccial meeting of the Chamber Prat at the Rearing. Mr. Cole inatated | ine home of hla nephew, Harry Sfidd ot Commerce to-day Marcus H. Tracy, id t at Wh 4 town, at Crosswicks, N. J., last night, Soseph B. Morrell and_Arthur M. Smith £@id. he wanted to call her ‘as @/of pneumonia. He had been il] a tow lected Pilot Commissioners for witness to attack the validity of the|d@ays, He was seventy years old ani re. jwilk widower. ee a v. 2 ~ the | | ‘. Jor a rh pumatie condition as to her sanity. do 80) asked C. L, the Countess. because I did not want to a paper saying she sound,” "Dia you not think she was men- | tally sound?” “1 did not,” replied the witness On crose-examination, Dr. Young- man admitted Mrs, Geiswold'’s pecu- jar actions might have been due to | drugs Dr, L. S. Madden, Pleasantville, testified to treating Mrs. Griswold in July and August, 1918. He said gave her an average of fifty five- | grain tablets of veronal weekly, That Mrs. Geiswold once attempted to make a will leaving her property | lo the Countess was testified to by Miss Esther Souder, Assistant Sec- wiry of the Mutual Building and an Association Miss Souder said Mrs. Griswold came into her office one day and com- plained she was ill and had had nothing to eat Mrs. Griswold, cording to the witness, was wearing an old black skirt and'a man's rain coat and said Mrs. Drischman had hidden her clothing. According to the witness, Mrs, Griswold sald she was sorry she had given the deed of trust | to Mrs, Drischman | Miss Souder declared Mrs, Griswold dictated 40 her a will leaving the es- | | Mrs. Grisw “Did you Cole, torney fo’ { “I did not to put was mentally my name dune he tate to the countess and took this paper a with her John J. Cross of Baltimore, who was agent for the Griswold property until Mrs, Griswold gave Mra, Drisch- BUILDING IN ALERT POLICE SEIZE FOUR "~ Cops Holding Lines Spot Flit- ting Lights Aloft and Balk Getaway. Policeman Walter Meyer and August Schalkhan of the Elizabeth Street Station, who were sent over to help in the adjoining precinct during the West Broadway fire, were dness of Mrs. Alice Gerry holding the lines a block away at 3/ M. to-day when they noticed contest inst!- Nghts flitting in the six-story loft building at No. 485 Broome Street. Soon afterward a taxicab drove up and men began carrying bundles from the building and loading them into the taxicab, Meyer and Schalkman doubted anyone would haye the temerity to attempt a burglary with the district swarming with policemen ified and firemen, but decided to inyesti-| gate. They jumped on the running board when three men, including the chauf- feur, started away in the car. A fourth man remained near a pile of bundles on the sidewalk. Meyer cov- ered two of the men with his re- volver. The third man jumped out and ran, joined by the one on the side- walk. Schalkhan, who became an ex- pert revolver shot while with the 6th Division in France, pursued them and fired several shots. He was so sure he hit one of the men he kept going until he caught the other. The two captured by scribed themselves as William Wal- lace, thirty-three, No. 2012 Quarry Road, Bronx, the chauffeur, and An thony "Lapatina, twenty-nine, No. 71 Thompson Street, Schalkhan's pris- oner said he was Joseph Frezza, s enteen, a waiter, of No, 215 Mulberry Street. Hospitals were asked to watch for the fourth man, believed to be wounded. The police say silk goods valued at $5,000 were found in the taxteab or on the sidewalk ready to be loaded, and that several thousand dollars’ additional loot was packed up in the hallway. Burglars had used a rope to reach the fire-escape, had climbed to. the roof, forced the trapdoor and tried unsuccessfully to enter sixth- floor lofts, They had obtained their loot from Neuman & Smit, makers of silk novelties, on the fifth floor, and the Preston Shirt Company, on the fourth, Meyer de- ed Striking Dockmen Ask Mayor to Act as Intermediary William Fildes, Chairman of tho committee of striking longshoremen of this city, asked Mayor Hylan t day to propose to the steamsh'p com- panies that they the 10,000 independents who have seceded from the union and negotiate with them recogniz ‘SILK ROBBER BAND LOOTS: FIRE’S GLARE; | WOMEN PUBLICLY QUIZ OFFICIALS OF ORANGE, N. J. | Nominee for Congress Among | Commissioners to Face Inquisitors. | | One result of women the vote developed last when the entire body of Commissioners of Orange publicly questioned by members of the Leagne of Women Voters of the State of New Jersey as to the conduct of their respective departments, It is said to be the first procedure of the sort in the country, Rumors of bootlegging, gam bling and other infractions of the law without proper steps by the Police Department to curb them prompted the women's action | Commissioner Isaac Schenthal, | Director of Public Safety of | Orange, a member of the Essex County Tax Board and nominee having night City were for Congress was among the com- misstone s interested. |Wemocratic Women of Brooklyn Open Campaign To-night. The Democratic Women of Brookls will open their campaign to-night with @ meeting at Democratle headquarters ‘The Thomas Jefferson, Nos. 4 and 3 uurt Square, Brooklyii. It that Mayor Hylan, former ( Herbert C Horough Ri local candidates speak side. , will iam H, Good will pre- Bae © } NEWS OF U. S. IN BRIEF ' a NIAGARA FALLS—Capt. R. F. ter, seventy-five years old, who thirty-five yeara was captain of id of the Mist, the Mttle ste Car- for the mer foot Falls, Ningare Mu which plies the lower river at the American and Horseshoe at of the died to-day Falls, Ont WASHINGT his home 1 Decision by the De partment of Justice as to investigation of the Ku Klux Klan will awalt action by Congress on the proposed inqui Attorney General Daugherty — auld to-day CLEVELAND.—William H. MeGan- non, ex-Chief Justice of | Municipal Court, tried twice and acquitted of the murder of Harold C. Kagy and now un der sentence for jury. hex been found gullty of contempt of court aud obstruction of Justice DETROIT,—Holding that the Unitar- fan Chureh best can serve the world by edopting the gulda board, ‘the Council enteral tarian of the eneral Conference in session A has urged permanent establishment of such a central group in ita,report <0 the Conference WILMINGTON, Del.—The Rev. R. Western, a retired Methodist Episco |pal minister Elkton, Md., has. beer dismissed from the church ‘after con victlon on fourtern counts, Among the charges were trafficking in marriages | splitting fees and conduct unbecoming ja min WASHINGTON - Harding have. i |into office as Hons of the Big Brother an eration, @ philanthropic on doing welfare work among ch reaident and formal Mrs. Alexander Korzon of the Chelsea litotel in Weat 234 Street and Adam Skok of Jersey Clty, who are charged with trying to sell Joseph Wall, a Jersey City candy manufacturer for $5,000 a $5 machine guaranteed to make $5 bills out of blank sheets of white paper w indicted to-day by the Grand Jury of attempted, grand larceny. in th st uf furnfsh $10,000 bail 4 to the Tombs nto thetr nt early to-day on | people in 1 w i the complaint of a tenant who eald he| lieve in new liquir jaws smelled gas. He found the mother and | and enforced without sent ighter unconaci in bed. A leaky | majorit of male voters. wrot waspipe, he sald, was the cau | Santer ‘ ease: 2 een SRNR RAS 8 2 | noner, and HELEN SCHNEIWIND | MARRIED TO-DAY TO WARREN B. POND the Misses Ailsa BRIDE NOW SORRY SHE TREDTODIE FOROTHERMAN Mrs. Moore, Who Left Note tec Old Sweetheart, Says She Loves Husband. Mrs. Jennie Moore, bride of lest than forty-eight hours, in Lincolt Hospital to-day declared that her taking poison last evening was all a J mistake. She said back to live with her husband and loved him very much. The physician at the hospital say Mrs. Moore wil) live. Her husband, Thomas Moore an inspector in the Bronx Water Sip. she was going ply Department, says he will sen office a eld fovees In New ork Ms CCR aT MIG) KOFCER IAN NEW Re: : f her to the country, to recuperate. [was ordered to-day by Trontbition | greg — Re —<$<—=zo55 | Moore is thirty-eight. His wite Commissioner Haynes tn oMctaliy an- nd & ¥ thirty-four. She was a widow. Th: the appointment of BE. (| Miss HELEN SCHNEIWIND | were married in the Municipal Bullfe- to auccer 1udge Harotd 1,| Ceremony? Will Be in Fifth Ave-]'"@ Manhattan, on aday, Mogee | | ? y furnished an apartment at No, (6% Hart as New York Wrohibition DI- nue Presbyterian Church Broek Avenue, Bronx. Last night | rector at 4 o'Clox when hé returned home he found My, Yellowley, at present Assoc Miss Helen R.‘Schnetwind, daugater] in the hall. She screamed Federal Prohibition Direetor and Jot Mr. and Mrs, Henry Schnelwind fr [to die: T have made ag it aydky “iMying Sduadvoni* wan) Of NO: # Maat Tan Birest: end Wi take.” She had taken [uesigmated Acting Prohibition DI-| decker No. 1 Bast Stat Street, wi! ao Polleeman Younglan, who was jreetee for the State in order that he} be married at 4 o'clock to-day in alled to give first aid, she banded 4 might assume office at once | Puth Avenue Presbyterian Church. letter she said would explain all It Hart's resignation is sald to ceremony will be performed by the was to John Corcoran, Elizabeth, N followed a row of two months’ stand-| Ur. Kelman, atter whieh a reception | J.. and eve Pal and Sweeth 1 i 4 ot the var Old Pal and Sweetheart: ing, which started when the special | Will be held at the home of the bride. } ‘ PE ae ane ea ating Selmotwind wil be attended by | Yent Out And got married on Tues. Federal squad was sent Into his te day. st have been ouc of ms = : | her aister, Mish Margaret, as maid | LISTENING TO THE STORYOF THE GAME Jritory. Hart is said to have resented ter, Misa Margaret, as maid Cf) wing, 1 hope you will always remot Melton, : ber me your honey, | am ending this action a8 & reflection on HIS} daughter of Andrew Mellon, Secretary | py taking my life. [ hope God will ability to enforce the law of the ‘Treasury; Harriet Payne, Martna | forgive and will also have nierey © the crowd was packed thick from The work has been distasteful to] Ottiey, Helen Johnsqn, Emily Sennei-]imy py soul. [also wish you well 4 he future, me from the first and [ do not care | wind, a younger sister, nd Mrs. Har- | in t i chide a sone ie This marriage w gainst my wil om the steps of the Brooklyn Bridge | to continue," was all Mr. Hurt would | vey 0 iene Clara harder selected |) yoy KNOW: HEL lave BAId CwOCNE or eat man Kirby F y back along the City Hall driveway, | say regarding his resignation " tie Hicbertne fs re never be hanes without you, m a ‘ p ¥ = anore: Wil De 2 honey, so will say oy. Pray fo The ane i iain vad ne aa K, C. Yellowley received offetal no. | Guy CaN ee ea peeled ba RAG i cannot stand it any longs . every ball pitehed and every in of hs appointment aa | Bltvelt Vity Huuten, 8. Brewster Ven- | your old pal and sweetheart, O hone tice to-day of his appointment aa) ie ott Lue Gardner, Was whatever came over me I do o succes: to Mr. Hart. Toe suid his}, Tailiot ‘and’ Harvey | know. ——$—— ean \ppolntment waa ag Acting Federal | Childs sd “with my love and kis#es, & Tie young ¢ ter their honay- vo .NNIB.” MUSIC STQPPED Prohibition Director for New York. | youn, will make with Mr ure, JENNIS “T intend to do in New York just} Vond's mother on Bast Sist Street. = TO LET FOOTBALL | wna: t said 1 would do when | came FOR COFFEE LOVERS “The P in yhibltion Law ADMITS rere,” he said. is being enforced and there 1s no reason why it should not be enforced here and T am going PLAYERS SLEEP $1 elon F; other 5 $ ‘aculty Decrees Soft- est Pedal on the mpus to do the best T can, My oniy am aldara . | After 10 P. bition ta to bring this office to the! © ® aes of efficiency.” Nathan Cob | PRINCETON, Oct, 6—There | lishest degree of efficiency ae eatin | will be no music on the campus mpany, deal after 10 P. M, if the Princeton DEPUTY TO PRESS [Nov want she ce Jiwetve ven | University faculty ruling to that POLICE CHARGES dent, Bernard | effect Is strictly enforced, Tho = wages of . Daily Princetonian prints an ar- |Sherifl’s Aid, Freed of Assault, Will) saya Pun | ticle urging that the ruling be en- Appeal to Grand Jury and Sue Patrolman. over t forced, The article sald the mu- | cis WHEN REFUSED PAY RAISE , says he asked the Presi- books verifying the concern’s | Jreturns on antes disc 1,000 FORGERIES Experiments with coffee have been made in the labora- tories of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Money, Saya Nathan eld in $7,500 Ba n of No, 778 Driggs Ave- employed by the Ratnard ers in women's wear at 42d Streot, for the Inst From which it has been de- termined that, for the great majority of normal individ- uals, Fuld, aw to tnerease hin| ek two years ng. sald “No.” epartment officers going Coffee is a mild stimulant of the heart, increases the da series of e4 amount pencies showing forger | ue : sic might Keep the, football men | 401, p, murphy, forty-four years| ing to $11,000, ‘They told the firm ana| POWeT tO do muscular work, awake. It was based solely on : t Cohe: He admitted the P y old, a deputy sheriff, of No. Eas | J the effect late music might have | orth street, who was dischar py | charge. they say, and explained he| And increases concentration on tired athletes, The effect on | ssagintrate Frothingham in the York-|took It by ralsing checks | | | off mental effort and there- “oo! ents" wa 0 ee foe He was held in $7,509 bail ty 3 : bi wea students” was not dis- | vitie Court to-day on a charge of as-| MY Tn ion in West Side Court on| fore the power to do more { oe TT sault brought by Policeman John} Gorge of grand larceny and forgery) brain work. | The situation has given con- |isoran of the Hast g6th Street Sta the degree. Asked w he | Sara leeway to the campus | 400 told the court he intended to lay} hag done with the money Ci who CHILDS, colt | wits, But it is said the rule Wi |e idence before the Grand Jury,| is abont five feet and must weleh 79 ded athrar be enforced hereafter, except in onde when soaking wet, aald he I thom ae aches raga a and that he would also bring a civil nee hose cases where the sound is > actto damages against (he police wo carefully muffled that it win | Seton for damaxes as ay’ | Woman of 70 Amneata Victim, not be heard outside the room, | Gonstan Grossen, a taxi chauffeu A white-halred woman of seventy, e —s — J of No 687 Amsterdam Avenue, testl-| found sitting on the staira in the hall at fied he drove Murphy from 100th) No, 2 mith Street, Brooklyn, at 2 |THOUSANDS WILL STARVE, [street and Broadway to uth Stract | AM. to-day, said she was Mra, Cecita| BUT MONEY GETS ME, nd Second Avenue on Sunday nisht. | Girl ean nica eaiieinbah: eliana ALS. | the fare was $2, he testified, bur Mus: | ives. She was taken to Kings - | hy refused to pay it. The chauffeur] county Hospital to be treated for \am aapeen Nat “hangs, View | Mummones ollstantaiy tora (oil 4. She wore black cloties and hat jan Death List WIM Be Heavy.) tion and lay the matter before Lieut. | SAMARA Russia, Oct. 6 (Assoc. a | Che ker, According to Gros: les A Press).—A month's journey from Con-| sen, Murphy paid t fare and he tantinople to Moscow by way of the| (Grossen) left Caspian Sea and the Ve region re Lieut. Becker and Patrolman Ho veals: an: iminenise hunger olf cute| PAN doch testifted that Murphy grabbed | minating in intensity at Samara ana| He! by tia Deol ends oa lind) bint ioek | ne Murphy testified Horan took Kazan, Tt is difficult to say whether! him in a back room and punched him more people are slowly perishing from] eyeral times: nhere gv nany undernour ment in Constantinopl bruises on Murphy's face when he ap Tiflis, Baku and Astrakhap or in the] peared in court to-day. Lieut. Becker | Si kov region. ‘ nd Horan said he bore these marks | To date, hunger has not invoived| before he entered the station house. | millions of deaths, but hundreds of Fa M. Brooks, @ clerk in. the thousands will surely die with the first | City C living at No. 208 West | sharp cold of October, Nowhere ts there | 80th ect, testifted he Was with more than a two months’ supply, of| MUfPhy on Sunday night prior to his fons taxi ride, and that no bruises were visible then, Sheriff Knott test! Despite the famine the curious fact stands out that everywhere It is possi ble to obtain a good meal if the tray eller has money on Monday to Murphy's good « ter —_ money DAUGHTER SUES FATHER | THINKS RUSSIA’S DEBT | FOR WAGES HELD FOR HER. | TO U. S. IS HOPELESS. | | Intrasted to Him Nine Yea! Asks for Mainta Al ng Mother, Mellon Says Credits of Anna Rosenkranz, a bo Other Must Be Conatdered, | uni stenograpter, to-day befure Justi ON, Oct.’ 6.—-Secretary | Ford and a jury testified that her! Mellon in urging legislation for funding ir -Afaxy in} 1908, old, ler when abe and refunding Allled war loans, told d working that he woul keep the House Ways and Means Com | and when she want 6 schedule of payment because of him for the “Vit ant tlons Jn each. of t editor na 1 to give itt asking that aln eter ‘ arranging for her mother f payment of jnde Med last January, ‘t conmider er father prom: nation, a week during t remained e with the m ith } POOR JUROR IN RUM CASES, ° | HE WANS COUNTY CLERK. Charles B bat W ; > WOMEN VICTIMS OF GAS. Sauter Willing (0 Serve, Mother and Danghter Overcome) Charles B. While Asleep. \ Ce @ jat Mrs. Catherine McNamara, sixty-five, | home at Old E end her daughter Mary, twentysfour, of | claima to. b No. 160 Sith Street, Brooklyn, are to- | My In a. letter doy in Norwegian H uffering | serverna @ gerve as a jure from Kaas polnoning York, but warns th After a hard day’s work —Lifebuoy cuts in half the labor of getting clean. Its big lather goes right down into the pores. You've never felt freshness and comfort. It leaves the skin soft and fine. such The delightful Odor of Lifebuoy means skin health. Made in U.S. A, oe ee nn te —