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we THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1i, 1922, : een = $$ - a en a ee a Avenue and 10th Street taxt night. | University, Chairman of the Ameri-plowed. ‘Then Donald went, and 1 Are 6899 pupils registered, and the rank Seetant of No. $14 Bast {hth |ean Council of Learned Soctetion audparter him. t knew that if elit : HO) | R main building has but 56 aeats, ne GIRL FIGHTS BURGLAR AIDED A DRUNK, THEIR PLEA 4 Ktreet, & passenger on the street car, | President of the Amertean Historiest| would de. tt world all get aw Cexsitating part-time Instruction fur a FOUND IN BEDROOM] ayy wo ten Are Held eu Chaves ; y |w diy cut by broken glass. Agsortation coef ba Lorraine provided we were not grabbed in the reat portion of the atudente e Samuel Buraseh, forty, taxieab enger nil t it vfter a journey! wot This t had feared spmewhat VP. 8.10, known as the Juntor High} A burglar early te entered the of Stealing Hin a weiven, 6 a : - eh England, Mrance and swit-[hecar there were inven ith; School, located at 163d Street and] @partment of Nicholas Glacobbe on the 7 ‘ 7 yes Driggs: Avenuri) and he kas convinced the Unitedlabouc fighting with U Je Avenue, hus about 3,000 puplls, | ground floor of St. Paul’ ipgpan Jee daateeny| wie. bare He) SiVeu ‘ Kieoklyn, was held in $2,600 ball ty tb emiptahe 3 about, flehting with the A) . has a, i or 0 1 St, Paul's Ave-] “on Broadway" and Salvatore Glacoppe, " Magistrate Mowea 1. Rytanbere 9 | Stutes had mal a wea ese I not parently unable to stay uy nC With eleven classes on. part time hue, Jersey City, through the kitchen] No, 416 West 46th Street, wer held tn & G Yorkville Court for examination Sept, | Jolting the Leagu dobhiel a long enough to avoid them. Tt wa Most of the schools on the west] window, Dora GYlacobbe, eighteen, dis- | $2.60% ball yesterday by Magistrate Cobh y 1 19 on a technical charge of homicide TG to make sure 1 could help Mrs, Kem side and the De Witt Clinton High] covered the mah in her bedroom and] on the charge of robbing John Quinn of & 1} {a GlbOH CA REFORUOD RTLER GUMS Tit moran undliuth ab Wecoutmer tak Schoot and High School of Commerce | creamed, He grabbed her around the] a gold watch, 5 til at SLOG LOrTae Isa =e Were able to provide aents for all their | throat, but she fought hin and he fled.g “T met Quinn in a restaurant and he ws devine Saturday night struct HTL wR CeR WHE hen 11 puplla, ‘There were but slight in-| TNO dollars in cash had been taken] asked mo to take him home," #ald Han- , and) Wied Atha: Bonimnerte; aay wax under Water when T heard (Continued from First Page.) : rom the pocket of a pair of trousers In| sen, ‘He also asked me to take c | ° een’ GE TNE Howie io. 409 ond great oxploxion) und. com creases In the registration at the} the pedro ike Beli bn © take care of fh Bia BURR ZIL ARE EE to the surface ee my wife ne t hifd otal ., {Schools in this section, and the high “Bollos are fling for the Bardtak, of Aine said that when he and Hf Mah Meéts Death When Hit 1 ' the children swimming easily a short | [poirueted that ne enild Of six OF Over Tachools aided by annexes were not} whom they have a good description] sen saw Quinn was intoxicated they : by Car Fleeing Poli Hender Jere y enty distance away. TOT TnI SECO ee eee ee een isnt eeine most con. | OBtged to take on part time students. I given by the gtr. sought to help him g y Car In, ohce— . ish lersey y seatei au uned H < sas em, one of the most ed rt 4 Sane ted died in Jersey City Hoxpital yester- eB lps EY Bees nek AD cated parts of the city, being equipped \ nree Are suffocated. jay from Injuries received Friday sheila and ove predicament be- Twith a number of annexes built in the 7 inten = night when she w struck by an came H re ate. But there was netliost few years, was able to hold its ‘i ; only oil, there were swimming meno the. openiig, Stout of eho. automobile driven by Thomas Solilary us ov pening, 3 \ Beven persons were killed in auto a 16 Sohacn aL Vanile late —>——— passengers or crew, it was imp x able to accommodate the mobile accidents in and near this city} city, Solllaro is under arrest charged (Continued from First Page.) Co ea ee Ted Time GOWN linree part Of the registrants with Cull arres r , r st Pag onus, One man grabbed Mrs. Kem-|time classes by putting 65 and 60 yesterday; four were mortally hurt] with manslaughter, i tim A putting 65 an i < “4 ’ und almost) strangled her. | pupils in a classros . . and twenty-one others injured While driving a motorcycle on Res-] put her rail almost in the water. Atl and t went to her ald At : 48, Pleas mnt Avenue and 9 f A pedestrian was killed at eles AV Patni Gare eater, ubout her was blazing gasoline and|got her free. Two men tried to grab[iioth Street, the registration was the i he Bronx, oimin John Webs ; : : 0 Fe C secker Stree a showin wet 4 ere wasp Ruth, but she managed to fight them » as about ay ago, } West Broadway and Bleecker Street] vinty.six, of No. a7 Luscelle Street, {Sie Wasa roaring furnace, There wi at is pint SU;IIE bs year ago, totalling at 1 o'clock this morning by an auto-] of the | Kingsbri¢ Station, was]a panic on her decks. Sailors ang] wi.) wvinming our fastest and going] On the cast side, FS. t Henry ! mobile driven by Arthur Sappatino of| thrown from the machine when the] passengers were running about to get | under every few minutes wefand Oliver Streets, reported | No. 434 West Broadway. Sappatino | eur cath Verena ager id boats overside and hunting frantic-fmanaged at last to get to chore, | girly registered, of whienenine ' did not stop, according to Voltce] ally for life belts, Tt was a freo-for- [though the burning gasoline was close | were on part time: PS. 4, Rivington, e 4 ae " Those struck by automobiles in the ue upon us all the way. We sank on the | pidge and Pitt Streets, reported 2 Sergt. Frank Woods, who pursued! streets Included: Jennie Bieder of No.]#! fight for life. The officers of the} oy irn utterly exhausted, but safe, with seats all; P. F him in a police automobile and made! 117 Bast 113th Street, who was taken] Villafranca were unable to get any] “we stayed at Hohenau for a ; Streets, reporte: j him privoner at West Broadway and|‘ pee pieL La peal Alorder among either crew or passen to recuperate, and, to our for alls Py 8 , 563 . SF euNInE possible fracture of the left urm;] surprise, (he suit case In which we nckworn Sr. Canal Street after threatening to} fiorge Lukovits, fourteen, of No. 620| 8°" had put our money, passports nnd 000 pupils in wie cn ar shoot him East 82d Street, who received a lace-| “My wife and I and the two chil-] itn, valuables, and which we had time: Ps Rivington. and’ ior Uh Sappatino, who had no driver's N-|rithion of the scalp; Arnold Wohl-| dren hastened back to our cabin, be-Hert on tle Villafranca’y deck, was] syth Street 16 . ats ) ; iA A on th Kk. ayth Streets 6 pupils with se cense, admitted he had been drinking Piao dsm A Tuten te nie aes cause we w only in our night] washed ashore a little distance be-| ror nearly P . Heaton 0. e. oor tn e ouse J. Preverdi of No. 176 West Houston] xpd’ hip und possible Internal Injuries,] Clothes. We slipped on a bit more oe aah Ma TS Koll ba rete suet wien Street and Fred Brunner of 76| was takem to Lebanon Hospital. clothing and hurried out again, with All T know of the fatalities is that] Bayard g repotted ‘eats for q Charles Street were found ustcep in} Joseph Shushan, sixty-seven, of No.| such of our valuables as we could} yinety ont of the total of 153 aboar tl] all Monroe and 4 the tonneau of the car, They were] 456 Riverside Drive, taken to St.] crowd Into a sult case. ; tia coeaal Ware tont' noua Dagh aitdten te \ held as witnesses against Sappatiny| LUKe's Hospltal suffering from a com-| “But when we tried to get on deck| Prof. Kemmerer suid that he in anditeriy hve An } sek k Homisite conrae . pound fracture of the left leg. again by the door we had at first used] tended visiting his brother in Jamaica | the ten\with seats for all: "A light delivery cnr on Long Ridge] AMthony Guriero, four, of No. 3128] we found that the list of the vessel] for a time before returning to Frince- | /'. S. 34, Broome and Sheriff Streets, Road. near Stamford, Coan. over-| Vill Avenue, Bronx, contusions of the} had jammed it. ‘That made Yt nec-| ton 1,600 pupils with seats for all; and P. Samick itch (aut Kent Bae (we head and left arm, taken to Fordham| essary for us to fight a way up the S92 me and Ridge Streets, re. ospita main companionway, up which pas- pre ort 00 pupils registered \ . ea J for . 3, . ' s red, witi men were Pe Noa See George Kramer, twenty, of No. 615] sengers and crew were already fight-|U. S. EMPLOYEES caareate u others injured, ‘ hy Tay ceebel 4 ; fora Hewital, ‘The dead are: East 140th Street, while crossing the] ing. Two thousand pupils had been teg- IN CONVENTION HERE roadway on the viaduct bridge of 155th] “At last we got to the deck. The téteret it Pubtie Bahool, BE Ad Kenneth Grure, twenty, of New ‘s a ts it 4 ® GeCck. 8 f School 52 Academy Canaan, Conn:, ‘Albert Reuben of| Steet, was struck by « tuxteub driven tflames were still towering over the} 309 pelegates Represent 50,000 in| Street and Broadway, and twertty- 5 , | by William Meehan of No. 405 East} vessel and she was almost engulfed in My - eight of the forty-seven classes were New Jersey and Fred Brown, forty, 5 Kederal Service. 3 classes were ot Stamford, 168th Street. He received contusions|them. We crept aft as far as possible] put on part time, according to the Badly cut and thought to have been| °f the right leg. and there decided what was best to be| The sixth annual convention of the) ii ciiat: 1. Louis Snyder. ‘Thirty. internally Injuced. ‘homes Daty, nia] Henry Lee, wlxty-flve, of No. alt}done. Fortunately all of ux swim well| National Federation of tell Bits ee cigusen Wéem ON (MR Ceca eee brother, Charles, and Ralph Vitti, ull] West Thirty-third Street, struck by/and 1 told my wife and the children|ployees opened at the Hotel Astor to-]ji¢ school 89, 145th Street and Lenox of Stamford, are in the Stamford|" sutomobile owned by Mrs. Mary] that our only hope lay in diving over-| day, with delegates present. The! Avenues where 2,600 puplie had teen Sloapitel. ldman of No. 80 thank Street, and |board and! swimming under water till | purpose of the convention is to formu-Jenrolied, Dr, Jacob M. Ross ts Prin- Charles Demmert of No. 5 Gien| erated by John Godfrey, twenty-lwe could get away from the gasoline |igte a legislative programme to be |cipal of this school. Ninety-four per- Road, Rutherford, h. J. was killed] ‘!'8Mt, of No. 8v Ninth Avenue. Lee! which covered the sea about us. c for betterment of|cent. of the enrolled pupils are N q Apc e was taken to Bellevue Hospital with!” “we stood there listening to the| UE’d on Cong : \ 8 Ne- when the automobile which he was 4 | conditions and efficiency in the Govern a possible fractured skull. Godfrey noise of the flames and the cries and was urrested on a‘technical charge of S. 41, driving with four others as passen- ». 86 Greenwich Ave- ment service gers was struck by the locomotivelor battling of the distraught persons] ™¢! Ly cating o.oo | RUC: the oldest school in the Green- an Evie train at Van Houton Avenue, | @onious assault. about us und waiting till some of the] The delegates, nting 59,000 | Wich Village section, and one of the Atbenia, N. J, yesterday morning, —>__—_. line on the surface of the water|Government employees throughout the} smattest in the city, 120 pupils had Wha AiinmObile. Wan: barried {eet had been consumed. We wanted to were welcomed to New York|)een registered, Seats were provided ty the locomotive, Mrs, Demmert, have as much of a chance for our] py Ith Commissioner Copeland. | for all Charles Demmert jr, ten years old, lives as possible. Gut we could not] speaking for Mayor Hylan, and by Miss] In the Bronx the registration at ele- wait long, as the Villafranca was set- ting faster and faster in the wuter, “At last I felt it was time to go and I gave the word. Mrs. Kemmerer LOST ON LOAN William £'Keefe and his wife Anna were taken to the Passaic Hospital. The O'Keefes suffered only minor injuries and were sent home after their cuts and bruises were dressed. Mounted ?’oliceman James A. Fagan was mortally hurt and his horse so injured that it had to be shot by an automobile which struck them on Richmond Avenue, Port Richmond, last night. The driver of the car did (Continued from First Page.) not stop. According to the police re- = Port the license number of the car was “85-912 N. J."" Fagan is in St, Vin- cent's Hospital, West New Brighton Mrs, Pauline Weinberg, sixt-four years old, is in Coney Island Hospital in critical condition from injuries re- ceived when she was struck by an automobile and knocked under a Sea Gate trolley car. Mr. and Mrs Harris Fahnestock of No, 15 East 66th Street, were hurt mentagy and high schools showed an increase of from 175 to 200 pupils in each school. Morris High School, even with two annexes, was badly hampered by lack of space. There the The ction of Rose Schneiderman, President Women's Trade Union League. convention will last all week. of officers is scheduled for Friday, How a bit of dried paint led to a new invention and gave-to you and others a better kind of floor. was touched, Then came the futile search of crew and quarters. Asked to-day about the Dayidson said to necklace was an heirloom and no viue closer than $10,000 or $20,000 could be placed on it. When she was asked whether it had been insured, she re- plied "Yes, but T don't really know by Joss, Mrs, the reporters that SALE Begins Tomorrow in the Music Room whom, in the collision of a taxicab im which they were riding up Fifth Avenue and which struck a touring car at 55th She added that she had sent no wireless notice to the New York po- lice, nor had she communicated news Fifth Floor EARLY everybody has seen a can of paint that has stood of yards of linoleum for the floors of homes, ofhces, business places, Street. Michael Rogan of No 291 of her loss to her husband. But she did ss atu * a = " sara Kegt Avenue Brooklyn, and Harry Intend to see a lawyer here in New too long exposed to air and light. A public and semi-public buildings Thompson of No. 914 Lorimer Street, | York. thick coating appears on top of the Linoleum is a strong, sturdy ma- Brooklyn, passengers in the touring The complained of insult by the ~ + a as eless fe ia a - be od wit sole Bae ACH ao HU Coal aney, Ware LARBH!| Negroswanteommiltad Mrusbavidbon paint and it becomes useless for terial that can be printed with col to Rosevelt Hospital, with the Fahne-|said, in the evening the day after painting. ors and designs, or the color may stocks. All were able to go to their}the vessel left Havre, which was P ; ick be put in during the manufacture homes after treatment, Mr. Fahne-| Sept. 1. After the guard was estab- An 1863 a man named Frederick —_ be put in during t iJ stock is a banker at No, 2 Wall Street.| lished outside her stateroom, she Walton stood looking at thé thick in which case the colors run all the Miss May Gordon of No. 826|S8aid that several times she heard film that had formed on a can of | way through to the burlap back. sullen remarks made by members of the crew. Three of them, she was positive, had said insulting things to Grand Street, Miss Minnie Robbins of No. 17 Grand Street, Morris Zuerfler of No. 1398 Clay Avenue and Sam ‘This, as your wife knows, is called exposed paint. He saw what many “inlaid linoleum.” others had seen, but he did a little Schneider of No. 484 Grand Street | ber. sone % £ " ‘ala, 5 » oO were hurt by a collision of Zuerfler's| Prof. Charles H. Haskins of tho thinking as he looked. Linoleum makes _such a good automobile with a street car at Third | Department of History of Harvard What Walton Discovered floor that scores of shiploads of cork and thousands of barrels of linseed oil are used every year in its manufacture. It makes a good floor because it is firm, resilient, quiet, smooth, and permanent. No other floor is so easy to clean. ‘There are so many different colors.and de- signs in linoleum that women who have good taste in interior decora- tion make linoleum floors a part of the color harmony of their rooms. How to Identify Linoleum When you buy linoleum, remem- ber what linoleum is. It has & bur- lap back that you can see. It does not tear easily. Some floor cover- ings are mistaken for linoleum that are not linoleum at all. They con- tain no cork and are not pressed on burlap. To be sure you are getting genuine linoleum, look for the Cir- cle “A” trade-mark on the burlap back. This identifies the genuine Armstrong’s Linoleum, a high qual- ity product made in colors and de- signs suitable for any room in any house He pried off this film and ex- amined it. He found it was tough, elastic, and smooth. It had an even color. Further experiment proved that it would withstand wear. It was durable. Mr. Walton knew what this film was. It was linseed oil that had oxidized and turned from a liquid to a semi-solid, elastic material. He took some of this oxidizedslin- seed oil that had been exposed to the air and mixed it with cork “flour,” or powdered cork. Then he took a strip of strong tough burlap and pressed the composi- tion into the mesh of the burlap. He Named It Linoleum Here was made for the first time a new substance which was named Linoleum—after linseed oil. Mr. Walton has lived to see his invention become famous through its value as a floor. Great mills in Europe, the British Isles, and America annually produce millions In this Sale . “One of the Finest Makes of Phonographs” at greatly lowered prices We are most fortunate in being able to secure these splendid machines to sell at such low prices. The maker who prefers to remain in the background, due to the price concessions, is well established as one of the formost in his industry. Each of his products represents a standard of quality which we are proud to sell. We know that they will give satisfaction and pleasure for many, many years, and that the quality will be remembered long after the price is forgotten. The cabinet work is exquisite, the machines are carefully and precisely made and the {one is of that clear rich quality so often found only in much higher priced phono- graphs. Any disk record may be played without extra attachments. Altogether this is an unusual opportunity—but quantities are limited and early selection is imperative. ‘ » Upright Models Formerly 160.00 dames McGreery & Co. “FIFTH AVENUE 34TH STREET The SZacte BROILET A Top-of-the-Stove Broiler For Gas or Oil Stoves This utensil broils steaks, chops, fish or fowl—both sides at the same time—with- out turning, and without smoke or odors., Makes the meat tender and retains full flavor. Axmsrronc Cork Company, Linoteum Division Console Model « ‘* Formerly 175.00 McCreery Sale Price McCreery Sale Price . 105.00 115.00 5.00 down—-No Interest Charges Lancaster, Pennsylvania New York Office—212 Fifth Avenue Telephone Madison Square 1700-1701-1702 Look for the CIRCLE “A” trademark on the burlap bach, Endorsed by Good Housekeeping Institute, Tribune Institute, Miss Farmer's School of Cookery and Other Culinary Experts and Physicians. Economical, Handy and Easily Cleaned Price, complete, including grid and gravy pan, 4.75 [Fifth Fleor—Music Room) Demonstration in House Furnishing Department — 6th Floor