Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE WORLD: SATURDAY EV NG, NOVE MBER 30, 190%,” EX-QUEEN LILIUOKALANI IS . HERE; AS SHE LOOKS TO-DAY elninteintesteinietnte! Several Prominent Ho- tels Refuse to Provide . Accommodation for Her Party — Finally Found Rooms at the Roland. A portly, chocolate-colored w with gray hair, surmounted with a @f pure white, a heavy face, thick ! @ pair of black, sparkling eyes t times seem kind and again are spiteful, @ loove, clumsy waik, yet poreersed of a certain amount of natural diguity; a fg- re without much outline as to sym- metry; a low, mellow voice as from the | South—that 1s ex-Queen Lilluokalar former sovereign of the Sandwich Is!- ands, and to-day a guest of the Hotel . Rolan, tn East Fitty-niath stre The ex-Queen arrived In e yesterday. She was accom Icseph K. Rea, John DP. Atmoku Miss Myra Heleluke. Accommodations were sough era] other hotels bofore the party to the Roland. The Waldort-As the .Murray Hill, tho Savoy and +» ‘Netherlands tn turn refused to provide them with rooms. “‘All full was the stereotyped reason given, though Mr. Rea, of the ex-Qucen's retinue, d: clared indignantly to-day; “We were not even treated with com- fmon courtesy. An Interesting Trio. led tn ao pink shirt-waist, set with \ wows and rows of ‘ine wiilte insertion, Joseph K. Rea, who acts as her secro- tary, received an Evening World repro- sentative this morning. A step back of Gim was John Atmoku, a paler brown and more conventionally dressed, and with him came Uttle Miss Heleluke, per- wonal attendant to the Queen as her small retinue always calls her. York d by and 2 telegram from Washington, which may} “I think," added Mttle Miss Heleluke,| weather for ten hours, and she wl The three have been for vsara the ex-lcome to-day, of to-mnorron, or next | naively, “we inake her very havoy comes gayly down on the elevated tair Queen's charges, the young men week, they are all waiting hero GH | “What does she wear?’ ane repeated. |i. woe in the morning clad in loné brought up by her at the palace from Doyhood, and Miss Heleluke ts the @aughter of her former secretary. They are an Interesting trio, although Mr. | ‘Rea, who was spokesman for the party, yas breathing unusual indignation after | times she grows so lonely—so lonely sho king must ace people. Then she comes away. Cesk. ce fat man near the hotel | fy neiteves Americans to be very inter: “He wanted me to take up his cara,” | c#ting. She han been reading all day, alt - oe day for weeks your Mrs. Mumford’s CS omceecy art aeree ree aa By vooks. She met her In Honolulu, But she reads usually only Scott. She itkes Cahn ioesnet back tn a emile teeth | iim pest of all. Ina little while she ts a 73 golng to finish her music—quite a grand ‘Tt has happened before, be explained | composition, indeed. You should hear ee aheeetnS hotraines Guseniiy | REF cfittelse pictures! She does not M * paint, but she knows emnused." put in Aimaku. "She ta tn “What sort of foster-mother does the especialy good spirits thie winter, She! Guson make?” repeated her protege. pelts us laugh all the way from | «sn» could not have ruled a country !f fonolula.”* she could not rule us, you know. Sho nae Ue beni sree aren tp severe, but very kind, She ‘@ Kood- to the season ‘ashington,” said Miss | patured—that {8 best. Heleluke, who wears American clothes | your American mothers I watched and has big shy eyes. fon the traln just this last trip of ours, ‘Then they all laughed merrily, for they [and they are not good-natured. The fnsist the Queen has left home sim-| Queen has always a funny thing to tell py Decause it is time for the Washing- | She does not brood about her troubles— senson. But sho {s waiting for a|she says she never was 50 happy. the telegram comes. “But anys Joseph Rea, “she is hero on no business of state. Some: then, the Queen ts | colors, as -| prefera American dress. | black tattor gown on the train and @ Best - Dressed Woman on the American Stage, in Her First Talk on ‘‘How to Dress,” Gives Valua- ble Pointers” to the Typewriter Girl. Miss Elsie de Wolfe, who has th: reputation of being the best-dresse: noon the American stage, pre sents to Evening World readers to jay the first of her interesting seri of articles on “How to Dress,” Her talk to-day is particularly for the Typewriter Girl, the girl who ha. to solve the difficult problem of put ting on that in the morning whic} will make her look well dressed fo the next ten hours or more. One point Miss de Wolfe empl izes more strongly than the rest, anc for many excellen, reasons. It is Always wear a short skirt. BY ELSIE DE WOLFE. HOW TO DREss. wo leleinieieini-i-t 1. The Typewriter Girl. ‘To the class ef girl who has fn the morning for the ne nm hor or inore belonga the ‘Typewriter and that is just why tt ts the Nard werk the world her to « sultably, Women who make from three to ty toilettes a day have an easy task com pared with the girl who makes one. For novody can forecast New Yor) on a s ‘ Why," she answered promptly, “‘she dresses always like an American woman —did ycu not know? Only she cares for they do in Paris. But she he wears a allor sktrt, too often goes home at nigh! with the binding dipping the mud and he broadcloth all spotted. Very few New York typewriter girlx home for luncheon. Very few of thea have time to change thelr gowns then [ALWAYS WEAR SHORT SKIRT, IS MISS DE WOLFE’S ADVICE. ® 5 Sood Sire Desert Mins De, that ar «okie and an add tailor gown rile for from $13 to fs twill last all winter Wil do for naw.” Th rconomy, And itis q SON, at any ral partment stor rand velvet xceedingly artist ¢ n imaghie the nd hats of Rood le Beayon ci Ald be two 9 aves of ih omce dresa ®, for about these tNq- at—never a bonnet” othe ts the ex-queen’s third visic to] oven If the weather demanis ft. The te.) ground an aes oa atic sssc three this country, the laat occasion being | Slt la that the well-dressed girl of the] thickly siltch shoes, $250: doxskin vh he tt ted in 1898 to obtain morning Is the badly dressed & a8 iy ihe: gals at collar and belt, §2. Se conoet feccretConeréas' . he afternoon, and thls make my ars | St belt ay about three wWeeks* salary $8,000.00 from Congress for the loss of | © . Now the # SEG a BO UCA Ih Seen wee a aalary votnt clear. The bdusinean girt ix nor wel who 1s not well dressed all day cannot be sure of being well dressed all her throne and crown lands, Her claims wero denied, but she had previously made a good impression upon ex-Preal- |dent Cleveland, of whom she has alnce rey ite shirt w Vs hree w fed ke salur a great item, nthe do her ta has who Ww Diy dre r work spoken as her & day If she wears a long skirt to her t Since the turtulent Umes beginning In| woric, ‘Therefore, she ought never t v dozen, as she 7 | you Wonder t typewriter 1895 wl “Queen Lilluokalani’s arrest . 5 us F sel? and leading ap to her demand on. the| Wear anything but’a short #ktrt. The’ washable shirt wud ew something of Uncle Sam, whe has been| To this I might add: Besides, [ regard|louking trimmer and: {rest n treasury rather in the packground. 1 ; rears inie net or any dark ut | The only incident in her career aince| # lone skirt about any work indecent’ fey “weeks It ts worn, | then worth recording was her objec- . oApILADY. ton last year to payine duty on two | automonites she had sent to Hawail. | Lituokalant ts proud of her ancestry. \Sne is a_grdat grand-niece of the cele- \brated Kapiolani, one of the first Ha- lana to ba converted to Christianity mMphasize in these The love skirt has three plac world—in the house, ina earriag the stag ri rom every other place is ouglt to be pardon hed saree cprpereiue ieyterrerroe irae banished, branded iy unsanitary and Matt ie Gad and Teleased her peoe| uncleaa, and, as 1 huve said, quite in- decent. J cannot speak too strongly about thin, t to ape ple from thraldom. THESE OLD PEOPLE WEDDED SIXTY YEARS AGO. Christian D. Crist and His Wife Will Celebrate t a Perr Hi cit stellt a Ba et Surrounded by the six who are lving| son Correlius, No, 243 Seventh avenue, | and have lved?here ever since. ‘They was returning of their seven children, their twenty | Where they make thelr home in the old Sixteenth Ward and| ome from the theatre last night ac @randohildren and thelr four great-| ‘They were married in Buriingham re for half a century Mr. | CoMpanied by two ‘The car was grandchilren, Christian D, Crist and tin Orange County, when Mr. Crist was CHSC Was In the wholesale incar bitl | orowded and Matthew was asi wife, Anne Elizabeth Perkins Crist, will only twenty-one and Mis Pork!us nin ix living child are ellue [17% fea The crowded condition of celebrate to-morrow oveniniy the sixcteih (teen years old, for now the man te SOW. Gritith and Mrs | the car awakened him and he became annivorsary of their wei ‘The fes- elghty-one and Mis seventy nine both oft Ina; Sra ||| very turbulent tivttios will be held at the home of thelr! One year later they moved to this « flex Jovephine Crist ond! tr ts charged that he swore a: the | Paxsengers aud was obnoxious to all tie Marriage To-Morrow Evening. Siebiebieitebbcbbsbieleb icici nb ieiebebinieisteleinieiedoieivieteiott bien ielelerteibieteiet A woman In business has uo r! pear at her work tn a long skirt, and L belleve the time wlll come when ny woman who wears one will be engaged) by an Intelligent employer. T have tumed away maids and house-) maids becauso 1 saw taemn coming from the street with ggled shirt Minding, and I know many other women who feel the same way. WERE Since this ia ono of the principal tings | “Y aditions and ne vating white Mes seem to are must minember, con oun know Tam in sh looking, when you prettest be worn mn the Ns are mor prish your the office at night he Anniversary of Their FIGHT IN A CAR; lelebininlelninleinininininfntein] BROOKLYN SOCIETY MAN RE- BUKED DISTURBER. Door Was Smashed anit wwiett Caused Matthew- son's Arrent. Glann Mr. . ‘ =) between two men, one « ior tbs well Known tn soclety circles, in 1h avenue street Hrooklyn, lost oy threw a bevy of women who we: x turning from the theatre into 4. The luge in the door of the \4 shattered and the disturbance w Hi & J quelled by the appearance of a potic + man In the Gates Avenue Court this morn- ing James Redmond Howlett, No. Sh Greene avenue, appearel against Matthew Matthewson, of No. {5 Jef ferson avenue, charging him with as- eault. Nowlett said that he FIANCE IS NOW IN JAIL, TILLIE FRIEDMAN HAS EX- ADMIRER ARRESTED. ROBBED 6 TIMES IN 6 WEEKS. THLANT Clothing Store of M. Benjamin & Son Haan Hard Time of It. For tho sixth time within six weeks the clothing store of M, Benjamin & Son, of No. 1% First venue, was en- + tered by burglars this morning. The thieves broke through a window next to a door and stole three overcoats and four pairs of trousers, Qn two other oc: lons entrance haw been gained through doors and four times the thieves have entered the win- dows. She alleges that he trifled with her Mr. Benjamin saw two suspicious ral affections and damaged them to the ex- {n tho store yesterday, and the pollce| reat of $2,000, borrowed $200 from. hh are looking for them. | a see: | and her father and tet the State tor \ year, after refusing to keep his en- JAMES W. ALLEN DEAD. | casement to murry hier, Because sf ———— these things Tiille Friedman had vn, N,{ [Sam Nasarufaky, otherwise known ax * **) Sam Goldberg," arrested to-day and | cast into Ludlow Street Jail in default James W. Allon, who wus Postmaster | of $20 ball pending the trial of her sult at Bordentown, N. J., under Prestdent | against him for 32,00 damages. Herrison. and wha was at one tlme| Deputy Sheri Walgering arr Postmaster of the United States Senate ied at his home to-day. lio was sev-! Jan, of the City Court, enty-rix years old. af Alley Fricdman’s aflidavit says that she i é ‘ am on an order signed by Judge Con-| ladies, Howlett remonatrated with him and Matthewson jumped ip tu tight, After Matthewson bad bee their tirst meeting, she her brother, David Frie yt) Robert A. Sharkey, a him as a boarder in the On| political lead ent May 5, she alleges, they entered Into a} sent. word aski t wrilen engagonent to marry by he) to release the man, M. glorious Fourth of J | paroled till next Friday from her and borrowed from her father, | — he says, to the extent of #39, but he | i dit not inary her, He disappeared in TT August, wolng out of the Stat | SAYS PRETTY GIRL STOLE. Samuel turned the da = sure that he didn't ran away no he had him nabbed hy the Hoarding-Huuse Keeper Avenaes , Taking Craey ¢ | Jer father corrovurated her, The case caer nan J will be tried next week, Jane Greenwood, of No. M2 Morsyta | street, was held for the action of Grand Jury in $2,000 bail at the {ville Court thin morning by Magist ~ EGGS WERE ACROBATIC. Mott on a charge of having stolen Carload of (Em Leaped tre atte) prize crazy quilt valued at 8 Th tocDuctarina varl cempininant against Miss Greenwoo: Wan Mrs. Gertrude Drigse, of No. 3t A in rom It car loaded ed, more or tle of fro Cl ewix Bohma: + this morning. With butter and | Bracefully, fi ¢ Titrteenth leas the 1 tot a. Pitt ph Reilly, r, and remain | the with tin’ ite Might waa uninjured. @ Rev herd eidens occurre > Carew to-morrow's San- | cdurel! alt being shift nd ’ ® day World. @ |B. Slevin, brother for it fintxplaced switch, 1 mage was and the bridesmaid wi thelr AleCollough. Arter the shat he done to the car, but grave fear \s felt) > for the ewes. | $0404 cveoregooesssen00es> | WOMEN IN PANIC, e.seenu will be @ reception at the hom IDR. SLEVIN’S MARRIAGE SURPRISES HIS FRIENDS. Oa Bachelor of the Harlem Hospital Staff Will Wed Pretty Miss Jeannette McGovern To-Night. leleinlnininielninivivieleinisinieteint anid Twe Ht Adina ceremony he tanks of the bachelors, COMPOUND. Only Remedy Used in Hospitals To cure nervous prostration is PAINE’S GELERY Nervous prostration kills more people in Amer- kK than all the infectious discases kill nayear.—-Statistician of London Medical Journal. 1 Nervous prostration, taken in time, is abso- utely, permanently cu by Paine’s celery com- pound. There are thousands of physiclane state- nents to this effect. It is the only prepared remedy used in such cases in the hospitals. . HAVANA, Cuba, ov. 17.—Mrs. Lola Mon- j aivo, who was Miss Barton's assistant, and is now nurse of the Succoring’ Hospital in Guanabacoa and wife of Mr. R, J. Montalvo, Warden of the City’ Prison in Havana, has made this statement: | “Paine’s celery compound has been used at the Guanabacoa Hospital as! any as five years with great success. Many women were scarcely able to nove ; there were others with a very weak nervous system. A hundred in, stances could be given of our patients who have been completely cured by tsing this wonderful Paine's celery compound. One bottle cured a Miss! Agustina Aguero, who had heart disease. She was old and her age w: gains¢] her, Other medicines had failed. May the Lord bless those individuals whe. yrought it before the market and public!” ce will be held at the Protestant morrow evening in the Mapttst Church of the! at Church of the Holy Apostles, corner | linbaay. comer of Madigan avenue and bf ath avence ani Twenty-eighth street. to] Judson Memorial chorus cholf, which exchanges’ worrow evening, The cantata ‘Seedtine snd} with the Mpiphany quartet. by Mylee B. Poser, will be sung by | ‘Tue preacher to-morrow fly velees, under the direction of | Temple, Oliver mrect, will be RS Jones, pastor of the Epipgany aptiet |. ormanirt h Services’ wilt te the Koderick Terry, pastor, in the urch, corner of Madison ave- wile, Thore was a large embers and their friends, asd mauy complimentary addresses, AUy-elgRiN street. tovmerroe tere | MOY combine 4 aYene e Preebyterta: ote will ting “The of one | Tbe, Rresbrierias from the | day evening. Dr, F. BD. Mehards pastor of the! ‘Comfort ye iny pees | Fourteenth Sreet Church, will take charge of the- (Handel, At the | meetings. The week following. Rev, Sr. Denke itiernoon ehorel Julies Cantata | 600, pastor of faa anid La wit hold evangel! juble qnariet and Street Church. direction of irmpaster, (Weber) mill ba renderet chorus of fifty-five vol: Dr. Garrett Builth, oF ‘The Central Presbyterian Chorch, Dr. Writes At the eolema figh mises co ba celebrated to] Merle Smith, pastor, beld secvices lest 1 te Cure Broa for the fire time etnce alterations and. Ime Frime Keeler, a ote. of Dinghamton, N.Y. asaintant. Mr. Keeler ts @ graduate of Auborw after his graduatior College, Oxtaed, oan vewper services held last year 4 Presbyterian Church, Dr. J. have been rewamed. The? tude a short sere who cannot to hecome Dr. @usith’ Dinahan, OD will preach) the eld td irotemant tor, | ast forey-Bre nitouies, and {] mon. Ther are mntended for attend the regular services 1 ine new editce of the an Congress Uonat Churcs se so far completed that the come Gregation (an now wee it for purposes of wore ye Work Is raolaly edvareing on the. waa and 1! is boped tat the patld) iy for dedication about Chrveuman: ‘anfeld, librartan of Cow 1 speak on “Screet and coon, in the West Bide oung Men's Chriatian Asso Foty-seventh etreet, The La~ 1 mate chars of aixty votces Inging under the direction of Brotherhood ef veil AL te preside wha will de Vau De partes label part will ber Jame Tali Esen Morgan, Tas will give the men 07 tatke sith Viet Masiness oF Pro Wrdeessey evening Mr. ton wil! Hrotnerinnd of (he Methodist Kolecopat A omit holt ite anaaal conveation Im fl h Avenue Chureh, Troy, N. Y., oa Dee. There desiring to atiend are requeati with Ker D., 150 Pitth avenue, New tn tare Til) be piven by the Methodist f Pitiyweveaty given by the Met Flees, New York. to the ui of the olfcial boards of all the odie Epixcopal Churches In tie boroughs of race Oburch, next. Thurstay informal. and ‘entury Commie the atterstianer hand will be * sMioa. wt Manhatten and the One Hundred and ening. The or The Work of th sion’ will be the a rreeehes, Margare: Hottome Seventeont’s u Tueelay, De The sale wil be enntinued on Tharsdar at the Sotttoment House, 216 Fast One Mendred and Teenty-elghth streets Shaped by SENSE ABOUT FOOD, Facts About Focd Werth Knowiag. lt is a serious question sometimes to know just what to eat when a person's stomach is ont of order and most foods cause griping and pains, Grape-Nnts Food can be taken at ie \s being consideret as af any time with the certainty that it wigs Mey De George 1 Vor" | will digest. Actua! exnerizace of peo- ple is valuable to any one interested | in foods. Mrs. Ella Nation, 1 Grand Ave., "| Terre Haute, Ind., “Had suffered with tz. | indigestion for about four years, ever since an attack of typhoid feverend at times could eat nothing mec of} very lightest food, and then y such agony with my stomach I would j/ wish I never had to eat anytning. 1 was urged to try Grape-Nuts Food, nd since using it I do not have to | starve myself any more, but T can the Fifth feat at any time and feel notrished \ prot \and satisfied, and dyspepsia fs @ fgets fF thing of the past. ats “When my stomach used to have Aaarmbty nities oa Tutus hardly walk I would get up and get some Grape-Nuts and cream and eat them, and the trouble would stop (right away, and I kept growing bet= | ter and better. Belt] "My husband also bad an expert= vad: | once with Grape-Nuts Food. He was very weak ond sickly {n the spring, | Could not attefie to hls work. He waa put under the doctor's care, but med= {eine did not seeem to do him any | good until he began to leave off or~ dinary food and use Grape-Nuts, Tt lwas positively sarprising to see the Ayert’ change in him. He grew better right Mate. politas aod wilt and Neve IL part fs the ever | words of praise for Grape-Nuts, Our boy thinks he eannot eat al) without he has Grape-Nuts, and he learns so fast at fi eacher and other scholars comment’ Son it i canse of the great nourishing el | ments in Grape-Nuts. é i} “It is a pity that people do kuow what to feed thelr child :, There are many mothers who their youngsters on slmost-any! *-\ot food and when they beco) uy! begin to pour medicine dot salaipgleey The real way is to stlek uth, to-morrow morning on Wort | food and be healthy and wart Jude, D. WD, will preasd w-| Without tie medicine aud and naturally he has none but ie school that bie Iam satisfied that ft Is bee 9