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esse ert eres esate BINGHAM FEARS BILL WON'T BE HAPPY TILL HE GETS IT AUSTRIANS HOLD THOUSANDS Wi BE OISFRANGHSED Impossible to Fulfil “Personal Identification” Law in Re- quired Eleven Hours. 4,000 IN SOME DISTRICTS. | ‘Asks Corporation Counsel’s Advice as to Voters’ Rights and Police Duties. Gov. Hughes's “personal {dentifica- tion” law, which w a operate in Greater New York on Election Day, disfran- chises thousandg of registered voters, according to the belief expressed to- ice Commissioner Bingham. MONTENEGRIN ENVOY Mission to Servian Govern- ment, Halted and Detained. BELGRADE, Servia, Oct. 2 Vukotics, an oMcial of the Monte: Government, has been forcibly detained by the Austro-Hungarian authorithes at Agram. The General left Cettinje Oct to the Servian Government. No rea sons for his detention can be obtained here. — QUIGG FACTION LCSES IN ITS FIGHT ON PAGE. stepped in election of party leaders, under the primary law, those leaderships now Quigg's law partner, Charles B. Cole- man, on behalf of William Hahn, to- day aplied to Justice uruax, in the Supreme Court, for a peremptory man Gen. m has asked Corporation to cancel the certificate of election Counsel Pendleton for an opinion as to the duties of the police on > when a large tion of the voters will have been barred from getting in their ballots be e lack of time to vote In accordance with the law within the eleven hours that the polls are to Btay open of the po were in hour, who of both pol! eto be put in the ing of the » door after the | continu se calculators of the Bureau “I Khat over 3 of the enrolled voters outside the polling Perlod 1s from enter because of the la st 66) minutes, | time the polls Senhysit 2) In bis fina Physical im- | asks for direct ‘oter to mark his bal-| the election a Ml the “personal | closing of the polls « 6 A.M. to5 P. M, o and {t is admitted to be Possibility for Jot and either a {dentification’’ questions or sign the election rolls for a comparison of his signature with the one he made when he registered. At least one-t tricts of the ¢ tribute ballots to yh hour at the side or without a eee LILLIAN RUSSELL’S HOME IS FOR SALE. |* ¢ election dls- larly on the lower east si 2 west side, portions of the nd portions of — Brooklyn have up to one thousand yot-| LtIlian Russell, who is ers on Wha rolls | race-track pla y has erty Theatre, poration Counsel: What Bingham Asks. “1. If at the hour set for the closing | /28t | from That was ‘the reason night for deciding to New Fall Styles of Shoes for Women From the Factories ot | Thos. Corcoran & Sons and J.C. Kelly & Co. Made of Patent and Enamel Leathers |! on the same lasts and patterns as the $3.50 and $4.00 grades. Lace, Button and Blucher, short creased vamps. Every psir guaranteed perfect. ctual worth $2.00 and Oa pair. In all aap -00 for women. Special at.. Pair Women’ s Leather Slippers for house wear; | ather soles; good fitting ‘ible and ye worth $1 a pair 3 to 8; our price. . Pair SPECIAL LOT OF Women’s Shoes for Street Wear Made of Kidskin with Patent Tips; also, Common Sense Shoes with Plain + c Toes, and Shoes with Felt linings. All a sizes in the lol. Worth up to $1.25 Pair a pair. at.... Also a lot of well made Women's Oxfords with Rubber Heels, worth ca up to $2.00, at. f 59 Pair ee The Famous Streeter Shoes for Girls, Sizes 5 to c a Pair 8 and 8% to 11. Made of soft Kidskin, stout leather Good bargain a Special Sale of Women’s Felt Julieis in colors, fiir trimmed. Also a pair, Our pric Felt Shoes & Felt Slippers, Worth up to $1.50 a 59¢ pair, Your (NY AARAAAA Pair All Sizes in the Lot. Boy’s School Shoes Sizes 9 to 1314; made of calfskin leather with solid leather soles, These are good, stout shoes, worth 59° || double the money. Price To- a MONTOW oe see seeeces Jetcttatat ttt Ss ‘Sample Shices” Sizes 2 to 6; soft kid- skin, with hand-turned Cc soles and snring 1s; in lace and _ bution; worth 75c, & $1.00; at weve! EARTHQUAKE AGAIN lice ore Eleo E i - SHAKES Pil PHILIPPINES saved ness Ve i : . 5 a,|. Justice Truax denied the motion and Adam P, Everett, thirty-six years old, |, Justice Truax denied the mation and Three Shocks aia) Follow | Similar Tremors of Yester- | )scket knit day—No Damage Done. —Following the rthquake that oc-| to the West lay the phenomenon was The OLRM reports tha: at were otherwise as suffered no damage and ity. the interior and nelghbor- first American there hasj| time. Th: issued to Charles B. Page as executive District in the Republican County Com mittee, on the ground that he js a member of the Board of Elections, and the law says a man shai not hold two | offices at once |, fiann is the Quigg-o | for leader, while’ Pay | sons-better-el fi led Hahn by eight at the y mnaries. The leader. te executive |member for the distriet in Mr. Par | son's county committee. The “Quigg trician Stabs Himself in Room | {Je hoped to oust Page and sent Ma They took this roundabout way to ell candids he Pi te, | PENNILESS, TRIES TO DIE. tried to end his life to-day in his room| some new way to bother in the Mills Hotel No. 3, Thirty itn | street and Seventh avenue, by boing | himself twice in the raght side with al He was found by a pert. Par- En‘oy your Bass’ Ale on Draught at Home! |chambermaid and taken to New York | Hospital, where it was sald he will re-| Everett rece returned from a trip here he had hoped to get | a good job at his trade of electrician. | |e said he had spent his last cent to re the room in which he tried to kill | self. and 12 ‘st disturb- SSS of Ma-| AMERICAN CHOLERA VICTIM. ro enjoy to the full exqutatte] orded sev-| tonfe-ber er And grew extract NILA, Oct. 20.—Lewis Connor, a }fmalt and hops, order a Spec ri. aber of the fi died to-day department of this JJCask (5 gall cholera, This is the Jpvaueht att trom your Departme nealer oF Jobber. h reported in some po » of new cases re- to two daily. m yorted had The Glamour ot Association in Our Period Decoration and “Assembling” i i HE periods in furnishing are not measured off like the squares on a i checkerboard and, as startling as it may seem, a really true period room is not a period room at all—in usage common to most dec- orators, When you dump a suit of Louis XV. furniture into a room and lay down an Aubusson rug and. stand a few pieces of Sevres China about and come home all out of breath with an ormolu clock under your arm for the chimney piece, you have not got a Louis XV. room, A real Louis Quinze Parlor, dominated by a taste of Du Barri, would have to contain some things from the Grand Monarque's reign, and the rugs very likely would net have been Aubusson and may have been born in the Valley of the Nile and there would not have been a six-piece suit of furniture, and there would have been a great deal of coziness and elegance It is this glamour of association that our artists, designers and assemblers have so charm- ingly expressed in the “ House Palatial,”’ which is a quarter million dollar house built into our Galleries, with a fine old Georgian Hall and staircase and twenty-two rooms all in real period effects. It is this glamour of association, this story-book, poetic, psychic addition to the fur- nishings that they are especially able to assist you in obtaining. To-morrow’s CONCERT In the Auditorium at 2 P. M. Sa Salt Sa Salt Sai Salt Sa ait JOHN WANAMAKER Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street, It makes little difference what you need---a World “Want” will : go and get it. You see, our experts are men of culture who have traveled aud studied and dreamed, ‘who are enthusiasts—with a song in their hearts, and who will not offer you a conducted” scheme, but will loyally help you reflect yourself in your work. Nevertheless, no charge 1s made for any Suggestion they make, and you shall not be under the slightest obligation to purchase. Bring your plans and blue prints when you call; or 'phone, or drop us a postal card and make an appointment for one of our experts to call on you. | becaus: Du Barri had given the rooma SOUL! “ personally mm Mrs. VIOLA WATERHOUSE, So-rano. Miss LILLIAN SNELLING, Contraito, Mr. PAUL DUFALT, Tenor. Mr. ANDREAS SCHNEIDER, Bass. Mr. HANS KRONOLD, 'Celio, Mr, ARTHUR DEPEW, Organist, THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OOTOBER 20, 1908, Gen. Vukotics, Sent on Special’ 17 for Belgrade on a special commission | Contending that as the State had | and taken a hand tn the) constitate public offices, Lemuel * Ely | damus directing the Board of ilections | member for the Thirteenth Assembly |! THE ROYAL STANDARD “TYPEWRITER Cai claims to superiority are fully established by actual tests among the most prominent concems in the world, No other type- writer is so simple, so durable, or so well adapted to ALL classes of work. ay Can PAY More But You Cannot BUY More. 565° .00 Demonstrations every afternoon and evening this week at National Business Show, Madison Square Garden. Royal Typewriter Company NEW YORK Store Closes Daily at 6 P. M. Special CONCERTS in the y AUDITORIUM at 2 ot VPausmedy dre What “Wanamaker-Originator””*"Means in the Hosiery and Underwear Store Improvements here or there, something invented or discovered to make an article fit better or ‘wear longer; some one thing or another done better than before. E FIRST to seize the opportunity of buying direct from the manufacturer, and give our customers either the same garment for less money or a better garment for the same money. WE WERE FIRST and are probably the only store today to have a complete and genuine ‘January Clearance Sale’—where all odd lots and last “year: S patterns are closed out at a loss, rather than carry them over. WE WERE FIRST, and again stand nearly alone, in ta‘: ig back the goods that have not been satisfactory—without any quibbiing, whether the manufacturer is responsible or not. i WE WERE FIRST to demand the freshest patterns in fine French hosiery and to escape the q rbitant prices charged by the wholesale importing houses, by goin; directly to the French m: anu- f facturers to bring over these fine, rare things to sell on a fair profit basis like any other merchandise. | THIS WAS THE FIRST UNDERWEAR STORE to reject the badly cut, peorly sized il skimped low-priced underwear and hosiery. We closed the docr until certain broad-minded ee | 4 facturers found it advisable to make for us good, well-fitting garments even in the low-priced grades, | OMe Y2maf4- Sore | | | 7e i THIS STORE INVENTED the cotton garter top silk stocking, which today is the very best | ? selling silk stocking inthe world. It enables women with a taste for silk stockings to wear them all i “the time without paying much more than the price for cotton and lisle sorts. i : THIS WAS THE FIRST HOSIERY STORE to use linen splicing in the feet of stockings to 5 make them wear better. The first store to put inextra heavy tozs. We do not guarantee any stocking to wear six months, but those which have been re.nforced as above we guatantee to wear {as well or better, than any of the so-called “guaranteed stockings” costing double. If the stockings fail in this, we will exchange them for cther stockings, or refund your money without any quibbling (es coupons or other inconvenient technicalities. H THIS WAS THE FIRST UNDERWEAR STORE to devise properly shaped and well-set-in par ir: | |i ‘reinforcements for men’s and boys’ drawers. ih THIS WAS THE FIRST HOSIERY STORE to find a way to have children’s circular-leg stockings made narrower at the ankle, and to insist on its being done. | THIS WAS THE FIRST HOSIERY STORE to import French black silk stockings that were bsolutely fast in color. The garments and the stockings will speak for themselves when you see them. f Winter stocks were never more invitu ng than now. ee Fall and 1 Visit the Exhibition of Kodak | Enlargements 250 Prints from Prize Wirning Negatives The Range of Women’s Suits is Wide A Special Beatty at $19.50 Between the confines of $18.50 and $225, the wealth of va- riety in our Tailored Suits for Women eludes description. There are many styles in the rich, superbly finished lustre broadcloths, in all of the new shades, and with every degree of plainness or elaborateness in tailoring and trimming. Smart suitings, too, among them this bright particular star, which has just appeared: | Tailored Suits are made of stylish striped material, the coats cut on the hipless model, slashed seams, satin- -bound, four large buttons, low patched pockets hed collar of satin, and small revers, satin-bound; closely fitting, sleeves with turn-back cuffs, The skirt is gored and closely fitting, trimmed with satin, and finished on each side of front gore with rows of satin, Suits that possess a decided air of smartness, brought out by | the good tailoring, at a very moderate price— Enterta:ning andIns(ructive DEMONSTRATIONS in Deve.op.ng and Printing Begirning this Mcrning and Continuing All Week Mornings and Afternoons Fuurth floor, Old Building Fall Petticoats Good Styles If you want areliable, practical, | $ 19.50 Seound floor, Old Buliding, pyou will surely find it in this group of heatherb'oom and mo- reen garments At $1.50—B! stylish, good looking petticcat, Replenished Supplies of These Rich Black Directoire Broadcloths A new importation brings our last-ebbing stock of Biack f Directoire Broadelotis buck to high-water mark, ‘hey i have gained jame on account of their high satiny lustre and} special lightness of texture, which muke them mosy ai-|) with stit hed t i d $2.75, mirabie for the closely-iraping gowns of today, Bes des,! Moreen Petticoats, black, | they are exceptionally strons, and proot avainsb spotting}! brown, green; flounce with i] 14 | by water, i ordion, plaited | Three wonderful qualities at $2, $2.50 and $3 a yard, flounce with he id ruffle; or ume | yiree fioor, Old Bulldins, i brella flounce ~with plait At $3.75—Black, umbrella flounce i with plaits; or with taffeta silk sectional | Women’s Waists—New Models | flounce. Others at $4.50 and $5.50, | A trio of styles, just in, smart in cut and showing the pret-i! Phied f ue Bult tiest new conceits in trimmings. Al! specially priced : ta Special at $5.75— Waistsyt messa/ine si/k, in light blue, Maids’ Dresses P Ma Cur assortments of pretty, trim, well- made Dressis offer an unusuaily large variety of styles and =m. 1s for chcice These ggestions: At $1.25. One-piece Dresses of per- cale, in checks, stripes Plaited front, pink and white; yoke of German Valenciennes lace and Cluny insertions, finished with lace insertions and medallions, Lace- trimmed k and sleeves, | Special at $5—Waists of b'ack taffeta sik; French knots and plaits; back plaited; new fitted sleeves, At §2~Two-piece striped percale Special at $2.75—Waissts of sheer ‘awn, handsomely Dresses: pl ted front and back, trimmed with lace, plaits and embroidery. New trimmed sleeves, d seersucker two- 4 floor, Old Bul JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T, Stewart & Co. Broadway, Fourth Ave., Eighth to Tenth St, yoke or Dresses of white sist platted. wo-piece Dresses plaited waist. 9-gore At $2. of black satee skirt. ‘Third fio! Old Bullding