The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1908, Page 16

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1908, OL TRUST HAD PRIZE-WINNERS A HAND IN FING — IN ERSEY CITV’S RATES? NEVER! CHERUB PARADE Exerted No Influence, Central) In Great Processiog 768 Varie Freight Traffic Man ties Are Shown, All Worthy Testifies. of Awards. ONLY ONE SET OF TWINS ‘HIS ROAD- CONVICTED. rand Mardi Gras Carnis and Masque Bail Foliows the Exhibit. } Admits Independents Didn’t Get Benefit of Their Se- | cret Schedule. | | Every one of J 76S vartecios of cherub@.had a good time, even If the: all didn't win prizes, and Jersey City is proud of them. Yesterday was a great day for both. The baby parade in ¢ View Park that < the Mardi + roads had labored for two years to per- | festival of the Me Co-Operative + fect a uniform tariff from the oll regions | Association of Jer: ) to freight terminals. | @ stunner, “Two years ago the ratea were in| There were no triplets and only { wuch confusion that I made an Investi- | pair of twins among the 768 contestants, } gation of rate-making and reported the | but the babies were of all varieties and ' necessity of general classification. Rates |in all kinds of costumes and capable } were incongruous and inconeistent. | of making all kinds of nolses. Camille + Bince the Hepburn act, the raliroads}and Emil Francois took the prize for ‘William §. Kallman, assistant freight reey City's , treme manager of New York Central Uines east of Buffalo, was called as a) 2 qwitneer to-day in the Government's In- | [vestigation of the Scandard O!1 Company {*by the defendant to tell how the ratl- and City Heignts was one ! have sought to systematize all rates," |twins, There were nine divisions in the said Mr. Kallman. parade “Did Standard Otl have anything to| Judges made the selections qs the { @o with this incongruity of rates?’ was|bables passed the reviewing stand, * asked. | drawing from the line the win The + “Emphatically not. I've been making | &Tand prize went to George Martin Vradenbergh, after the winners of the first prizes in the different divisions had been selected as follows Emily Viaud, dressed as a French doll surrounded with rosebuds; Timothy ; tariffs for twenty years and I never { knew the Standard Oil's influence in : fixing tariffs.” Mr. Kallman stated that the rail- road’s activity in making a harmonious Some Pretiy Youngsters in Jersey City’s Baby | | | DIROLLTY SLONME WAVER $ {od in the sere the Scotiand t Hook Light- the forme een Sandy Hook Lightship and ¢ k itself, The . Scotland Lightship © nat tte present rings, no mn having ——— been made to replace it by a more mod- ern vessel. Eight-Mile Lane of Lights @ enitre New Vessel, No. 87, Will Bear “Ambrose Channel” oh nt of ida for an expenditure of $250,000 and on olues included, besides the new ite 4 lane of gas buoys eight These deep-sea broad pathway side and white EIGHT MILES OF LAMPS. Great Water Highway Will Be Marked Between Rows of Gas Buoys. mpposts th red If ights on tl 1 form a r, the nel--87 that lets There will be no more Lightship” after Dec. 1 hes itghted the en Sandy Hook No. which nee A tens of thousands of verse! during the cast loose fron York harbor sixteen past was in years, her cables on that make way for the new $115,000 Hecht on her sides day and tp which has embiazoned REGISTRY BOCK — WITH MADIGAN'S NAME: MUTILATED a AMRBROSE CHANNEL-S7." OmMetally, therefore will be known as the A Lightship, although !t that seagoing folk will get habit of employing the old No, 61 has had a long and honorable She has lived nd vast Im- arf at Tonipkir e SOLDIER, SLAYER OF FOUR, GOES TO PRISON FOR LIFE. wv vessel POPPE PE through a pertod of i That the Crime provements In harbor Installation of wireless the submarine telepho the installation of ¢ at Navesink and Atlantic Ilighiands, Has Ridden Out Many Storms. There have been few big inciden eee Court Take of Pri te Bee Cavalry, who ley ” | Among. the provisions Renate ill \ adjustmient of rates was not instigated : by the Bureau of Corporations’ inv + gation in 1906 of alleged secret and {. preferential rates in favor of the Stand- ard Oil, He added that Samuel Good- “man, George E. Gerry and Nathan Beanlon, dressed as a swan; George Mar- tin Vradenbergh, in a baby coach smoth- ered in forget-me-nots; Marion Hamil- ton and Hazel Paterson as Scotch las- sies, John H. Miller as a Princeton Col- | lege boy, Louts Heid os a hod carrier, the career of N dents go in the lives of the fi Rhatilentehelharborsies along the Atlantic coa , Su- Done to Save Pi perintendent of Elections Camille and Emil Francois, twins; Hazel | Fuchs as Little Red Riding Hood, and Myrtle Sander as a Red Cross nurse on @ war ambulance. The baby show was followed in the evening by @ procession auch as Coney Island has, ending in © masque ball at | Grand View Hall in honor of the King | of the carnival, Thomas H. | Miss Minnie A. Gilliar. There were 100 floats and 20,000 men, women and children in the night parade, which was seen by 200,000 persons and reviewed by Mayor Wittpen and former Mayors Hoos and Fagan. AUSTRIANS SEIZE ~CZAR'S MINISTER ~ ON SERVIAN LINE Guilford, officials prominent in the rate reformation, are all dead How Roads Are Acquired. “It there was a reason for the gen- eral rate systematizing at this time other than the growth of natural causes only those men knew of it end they are dead,” said Mr. Kallman, | » reverently. | An interesting sidelight on the meth- ods adopted by ,veat trunk lines in ao- quiring desirable railroad property de-| veloped during Mr. Kallman’s testi- mony. When the New York Central cast envious eyes on the Rome, Water- | town and Ogdensburg Railroad early in | the 90's. the line was struggling along | under a heavy debt. Gradually compe- | n the Central and controlled ed the earnings eo that when jo the line little The Central then took the R., W. and 0. _unéer lease, learned that {t could be operated at a profit as an oll carrier from Buffalo to Vermont, and in four years absorbed the line entirely, Since Oct. 1, this year, the R., W. and O. Rail- road is defunct. It is now neon as the Leary Says. tng that the It was dlaco’ three pages hav registry book, containing the signatur of the v the polling place No in the Sixth Election Fitth Assembly District juperintendent of E fons Leary this ‘1s a base attempt the part of the system to shield Patrolman Madigan. Patrolman Thomas P. Madigan, of the Mercer street station, was arrested last night charged with illegal reeist It was charged that he had registered who have registered at eecker street, rict of the According Di on day, Oct. 5, had registered from No. 302 Bleecker street, at which place the book has been torn. When a police sergeant went to the registry place this 1 ng he found that three pages had been torn from the book. One of the pages was that containing the names commencing with M, which, Supt. Leary says, had on it the signature of Patr win- Mr. Kallman said his raflroad took the . A = longer route over the R., W. and O., H Dis! Ela ‘ike Meet’ cuidt'Snee, Police Give Sergueieff Rough Under Mr. Kellogg's probe. = Not comiidenendentel Yreatment and Ransack Under cross- {nation Mr, Kalli iT " _gdmitted that the. New York Central His Baggage. Was under conviction in the Federal Courts for carrying oil at the $-cent rate + gnd failing to post and file such tariffs with the Interstate ( nerce Commis- tesion, As far as he knew, he said, none ; of the Independents had the benefits of * the unpublished rate. BELGRADE, Bervia, Oct. 25.—M. Ser- gueleff, the Russian Minister to Servia, | is much irritated over an experience he peal ee i |had last night on the frontier between BServia and Hungary. The Minister CHINESE SEND WELCOME crossed the Danube to Semilin, 41: a} TO BATTLESHIP FLEET. svonte tegrade, ror the pirpone of ng his wife the ‘ J When returning he was detained and . Miceroys and Governors Wire Cor- roughly handled by the Austro-Hun- ®arien police, who ransacked his beg- dial Messages to Rear- gage. Admiral Emory. Pesce eat Bett was learned here uthoritatively to-da: . SHANGHAI, Oct. °%—Twan Fang, garian eat i Sami en the Viceroy of Nanking, as well as a sation of military preparations on the { mumber of other Viceroys and local part of Turkey and acting upon the ¢ governors, have sent cordial telegra advice of the powers, has decided to re- | of welcome to Real Admiral Emory, the lease to-morrow the 75,000 reservists who | commander of the second division of |have been held to the colors. It is the American battleship fleet, The Chi- hoped that this measure will reduce nese press association of Shanghai also|tie t between Sofa and Con- stantinople. SOFIA, Bulgar! has sent a message of greeting. Much tmportance {* attac! here to the coming of the Americar leships Oct. 2—The dect- sion of Bulgar isband {te reserves |and make @ financta! compensation to |Turkey was brought sbout by the pre entation of what was practically an by Great Britain, France and Rusela, who were supported by Germany and Italy Identical notes from the first named three Powers were presented Bulgarian Government the to How a Little Cub Beat Teddy Bear Out ultimatum to They dema: disbandment of the Bulgartar serves within three days and the p tee to send delegates to Constantinople fate the question of fina fon for Turkey. It was made omplience with these de- nda depended aii hope for the recog- nition of Bulgarian independence. In ied Ite willing: mands therein ——-———— MRS. PHIL LYDIG’S HAT. She Arrives From Europe With One a» Big as a Table Top, The Kron Pring elm, of the nen ne ed Philip Lydie. y her hue- ry g: Acent at of He . as big Seid | bear F Palmer On this pass Who, through a World Want Ad Leaped into s Made boast! tidy sad. And to think that © Pos:tion-Getting ” ! " cost vacation trip in Europe es Waa toro Oem Ags cost Powers ‘the comedian ‘The place on Bleecker street is a dow shade and hardware store. The proprietor there, according Mr. Leary, says that he closed his store last night at 10 o'clock and opened this morn- ing at 7. The registry book, containing the signatures of voters, {s kept in the place all the time for public inspection, and is known as the “public cop: There are copies in charge of and election officials No one noticed that the book had been torn Jast night and the exact time of the work ‘# not known, The hed not been looked at last night, the absence of the pages would not have been noticed this morning had not the police sergeant gone in to look the book. Although the poltce ha made an Investigation, they have been unable to find apy trace of the missing to the police pages “This 1s an attempt to save this pc |iceman,” said Supt. Leary, it will not succeed, There are too many other a feguards.” The mutilation gr stealing of a reg- Kk ts a felon: was bail tor ‘ation Frid Jefferson Mar- Court ‘this aft He | pleaded for @ reduction tn bail, saying | wife was dy! and one’ of his died only three weeks ago, but urt held that he was entitled to sets up the defense thet he nk on the day he registered He says he does not remem- at all. Nevertheless, ¢ duty that day ae Sees STOCKS DECLINE illegally ber registe was on p N BRK MARKET Union Pacific, Steel, Reading, Smelting and Copper Slow in Trading. gains were ck market t later the day rule but tn the a ree in the Twelfth Election District of the First Assembly District, from No. 128 Varick street, and that on the same | PEE PORERERS POE LESR cues of Ly vessels were wrecked! In storm and r the Th light, and she has served as the great GOLD MEDAL FOR WRIGHTS } pivotal mark in ail the ational Le Nraces tani recency FROM BRITISH AERO CLUB. % But the lightship herself has never 432 met disaster en by ter: 813 — of bert cables have always hel The sturdy Ittle vessel with her brick red the aerop See sides is as stanch to-day in seam and for thetr rem HONOR GEN. LEE IN CHINA. polt as she was on that day, in 1802, AMOY, Oct. 28—In 1898 a slip of vy when she rode out to the harbor's oe from Gen Lee's grave was planted in| mouth and was moored s of the Amoy Club, and this SERVICE BOARD CUTS FARE, Part of Great Improvement. e ALBANY, Oct Schenectady | na bronze tablet was set in an) The installation of “Si—Ambrose Railway Cc A ‘nt rock by American residents of Channel—Si" is only one of the improve- aission in the Bhertan lees: pnact bed Paine ments of the harbor entrance provide its rate of ym the gray Gen. ; E Ses pace on Ite inter- planted by Vice:|for in the Omnibus Lig ° y and More- 189 passed by Congress three $ What Telephone Users Can Do to Help the Service. ‘ A y ERE are three parties to a telephone J call—the person making the call, the Tele- phone Co: and the person called. It is not t that one, or two of the above parties do their work properly. The co- operation of all three is necessary. Telephone users may help the Telephone’ service— By consulting the tetephone directory be- fore making calls, thus obviating the many errors dueto calling numbers from memory. By speaking directly into the transmitter in a clear, distinct voice. By separating the figures of the telephone number when making a call, for example— Rector 1234, Rector one-two-three-four. By correcting the operator if she repeats the number called incorrectly. By holding the telephone receiver to the ear until the called party answers, or some report is given from the Central Office. By being ready to talk when the called party answers. As a matter of courtesy, the person making the telephone cal! should mot oblige the called party to wait his convenience. By answering telephone calls promptly. If there is unusual delay in answering the telephone, the operator may report “ D anewer” to the party calling, In telephone operating, the human element must be considered. The public is human, Telephone operators are human. The hastily spoken word and its inflection conveys whatever impression each gets of the other. Under such conditions, courtesy bo. on the part of the operating force and the public is like oil to ma- chinery—necessary to preven: friction. NEW YORK TELEPHONE TREN. ¥.&™. 0. TELEPHOWE COMPANY fallow cen Sale $20&$25Suits $F 75’ , New Fall Models _# e) Special Thursday ‘ Dressiest suit creations the Bedell stores have ever offered — literally crowded with Parisian. style touches, each suitreflectingthe fash: \) ion features of imported models, — Wi, (. ~ ES tow Sl Charming Empress Suits New Semi-Box E!fects , Colonial Innovations ff Z~ Stunning suits of rich materials, beautiful. lines and much tnm- ming. Long pointed coats, collar and collarless models. Attrac- tive backs with raised waist lines accentuated by satin or braid applique. Louis XVI. & pockets, attractive large cuffs. S$ Many buttons. Trimmed skirts cut just to clear the ground. Some strictly tailored models. Coats satin lined. Rich New Shades * DiArgent, heauvat: blue, Edison, smoke, Taupe, ; € amyrtie, mulberry, peacock, Catawha, navy, black and ever\ nex fashionable shade. Alterations FREE » SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 1 46h: {4th Sect = AY 4604462 Fulton Street BROOKLYN ¥ 64510651 Broad Street WARK LARGE stores, NE JAMES McCREERY & CO, ) 23rd Street ; 34th Street On Thursday, October the 29th LADIES’ HOUSE GOWNS. 7 Both Stores. French Flannel House Gowns, trim- med with Persian bands, 13.50 Silk Gowns,—Oriental and floral designs. 7.50 and 1150 Figured Blanket Robes.......3.50 NECKWEAR DEPARTMENTS, ! Both Stores. Ruching and Ruffing Neckwear Novelties in a great variety of designs and colors to match gowns, Neck Ruffs of plaited Maline, Nets and fancy Ribbons, Guimpes, Yokes and Sleeves of tucked Net, Novelty Laces and Real Irish Crochet, Jabots, Stocks and Collars of ruffled, plaited and tucked Net, also Lace and Irish Crochet Imported Novelties, Novelty Tuckings and Box Ruch- ings. ‘ | 23rd Siect od lt

Other pages from this issue: