The evening world. Newspaper, September 14, 1911, Page 18

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)

] ae. wet rman cetomed see OR, SHA WINS GOVERNORS INPLEAFOR VOTE Leader of Suffragists Reaches Spring Lake An Hour Late, but Gets a Hearing. sMANY WOMEN PRESENT. Governor of Nebraska Mak An Attack on U. S. Judge Sanborn. Wedd From a Staff Coremomtont of The Prrening World.) @PRING LAKE, N. J, Sept. 4&—An Parnest little woman in black, with @ @mall bit of a hat as the crown for her gray hair, to-day rescued the’ iesue of Feh and fashionable sets wearing the @reation of the latest and best modistes bad been figuratively sent back to the eradie and the pink tea by the humor- ous dlandishinents of the sterner sex Owing to the fact that Dr. Shaw was corded the privilege of appearing before the Governors, she was not able to get @o Spring Lake in time to address the @ession at tho fixed time, Mra. D. Brannan of New York and Mrs. A Ven Winkle of Newark sought to fill the gap. So, when the largest and most tin- portant, and most fashionably Kowr Aggregation of women that ever attend ‘& senvion of the Governors since the in- eeption of the conference movement saw the apparent finish uf the woman's dis- evasion with a few perfunctory remarks from printed documents, they were sore- fy distressed and thoroughly routed be- fore the supremacy of mere man. OR. SHAW REACHES THE SCENE JUST IN TIM Then at the crucial moment there @ame through the door of the assembly room the little woman in black. She sat tidily in @ rear seat for a few moments. Then Gov. Shafroth of Colorado came the rescue. He demanded a place for ron the programme. ‘The little woman in black came, she @poke and she conquered. Her address held the closest attention of the Gov- ernors. The women hung upon her every word. No more coherent speech has been made at any session than she made. Its temper was good, Its tone @ven and its humor unimpaired. “I thank you for permitting me to @ppear before you, gentlem she @aid. “This courtesy will take from thie question of woman's suffrage one of the great causes of complaint. You know that we are not permitted to be heard when wo ask the privilege of Presenting our views to men, So this courtesy will do much to prevent us from becoming suffragettes. “@ have read with close attention the Proceedings of this body of distin- @uished men, and let me say to you that Mo man in this jand has taken more In- terest in the vital public questions you ave discussed than 1. 1 have thought ‘we should have equal right with you to decide what men shall pass upon the @reat questions that interest alike both of us. “One of the gentlemen speaking yea terday said that the strength and powe of England is in fact that she sent he laws back to tie people for their ap- Broval. One of the gentlemen speaking to-day made a similar statement when fhe said that when an entire people ex- press their will it should be the law of the whole people.” Bhe defined the chief functions kovernment to be the protection of pe “Is there anything “that do the supreme isa sons and property. §n there questions,” she more concern men than women of the country? The Court has decided that a woman person and we are therefore int in the kind of justice that ts me to us. “It will take all of the people work- ing together all of the time to evolve the kind of government they ought to have. There are twenty million women fn this country earning their own liv- asked, they Double Your ~ Opportunities If it's a fair question, Would you take a half when you can get a whole? To be more explicit 414 Investment Oppor- tunities—"“Real Estate” and “Business Opportunity’ ads, — were _ individually advertised in THE WORLD yesterday— More Than Double the 204 in the Herald WHY NOT READ WORLD ADS. FROM DAY TO DAY AND LEARN OF THE GREAT- EST NUMBER AND VARIETY OF OPPORTUNITIES TO IN. VEST MONEY VANTAGE? TO YOUR AD- THE EVENING WORLD, Singers Whose Wedding Stirs Church woman's suffrage from the realm of Jokedom and made the conference of Governors heed the plea for vole e | Little woman was Dr, Anna Shaw of | New York | When she arrived she found her| handsomely gowned sisters in a rout Mke that of Napoleon's army at Water- Joo, Hundreds of her sinters from the be bay av | EMMA ERAMES. ©-4. DUPONT Metre. ing. The State has atepped In over the threshold of the home and taken f the mother her rights at home. State has taken from her the right to say what sort of labor the children shall perform. The State has taken the right! ~ to say what sort of food she shat buy,|the law regarding the and has even taken the right to say Commission. History, fact and pr what sort of doctors they shall call/ent are against his position. There when filness comes to the home, 'no case anywhere to be found that “When you give use the right to vote|UPRolds his dissent tn the opinions of you will find us as ready to serve our | other two Judges, and such @ posl- | country "as you have found us ready tion as he took in that c: may well to serve our homes, our churches and|* regarded as the source and origin the communities ‘in which we live’. (£F the clamor for the recall of Judges. The hall rang with applause, ‘The ite} “When court decisions disturb and tle woman in black, who came silently even override our entire scheme of gov- Andunnoticed in the gay throng, with [SfAMment it is ime to call & halt and her plain, sombre garb standing out ast Shout f & remedy to check & corporation that may, in the near prominently among thé handsome gowns Me the great narembiage, wan turnea| lure. develop into a galling tyranny if allowed to go unchallenged. from a mouse to a lloness by the magie] ut qo not know what other States may of her voice. do; 1 do not know what other States | Mrs. Brannan opened the earlier discus-|ingy think. But I can speak for my | sion after Gov. Noel, who presided, re-Jown State and say that she demands | ferred humorously to the Governors who the right and the privilege to be al- were not present as being afraid of the|iowed to do the things which her sov- inoue. ereignty, her independence and her “T have been doing a little sum,” she Hberty say she may do. an'* "ast year when we as’ d to “Bhe will respect courts and court appear before you allowed us three |dectsions, But as a condition precedent minutes, This year we have been al- to all this, she demands that court lowed thirty minutes, That ts the gain opinions stay well withif marked Unes of something.” and respect the sovereign power of Then she presented to the Governors |those States in the regulation and con- the argument of tho women as shown trol of thelr own purely Internal com- Thi State Railway in the published documents of the | merce, Women's Political Union of New York] “At all times it asks these courts to and Mrs, Van Winkle. do homage to the scheme of repre- In addition to the pleas for suffrage there was a discussion of the right of States to regulate traffic rates within sensative government, and let the courts remember that tyranny clothed tn the| garb of judicial ermine has features as their own boundaries, a big ttle |hideous us though in the hands of a) ‘brother to the Federal proposition of |ezar."* interstate commerce. Gov, Hadley of TWO GOVERNORS DEFEND THE ASTOR MARRIAGE. Col. John Jacob Astor found two champions to-day among the Governors present at the conference. discugsion of |H. Aldrich of Nebraska and Gov. Fred- | Missourl and Goy, Aldrich of Nebraska spoke on this subject, MISSOURI'S GOVERNOR DEFENDS STATE RIGHT TO REGULATE. Both Governors in th holr bids for the melight." | day broke the entire ist from 1 to 3 Gov. Chester | and of net changes as compared with yesterday's important problems for transportation|erick W. Plaisted of Maine, in inter- HY oe. control said things that will vitally ins | Views, declared it was nobody's business Copper... * terest the big men of the financial world] What the Colonel did in his marital |4%- Ger, © Foun. pants) nd which will also Interest the little | tangle. 4 Can ot +~ lows Whose dally bread depends upon] “I am glad that one young and rich| 4B. {x* H bd g the prosperity of larger interests, Gov, ]™an, @ man worth $150,000,000, had the | Hosomoiite, 2 3 Hadley in part said nerve to go alioad and marry the girl,” | 4% Sm & Ht, = 3 “The question of right of States to] Said Gov. Plaisted. “In the face of the| Am. Sudar , ma regulate within. th lis tie rates | opposition to his match and in the storm| 4, T@ & Ce 26 of transportation of railroad companies |of church protest he did just what a| Anacopda Mining : oo engaged in interstate commerce now] Man of real courage ought to do, and 1| Ateh., T. & 8, F + % pending bef reme Court is in] glad he had the nerve to do it.” puseve ¢ =1 my opink ve most important, if| Gov. Aldrich was sitting nearby, He|Brookim RT regs not the m Important, question with |Joimed in the comment and went stronger ere, Leather -— 4% which that Court has had to deal in| + the defense of the Colonel, ga + $ recent years, There is nothing that we It was an outrage for the papers to] ©, Mo & St. P ret | , nothing that we wear, no part of [Print the stuff they did about Cov | Ch at » hor that shelters us but that its] A8tor’’ he sald, “What he did with re- 1 rape cost ts ed by the question of| spect to his marriage was purely nts| pis, Sec tue” transportation, own business and the press and the pud- | Fr t % | Inv of far-reaching consequences |2© had nothing to do with ft, The] By eaeetrre, = Ve of a decision that the rik ytix imter-| Preachers who started this fight wore] Inier-Met.. + & state rate: 4 er 4 in nothing except a lot of notoriety seek-| {11 Grate * + % terstate no lot 0 Jers the papers ought to have ignored | Inter, Pump % CHURCH BEGINS NEW QU NTO EAMES MARRAGE {Archbishop of Paris Wants | Proof De Gogorza Was Single Man in Eyes of Canon Law. oo | Unioss the wirelens has already broken the news, Mme, Emma Fames, the opera singer, and her husband, Emilio de Gogorza, will learn when they arrive in New York on the steamer La Lor+ raine Saturday morning that Arche b Amette of Paris has ordered a | new !nquiry Into the elrcumstances that | preceded thelr marriage by a Roman Catholic priest on July 12 ‘The inquiry will revolve around M. ae Gogorza, and has as ite object to deter- mine whether he was a single man in the eyes of the Church, the presump- tion belng that If hie marriage to the first Mme. de Gogorsi only @ civil proceeding he stands excused, but if it had the sanction of Holy Church the status may be different. ‘The following communication from the archbishopric of Paris has been re- celved by the Rev. Thomas J. Camp- bell, editor of America In reply to the letter which you addressed to Monseigneur the Arch- bishop, during his absence, on the subject of the Gogorsa-Eames mar- riage I can tell you that Madam Eames was free according to canon law, She had not been baptised and had been married to an unbaptised person, In becoming a Catholic she availed herself of the Pauline privi- Jeke, procuring a dispensation from interpellation, granted to her by the Holy Office June &, 1911, As regards M. de Gogorza, I was under the im- preasion that he was a single ma Your interest has reawakened my tention. The priest who blessed the marriage informed that M. de Gogorza had indeeu contracted « pre- vious marriage, but a purely civil one, and that he regarded {t as null, 1 have ordered a new inquiry in the matter. The Eames-De Gogorza marriage took place in Paris last summer, after two years of rumors and after the two sing- ers had often denied that anything of the sort was contemplated. WALLSTREET. Direct selling for Berlin and London, coupled with increased local itquidation at the opening of the stock market to- points, Pronounced weakness was man- ifested in Union Pacific and Steel—iead- ers of the current slump, Exceptionally heavy dalings in Steel drove the price from 66 1-2 to nearly 65 before support could stem the reaction. Union Pacific, during the morning, offered practically no resistance to liquidation, which car- ried the stock down to 1571-4 from o closing yesterday of 169 6-8. Other spec- wlative features, In sympathy with the weakness displayed in the aforesail shares, sold off from 1 to $ points, At mid-day the selling pressure was ex- hausted, or at least temporarily lifted, and stocks began to recover that became vigorous in the final hour. Reading, Southern Pacific, St, Paul and Steel managed to show small gains at the close, after having recovered all their early losses in the late rally The day's turnover amount most a million shares. to al- The Closing Prices. ‘Today's highest, lowest and last prices of stocky final figures are as follows: Kon City South.) Te th | NEVADA RAISES HER VOICE FOR Heved that the ne will au tain this con vid, 0} REFORM IN DIVORCES, ean foros hat | From Nevada, where the Reno divore sults in the effect upon State's! fou the agitation on the subject | rights and authority? 5 uniform divorce law, volced by “A few years ago Secretary Root in| The Evening World, has brought notice @ notable speech in Philadelphia warned isker Loddie, whose | the people of the several States that un i appearan wired t less they f for a reform in the lawa that into workl-wide ers thu | of « grad . Hby t f divorce laws ts er f 1 em inj g that | the | ed to sta Phar ‘ * 1 anxious for | the ¢ i | Ave nfavorable com. The rtat tend is stin | much 4 harmful.” ATTACK ON FEDERAL JUDGE BY| W GOVERNOR OF NEBRASKA, ATER CURE BY HOLD-UPS. Aldcioh's woahoh’ Wan An as | View "Kick at Robbery, ne called the “nutocratc| but Objects to Ducking in Can: iL, Sanborn of the Eighth Shae f Newark went to the t ¢ ‘ Aldi ta walking ned his om Judge Sanborn ened the rope decisions of that Judge in} “w ret of a town is this?” he railroad Ane asked The old. » on aren't satth- said Gov, Aldrich, “the learned | fied t iup a ma because he ad had the same experience | !a# und take a RC with railway con at the | Wat bney from him, but people have had with certain courts in| ‘ey rub throwing him in the nullifying State ¢ roment he mignt| “0%. & Nerwand. You it did sober me | 1p, but T would nat per up my o' |have been warranted in assuming the| Why waded bate seco aha position that he did in @joining the| ‘The police promised [Btate officers from the enforeemeng of mater wali Lo | Mo,, M | Heading (From the Cleveland Plain Dealer, A local victim of street car’ pick- pockets resolved to get even, He put in his pocketbook containing nothing Jdut a sip of paper, on which was | written “Tis is where you lose, fellow ‘Then he climbed into a pay-enter car and waited. Twenty minutes passed and nothing happe Twenty more minutes fitted by. The sleuth left the car then, having assured himself that his purse was safe. He repaired to a safe place and looked things over, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1911. ‘GARBAGE PAIL HAT, HANERSTENS NARRGESTIS UPPROSECUTOR Niagara Authorities May Pro- ceed on Charges of Perjury Against Couple. WITH CONTENTS, IS FORCING FASHION So Says Mrs. Healey, Who Takes Outfit to Court as Exhibit. | NIAGARA PALLS, N. Y., Sept. Me In contracting a marriage here on Sept. 4, Abraham Lincoln Hammerstein, son of Oscar Hammerstein, the New York impressario, and Miss Mirian Henriques jew York City, known on the stage Marcel the Oriental Rose," violated, it 1# alleged, the laws of the church and the State, The Episcopal Church law ts offended in that they were divorced per- sons; the law of the State in their affidavit before City Clerk Hogan that neither had before been married. The case haa been called to the attention of Distriot-Attorny Ackerson, who, it te aid, will awk for their arrest on charges of perjury. Miss Henriques and Hammerstein were married by the Rev, Dr. Coleman Bryam of the Chureh of the Epiph- any, to whom they represented that they had never before been married, though it Is said there fs some question as to Hammerstein's supposed di- vorce from his first wife, who was Ethel aritton, was effectiv Miss Hendiques, it te allexed, further violated the Ja idence as the Tower Hotel, tht city. —_————_ NEAR-NEWS !S NO NEWS, EVEN IF SHIP NEWS. But If Detectives Who Searched Liners for “Con” Man Starkloff Had Found Him—What? Detectives spoiled a good newspaper | story on a dull day by carefully search- MISHAP, SAYS NEIGHBOR. Talking About Kitten, When Somehow Buckets of Water and Swill Were Upset. In charging that Mra. Filzabeth Miller had emptied a pail of garbage over her head to-day, Mra. May Healey of No. 2008 Lexington avenue took the evidence to Harlem Court with her and displayed it to Magistrate Appleton. The evidence WAS 80 conclusive that a summons was issued for Mrs. Miller, and within a few minutes she was in court with nearly all the residents of the tenement at the Lexington avenue address. “I was washing my windows on the third floor front,’ sald Mra. Healey, “when this woman, who lives above me, dumped a pail of dirty water on my head and then dumped a pail of garbage on me. She is Chuck Conners’s sister.” COURT CUTS SHORT LANGUAGE SOME COPIOUS. “Tt ts true,” admitted Mrs. Miller, “that Iam Chuck Conners’s sister, and I want to say that Chuck !s @ good man and this woman's husband has left her thirty-four times this year and isn’t liv- ing with her now, she being with her father and mother, and her father's name {s O'Brien, and he told me this morning that he had « pull with Percy Wie eR HERA PAB tO Deon: |ing the Cedric of the White Star Line Halt!” cried the Magistrate. “‘Stop!|@"@ La Savole of the French Line be- Coane! |fore those vessels sailed to-Gay. The detectives were looking for E. A. Starkloff, a confidence man of interna- tional notoriety, who got away when his partner, George W. Post, was arrested in Chicago a few da} ‘ The detectives did not find Starkloff. If they had found him, there would have been a good piece of news to serve to an eager publlc. Consequently, in not finding Starkloff, the detectives utterly spoiled sald good piece of news. However, such {s life in @ great city. ——=———— ELIZABETH EVANS DEAD. American Authoress Had Lived Abroad Many Years. AIBLING, Upper Bavaria, Sept. 16.— Elizabeth Edson Evans, the American authoress, died here to-day. She wat born in Newport, N. H., in 1832, and had resided in Europe since 1870. With apparent difculty Mrs. Miller cut off her flow of language. Then en- sucd @ hearing that took more than an hour. Finally it was admitted that Mrs. Healey had involuntarily contributed the contents of a water bucket and a garbage pall. ‘But it was an accident,” explained Mrs. Miller. “Yesterday my neighbor, Mrs. Carrie Engel, who lives next door | to me, gave me @ little kitten. It ts a female kitten, Judge, and has no sense | yet. “I was washing my windows this morning and Mrs, Engel leaned out of her window and asked me how the kit- ten was. ‘Why,’ I says, ‘Mra, Engel, her habits are awful,’ and then I went on to describe what trouble I had had with the kitten, ‘She ought to have her mother with her to look after her,’ says Mra. Engel to me- SHE WAS THAT SURPRISED IT ALL HAPPENED. “Just then Mrs, Healey stuck her head out the window below and says, Don't} ™ you talk about me, you Chinatown tm-|W migrant,’ she roys, when I wasn't talk-|!ams) Gibson. ing about her at ali, but about tae| Ward Payson Evan: kitten, a native of Remsen, N, Y. The two have “Judge, I was so surprised I upset the|!!ved in Europe since 1870, Mra, Evans pall of water I was washing windowa | contributed verse and prose to the new: with and I guess some of it hit her, | Papers and magazines, and her books Then I went to empty my garbage and | included the novels “Laura, an Amer- just as I opened my door who should |!can Girl,” “Transplal ted Manners" and come bursting in but Mrs, Healey and| “Confession,” and “A History of Re- her father, Mr. O'Brien, They knocked |ligions,” “The Story of Kaspar Hause) the garbage out of my hand and|"The Story of Louis XVII. of France’ some of it got accidentally spilled.” and "The Christ Myth.” ‘ans was a daughter of Dr. lard Putnam and Lucia Field (Will- In 1888 she married Ed- the author, who te RTA Oe proerid Mrs, Healey, ———— “she turned it up: a head RECORGecieT eon ee SHIPPING NEWS. After arguments, recriminations and | more explanations, Magistrate Appleton ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. arranged a peace pact. Mrs. Miller {8 | Sun rises,, 6,39/Sun sets,, 6,13|Moon rises,, 9.37 not to wash her windows until after Oct, THE TIDES. The Only Exclusive Men’s Store il in New York Representing The House of Kuppenheimer i 167-169 East 125th St. \ (OUR ONLY STORE) | Announce the arrival of the New Fall iH and Winter Clothes for Men and | Young Men from the House of Kuppenheimer, ranging in price from $18 to $40 There was a slip of paper, just as he had wrapped It up, But when he opened ft, the thing had a new sentence "§ Te paid; te for the Kuppenhelmer Fell and Winter Styie Book. | BOY PLAYING INDIAN IS SERIOUSLY BURNED. Johnnie McFall Is Sorry Now That He Didn't Go to School“ To-Day. The first thing seven-y -old Jolnnle McFall sald when the pain from his jem Hos- I hadn't As soon as his mother told him he needn't go to school he jumped into his Indian sult and put on his head-feath- ere. Then he went whooping out of his house, at No. 2% West One Hundred and Forty-sixth street, and filled the block with his valiant battle cries. With two companions, younger than himself, he went on a hunt for “the The boys armed themselves ‘andies and followed the trai! which led to the cellar of No. 21% on the same block, and into the deep cav- erns, otherwise known as bins. Just aa Johnnie stepped within he stumbled and the Hwhted candle set fire to the Indian suit. Johnnie ran to the yard, screaming with pain, but clutehing t mhted candle, Abraham Sleipol put out the blaze. ‘The boy's injuries, while severe, are not fatal. Dr, Becker took the boy to the hospital. REVOLVER CAUSES BOY’S ARREST ON BROADWAY. Children’s Court Gets Its First Case Under New Sullivan “Dan- gerous” Weapon Law. ‘The first case of carrying weapons under the new Sullivan law to come in the Children’s Court presented to Magistrate Hoyt to-day when Samu Richarison, aged fourteen, of No. 7 West Seventy-second street, was ar- raigned for carrying a 38-calibre revolv- He was arrested last night at Broad- nd Seventy-second street The boy saki that he tn a waiter am- ployed in a Seventy-eecond street board- Ing-house, and that yesterday the cook's husband caMed on her. During visit there was a quarrel and the man Grew a revolvor. ‘The cook took the weapon and put her husband out, #tv- ing the pistol to the boy to take to her home at No. 188 West Sixty-elghth atreet. Richanison says he put the revolv: in his inside pocket, and when at Beventy-second street and Broadway the wind blew hie coat open and the revolver fell to the street Patrolman Jones of the West Sixty-eighth street station saw It and arrested him. Hoyt remanded the boy until id directed the agents of to Children’s Society story. r.) “Oh, mamma, John doean't love ma any more’ “Nonsense, child. What's happened?” ‘When he came home last night he aidn't kiss me. And he kept edging away from me whenever I'd go near him. “Did he, indeed? My dear, he'd had & glass of beer and didn’t want you to 4-4-4. emell it. It probably didn't hurt him at all, but he wae afraid of you, Don't make any mistake, doughter—if he hai loved you any more, he'd have kissed you without hesitation. You've the | investigate the| 20,000 IN FLIGHT = WHILE LAVA FLOOD FROMETNA GROWS ———— Residents of Two Towns | Forced From Their Homes | as Volcano Spreads Ruin. PANIC AND SUFFERING, Rushing Mass of Lava Fifty Feet High Covers Area Third of Mile Wide. CATANIA, Stetly, Sept. 14.—The 20,000 inhabitants of Castigilone and Fran- cavilla turned their backs on thetr homes to-day, fleeing before the ad vancing flood of lava from Mount Etna. Both towns are threatened with de- struction. The harge from the craters and new fissures increases in volume, The main 1 pouring dows the northeastern side of the voleano hae inade its way st y about and over the railway and invaded the valley of the Alcantara To-day the front, fifty feet high and a third of a mile whie, broke over a long declivity and gatherl: ; velocity forced the peasant dw in its path to make a hurried retreat. It spread through and burned the orange and lemon groves and engulfing the many od. villa within three lanrings in the neiehbo: ut off the water supply of sev When the stream y miles of Castiglione and Francavilla the people collected their portable property and with their farm animals and house: hold pets made “or the hix laces JOSEPH P, McKUGH & CO. Special Sale Now Going On: Second Floor Salesroom 250 ROOM LOTS OF FINE FOREIGN WALL PAPERS Values $1 to $4; reduced for this Sale to just 25c a piece. APARTMENT HOUSE OWNERS AND MANAGERS (Specially Invited to Call) will find these Wail Papers arranged in lots.and tagged f QUICK AND EASY INSPECTION. | ware Early Selection Adtotsed. Q WEST 42d ST., at Sth AVE, Opposite New Public Library. JAMES McCREERY & CO. 23rd Street 34th Street On Sale Friday and Saturday, September the 15th and 16th MEN’S HALF HOSE. 1 Both Stores. Pure Thread Silks with cotton soles, heels, toes and top: Blue, Grey and Green. 3s. Black, Tan, Navy 35¢ per pair 6 pairs for 1.90 Fine Gauze Lisle Thread with double Girls’ Rainproof WOMEN'S CLOAK DEP’TS. A large variety and Street Garment: and materials. berized Material. M 23rd Street Brown and Red. Sizes 6 to 14 years. 1, and she ‘ato avotd emptying her gare | cE kom Water, bage when Mrs. Healey ts around, On |¢ % eh Om H i Oct. 1 Mrs. Henley 1s to move trom No. | $22, ee BSS 88 spliced heels, soles and toes. 25¢ per pair 2098 Lexington avenue. | Hen Gi 142 100 712 81s usual price 3$¢ oe + | PORT OF NEW YORK, MEXICAN DIES ON SHIP. Tanivan Senor Gamboa, Former Diplomat, Sinise wate isp “orien Nomninodd one itoiaa’ Port Antone , Was Seeking Heatth, sided eet vit) tte | JUNIORS’ SUIT DEP'TS. 1m Both Stores, rok BOARD THE STRAMSIUD MEX. INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, ‘O, en route Vera Cruz to New York, DUE TO-DAY Sept. 14. (via United Wireless). Senos | Pramamare, Valencia Hla Cun, Port Antone Juniors’ Suit in two and three piece Jose Maria Gamboa, formerly assistant | Stork ctu Porte ate hs models. Made of Navy Blue Cheviot, Secreta o tate of Mexic: and P AMO. . . t, : . Mexican Minister to Argentine, died at | Almirante, i . trimmed with satin and braid. Sizes 12 1 o'clock this morning on board the Mex- a foo. ‘The immediate cause of his death OUTSOLE: 0 SSA Maren to 16 years. 15.00 is not known, ALL AY, : : "He had been in ill health for some Juniors’ one-piece Regulation Sailor time and was going to New York 4 ; . 1 fie hone ot baine Denahted’ vy the croiee | ommnagen. Kalai" Hniinck Suits. Made of Navy Blue Serge. Sizes climate, ; : bar ay 14 and 16 years. 12.00 Capes in Navy Blue, 3-75 In Both Stores, of Evening, Carriage s in the latest models On Sale Friday, September the r5th English Coats of double-faced Fabrics, for Street and Automobile wear. 18.50, 22.50 and 24.50 Rain Coats of Imported plaid back Rub- annish cut. 15.50 and 22.50 JAMES McCREERY & CO. 34th Street

Other pages from this issue: