The evening world. Newspaper, October 6, 1911, Page 20

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ny a Se Fc meme Cl ce ed wees amen FERSEY ITV PUTS. Mess LaForeteto ONAIRSTOSHON SHESABIGTOHN Makes a Holiday, Displays Lots of Bunting and Gives Great Parade. PROUD OF HER GROWTH No Longer a Mere Ferry Station, but Now Able to Stand Alone. Fie was Jersey City's day to prove fte strength and independence. At 1.30 o'dlock this afternoon a general busi- Nese and trade parade three miles long started over an eight mile route through streets that were garlanded with flags and bunting and Jined with applauding thousands ‘On account of the parade, which was arranged by the Jersey City Board of Trade, working with Mayor H. Otto ‘Wittpen, the day was made a city holiday, and all the children of the wchools were out in their freshest and neatest clothes. In the parade were regiments of brightly decorated delivery wagons @rawn by horses; nearly as many au- tomobile wagons and the 30 auto) bites owned by moi Hudson County Automobile Association. Interspersed among them were great floats typifying Jersey City’s advance from being a mere ferry station for New York to a great American city manding easily on its own foundation. At Hudson County Park on Hudson Boulevani a creat reviewing stand had been erected. There stood Grand Mar- shall Willard D. Fiske, a major of the Geventh Regiment of New York; Mayor ‘Wittpen, Mayor Hausling of Newark, Mayor Gonzales of Hoboken, Mayor Cain of Bayonne, Mayor Tenney of Harrison nad Mayor Mohn of West Ho- boken, and Col, R. G. Smith of Say- ville, L. L, who was once colonel of the Fourt New Jersey Regiment. @OME OF THE FEATURES OF THE 31G PARADE. The procession was headed by a do- tachment of mounted police and the Fourth Regiment Band. Features among the fipats were three representing the Salvation Army. One of them was a living exhibit—a man who has spent eighteen years in prison and who 1s now working for the army among ex-con- viots. He wore his prison stripes and “ owed cheerfully to all who culled at im, @ir Cave Brown Cave, the former cow- boy, did mild bucking horse and roping stunta up and down the line. The wind- mill with which a Jersey City man took prizes in Belgium was borne along in tumph Cy ‘As the procession approached the re- viewing stand a bomb was sent hurtling aloft from a mortar. When it burst with a mighty report it released a Parachute which supported a big Amert- ean flag. Finance Commissioner John P. Lan- @rine/has made arrangements for a fireworks exhibit to-night which will include 200 set pieces as well as numer- ous bombs and rockets, ——_— LOVE OF PRETTY CLOTHES LANDS GIRLS IN PRISON. Two Minors Sent to Reformatory After Being Convicted of Thefts — Judge Lectures Them. Two pretty girls. both minora, were sent to the State Reformatory for Wom m at Bedford, N. ¥., to-day by Judge |, Warren W. Foster, of General Bessions | = Court. Love of finery and beautiful clothes was the cause of their being sentenced to indefinite terms, which will probably amount to three years each, Dorothy @ Palmer, aged nineteen years, Was accused of having visited « Fifth avenue department store, Sept. 22, and represented herself to be Mra. John K. Lowell of Yonkers, who t# 4 neigh- bor of her parents. She got goods upon he strength of the misrepresenation. mother pleaded for her. Jane Barry, nineteen years old, who came to New York from Portland, Ore., to go upon the stage, was the other girl, She failed to get the theatrical Job, but did become @ saleswoman, Her Offense was stealing a $176 diamond pin from Ernest Wbi of Richmond Hill “Your sin bas found you out,” sald Judge Foster, addressing the girls. ‘Phe course you young women have Jeadr to death and a apeedy end. “It le @ good thing that you are here today. Your downward career has I sincerely hope you will nd reform. > WILLING TO GO TO JAIL. Lawyer Won't Pay Wife Alimony and Sey Up to Her A lawyer representing Mra, § Brill, of No. 30 West Ninety-sey street/ Manhattan f tee Garretison in Brooklyn, Garretwon a Brill was | had anyt had no opp: application decision. “Is your a desye t alimony? ter, “It Mrs. Bi send me to Jail tt 18 up to her # answer Found Dying Thom unoonsei street, a | morning, ved frov ‘| when this shoe is worn, THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1911, FOLA, & LA FOLLETTE. 4 Announcement has fust Washington of Fola La Follette, th: of Senator and R lette, to George Middle wright and n is at La Follette h the marriage will next few weeks, Miss La Follette has recently returned from a tour of the capitals of Europe, eon made tn agement of Miss actress, daughter ert M. La’ F on of this clty, ne writer, Mr nt a guest at the capital, where place within the years, /ed New York Man at the Play- matized ‘Candles’ He 1s a grad- versity and has contributor to maga- z He has done h literary and dramatic eriticism, wolng. Her ing woman y Mackay’s Tt is understood that will not Interfere with her “The and DUKE OF CONNAUGHT SAILS TO BEGIN RULE IN CANADA. Little Ceremony on His Leave Tak- ing From England, but People Give Him Big Send-Off. LONDON, Oct. 6—T naught left Liverpool, w! evening for € post as Governor This ie the first ¢ that a member of the roya) family has been made vice- roy of one of governing colonie ment is in ac pressed wish of the late King © and the ap ce with the ex- he Duke's brother, award, It was be- who Is extremely ple of Engiand, much to strengt Canada and the mother co pular with the peo- ie to do between vate, but a hug station and send-off. ‘The p Duke and Duchess, Mi Major M. CG. Lowther, w of the Speaker of the He mons; Comptroller of Capt. Rivers Bulkele d at the hustastic ted of the Secretary, 3 a brother se of ( Hou er, Duchess In-watting, | Bunion Room Shoe FOR WOMEN (with Coward Extension Heel) No pressure on the bunion Ab- solute comfort over the most sensitive joint; easy across the ball of the foot. A shoe that fits snug and close about the heel, under the arch and over the instep The Coward Extension Heel ste: s the ankle and supports a wouk arch, Made also with the thin and flexible Coward Slipper Sole, for indoor wear. Coward Arch port Shoe and Coward Ext ntieel have been made by James 5. Coward, in hie | Custom Dept, for over 30 years, fhe police reported there was notaing euapicious bout the case, 4 a tz SOLD NOWHERE ELSE JAMES S. COWARD (NKAM WARREN wxKE ER) | etait WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS —— Duke of Con-| + known to the the who | was » has been eritte Good on hot meats, Good on cold meats. | Fine i for 613 Engl & upper west sido as “Paddy early ™ shot in his saloon at No, assailants were mem- Siviers tae Zann oot operas] Wl 125th-126th Street on Fifth Avenue, New York ly 1 of ptomaine ing, has not been told of his flavoring soups and gravies, EDDY \ r/) S ee ish El 264-274 Greenwich St., N. We | Made by B Pritchard, s31 SpringSt NY Jonal body and enter| control,” said one of the Jargest em- with the ax locals [Ployers. “But we dare not aocede to pre ° thelr domand that we repudiate the tn- nd frend “ne ternational organization. Jf we aid that : we would precipitate a strike among all ix months off and|the aliled trades, pressmen, compositors | 8 are confident of de-/and proof-readers. So we have to let administration, the|the untonists fight thelr sure, among themselves.” sald one of the strike| A meeting of the six locals tnvolved ind we go batt lin the fight will be held to-night at then? We reallae wo are 1200 BOOKBINDERS ‘STRKEIN ROW FOR CONTROL OF UNION |Locals Call on Employers {Ol weiners th battle out | “But if the ers to-day," how witiout the where will be between the | that uniss thir Fourteenth street, to constder the new | turn In the situation caused by the the paying of {njunction resraining strike benefits. rk of Bayonne, » hia home, No. 49 7 third street. Mr. Hamilton was once a rch man. When he returned from ined on | Ue, ¢ war he traded with Travers er, | & Jerome In Wall street. He accumus onal pody lated and lost a fortune of half a # made vacant by the| million dollars. He entered New Jer- filled within @ reason-| «ey politics and was almost immedi- on given to the em-| ately made City Clerk, Mr, Hamilton's le caused by @ stroke of r the International, {Gath was cau and fifty non-union | paralyals. Repudiate Agreement With | preme | International. he the su-| C! st Thirty> | Twelve hundred pookbin strike tn the city to-day |row between the local unions and the [International Bookbinders’ Union which wtarted at the last blennial oo a vent and a half ago. Ost have already been brought teen The y from out of town, prepared Sweetn “ : to go to w (From the [the real object t# to compel the em-| ““Our sympathies are with the striking| A sentimental w |ployers to repudiate thelr agreements men, who helpless in @ fight for’ bill Into @ love letter, Buckley Newhall Co’s., BLUE RIBBON Pe, This handsome couch is made with a solid frame of quartered oak, highly rubbed and polished. A very shapely and durable piece of furniture, up- holstered either plain or tufted in the best of Boston Leather. Has thirty- six coil springs, is thirty inches wide and eighty inches long. Our Special $18.98. $1.50 Down, 50c Weekly BUCKLEY-NEWHALL CO. Brooklyn Store: 929 Broadway “Clothes from Maker to Wearer’’: Moe Levy Lands a Prize $35 to $50 Suit and 3) Overcoat Fabrics at Not a sale, just a Chance that came my way to do something for my $20 patrons that makes the ordinary “Big Twenty” look like a plugged nickel in comparison. These are not $20 suits at all. Never were, and never will be. All they have in common with anybody’s $20 suit is the price. Broadway never marks these values less than $35 to $50—-and I couldn’t mark them less than $30 myself if I had bought the goods regular. But I didn’t; not by a long way. . A foreign mill needed money. They offered me these fabrics at a price. I bought them—made them up in my latest English and American models—tailored them as well as any $50 custom work, and marked them $20 each. I can afford to do it, so don’t worry about me. Only, get busy. Values like this don’t last anywhere. My & Sei Suit or Overcoat for $15 Guaranteed of course, isn’t a chance offering, and is here to stay. It’s a value I've established, and I’m prouder of it than a peacock is of its tail. And why shouldn’t I be? It’s the greatest suit and overcoat value ever invented, and I defy any clothier to show you its equal this side of $25, My range of fabrics for this Fall and Winter includes those popular shaggy English effects, cheviots, tweeds in the warm Autumn browns, grays, blues and those greenish mixtures you see on swell dressers. Ask to see my English models in this $15 line. Fifth avenue has nothing on them for style. Doing things in a big way; manufacturing everything myself, with no fancy store rents to pay, makes it possible for me to give these extraordinary values, Moe Levy 119-125 Walker St., New York Open Evenings Saturdays TH 9 o' Clock THI 11 o*Clock (My Only Store) 3 Blocks East of Broadway Shopping is a tedious task at best. Why not give the wife and daughter a treat by ordering one of the “BARGAIN” AUTOMO- BILES ADVERTISED FROM DAY TO DAY IN THE WORLD? Then they will hanging.” AND SO WILL YOU! DOWN ONS 75: #7 DOWN ont LOOL? EN SATURDAYS EVENINGS » saved from “strap- Dy 847-1191 AVE: 120" wie seen ae Stern! Brofhers are showing very complete assortments of distinctive Fall and Winter Models in Girls’ and Juniors’ Apparel “ made of the highest class and most fashionable materials, Suits of Brosdcloths, Vetours, Cheviots, Diagonal W. effects In all the Autumn colorings, manne ond aoenaisarsd pre Dresses for party and Informal wear, of Dresden Chiffon, Henriettes, Velveteens, Serges and Repps, many being copies of foreign models. Coats of Chinchilla, Zibelines, Reversible Blanket Clot Chevi Broadcloths, Rough Novelty Weaves, Velveteens and coraarore’ mt Also for To-morrow, Saturday, an Extraordinary Offering of Coats, Suits and Dresses SUITS OF SERGES, CHEVIOTS AND ROUGH NOVELTY bBo Ati eh in the betel shades, mannish cut and demi-tail , id three-piece styles, tol yan, “a 516.85, 22.50 DRESSES OF VELVETEEN, for Dress Wear in wine, brown, green, blue and black, with Irish lace collar and beaded ribbon sash, 6 to 14 years, at 14.75 SCHOOL DRESSES OF SERGE, of Imported Striped Serge, 6 to 14 years at 7.75 ose hi REVERSIBLE BLANKET CLOTHS, light face backs, ral model Pe ee ce Siete 11.75, 17.85 in all desirable colors, with collar and cuffs Infants’ and Children’s Wear Later lnipordaiions have been received the past week of Coats, Caps, Hats, Bonnets, Dresses, Afghans and Pillow Cases. Also complete lines of Misses’ Imported and Domestic Underwear, Wrappers, Dressing Sacques and Colored Skirts. Saturday, an Important Sale of Children’s Coats, of navy blue cheviot, flannel lined and of brown and navy $3. 75 corduroy, in sizes from 18 months to 5 years, at > x 6.25 Chinchilla Coats in grey and navy; also Tan Polo Reversible Coats, sizes, 2 to 5 years, Beaver Hats, in navy, brown, white and red, trimmed with ribbon, « *2,.50, 4.95 Imported Hand-made Garments WE eel rcatewonn the ao bir rep Shs es ROE Waist Skirts, . 65 hand scalloped; sizes 6 months to 5 years, Boys’ & Young Men’s Clothing in correct models for present and Winter wear, made of the best class and most stylish fabrics, NORFOLK, DOUBLE-BREASTED, SAILOR & RUSSIAN SUITS, BOYS’ FIRST LONG TROUSER SUITS, YOUNG MEN'S SUITS, TOP COATS, REEFERS, RAIN COATS AND OVERCOATS. To-morrow, Unusual Values in BOYS’ NORFOLK AND DOUBLE-BREASTED SUITS, in gray and brown mixed Cheviots; at $6.50 Value $8.50 BOYS’ NORFOLK AND DOUBLE-BREASTED SUITS, 8. 5 extra Knickerbocker trousers, in the newest famy mixtures, ° 0 Value $10:50 BOYS’ OVERCOATS, eca of plain and fancy coatings a in- chillas, sizes 24 to 9 years, at $6.50, 8.50 Values $8.50 to 10.50 BOYS’ SCHOOL OVERCOATS, in the newest fancy mixtures, sizes 10 to 18 years, at 9.75 Value $12.50 BOYS’ FIRST LONG TROUSER SUITS, in fancy mixed Cheviots, 14 to 18 years, $9.75, 13.50 Values up to $16.50 YOUNG MEN'S SUITS, at 14.50, 18.00 in fancy Grey and Brown Mixtures, Values up to $22.00 sizes 35 to 39 inch chest measure, BOYS’ AND YOUNG MEN’S FURNISHINGS, HATS AND CAPS Autumn Styles in Women’s Walking « Dress Shoes are now being displayed on the Third Floor of the New Building, in all the fashionable Leathers and Fabrics, ine cluding attractive models of Colored Suede Tops, with Patent Leather and Black Russia Calf Foxing, Evening and Boudoir Slippers of Satin, Velvet, Patent Leather, Vici and Dull Kid, Gold Kid and Cloth, Attention is called to a Special Offering of Satin Slippers in ten evening shades, at $3.50 Weet 23d and 22d Streets HE Sunday World's Want Directory makes more “Offers of Positions” than any other two mediums in the universe. A A NPS RUS REI Si PEP TEE TCT TST a ah a ee teeta see

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