The evening world. Newspaper, November 1, 1911, Page 8

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)

TT WL = eal “AVMEDFORGHNA TOR WH TAKS. © —ANSFORPEAE ONPEAERNTES === Omesa EW PREMIER “Yuan Shi Ki Will Go to Camp | President in West Virginia | nny rorer'totie treaties in nC of the Rebels in Negoti- ating for End of War, MORGANTOWN, W. Va, Nov. l= the coming session |} of Congress, President Taft has planned PEKING, Nov, 1.—Yuan-Ahi-Kat hae been appointed Premier of China and he will organize a new Cabinet es soon | As he assumes his post. Prince Ching, whom Yuan: ceeds, will continue his Premier and have as Premiers Na Tur. and Hse Shih Chang, who up to the present have been Vice- Presidents of the Cabinet. Prince Ching has been made President of the Privy Council Hsu Shih Chang Vice- ‘ampatgn tn behalf Kwangtung province, of Hupeh and Hunan which office Yuan St when he was rece In the redistribut! n of oMces the Yuan Bb! Kal, in wh he be appointed actin forth his immediate He proposed, he said, to stop the ag- gressive movement of th troops and to open the rebel leader, Gen, Li bY the Prince Regent) and Yu-Lang, a Manchu prince, who were Joint chiefs of the general staff. Nelther of theso 19 military man or has a military educa- Yu-Lang was the Imperial Com- nilssioner to Amoy In 18 to receive the American battleship fleet. ‘The transfer of Yin-Tchang to the post eral staff is obviously the throne a qualified warrior in Peking, the capital, which potnt the Manchus apparently are expecting to conduct @ reconquest of thelr Chinese domain or fight a scientific ‘The other appointments in Peking an- nounced to-day, while of a conciliatory nature, provide no material change pend- ‘ing Yuanshikai's advent at the capital which appears distant owing to the ne ture of his self-appointed task of visit- ing the Republican Government and ‘bringing about a union ef rebels with a feform government. Prince Ching rematne Premier tm fact Manchu nese aide, both already Government GHANGHAZ, Nov. 1—Rear-Admiral Joseph B. Murdock of the United States Rnewy arived here to-day and at once H g Kayton Taxicab Company crossing seventy-sixth street Lezington and Third avenues, was fractured, but he to go home after he had been Dr. Joseph J. Dition of m avenue He was on to attend mass at St. Anne's Catholic Church at Seventy- street and Third avenue when he Druggist Knew More Than Doctor. Hl led t time ago I had what is termed mmation of the neck of the bladder. I thought I would surely go wild. T tried the doctor but he did not seem to hit the case. 1 did not get any relief from the doctor's treatment, try Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root by a drug- gist. I took his advice apd began taking Swamp-Root and after using it for a short time began to get better and con: tinued using it until my trouble was u if you wish in any way that it will bene- My trade is that of a painter, My age is forty-nine. IN, Watertown, N. Y, peared before ‘me, this ni ribéd the above statement and h that same is true in substance Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham- | ‘. Y., for # sample bottle. You will also receive # booklet of yaluable information, telling | all about the kidneys and bladder. When be sure und mention the New World. Regular fifty- Mar sige bottles for sale i : ee: ET 2 eye RE RARE TA SOTERA PHAN ME RR BE BO De AE acs ne vr ATF roposed arbitrath State, Up to date more tha treaties | that Is to be given by his Secretary me Hast ‘Thirt United in- [enjoyable succens. ri of We himacif t# there | President of th at Vir- there | ginia of Thom: | to Votemand to keep a speaking engage. eee ie ee emtine P at will go by ment made long ago. The President | special train to Washington, en route to New York. It tw expected that he will | atl address and Mr, Knox t# ex+| stop o West Vir- for and Comes pected to Ro thoroughly Into the subject | einia FDiattorm of arbitration. tears Here To-Morrow. tween the time he speaks in Cine) be the White House | serted. a the treatios " United States MA hat in Mr. Knox | Resi who can talk ag | Vacation at Loch any one in the! summer months will he nts upon thi id If you were a miller— Would you bother to wash the wicat and scour it? That's what Washburn-Crosby Co. do in milling GOLD MEDAL FLOUR— To make your bakings better. EVERY BAG AND BARREL GUARANTEED ALL GROCERS SELLING—BUY NOW THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1911.- jourth street. Many in- vitations have been sent out and it is believed that the gathering will be an ES “: ColdinHead “Heanton. | — <a Catarrh en tonight at Muay Hill Lyceum Trial bottle 10c. lange bottles 2he. 60e | ‘ Men Who Care for Very Exceptional Suits at $35, $40 or $45 | are urged to include Wanamaker’s in their itinerary this week. For we have assembled, subject to the approval of New York’s best-dressed citizens, a number of suits possessing all the goodness of high- grade custom clothes, yet fetchirig prices considerably . below those a tailor would have to ask. Wy) In these suits we have combined all the good L a qualities possible to good clothes. Not one IN stitch of worthiness has been left out. In style they cleave to the season’s edicts. Indeed, it is with suits of these grades that we have gi 2 MADE the 1911-12 styles for this and all other | stores for men in New York. $35 to $45. Right Off Ship trom London R) More Raglan Topcoats for a a Handiwork of a London tailor who fashions the clothes of two kings, an emperor and lords and earls enough to fill several columns of type and exhaust the supply of hyphens. Tweeds and homespuns such as only one community of people can make, | 150,000 yards of silks that went on sale this morning. | of 42-inch width at $1.85, instead of $3 yard. | wide satin brocade at 95c yard. instead of $1.50. OLD MEDAL FLowuR | Up to the heights where Music dwells—all you who tread the gray foothills of a humdrum existence. Up to where the minor chords of striving and set-backs are merged into glorious harmony with the mel- ,ody of Imagination and Hope. Up to where Effort receives the strong impulse of Inspiration, and tangled nerves are straightened and made ready for the work of To-Morrow. You Do Not Need to Be a Musician. _ The ANGELUS—first and best of piano-players—gives you the ability to play the piano—to play any music that ever was written—to play it in your own way, according to your own ideas. You Do Not Need a Balance in the Bank. The WANAMAKER deferred-payment plan—an elastic plan which accommodates itself to individual circumstances—enables every one to accept this invitation— Come Up! Any one of the Wanamaker Player-Pianos—the Knabe-Angelus, the Schomacker-Angelus, the Emerson-Angelus, the Lindeman-Angelus, the Autopiano, may be tried, and explained, alone, in the quiet comfort of one of the test-rooms in the Piano Salons, First Gallery, New Building. JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, Fourth Ave., 8th to 10th St. GO aN >> Ts ep EY and which go exclusively to this tailor. It goes without saying that there are no other coats such as these in all America. $30 to $50. Main floor, New Building. More Than Eighty-five Miles of DRESS SILAS In the Momentous Sale Opening Today | Spread out, they would reach nearly to Philadelphia—these | But better yet, they are reaching into the homes of New York women who love beautiful silks! : Who that wants a rich black silk could resist this pailiet de sore, which we know to be sold regularly at the best stores in New York for $1.35 yard, and which is in | this sale for 85c yard? 40 inches wide, at that! Or this beautiful black crepe meteor | For filmy evening gowns this wide silk marquisette at 60c and 75c a yard is | irresistible. Its regular price is $1 and $1.25. She who secks a rich lining for street and evening coats will find it in this yard- She who loves to go softly clad in clinging satins—as what real woman does not?—will delight in the beautiful Balkan Princess satins at $1.50, instead of $2 and $2.50 a yard. Every lovely color of the rainbow, as well as black and white. + Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars’ worth is a silken fortune. We shall not sell it all in two days, nor in several. But very naturally the rarest fabrics in the whole collection will hurry off in the earliest days. Many kinds and all colors of silk in the sale—and the whole lot to be sold at an average of little more than half. Rotunda, Main floor, Old Building. Brietiy, Our Position in the Matter of Making and Selling Women’s Caracal Coats We have not nd will not have, even a single coat that is made of anything bu. th full, solid ski ry caracal coat here is free of strips (patchwgrk.) or plates which are blanket of caraca! pieces. That protects you from unsatisfactory wear. This speaks for quality and color— Caracal coats in the Fur Salons are of the Balkan grade, collected at Bucharest and Leipzig dyed. id They are almost as supple as velvet and neither heavy nor clumsy. ; = _By ordering early in April we are able to present very exceptional qualities, upon which we shall welcome the most rigid comparison—as we do upon every fur in our stock. We also direct attention to the{uncommonly attractive linings of plain or brocaded satin. | Prices $54, $60, $67.50, $72.50, $80, $112.50, and rich imported models in baby caracal up] | to $900. A'l sizes from 34 to 46. 4 Marmot coats, plain at $60, and with striped border, $75. They look considerably like mink. Fur Salons, Second floor, Old Building. _ A Recent Purchase Makes It Possible for About *' 5,000 Women to Buy Their Winter Shoes At a Saving of Almost Half Their Usual Cost These shoes come to us from one of the great factories, whose trademarked name | you have often seen in the advertising columns of the newspapers and magazines. This factory sells its shoes at $3.50 and $4, confining them to one dealer in each city. Because they have a regular agent in New York, we are forbidden to use the trademarked name in this announcement of the shoes at special prices. A miscalculation of demand brought about a surplus stock, the quick disposal of | which called for some departure from the regular course of business. We were called upon to help and, knowing the shoes to be good, were glad to | accept a very favorable proposition which enables us to sell these t Excellent $3.50 and $4.00 The Wanamaker Shoes at $1.90 and $2.40 ANNUAL SALE The Styles—Lace, button and Blucher shoes of Ginnie) —OF— calfskin, black and brown kidskin, patent leather with tops o: | kid or black, brown or gray cloth, black cravenetted cloth, LEA THER and black suede. High and medium Cuban or low heels; light | turned or mcdium or heavy welted soles. Some have fancy FURNI TURE | buttons, Will Be Held Next Week. Sizes—214 to 8, in AA to E widths. The assortment of , 4 sizes could not have been much better, if the shoes had been A ar 7, sveenfional efferia A made to order. Ready Thursday, Subway floor, Old Building. prep ion. ar te’ece John Wanamaker ‘sirtrt sar

Other pages from this issue: