The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1912, Page 7

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HANFORD RESIGNS 'LONDON PLAYHOUSE FROM THE BENCH ~ UNDER OHARGES Seattle Judge Had Been Under Fire of a Congressional In- vestigating Committee. BPRATTLE, July —United States Dis- trict Judge Cornelius H. Hanford, whose onduct on the bench has been under investigation for nearly a month by a sub-committees of the House Judiciary Committee, telegraphed his resignation to-day to President Taft. Judge Hanford gives ill-health as the reason for his resignation. : Various charges have been presented against the Judge tending to show him unfit to sit on the bench and much testimony has been taken, The hearings in his case had been practically ciosed and the Congressmen ready to return to Washington to make their report. The original charge against Judge Hanford was that he cancelled the citl- genship of a Seattle n because he was a Soc’ Phi t nent Was dis- FOR BRYAN IN 1916. WILLIA Va, July 2— ant- mously indorsed for the Firth District ni tion esalon ere. y | rangement with the Shuberts she will is wood. A third is entitled ‘The Woman of It,’ by a noted English dramatist, and still another—“The Folly of It All,’ by Horace Collins. PLAYHOUSE FORLENGTHY TER New York Successes Are to Be, Produced by Him in Eng- lish Theatre. William A. Brady, the American theatrical manager, was a busy man during the stay of himself and his wife in Burope, and he will be a much buster man during the coming season. He sceured @ number of successful English plays for production in this country, and arranged for the produc- tion of a number of American plays ‘on the other aide. He organtesd a com- pany of his own in London and e Mr. Brady : “Beginning in November Grace George (Mrs. Brady) will open for the Season at the Playhouse. By an ar- appear in the Chinese play by Vol- moeller, produced by Prof, Reinhardt in Berlin last season under the title ‘Turandot. It created a tremendous sation, Sir George Alexander has nalish rights. “It was his intention to produce the play in London early in October, but 2 version which !# to be used Miss George has not been by W.N, Col will not receive its Lon- nm until January. The facturer’s name. i| sailor collar and cuffs. Cool and simple as anyone could wish! colors—pale blue and pink, lavender, black, white, etc., trimmed with soft white Prty thousand yards of the best $1 silk foulards made in America will be offered for the first time Tuesday in the Wanamaker Silk Rotunda at 58c a Yard. Fifty unusual styles, mostly in spaced small patterns, some with tiny flowers, all colors, and water resisting. In making the contract we promised not to advertise this famous manu- It would be unnecessary in any case, for all women who know 24 inches wide. foulards are fully aware that only one maker puts such silk and weaving into his fabrics that it is hardly possible to wear them out. Silk Rotunda, Main floor, Old Building. 500Women'sStripedTissueDresses‘1.50 Instead of $4.50 Manufacturer tells us earlier in the season his wholesale price was $3.75. Special Purchase of 1344 Dressing Sacques 35c, 38c & 50c, Usually 50cto $1 At 35c, white lawn with flower border or trimmed with torchon lace, or black-and-white printed lawn with black and white striped borders. At 38c, white lawn with embroidered edges in different colors, dotted swiss with turn-over collars and cuffs trimmed with lace and flowered lawn with borders. At 50c, white lawn with scalloped colored embroidery, printed tissues, flow- ered dotted swisses and white dotted swiss. All wonderfully pretty and comfortable for hot days. serve you quickly. $2 for Young Women’s|$2 Laces and White Materials Summer Dresses Which Were $3 and $4.50 Right now each dress is worth its original price to any young woman. But July brings about strange prices—and here are these pretty lawns, ginghams, and linens in desirable Summer shades, marked $2 each. Not many of any kind, but more than twerty styles. Subway floor, Old Building. 16 and 18 years. at $2.50. people to fit them. Fresh from sleeves. Sizes 14, Yes, There Are Colonial Pumps Among These 3,000 Pairs of Women’s Low Shoes $2.20 Instead of $3 and $3.50 In the Store on the Subway Floor The Once-a-Summer-Sale of Shoes will offer tomorrow, Tuesday, our regular $3 shoes, in styles not to be reordered for Aut umn, together with a special purchase of $3 and $3.50 trademark shoes, in all sizes from 2) to 8, A to E widths, The popular Colonial pumps have large gilt buckles or small leather buckles; in Russia calf, patent leather and dull calf. Black bow pumps come in patent leather or tan Russia calf. Good walking oxfords with medium heels come in dull calf. Walking shoes with low heels, medium wide toe, come in chocolate color kid, soft and comfortable to the foot. Every style now at $2.20—models to fit every normal foot. Experienced JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart és Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street Miss George will carry out @ plan fo: last year which had to be abandoned by the extraordinary success of ‘Bough! and Paid For. aim to establish a regular repertoire season at my theatre, alternating new modern plays with the accepted classics Marvellously pretty materials and In $1 Shirtwaists of attractive waists nearly all lacy and just what most of our customers prefer. Many have low necks and Not quite such elaborate waists have high collars, and a few have long sleeves. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1912. Play may not be ready for the opening of Mise George's season, in which event she has in hand a new play by Edward Sheldon and Harrison Rhodes. Another is nearing completion by Avery Hop: 1s TO HAVE VARIED REPERTOIRE. “During her season at the Playhouse It has long been ow During my trip 1 effected a long-time agreement for the New Theatre, I hav organized a company with Alan Aynes- worth at its head, ‘Ready Money,’ fo which I have secured the Engils rights, will be produced at the New Theatre about the mddle of August about the same time it Se Rina) it Bs THE HONEST PROPRIE- TARY MEDICINE fills a national need in the land and it will take more than the cry of “fraud” and “‘fake" from the avaricious, over-reaching physician to overthrow an hon- est, reliable and standard prep- aration like Lydia E. Pinks ham's Vegetable Compound, which is made from the roots and herbs of the field, and has cured more women of female ills than any other remedy we know of. Plenty of people to Subway floor, Old Building. the maker—a smiling lot short Subway floor, Old Building, Subway floor, Old Building, Mazina Eliott Theatre with the orig nal organiaztion. the @uthor, Is now In London to super- i kal award Kline, fifty years old, Intend the staging of the comedy. Drone.’ This is a pretiy trish play |! 4) Durch Garden.) ith [Rees a wine atore in Winneld, @ Clearance time finds my Bousnt beheld ne ps poate we bs a name will be changed for Amer- |, great favor, will probably follow |dore, who te being sued pa store humming with ber: ~ ; ‘or. jeady 4 ‘Bought and Pafd For’ at the Playhouse, | tion by his twenty-fiv roll wife, * Money’ proves the success wa anticl-| MANY NEW ENGLISH PLAYS|My dauchtor, Alice Rrady, wile lave wan in the Brooklyn Supreme Court to.| ins and buyers. The best pate {t will be removed to tle Crite to make way for ‘Rought and Paid 1 My Wyndham calls for continuous produc- tions® of several American succyases, and Tam prepared to negoti.te for the English rights of a number of welt known hits In this country, the proper- tes of other managers. marryin = “From Frank Curzon T have acmitrad Bernard Shaw's much discussed jovernment in Canada” | M10) MM ee nnelhborhood,, twenty | Moe” 119-125 Walker St. N. ¥ ~ the American rights of ‘The Dust of |” 's First Flay. years old, Miss Irene Vogel, who be«! ; Eeypt, produced last season by c. “Me, Barker and his company, headed THE TIDES, came stepmother to several children as Kary Liaddeeiiatetins > | 5 jason by Gerald by Lilah ‘arty and Henry Afnley, Wigh Water, Low Water, | old an herself. i — => Du Maurier, I have taken ‘Shan Magan’ | witt produ hakespeare along the I AM. PM AM PAE] ‘The Court asked the attorneys ‘or | . from George H. Jessop. This {san Irish! of Max Reinhanit. ‘Macbeth,’ ‘A W 220 TRY 848 poth altos to try peacemaking and xave| World Wants Work Wonders. play in which the Messrs, Shubert and myself will star George Macfarlane, We have also contracted for the pro- duction of Rutherford Mayne's ‘The inctuded in the repertoire. The company will also present “The Volsay Inherl- ance,’ ‘Waste’ and ‘Prunella; or, Love “MAKE UP,” COURT’S ADVICE Mr. Montaomery, ARE COMING. "T have also secured Justin Huntley McCarthy's ‘Charlemagne the Con-| aqueror,’ in which part Robert Mantell Is to appear in early autumn wit star cast, Mr. Mantell will a as the Cardinal tn Tennyson’ T arranged for the Shuberts to pri Gibert & Sulltvan's to play Mag, which riginated. The now Forty-eighth Theatre will open In August with | hurst and Mark Swan's new farce, Just Like John.’ 1 will produce a num- ber of American plays in New York this season, “There fa a movement on foot to en- force the recent copyright enactment of day before Justice Benedict. The wite| values ever offered in men’s charges Intoxication and demands the} elothi * o custody of her three-year-old son. This lothing show a 50% redue- is Kline's second marriage. He is tue} tion of their real value. father of sixteen children, two of whom "| Moe Levy, understanding with Sir Charnes were lost with his first wife | Slocum disaster. Three years | iting surprised his friends b ation. tera Tale’ and ‘Twelfth Night," fa week for the attempted reconcl! “The Only BUS YOU had your share of the good things in the q JULY CLEARANCE SALE AT GIMBELS Gg Here are a few examples of tomorrow’s exceptional offerings. And there are hundreds more: Store Closes Daily at 5.30; Saturdays at 12.30. 300 Men’s Spic-Span $25 to $80 Suits| White DRESS LINENS To Select from Every const t, Low = Prices our stocks of Tomorrow a: $16.50 Dress Linens will wonder how we can make prices any lower than they have been; but the July Clearance doesn’t stop at the choicest and finest, and most-wanted fabrics. That’s Not a “job lot.” Not a “specially made” | the only reason for this good luck: lot. Every Suit taken from our regular stock. Made, in every detail, to meet the drastic de- mands of regular Gimbel standards—the best At 760, from $1 Mediumn-weight 90-in. White Linen suiting. 26, from $1.50—White French shrunk, 90-in. Linen Suiting. You'll like the Suit you buy, because there are Obata TAOS ce Rinsho ee oS STORE Is GIMBELS” | There’s plenty of reason for these busy aisles, and hundreds of enthusiastic customers. People have learned that they find just the things they want at GIMBELS—that the quality is always right, and that assortments are always complete. But they especially find—RIGHT NOW-—that the store is filled with tempting merchandise at wonderfully low prices. Have At 40c, from 50ce—Light and medium weight 36-in. White Linen Suiting, At 60c, from 65c—46-in. French Linen Suiting, Tes pinge At 600, was 60c and 65c—Fine 36-in. White Irish Linen Suiting, known to ready-made clothing. At $1. . It is the July Clearance of Gimbel Clothing, tat Mcrat toe to Teme and every dollar is a sure and positive saving. 45-i t 76¢ and 90c, regularly 90c to $1.10. no better brics and no better tailoring in any '96-in., at 36c, instead of 60c. | 72-in., at 76¢, instead of 90e. $25 tof its regularly sold in any store. Yet 45-in., at 60c, inatead of 65c. —_90-in., at 906, instead of $1.15. you pay only $16.60 tomorrow. ‘There is a wide Only about a thousand yards in the lot. Linen Store, Secend Floor variety of plain and fancy weaves to select from. Some two-pie Suits, some three piece, some with Norfolk ce Some quarter-lined, some halt-lined, some with no lining at all. Sizes not complete in any particular style, but oll sizes in the lot, from 33 to 46-inch chest measure. $16.50 Tomorrow, Instead of $25 to $30 Fourth Floor IN THE SUBWAY STORE— Men’s Suits, were $10 and $12; Now $5 Famous for Quality and Artistic Designs hese Axminster Rugs In the Clearance Sale Yes, Hartford Axminster Rugs! Some Of the well-known Sanford Kup, too. And others that are renowned throughout the world of home-makers that are endeavoring to make the Home Beautiful. If you want a he that the rich designs of the Orient, you may get it in this Sale, for many of the Rugs are copies of Sarouk, Ghorevan, Mahal, Daghestan and Rugs. Also a few in self-color effects, July Clearance of broken lines; but all sizes from 32 to 48-inch chest measurement in the collection; formenand } 9x12ft., seamed "40 | exo t., seamless... 34.80 sieéo young men, Many styles, well tailored from absolutely all-wool materials. Sais th soaanle . ‘ § ’ . ‘ w ’ “seamed... $21.60 $15 seamless....... bape Men’s Suits, were $15; Now $8.75 * Stx78in., seamless..9 3.75 92.75 |B, $26.60 $17.60] 97264in., seamless..9 2.25 § 1.75 ‘ade Wilton Rugs of different weaves, seamed‘and are regularly $45 to $66, at $30. Sixth Floer tam and gray mixtures; also stripes and plaids, nt s, small sizes 5 Blue Serge Suits, plain, light and dark grays, brown, tami © Men’s $18 Mohair Suits, $9.75. Men's $10 Men's $2 Office Coats, $1.26. Men’s $1.’ Subway Baloony Women Are Always Glad to Hear of Economies at GIMBELS For They Are Really Worth W hile Py Tomorrow—A Day for BLOUSES Sometimes it is a temptation for women not to dise ut) f i where they get their modish clothes at leg open bees Naa’ 8,500 Blouses That Are the Result of Painstaking but we are sure:that those who share in this Sale will be so AA) . enthusiastic that they will not refrain from talking about it. Endeavor and This Pre-Inventory Season We were going to say “wait and see;’”’ but, on second thought, SE it is not advisable, because you may miss some of the good things. For instance, if you have been wanting several little handmade French lingerie frocks, but did not want to make a large outlay, here is your opportunity, as there are some at $12.60, that were $17.50 to $22.50. Others at $19.50 to $23.50, that were $37.50 to $65. Also Silk (two-piece) Suits at $18.60, were $35 to $65. Women’s Chiffon, Voile and Eponge Dresses at $16, were $32.50 to $45. Linen Dresses at $5, $8.50, $15 and $29.50, were 7.50 to $37.50. Lawn, Voile and Cotton Tissue Dresses, $2.26, were $6.50 to $9.50. $1 for Blouses Worth $2 and $2.50 $1.50, Worth $3 $3, Worth $4.5 $5, Worth $7.95 $2, Worth $3.50 $3.95, Worth $6 $6.95, Worth $10.75 Go to the famous shops of Puris or London, or to any other store on this side of the Atlantic, and you will not tind Blouses of such value-giving quality! oes Blouses reflect (and in many instances are copies of) costly French models, ‘These are Blouses that have been made to our order—even though the ma- jority owe their little prices to the fact that they are made from left-over materials; ‘These are Blouses of daintiness in every detail, from the tiny stitches that join their .eams and the clear pearl buttons that fasten them either in back or front, to the fine batistes, lawns, marquisettes, voiles, and all-over embroideries For ans MAE sof th ae ene of which Mey Ste Aas and the attractive laces and embroideries with which Eponge Dresses, $18.50, were $32.50, SDey. ie MOD Dainty describes every one, whether it is trimmed with profusion of lace embroidery, or if it is semi-fanciful or the essence of simplicity. Many of the latter have Robespierre collars and double-collar effects, Third Floor Lingerie Dresses, $5.75, were $10, Silk Dresses, $10, were $18.50, Women's and Young Women's Tailored Suils of Linen $5, Instead of $10 $8.76, i $7.60, instead of $9.50 $12.50, inst Third Floor Au Revoir to All. of This Season’s COATS for Women Every Kind, from Motoring Dusters to Paris Model Evening Wraps, in This Clearance—Al Fractions | of Former Conservative Prices | “The most interesting collection of Coats I have ever | seen!” a woman told usa little while ago. ‘Indeed, there are so many kinds and all so distinctive that I would like to have et least six or seven!” And it is the remainder ot that very assemblage of Coats and Wraps that we are now disposing of at ridiculously small prices. , ; Generally speaking, there are Coats for traveling, motoring and street wear, also for afternoon and evening functions. Prices range all the way from $4.50 for Motoring German Silver Mesh Bags There was quite a large number when we presented this manufacturer’s surplus this morning. And we are sure that there will be some for you tomorrow— However, we cannot say whether they will be of the reverse ring, diagonal, or safety mesh, but they are all pretty, as their frames are hand-chased, etched, pierced, or engine-turned, $2.95, Regularly $6.50 $3.95, Regularly $7.50 to $12 Just at vacation time comes this col- lection of much-needed accessories in 14-k, Gold-filled Jewelry Handy Pins, Hat Pins, Sash Pins, Scarf Pins, Cuff and Collar Pins, Ascot Tie Pins, Shoe Buckles, Bracelets, Fobs and Cuff i 60c to $2.50, regularly $1 to $5. cr Vanity Boxes, 96c, regularly An Economical Purchase if you're looking for a pretty Princess Slip to wear neath that sheer lingerie dress, you will | find itin thi e. ‘There is one style with a panel front, outlined with lace insertion—others are beautified by various foot trimmings and ruffles. ‘The Nightgowns are tery dainty and you ma; select them with most any kind of cool low nec you desire, Combinations are in both Princess style and those with the defined waist line—some of the latter have knickerboekers, In spite of ices for which these Under- muslins were ave divided this urplus purchase into two groups— At $1.50, Undermuslins worth $2 lo $3 At $2, Undermuslins worth $3. lo $4.7 clasp, 75¢e, regularly $1.50, Main Floor, Dusters that were $9.50, up lo $50 for Silk Evening | Second Floor Wraps that were $250-—numerous prices belween, | So that you will know what to expect, we shall enum | the materials ie gloria, mohalr, serge, whipeord, mix 1 | woolens, polo fabrics, satin, taffeta, bengaline, chiffon anc WAY ; charmeuse. Third Floor | BARD NEW YORK THIRTY-THIRD ST.

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