The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1912, Page 10

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"BIGHT LAWRENCES : Father, Mother and Seven Chil- (dren Celebrate Their Joint *t Anniversary. Kisht couples, all related, celebrated their wedding anniversaries last night at a belated Hallowe'en party at the heme of! Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 8. Som- @B. No, 988 Sterling place, Brooklyn. BY an unwritten law of the family, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Lawrence of MO. 668 Bedford avenue and seven of children were married on All year to celebrate the event and relate the happiness and misfortunes that fore befallen them during the previous year. Mr. and Mre.-Somers, who enter- tained this year, celebrated their silver anniversary. irs. Somers's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence, were fifty- @ight years married and were the live- Hest couple during the evening. LIST OF THE OTHER COUPLES wi RATED. | The other couples who were married Hisiiowe'en and were guests at the Joint celebration were Dr. and Mrs, E. P. Lawrence of Flushing, thirty-two years married; Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Lawrence, celebrating their eighteenth Aske@ why eo ‘meny of the children had chosen Hallowe'en for their wed- @ings,.Mrs. Somers said: “We! all consider my father's and other's marriage the happiest in the world. When it came time for us to get married we wished to follow the epample set us, and knew that w would be luckier and happier by choos- ing the same day they did than if we decided on different dates. HALLOWS'IEN LUCKY DAY TO “ @QET MARRIED. Ll Ze - : Ff iif, é ss BS Hd are S28 " ne EE. ut e 5 t3 g ? : 3 E 8 ij #33 iF: tf [ " i i “| Beem Jott fy sens. Cention: Bre. pt ‘alter Lawrence, STANDARD OIL MEN BEATEN BY PIERCE | AND BOUGHT FF Rockefeller Loses Control of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company. Henry Clay Plerce of 6t. Touts and New York has beaten the Standard O11 crowd. It was formerly anounced ss day that the Rockefeller people nad! let’ go of their-2,748 shares out of the 4,000 shares of the stock of the Waters- Pierce Oll Company, the purchasers be- ing Me. Pierce and his friends, and the for the stock was in the price paid be-| neighborhood of 63,000,000, This is a very different ending trom the one that was expected when the jandard Ol! people In May began suit mn the United States District Court at Bt. Louls to oust from the company Mr. Pierce, his son, Clay Arthur Pierce, and Junction to prevent the Pierce crowd from exercising their functions as offi- cers and directors, The attempt to take over the Waters- Piérce Oil Company was the outcome of a stockholders’ meeting when the i | steis oy, aS ELECTION DAY COURTS. Asstguments of Gupreme Court ‘, Mustiees Announced. » Brooklyn; Justice jueens; Justice Scudder, ; Justice Jaycox, Suffolk, and a : Clark, Richmond. ey will hold court all day deciding over illegal voting and election @,;majority stock- that such a course would put them in contempt of court with the Supreme Court of Mie- sourt, as well as the United States Supreme Court, which had decided against the monopoly features of Standard Ot! methods. In defense of the action begun against the Pierce crowd the case was shifted to New York City, and sub- poenaes were issued for twenty-four officials and stockholders of the Stand- ard O11 Company, including John D, the latter, ‘By the terme of the sale Mr. Pier: acquires all the stock in the Waters- Pierce Oit y Rockefeller, ‘Willie M. lagter, of holdings of the’ that of @ large number of other share- holders. Annou! it of sion, of the ni the Flerce interests, An. Irrestetible (From the Washington | AJ “How did you break that boy'of his practice of breaking windows?” “Eeeily.. I told him npbody 414 such things except little girls! who were learning to be’ militant’ suffragettes.” 3 News ) Oddities } | Jack London's latest venture te @ trip to the Santa Crus Islands to lasso | qual. ‘ ‘AN’ Europe getting ready for its alice of Turkey, | Two Western const men are én their way to New York in a buggy drawn * —_—— than trolley care in Greater New York 4 ‘More people were killed by wagons October. Sr Av horse named Roosevelt won a race at Anteull after snorting and kicking | alow : i odinvgl ow FANCIES-—A course of avistion has been added to the High fetoel eurroaium im Pasadena, Cal. City fell down o Might of steps and died of heart disease, ‘before whe reached the bottom. yritnesses, Greek waiters, had sailed to fight Turkey, @ hotel bad Xo be postponed until the war is over. F. Paimer jr. of Bast THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1912. EN LUCKY | Hallowe ’en the Marriage Day of All of These People; | _ All of Them Related and Ali Say They Are Happily Wed Mellie Gorman, Andre’ wrence, ‘Mrs. A. 8. Somers, jeriok LAST CAMPAIGN TRICK MAY BE A WARRANT AGAINST CANDIDATE pel fia ty Thomas .F. Devine Expects Such a Move by Democratic Rival in 17th District. ‘Thomas F. Devine, who ts a candt- | date for State Senator on the Repubii- | ¢an, Bull Moose and Independence | League tickets in the Seventeenth Dis- | trict, wan going around to-day expecting ai any moment to be arrested charged with iWegal registration. He says the charge, if it 1s made, is a trumped up trick of his political enemies and ts tn- spited by his Democratio opponent, John J. Boylan. The Democrats of the istrict are hinting that they expect to a4 to their campaign funds « large share of the $20,000 reward which Mr. Devine himself offered for the convic- tion of any voter for illegal registra-} ton, \ Mr.” Devine has ® home at No. 21) Weat Eilghty-ftth street, which t@ in the Seventeenth Senatorial District. But he asserts that he has a legal vot- ing restdence at No. 101 West Sixty-third atreet where he rents a room and has) rented it for three years from Mrs, Dooley. This room is in the district in whioh he is running for office. | The Election Buard had Mr. Devine! before it yesterday and after hearing his statement and looking at his rent receipts from Mrs. Dooley dismissed the charge. Democratic workers from the district ware known to be in mys- ‘terlous consultation to-day with Com- missioner Waldo and Chief Magistrate McAdoo, and Mr. Devine was inclined to think that it might end in the !ssuing of @ warrant, “The thing won't hold water for an inetamt it & te desued," Mr. Devine told © reporter for The Evening World, “and fe @ purely political fabrication. It shows what my opponent thinks of my BRADFORD'S Blood Purifying Pills Purely Vi ble, campaign that he should go to such’an extreme or even consider it." Mr. Devine 1s already the defendant dn @ $100,000 slander suit brought against him by Mr. Boylan, following the Jesuing by the Republican candidate of a etatement regarding the methods of the Boylan workers. Tho papers were served on Mr, Devine as he mwas making cartall speech at Tenth avenue and Thirty-ninth atreet, belie is ee GAELIC FOOTBALL TO RAISE A MONUMENT. Kildares and Kerrys to Clash To- Morrow in Memory of Tim Hayes. A momiment te to be erected to the memory of Tim Hayes, the man who introduced to this country the excite- ment, the skill and the brawn of Gaelic football. All the teams of the various Irish organizations that compete in| © Celtic Park throughout the season have taken a hand to ald the project. They will kick complimentary games until] a fund of sufficient amount is raised for the memorial, To-morrow at Celtic Park the Kildare team will meet the Kerrys. Some clash, too, This will be the last time they can meet this season, and, as they have a hard score to settle, there should be action ai through the game. Action LATE LEALLLLLE | Fun A Brand New 16-Page Copy of “FUN,” the Famous Weekly Joke Book. Fiction A Thrilling Sherlock HolmesDetective Story by Sir A. Conan Doyle. Bex of 5O Fills, Bh; $1.00, At ef drug stores or by mail. n "ERaBroRD OR GBPARATION—Mre. William Was GP proud of their baby, one day ob, he tried to tuke it e EXTRA WITH SUNDAY | means hot etuff- when Kerry meets | Kudare. Denis Buckley of the Kerrymen's As- sociation has bet four of his best coaches on the result, and he’s looking for a lot | more ot Kildare money. ‘Don’t Drug Yourself! This Simple Home Remedy Will Cure Your Cold Never take drugs for a cough or cold. — The relief they afford is more than offset by their disastrous after- effects. But coughing should be stopped in its first stages before the throat and bronchials become inflamed i ety, diseased. ‘ou can make a soothing remedy that will instantly allay irritation and ‘speedily stop your cough. Shake to- gether in a bottle two ounces of glyc- rine, cight ounces of pure whiskey and half an ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine. A teaspoonful every four hours is the usual dose, and it can be taken with perfect safety by children as well as by adults, To protect yourself against substi- tutes, and ee Re ggts pure and fresh Virgin Oil Pine, ask your druggist for an_ original half-ounce sealed vial. T come only in wooden cartons bearing our label. The Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati. has been tested the world over and been approved by three generations. HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS is, therefore, well known as a specific remedy for indigestion Dyspepsia Constipation Billousness Malaria Fever and Ague Be persuaded to try a bottle today. It never disappoints. ALL DAUOGISTS AND DEALERS - Fashion An 8-Page Magazine of Stunning. Horse { Show Fashions, Edited by May Manton. Free A 24-Page Magazine— 16 Pages in Colors— §) Profusely Illustrated. TO-MORROW’S WORLD Ke Winners! In the Men’s Store—at Wanamaker’s—Monday 425 Men’s Suitsat$19.50 $25, $30 and $35 Grades 120 Overcoats at $22.50 $35 Grades A Special Election offering advanced one day. These offerin bear about the same relation to any we have known 4s a Presidential election bears to any other election. If youget the significance of that you won’t need to read further. The simple truth is—two tailors who make the most consist- ently good clothing for men miscalculated the volume of their business for the current season. Had a quantity of piece-ends left—cloths used for $25 to $85 suits and overcoats. They came to us when we were searching the market for somethi out of the ordinary to give our customers on Election Day—such as we gave last year, when we had the biggest one day’s business in the store’s history. And they gave us something better than we had expected. Suits in 29 patterns of rough and smooth finished fab- rics, such as cheviots, cas- simeres and worsteds. Patterns that appeal to men of gi te. Conservative | sack models, soft lapels per- mitting the showing of two or three buttons, as desired. Tailored as you agg ex) a $35 suit to ‘elleed, The Grading of the Suits 208, regularly $25 144, regularly $30 73, regularly $35 425 in al! at $19.50 each Overcoats of thick, soft, fluffy Shet- land; satin shoulder lined; blue, Oxford and Cam- bridge grays, brown mix- tures, green mixtures. i knee foretoeteh os be shaped lapels, patch lit sleeves, turn- cuffs, patirall _ Shoulders; all outer piped with satin. $35 overcoats for $22.50. Burlington Arcade floor, New Bidg. And, in the New Store for Men, Broadway, corner Eighth $20 to $25 Overcoats at $15 145 from another maker, but yet--a Wanamaker offer, And—note well—at $15, instead of $20 to $25. Single and double-breasted great-coats—rough finish, sturdy, all-wool cheviot—in several shades of gray.and brown. Belted back, split sleeves, welted seams—giving smart lines to coat—con- vertible collar. 1200 Shirts—$1 We have no shirtings in our regular $1.50 stock to match these shirts of woven corded madras, at $1. The maker bought the material months ago in the gray. We gave him the patterns—12. He fad them bleached and con- verted, then printed the patterns in four tecere tuck, lavender, blue, gray. ; Because of the co-operation between us we can sell these shirts—first lot of 12,000 ordered—at $1 each. Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. Broadway, corner of Eighth. Neckties at 50c In 15 plain shades of rep si]":—pure, not a thread of cotton in it.‘ Made for us alone in New York. We never take a tie out of a maker's stock. Always there is some better thing we insist upon—either improved shape or a better quality of material. The betterment is especially notice- able in these ties, which surpass in value any other ties weever sold for 50c, Burlington Arcade floor, New Building, And These Five Winners for the Boy $7.50 Suits for $5 Blue cheviots — all- wool—with two pairs full cut and full lined knick- ers with each suit. The result of a fore- handed purchase of cloth before the remarkable rise in price. Norfolk and’ double- breasted models; sizes 7 to 17 years. Broadway, Corner Ejghth. $8.50 Overcoats, $6 150 Overcoats at $8.50 $12 to $15 Grades Long, back-belted, all- wool double - breas coats with convertible collars; serge-lined. $10 Overcoats for $7.50 All - wool chinchilla, blue, brown,’ ford; wool-lin to 10 years; convertible $8.50 Suits for $6 All-wool; two pairs of knickers, full cut and full lined; double - breasted and Norfolk jacket mod- els; 7 to 18 years. Broad c: Ox- . - Me 8 collars. Third floor, Old Building. Long, all-wool rough fancy mixtures, single breasted; 11 to 18 years; and belted polo coats— many wool-lined—for boys of 6 to 11 years. Broadway, Corner Eighth. JOHN WANAMAKER 4 Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., ‘s Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street. \ i | |

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