Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
JAPANESE RIOTERS. ~ SLAY AND BURN IN | REAT REVOLUTION Fall of Ka chal Change in Politi- cal Condiiions in Japan. ra Ministry Marks FIGHTING IN STREETS. Mobs Attack Offices of News- papers that Supported Over- thrown Administration. 1915. be Toe Prem Publishing Co, New York Evening World), he Evening World, joting and blood- Feb, 12.—1 whed, attending the sudden fall of the Katsura ministry, have spread from Tokio to Osaka, the second greatest city In the empire. A revolution greater than any event in the political history since the Restoration is now ly in progres, nthe Osaka police attempted % break up a meeting of the Constitution: ‘ists, held in the big park near the tre of the elty, a mob quickly formed 1 began to attack the offices of the news favorable to Katsura and his Goversavnt, Hot fighting between the mob and the editorial and mechant- esl siafl of t ewspapers ensued and sev 1 e Killed. The mob then turned to of well known partisans of the Katsur pasty and tried to burn them, The swift events of the last two days, following Katsura’s enforced reaignation fron the Premiership, indicate the com- ‘vg of a new era of government to Japan, The autocratic rule of the so-called | amen, @x-oMolo advisers of | rand his cabinet, ts now a! tiing of the past, according to present | Indications, The {nauguration of real nt of the Engl.sh “variety Katsura, the fallen Premter, who saw, the storm of the present re- volt against the old bureaucracy com- ing and altempted to save himself by or- fanizing a party, Failing to obtain a majority In the Japanese Diet he fell) back upon repeated suspensions uf con- st al guarantees and use of the Im- perial veacript from the hand of the Em- peror hunself in bis attempt to keep himse power and jam through his ne of military expansion, most etartling indieation of the of polltival thought in Japai n former Mayor Oaaht ya member of Parliament, 4 passionaie speech that) change came t of Tokio, deciare nortal and not free from mortal | error, was dislo he eald, for Katsura to attempt t Le Japanese has con ‘0 be of immortal mould and above the power of hur frail WED SWEETHEART’S SISTER, BUT “JOKE” IS ON HIM. Fifteen-year-old Bride's Mother inds Alleged Former Wife Who Says Klug Deserted Her. Minnte 3 er of No, 21 East Sixty- Mi ith stres was keeping company with Willlam J. Klug of No, 10T West One Hundred and Fourth street, a wi ‘ik ago. @he quarreled with him and decided not to keep un engagement she had made with hie 4 sent her fifteen-year-old sinter, to tell him she was a ie iked you better than nyway,” sald lug to Bar- ‘ome to Hoboken, and we will be marriad, and put the Joke on her: id The Rev, Conrad Engleton of No, 234 Garden street, married them and they went to live in Klug's apartment, The Meyer family was not pleased and the jde’s mother made inquiries, She 1 was Interesting information about Klug at No, #8 East Sixteenth street. She found there a young wom- an calling herself Caroline Dorothy Kanter Klug, who showed a certificate of her marriage to William J. Klug signed b ythe Kev. Rudolph Kubler of Hackensack, in February, 1910, She said Klug doserted her last Sunday, Magistrate Cornell, in Harlem court, fenued u warrant for Klug. Ho was ar- rested to-day and held in $500 bail for abduction, A bigamy charge was not possible, because both of the marriages are said to have been performed in New Jersey. pie ELECTION INSPECTOR TRIES TO BLAME TAMMANY. “1 With ction Frauds, ys He Tallied Votes at “Some One’s” Direction, = , on telal before Justice di with election frauds in the n District of the Tenth t, Was witness In his He admitted that he Cha fh 1 la had Jown the figures on the tally sheets of the district at the direction o: Whose name he did not know, Marshall, the leader of the dis- trict of iny party,” sald Lipschitz, whe was a Republican inspector, “told me sarrel with the Tammany in- or district ains, and do er they sald, So when they called off the flures I did not question them It is charged that by the action of Lipschitz eleven votes were added to the total of Meyer Greenberg, the Tammany candidate for Assemblyman, and fifteen were taken from the total of Maxim Burnbrandt, the Bull Moose canaidate, }(even if he doe ‘Par WAITING TO BE ball Rushes Look Mild in Their Dashes on Department Store Counters During Sales. But Here, Writer from French Capital Finds, Feminine Shoppers Are More Decorous and Big Stores Less Crowded. BY MEG VILLARS. You have got some lovely big shops, dear New York! Women ought never to get fat from lack of exercise in this town! On rainy days they can trot out to the nearest store, and by the time they've gone over It completely they'll have walked miles! Of course, you must be strong enough to withstand the temptation of buying all the “pret- ties you see, otherwise poor friend husband will surely be broke! No wonder American husbands work rd! What with cabarets, peacock and the gorgeous shops to tempt wwes into expenditure, it's @ thelr wonder there are any milMonaires left at all! Now I have aeen the shops. myself wondering all the harder why it is that such a lot of American women you know, dress so badly, becaui there's no denying it, they do dress ‘badly and, what is almost worse, haven't the sligatest dea of when to wear the right thin The numbers of ostrich-plumed hats I've seen worn tn the early morning with a tailor-made costume and brown shoes in incredible. Don't you have any morning hats? Why, yes, of courge you do. I've sen them in Fifth aven' shops, and very pretty ones some of them are, too! HOW IT 18 DONE IN PARIS TO EIN STYLE. Believe me, you don’t see many ostrich feathers floating on the breeze in Paris before the afternoon any more than you see brown shoes after mid- ‘ Here you see them not only all day twinkling about on the pavements, but at night at the theatre, and I've seen them trip along to supper after- ward! You evidently belleve in w: ing what you like and when you like 1. Of course, as far as individual comfort woes, it's very fine, but It gives an un- Udy appearance to a@ city, just as It gives an untidy appearance to your tweed sult and a flannel shirt sitting next to a man in correct evening dress as I've sometimes noticed here, wear dark-colored gloves the evening!) It seems kind of ducer, too, when you see a little tailor nade miss in the seat next to @ lady wearing a frock cut as low as only New York, and perhaps Lendon, dress- nakers dare to cut it! Th: more I go about tn this town the more I come to the conclusion that the women are playing a game of “I dare you to” with thelr dresemakers! It seems so strange to see women ar riving at the Waldorf for various after. soon concerts and entertainments wear- is dress! If they can make up eat excuse to do so they'll manage to come to take & couple of \urns in peacock alley, too, when thelr aps are off! 1 wonder some of the hotel people don't appear at breakfas: me in nighties and kimonos! What a ow note to strike, eh? Nightgown pa- rade In peacook alley. But to return to the ladies in their low-cut frocks at 3 P M.! What Is the idea of 't, anyway? all eee Good for Papa's Baby? + Cough Drops, by, per bos, ACL! g Lvening dress is evening dress and {i 0 C40 eh? earl ti 1 tina |! heatres when you see a man in a gray| : THE EVENI Buch frocks they are, too! Lots of them look as if they might e all right ‘f they were given half a chance, but they are il done up with “personal touches.” GOWNS SPOILED BY “PERSONAL TOUCHES.” Oh, those personal touches, York! If only your ladies reallzed how often they spoll a gown by trying to put in @ “personal touch" they would @ it alone! It's not given to many women to have the knack of originality, and while almost every kind of a fomaie on two legs, from Eve to her youngest descendant old enough to hold a needle, knows how to throw some sort of a garment together, only one out of twenty can arrange a gown by herself so that it looks like the Real Thing! I: Paris models could be made at home with the ease that some people would have you believe, why then everybody would have them made for five dollara ‘and the rue de la Paix could put up ts shutters; instead of that being the ca: your “Dollar Princesses” are atill Apending small ¢ortunes on their gowns in the gay city, and Madame Paquin, the world's leading dressmaker, has just been decorated with the “Legion of Honor"! In the atoree I explored to-day I saw dozens of dainty frocks and not so very expensive either, Where do they go? Who wears them in real life? I suppose some slily wom- an buys them and then tortures them out of all recognition with such “per- sonal touches" as an artificial rot planted in the middle of the chest, black velvet a sh added (Lord knows and He won't split on @ woman), of buttons sewn on at odd places, lace collars and ruffles ad lib, THE WOMEN ALSO SPOIL THEIR HATS, The hats are spoilt the sane way! A woman buys a pretty little hat of black velvet, quite plain with just a rt trimming of fur around the crown, It is perfect as it 1s but, because she has read somewhere that “feathers will be worn in Paris this season" and “roses will again be seen," or that “the alge rette {s as much in favor as ever,” she will rush off to her box of fineries, pull out roses, feathers and algrettes Kalore and load up the prety Ittle new hat with then without pausing to reflect that the person who wrote the fashion areticle meant her to understand that each trimming was to sult 4 separate hat, Honestly, dear New York, haven't you noticed some of your Sunday girls in thelr Sunday clothes? The costume usually consist of a long coat worn over a Hight silt frock (the me t saw that of get-up I thought the girl had come out In her petticoat!, hat top-heavy with plumes and f with nearly always # rove at t ‘another rose is pinned to the fur nee ece or in the cen.e of the muff, and, to one, you'll find she ls wearing first ¢ dear New i NG WORLD, THe WARGHTY Lin GIRKn Datent leather boots with white uppers: White uppers at this time of the year, dear New York! un't tt Just crazy? And, as I've said before, there are such lovely things in the shops, You must be proud of your fine big atores! In Parts there are only about five or oix really first class ones, Well, of course you can’t quite beat those as far as the display of hats and gowns and lingerie goes, but then Paris !s wond-famed for such things! THANK HEAVEN NEW VORK BEATS PARIS AT LAST. We have no manicure parlors, ae I see you eh in wome shops. In- deed Paris is fairly badly off for really g004 manicures; the best one J know comes from the States or hae her “American parior,” rue Volney. Last summer so many Americans used to «0 there—and wait, because she w. ways engaged four deep, that we used to call it the 1p parlor!” ‘Only two stores at home have lunch- eon rooms; those make up for the others by their gorgeousness, however! Here it's 40 amusing to @ stranger to see all those women sitting round that \dairy-lunch place, on their little stools, elbow to elbow, waiting to be served, for all the world likg a lot of good chil- dren at a Sunday schoo! treat! | I suppose that because you have about a dozen stores to every one of ours im the reason that they don't em very crowded to me, Even the one where there was @ bargain sale on! | You ought to #ee people fighting at the Galeries Lafayette in Paris to be served about Christmas time! The shop in- spectora have to push the mob into some eort of a line, and then “frst feome, first served!” It's better than @ circus to watch the Way some women \try to sneak @ place up in the line while the one in front of her i# count- ing her money, or looking over her Ist, or pinning up her skirt, or one of the thousand and one things women do in @ crowded shop as calmly and quietly as if they were at home, in spite of the pushing people all around! In the afternoon there are not many men in your shops; at home there are quite lots, Their wives take them to carry the parcels! A Parisienne never |has anything sent {f she can get friend, husband or a foolish male cousin, or \any sort of man-pal, to come and carry her goods! A RUN-IN WITH A DUCHES! HIND THE COUNTER, How very high and mighty young ladies some of the stores I've visited! the behind the counter are in They » {nose a noteh higher, lifted her eye: brows till they disappeared (and I'm certain she'll never K) must be duchesses in disguise! I tried ito get some ribbon at one place and |this is what happened Choosing the one who didn’t look jquite so “!'m-better-than-my-neigh bor. | and-wne's-a-good-deal-better-than- you" as the others, I meekly said that 1 wanted some white ribbon, “Busy!” |snapped the duchess. 1 tried the others with the same re- sult, but they were all busy—doing nothing but waiting for change! (Say, that overnead railway system for the money is rather fine, isn't ite If my father liad @ atore I'd want to come down there on Sundays, when no one's avout, and play with {t!) At last I found a little girl, a snub- nosed, but very haughty little girl, who will some day be a duchess too, I guess. She was putting the ribbons to bed in a drawe | Very. very, very politely I said Jher: ‘Please, I want some ribbon,” | I sald that three times, wits apolo- lgetic coughs between, before lie took any notice. glanced at me with scorn, to wrinkled her anc very distincUy uttered with with ~- At last she looked up. She —— ee isian Shoppers Fight to Get Bargains; New York Women Don’t, Says Meg Villars. CAUSE TUMULT ON SUBWAY EXPRESS Shocked by Seeing Women Wearing Plumes, Tailor Made Costumes and Brown Shoes in the Afternoon. Some Are in Evening Dress in the Afternoon, ' Suggesting the Idea of | Going to Breakfast in Nighties ering empha tomers!’ The side that nasty Ittle apprentice was putting on got my goat, dear Now York! I measured the distance to the door with @ quick glance, and then be- came as haughtily English as I could. “Never mind, my child,” sale L “you'll srow, and then some day you will Forthwith I vanished. But I never got that ribbon, @ome day I shall try again. Wish me luck, dear New York! ONE DIES INFIRE IN LOFT BUILDING; GIRLS RESCUED Assistant Engineer Is Suffo- | cated in Blaze on West Twenty-Second Street. » “I do not serve cum Olat Knudsen istant engineer of the loft bullding at No. 150 West Twen- ty-second atreat, was suffocated to-day by the smoke of a fire which burned out the basement and ground iloor of the The fire started soon after @ number of boys, employed by the Colum- bia Button Works, entered the building at 7.20 o'clock, The button factory, Imhich occupied the ground floor and part of the cellar, was full of cellulotd sheets and other easily inflammable material. Bernard Bensen, the engineer of the building, was turning the corner of Seventh avenue when ho saw the boys pouring out of the door yelling with fright, followed by puffs of heavy smoke Bensen ran to the building, called for Knudsen, who went on duty an hour earlier, and getting no answer, took charge of the elevator and made three trips to the top floor, rixteen stories up, bringing down the few girls who had reported for work in the various factories on the holiday, Once certain that all of the people in the upper stories were out, Benson went to the basement, He made tran- tic efforts to explore the whole floor to find Knudsen, but was dragged back by firemen, when he Ww attempting to enter his own office apt, Callaghy of Engine Company No. 1 went into the rooom and found Knudsen unconscious on the floor, The the Famous Chi will regulate your bowels and If your stomach isn’t just right, coated tongue, feel distressed after these are warnings of serious trouble. up your stomach, nervous system. You will be surpri ambition and appetite will come back 0c and 25¢ a Boz, onstip WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1913. May Anderson, Arrested for Violating the Sullivan Law, Carried From Train. of one women ever arrested tn violating the Sullivan disturbance to-day on @ between Seventy-second the bway expre street and Grand Central station by going into/tut instead brought the news of his} communicate hysterics and convi carried from the train by Detective Haggerty, Enright and Haines and by George Rantis and Charles Harrie, pris- Oners arrested in Harlem last night for conduct which seemed suspicious to the polle Tho task of caring for the girl wae not made any easier by Rantis, who, from the time the detectives took him from his cell had scolded and whined over the discomfort tn which he had spent the night. He sald he meant to write to Mayor Gaynor because he was not furnished with a pillow in his cell, @ fits, She wai shop this morning, and because the do- tectives did not show proper respect in addressing him. It was his tirade that neomed to start the Anderson girl into her excitement. and can hardly make herself understood in English, was arrested last night in a dance hall at One Hundred and Twenty- fifth street and Madison avenue, 1: reverently called “Jake's Place” by the youth of the neighborhood. It was e tabMehed by Jacob H. Schiff and other philanthropists to counteract the evil of Harlem dance halle on and the sugges. tive variations of the turkey trot a forbidden. The police of the West One Hundred and Twenty-ffth street station got word last night that a number of the gunmen and parasites of the other dance halls meant to raid the place in revenge for having been stopped at the door recently by special police- men. Several tough characters had forced their way in when the police arrived. They were put out forcibly. Inasmuch um it has recently been the custom of gangsters contemplat- ing trouble to let the young women with them carry their dangerous weap- one until the moment of action ar- rived, the detectives searched the handbage of the girls who had been with the men who were thrown out. An unloaded revolved was found in the handbag of the Anderson girl as she came out of a washroom into which she had run when the search n, A phyasiclan, who was a passenger on the subway train in which she started Gisturbance, adminetered restor tives and she was quivted eo that she made mo anore fuss on being taken to Police Headquarters, No record was found againet her there. Magivtrate Cornell, before whom she ) held her with- Burglary wae charged against John Cutler whe nhe was arralgned in Mor- riyania court to-day, in addttion to tempted burglar; overcoat that had been atolen from Joseph Maloney of No. 660 Jackson avenue, when he was arrested on the | complaint of Mrs, Carolina Libar | Mrs, LAbarto, returaing 1 \day, found the door of her }and Cutler fn the hallway. She | screamed and Cutler ran, He was caught after @ chase by Bloycle Pollvw- man Foley. At tho station house ‘le tectives recoxnized the overcoat from Maloney's description, Cutler, who calle himself an “axent,” was held tn $3,000 bail for trial on each char; > fat open, ellie J. Tabor of No, 3% Linden Flavbuah, who in the summer of H. Tabor, a contractor and bullder, yenterday gued for separation and usked Supreme Court Justice Benedict in Hrooklyn for $# 4 week alimony and $100 counsel foe. piocy, it between genius | ‘® pretty @afe to bet that | drawing people to the box. | office. _ SS |captain carried him out and turned |nim over to the men of Truck No, 24 for treatment by artificial respiration Knudsen died Just as Dr. Dickinson are rived with an ambulance from the New York Hospital he basement and «round floor were burned out, The at 83,000. Jamage Was estimated One Ten Cent Box of EX-LAX — ocolate Laxative relieve you of the miseries of e ation if you have a bad taste in the mouth, | eating and have frequent headaches, | Don't neglect them. Ex-Lax will tone | digestion, promote bodily vigor and strengthen the ised to see how quickly your energy, | to you. | at All Drug Stores. | ene ee few this city for! Law caured a| had no opportunity to vialt a barber | The girl, who {# nineteen years old! and| the elders RAVINGS OF GIRL CAPT. SCOTT'S SHIP Terra Nova Brings Survivors of South Pole Expedition— Memorial in London. CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand, Bob. 12—The Terra Nova, the veaselegvhich took Capt, Robert F. Scott to the Ant Aretic on iis way to South Pole and which returned there to fetch him back and his companions hero! in thts port to-day, On hoard the Terra Nova are the sur- vivors of th South Pole expedition. The veesel which came in port with flag at half mast will refit here and continue her voyage to England, LONDON, Feb, 12.-The Lont Mayor of London has decided to open a Man- sion House fund for the erection of a memorial to Capt. Robert F. Scott and his companions, who died in the Ant- anette, The duty of providing for dependent relatives of the dead explorers he con- should be undertaken by the death arrived State, ‘The British Government undoubtedly will set aside a Treasury ARRIVES AT PORT. IN NEW ZEALAND those dependent on the dead explorers, Jit was sald, and Mrs. Seott will receive | #1.000 4 year from the Admiraity, The widow of Petty Officer Hvana ateo will recely Mdmiralty annuity, (t being the intention of the Admiralty to fider that both the naval officers in action A plan already under dle 1 for an expedition to bring back the bodies of Capt. Seott and his t ie saif that» rip will be financed by private subeoription if the Government does not undertake the task. Experte say that an expedition © fthia kind 1 go and return in one year at a cost of $50,000, A memorial service and his comrades, for Capt. Seott similar in detail to that held for the British victims of the t Titanic disaster, will be held Friday in St. Pawi's Cathedral, The Archbishop of Cantevur, and other dig- nitaries of the Church of England will officiate, and the King and Queen, mem. bers of royalty, Cabinet ministers and high oGvernment officials will parts pate HONOLULU, Feb. 12.-All efforts to by wireless with the steamer Aorangt, on which the widow of Capt. Scott safled from San Franctsco on Feb. 5 in the expectation of meeting her husband tn New Zealand, was aban- doned after twenty-four hours of futile signalling. By three o'clock it was deemed certain that the steamer had Passed beyond the range of the powerful apparatus at the wireless station here, and the great stack of messages for Mra. Scott, recetved here from all parte of the world, to be forwarded at once, remain unsent. — Positively Elegan' From the Lamisville Courter Journal.) It {# Inelewant to say “hug a girl” says a contemporary. Oh, very well. Tut ft 1e positively elegant to hug « girl. Customary Values $20 and $22.50, Spring edicts now ready. for DrivesRheumatic PainsAway, Relieves Backache and - der Disorders After a Few Doses Are Taken p disturbing bladder weaknesses, che, rheumatism, and the many other kindred ailments whi monly come with declining years, no longer be a source of dread and misery to those who are past the middle age of life. The new discove Croxone, cures all such disorders because it removes very cause of the trouble, It soaks right into the kid through the walls and linings; cleans out the little filtering glands and cells, and gives the kidneys new strength to do their work props It neutralizes and dissolves the poisonous urie acid substances that lodge in the joints and muscles, causing rheumatism; and makes the k » filter and sift out The Adventures of One-Dollar Bill For Anything You Want in the Way of a Cycle, Motor-Cycle, Mo'or- Bogt,Automobile, Etc., Usea‘ Wanted’ Ad. Sample Suit Sale $13.75 Advance Spring Models DARING innovation for the interest and benefit of all BEDELL patrons. During igners, fini ilors busy making up suits from odd pieces and remnants of cloth left from the Winter cutting Several i hundred exceptionally the correct new Spring 8 suits, = in model and faultlessly tailored according to the latest The_materiale are ALL OF MEDIUM WiIGHT Li, cach ault_being thus appropriate not only resent wear but for None but the most fashionable weaves have been employed in the making. None but the smartest Spring models have been iy and iate Spring. none but the choicest creations of the Spring season will be included at this price, $13.75. Remember, Alterations Free ON SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES 44-16 West 14th Streal OLD FOLKS FIND NEW REMEDY RELIEVES ALL KIDNEY AND BLADDER MISERIES all the poisonous ste matter from the blood and drive it out of the system. It matters not how old you are or low long you have suffered, Croxone is so prepared that it is practically impossible to take it into the human system without results, You will find it different from all other remedies. There is nothing else on earth like it It starts to work immediately and more than a few doses are seldom required to relie even the most chronic, obstinate case, It is the most wonderful remedy ever made for restoring the lifeless organs to health and strength and ridding the » stem of artic! of uric acid, and you can take it with the utmost fidence that nothing earth will so quickly cure such con You can obtain an original packag of Croxone at trifling cost from any first-class druggist. AN druggists are authorized to personally return the purchase price if Croxone should fail in a single case, Adventure 16 1 used to trudge along the streets, but finally gave up; | was a prey to great fat bull pup; “A Motor-Cycle’s what you need,” explained a friend one day, And so | thought I'd order cne with: out prolonged delay. gue and My f st thought was to pu ardiess of its pr chase one Again | | my good triend’s :nost exe) advice. A “Motor-Cycle Wanted” World Want Ad, | then did use, And o'er the trips I’ surely do enthuse, had on it he World for a Bargain th enliln