The evening world. Newspaper, March 21, 1913, Page 13

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NEW RULER TAKES | OATH OF OFIEAS KING OF REECE Constantine, Surrounded by Royal Family, All in Mourn- ing, Is Cheered by Throngs, March 21.—King took the eonstitu- tional oath of office in the Chamber of Deputies to-day in the presence of the Righest officials of tho State and of all the members of Parliament. A salute of one hundred and one guns ‘was fired when the royal procession left the Palace. Brilliant weather had brought out great crowds of people who cheered the King on his way while mill- tary bands stationed at intervals played the national anthem. ‘The King, who wore a General's unl- form, entered the Chamber of Deputies at 10.90 o'clock, Queen Sophia, Crown Prince George and the other Princes of the royal family, all dressed in deep Mourning, accompanied him The deputies stod i their places tn deep silence as His Majesty entered ‘The Metropolitan of Athens, surrounded by the members of the Holy Synod, in ful! canonicals, offered prayer @nd then read aloud the constitutional oath which King Constantine repeated ina firm voi , The King then signed the oath and all the Cabinet Ministers and the Metropoll- tan of Athens countersigned {t amid the hearty cheers of the Deputies An immense crowd gathered outside the Chamber of Deputies, welcomed the King and the other members of tho Toyal family when they emerged, and the cheering continued all the way to the Palace, The King starts for Salon- fica to-night. Gen, Su SHANGH) ex-Minister of Sung, cation, was shot and dangerously wounded at the ratlway sta- tion here to-d His assailant escaped, The General was on his way to attend the opening of Parliament at Peking. Managers’ Chairman Tells Arbitrat- ors Grade Crossinys Alone Have Cost Pennsy!vinia $60,000,000. Elisha Lee, chairman of the Confer- ence Committee of Managers, which represented the fifty-four railroads !n- volved in the firemen's wage dispute, to-day opened the case for the rail- roads before the Arbitration Board of Three, in session in the Waldort- Astoria, to decide the dispute under the Erdman Federal statute. Mr. Lee sai tr buna! Inver railways appear before chis crl- institutions bulit up by the t of private capital and yet unable to control the price at which they may sell thelr transportation. But the railroads not only cannot con- trol the price of their product, but they have not the privilege of getting, in the cheapest market, the labor for that product. “To our firemen friends, however, the sense of responsibility to the public does not seem so acute as to us, They rep- resent no one but themselves, not even ellow-workmen in other lines of mployment, They cannot ex- he direct results of public dis- . ‘This is not sald to blame or “Rallway employees have come to know that @ strike which would tle up trafMc is well-nigh unthinkable, They know that {f @ strike doesn’t take place the railways must give way. The men make large demands upon railway man- agers, not expecting those demands tobe granted, hut believing that arbitration must take place and that in the end the splitting of the difference between what they denand and what the rall- Ways offer will result in thelr favor. Mr. Lee went on to explain that new State laws as to grade crossings and other requirements have demanded ex- tensive outlays—instancing the cost af $60,000,000 for grade crossings alone to the Pennsylvania Railroad, and an addi- tion of $900,000 per year for operating under the Extra Crew bill in Pennsyl- nia. This latter law, pending in thie State, would cost the New York Central $700,000 a year. ~, William H. Holbrook, foreman of ene ines for’ the Pennsylvania's Western Mnes, testitted that firemen's work 1s made easy by automatic stokers, which require only attention to valves after 50 Pounds of coal has been shovelled to “atart fires.” Firemen, he said, now do no more work th: 912, THE EV HISNDS COMBINE TO PROSE. THER WEA A BAMST Anthony Henke Starts to Look for Missing Spouse and Finds He’s Hubby No. 2 Lulu Bergman, twenty-elght years old, was arraigned to-day before Magistrate, McGuire in the Gates Avenue Police Court on a charge of bigamy. Her plea was “not guilty” and she was held for examination till to-morrow on $1,000 bail, Late last November there appeared in a morning newspaper the following ad- vertisement: “Wanted—A young widow to keep house for a widower. Apply No, 33 Ralph street, Brooklyn.” Mrs. Bergman was then living with her husband and their three children at No, Sil East One Hundred and Thirty-third street, in Harlem. She anewered the advertisement and was eo witower was Anthony Nine days after her engage- tied Anthony, it is alleged, brought home his three chil- dren from an asylum. .Christmas came and Anthony stayed out rather late, and when he came home his good quency. After that the dove of peace flew out the window and there was nothing but bickerings in the Henke household, Ten weeks after the wedding the ‘ride followed the dove and flew the coop. Henke began to miss her atten- tions to the children and himself and went in search of her, He had the ad- dress in Harlem and thither repaired and found the husband of his wife. When Henke and Mrs. Bergman were married they had a photograph of themselves taken @ Ia honeymoon, and he flashed this on Bergman, who rec- ognized his wife. An argument fol- lowed and an arrangement entered into by the two husbands. They re- solved to find the woman and prosecute her, Henke swore out a warrant for big- amy and by a decoy letter, copies of ENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAROH 21, 1918. which Bergman sent to all his and his wife's relatives, addressed to his w: Mrs. Bergman went home and was ar- rested. The letter told her that one of her ohildren was dying. When the woman appeared tn court this morning she did not seem to real- ize the gravity of her position. She seemed to be in a haze and answered the questions put to her in @ listless and absent-minded manner. CHOP SUEY BURGLAR GUILTY. Fred Schwetckert Convicted of Robbing Restaurant. Fred Schweickert, who was one of two in a dinastrous attempt to hold up & Chinese chop suey restaurant at No. 144 Flatbush avenue, Brooklyn, on March 4, and whose camrade, John Kleebolt, shot and killed himself when he saw arrest was inevitable, was found guilty of burgiary in the first degree nd assault in the second degree bo- fore Judge Baker in the Brooklyn County Court to-day, He was remand- ed for sentence on Monday. When the two robbers started to fee Chang Jow, proprietor of the restaur- ant, hurled a butcher knife twenty foet and it plerced Schwelckert’s side, bring: ing him down, Then, seeing the police closing in @n him, Kieebolt shot him- self through the head. lancy street, George Quinn, thirty-nine years old, a printer, of No. 9 Jones Street, was knocked down by an auto- mobile belonging to the Consolidated Gas Company and run by Charles War. ren. Quinn received a broken leg and internal Injuries. He was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital. GAS OVERCOMES FATHER AND GIRL IN VACANT HOUSE. They Are Rescued by Delivery Man After Broken Pipe Floods Their New Home. The fortunate appearance of a driver for a Newark department store probably saved the lives, at Arlington, N. J., to- day of Endrew Crawford and his daugh- ter, Mildred. Crawford had rented a house at No. 76 Quincey avenue and had arranged to move in to-day. Some articles were or- dered at the department atore. The de- Parement store driver reached the house at noon and rang the bell, Not getting An answer, he peered through a win- ¢ow and saw a woman lying on the bare floor, A window was opened and the house entered. It was filled with Kas. The young woman was carried Into the open air and her father was found collapsed in a corner of another room. The gas had been turned on in the cellar and was pouring into the rooms of the house in a falf-inch stream by way of a broken pipe. Dr. Plerre de Stanley was called. He ald the pair would recover, They would have been dead in another half-hour. ‘Hegweg joenagen, keeps a parting house at No. 16 East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street, traced the odor of gas early to-day to the room of John Sheridan, fifty-eight years old, @ plasterer, on the third floor, He broke down the door and found Sheri- dan dead, with the gas turned on, The keyhole, windows and cracks had been stuffed with paper. Sheridan had been out of work for some time. woman pitched into him for delin-|— The Effects of Opiates. HAT INFANTS are peculiarly preparations, all of which are le to ic, is well jum and its various inown, Even in the smallest doses, if continued, these opiates cause changes in the func- tions becilit tal perversion, a cravi Nervous dseaey such intractable and growth of the cells which CD AN eel eter gtoat causing for ol or narcotics in later life, nervous d. and lack of sta; as | macteet pdb it of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children qui their infancy. The rule receive opiates in the smallest doses only then if unavoidable. ‘The administration of decried, and the ove should not be m party. to it. Children who are need the attention @ physician, and it is nothing lees than a crime to dose them willfully with narcotics, contains no narcotics if aignature of Chas. H., Fletcher, among ph; Anodynes, Drops, other narcotics to children by any but a ysicians is that children should nover for more than a day at a time, and Cordials, Soothing 8: and Physician cannot be too wicon Genuine Castoria always bears the signatare of A Special Easter Collection of New Models of Warner’s Rustproof Corsets Ready in the Wanamaker Store They are so comfortable. If you have forgotten the corset, think of it tonight, and order it tomorrow. A Warner’s Rustproof Corset will make the prettiest gown more distinguished. It will give the new straight lines of fashion over which the gown will drape more gracefully and hang more artistically. Warner’s Rustproof Corsets are so light in weight that they help to givethe natural—the_uncorseted figure effect—and yet they are so well cut that they keep the figure in shape by moulding it on the right lines. The corset shows, more than any other one thing in the costume. The new hat, the beautiful gown, gloves, shoes, all may be perfect—yet the perfection of the whole depends upon the right corset. Women Who. Once Wear Warner’s Rustproof Corsets Always Wear Them They are so well made. * They are absolutely guaranteed not to rust or tear and the bones will not break. Complete collections in the Wanamaker Salons of all the new models’in all sizes. ; Warner’s Rustproof Corsets, $1 upwards. Redfern Corsets, the finest of the Warner Rustproof models, do. Corset Salons, Third floor, Old Building JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co, Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street BROTHER EULOGIUS DEAD. ‘ Had Reen Director of De La Salle Inatitute for Twenty-one Years. Brother Eulogius, for thirty-four years a member of the Onter of Christian Brothers, died early to-day from pneu- monia after a week's ‘line La Satie Institute, N ninth street. Brother Eulogius, who was sixty-elght years old, had been for twenty-one years director of the Inatt- tute and head of the literary depart- ment In Judicial circtos, Judge O'sulll- van of General Seasions, Supreme Court Justice Cohalan and Surrogate Cohalan and Magistrate McQuade were pupils un- der Brother Bulogius. The alumni of De La Salle and the Manhattan College, where he also taught, are arranging for a memorial service in his honor at St. Patrick's Cathedral on Monday morning, March 2%. Petcare MISS ANNE ROGERS TO WED. Her Engagement to J. Griswold Webb Is Announced, was announced to- Anne Pendleton Rogers, West Fitty- drink tea every afternoon. Not only \ because it is pleasing and refreshing, but because it is an excellent brain tonic. “White “Pose CEYLON TEA enjoys the same popularity here in America. It is packed \ in air-tight, duct-proof packager—in Ceylon—where it degree p the American housewife is enabled to \, buy it as fresh and full-flavored as though she / ‘The engagement day of Miss daughter of Mr. and Mra Archibald Rogers of No. 35 Went Pifty-third street, to J. Griswold Webb of No, 829 Park avenue. | Binying Americas Most All- Ceylon Tea from her Groces,~ ‘Mrs. Rogers {ts entertaining a house party for the week-end at her country home at Hyde Park, N. Y. Formerly of A. T. Stewart & Co, Best Time of All Spring to Choose Wanamaker Millinery, Tomorrow, Saturday Spring millinery is queen of the day. of the prettiest hats of the season prin quickly and well in the Millinery Salons. Second floor and on the Subway floors, New and Old Buildings. Hundreds of New Hats, $5 to $9.50 EARLY a thousand hats—hundreds of shapes, colors and styles of N trimming. Surely among them all any woman who wishes a moderate priced hat can find several to exactly suit her. Second floor, Old Building. “Nearly Five Hundred Sample Hats, $3.50 M*? to sell at 85 to. $8, Because they are a wholesale milliner's samples we have | sectired them just this day before Easter. If you could see the hats, you would be quite as sure as we are that not one will remain here longer%than tomorrow. Whoever heard of a hat at $3.50, made of hemp, with satin crown and hackle feathers? Yet it is here shown in the picture. Others with satin crowns, arrow bows, flowers, fancy feathers. Impossible to describe hundreds. All the new gay colors, and every Ay — Brosdvay, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street. Largely augmented collections Y plenty of people to serve you | shape. Continuing the Sale worn now. noticeable. Women’s Underwear Women’s 5c, conds” of $1 combination blac “firsts” of 35¢ combination ton, split soles. Ise, “firsts” of firsts” in vests and drawers — work isle, rades, 20c “seconds” of 25¢ combination suits, Children’s Socks cotton, lc for 25c qualities of white ayrirs rotton, funcy tops. dc, sono sbway floor, Old Building. duality. cotton, Men’s Hosiery 5c pair, usually 50c, Imported liste thrend, black or colors, self- clocked. White or ecru oy Subway Young Girls’ Easter Blouses This picture shows a new model which we think many Is will like, It is of pe de chine with lace chemisette and undersleeves, || priced 85,75. '" Tailored crepe de chine blouses at 85 are so popular it is almost impossible to get “) enough of them, Scores of new waists of voile and batistc, $1.75, 82, $2.50 and $5, New chiffon blouses at 85, Saturday is always new day in this Girls’ Specialty Blouse Shop, Come and see for yourself how many pretty things are here that cannot be found elsewhere. Third floor, Old Building, Last Day to Choose Blossoming Easter Plants Brighte) yur own home or the home of a friend by t ift of a blooming, growing plant. These hardy lilies, roses, hydrangeas, lilacs, azuleas, genista, hyacinths, spireas, lilies of the valley will keep alive the Easter spirit months after Faster has gone, Final Shipment Fresh from Greenhouses makes choosing better than ever before, Easter lilies with two to twelve blooms— very tall, suitable for sending to churches, Burlington Arcade floor, New Bldg., and Subway floor, New Buildi Hosiery and Underwear For Men, Women and Children All light Spring and Summer weights that can be Some “seconds” in the lot—but their faults have been mended and tiny oil spots are hardly 20¢ pair for mil run of 81 qualities ck or colored silk. B5c, for “firata” of 85c black cot- 124, “seconds” of 180 mercerized Men’s Half Hose 18c pair for “firsts” of 86c grade. for 50c, reavlatly 5c joued Men’s Underwear 50c for $1 combination suits, loor, Old Building. hat well-made in the new Spring Subway Entrance aad Subway floor, Old Building. of Gunmetal Jewelry 4 Gunmetal bags with five an six-inch frames will be carried by many well-dressed women on Easter. New models, 5. | ie at $1 are a special urchase of regular $2 kinds, q Lorgnette chains with six to thirty-six faceted “stones,” 50c to $1. . Imported coin purses, vanity , and card cases, lockets, hat pins, match safes, oddments from our own earlier importations are IL priced a third to half less than usual. — Main floor, Old Building. Hardwater Soap will be 10 cents a cake the first of April. For the rest of this month it will be only 5 cents a cake, REIN iter the pe a tunity now of getting a su for half the usual price. | Toilet Goods, Main floor, Old Bldg. ff Stockings 5c and 0c open- or tan, fas n-mesh cotton, i\Eggs of Chocolate and Cocoanut Small cream and chocolate eggs, 25¢ pound; jelly eggs, @0c pound, The “goode: #49 one can imagine are made in our own Candy Cuisine of pure sugar, fresh coc yen or coated with rich chocolate. $e, 5c, to $1. dack Horner pies for Easter include baskets of roses, All sorts of unusual favors and painted satin Easter eggs to hold candy. Fine chocolates and bonbons, 60c, 80c and $1 pound. Subway floor, Old Building. Veils for the Easter Hat Sunshine veils—in Nell rose, complexion pink, cream and champagne colorings, $1 yard, Newest French veilsjust here from Paris— show combinations of shadow figures and jchenille dots, 50c to $1.50 yard. Plenty of the much wanted taupe and purple veils ag well as made veils to drape the small hats, Main Floor, Old Building, The Easter Boy What a transformation when he puts on one of these new Norfolk suits in blue serge, tweed, homespun or black and white checks, topped with a covert coat! A fine showing is ready for tomorrow's | choosing— Topconts, 87.50 to $10_——_-Reefers, 85 to #10, Norfoik suits,86.50t0815. Double-breasted suits, 85 to@1 , | Russian and sailor suits, 86.50 to $10. | All the newest in colors and styles; all- | wool, sturdily made; fair priced, Try to come as early as possible. It will be a busy day. And we want to deliver every purchase Saturday evening, Burlington Arcade floor, New Building, en ee

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