The evening world. Newspaper, October 13, 1913, Page 14

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t t 14 WHENNDERYOOD SCALED TOL" Hobson's Attack Met by Demo- cratic Leader, Who Asks Ver- dict of Fellow Members. "WAGITINGTON, Oce. 18.—Representa- tive Hobeon launched a hot attack ageinet the Senatorial campaign of Democratic Leader Underwood in the House to-day, when he charged that his support of Underwood's presiden- tial candidacy at the Baltimore con- vention was obtained under “false pre- tenses.” Hobson, himself a candidate tn the Present Alabama contest, referred to printed reports of a recent speech in which he charged that Mr. Underwood was “the tool of Wall Street and the Naqwer interests,” and read from the Senate investigation of campaign con- tributions the testimony of Senator thanithead containing the record of a contribution of $35,000 from Thomas F. Ryan and Bankhead’s statement that Underwod hed not known who financed his campaign, “Hed 1 known,” shouted Hobson, “that Thomas Fortune Ryan, the man) whe Mr. Bryan rebuked and named be- fore the Baltimore convention and ac- cused of being the too] of Wall street, had financed that major portion of the campaign of Oscar W. Underwood, I not only would not have supported him, but I would have fought him, and, what ie more, he never would have deen the choice of the people of UNDERWOOD FACE! CHALLENGES HIM. “The support of the people of Ale- bama for Mr. Underwood for President was ‘secured under false pretenses, and There deciate that their support of him for the ted States Senate shall not be obtained under similar felee pre- temecs, Underwood, on his feet at ence, was loudly cheered by Democrats and Repubd- Means as he was recognized. The major- ity leader Aret reférred to Hobson's pub- Wehed speech, and sald he had been waiting to anawer it “when he could look Mr. Hobson in the face.” “I would like the gentleman,” Mr. Un- @erwood continued, turning toward Hob- son, “to say here what he said in his Alabama speech, and whether he charged me with being a tool of Wall street and the liquor interests.” “I used the double word,” replied Hob- fom. “I read the testimony I have just read here from the campaign contribu- Hone hearings, and I med that what Senator Bankhead said was true—that Mr. Underwood did not imow bis cam- palgn was being financed by 1 street. 1 eoked People of Alabama why, when charges were publicly made that hs campaign was being financed by Well street, my friend didn't find out I said that he in the hands of mana) and was being used and apparently did not know it. 1 said that he was dummy being used as 2 tool, and that if he had been a dummy and used a @ too) of Wall street he could be used by the diquor interests or any other interest.” HOUSE WITH UNDERWOOD CriE: “NO, NOI” arr directly that I 48 the tool of Wall street or the liquor Interests?” Mr. Underwood demanded. "I sald you were a dummy," Hobson replied with emphasis, ‘and as a dum- my you had been used and could be used again. Underwood then demanded to hear anything else in his public life upon which to base such tat asked Hobson to of the House, Hobson referred to the conference on the Tariff bill which struck out the Pomerone amendment full revenue certifying wines, We eharged that in agreeing to that Underwood had con- sented to let more tarn $7,000,000 “rest in the pockets of the liquor inte , After explaining briefly the hist Ye that amendment, Underwood tur to answer Hobson's general charge. i’ there eny viher man in thie chamber who believes the charge that 1 am or ever have been the tool of Wall Street?” he demanded, swaying in his place to face every member ‘present. ae no, shouted members of both Hobson attempted to interrupt Un- erwood, but desisted when member shouted, “Bit down, you've had your time. was tol,” continued Underwood, “that Mr. Ryan had made a contrihu- tion to my campaign fund; that he had done so without asking any questions it was given solely on the basis tha whatever as to my policies, saying thi he was a Southern man and wanted to see @ Southern man elected President. ory ned SIGK HEADACHE, COSTIVE, BILIOUS, IF LIVER 1S TORPIX—DIME A BOK You men and women who can't ht — who h e, i ‘a, can't sleep, are nievous and upeet, bothered with @ sick, gassy stomach, Are you keepi g your bowels clean with Cascareta—-or werely dosing your- lew days with salts, pills, cas- jd other harsh irritants? Cas- carets immediately cleanse and sweeten CANDY Gorgeously Colored and Pro- ductive of Comfort and Ease. The rea) tea gown of the moment is & Gorgeous garment of brilliant hues, su Geative of the Turkish harem in its lin draperies. ‘There te something suggestive of per- | fect comfort and informality about the new Turkish tea gown—as the illustra- tons show. It enwraps the figure like the loose folds of @ silken toga. Three hooks hold {it in position, one at the point of the decolletage, one under the sash and a third where the draperies cross at the knee. It may be slipped Into in a twinkling—ev while on Guest t@ mounting the two or three flights of stairs to one's domicile or coming up in the elevator and waiting without the door, And when on it is partioularly becoming in its graceful lines, its rich coloring and its suggestion of sensuous case. The Turkish tea gown illustrated has @ tunle of Roman atriped silk over a founaation ekirt of navy blue cha: meuse. Much dark blue is used in the Var East, and this color ts particularly beautiful as @ background for brighter | hued fabrics. The wide sash draped around the hips is of black satin meteor and the co! js loose, th blounes loosely, the sash is knotted loosely. There is nothing tight about the tea gown—even the narrow little blue charmeuse skirt te looxe because of {te manner of crosed drapery in front of the knee. Within this crossed drapery falls an odd panel of fringed and beaded eilk, presumably designed to hide tho ankles modestiy, but really hiding then only in an elusive, provoking Way. The black satin sash ts also trimmed with fringe and ie rather heavily weighted et the end eo that it fa! —siving « dignified, otherwise loose, draped robe, RONT AND BACK VIEWS OF NEW TEA GOWN, ‘Two views of this new Turkish tea own are given, one showing t rapery of the skirt the ai wash and the other the enormous cape- collar and the very simple lines at the| back of the tea gown. The tuntc is of corn-colored silk striped in Persian blue, Yad.an red and lavender. the stomach, remove the sour, undi- gested and fermenting food and foul Gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated matter and poison from the bowel A Cascaret to-night straightens you out by mornin ox keeps cd bowel i you feel buly Yor and bowels regular and you feel bully foi months. Don't forget the children. i CATHARTIC. f i / yi o OF, ROM RIBBON- MORNING FRocK OF WHITE \ MOHAIR AND WORSTED Panel hanging tn the opening of the skirt drapery repeats these colors, the black collar and eash by their very con- trast of tone throwing the bright Orl- ental shades into relief, Another illustration shows the new sash of R tpea ribbon wht Just now dear to the h of school and college maids. These sashes come in splendid colore—usually the stripes showing up vividly on a dark ground, ‘aph appended es of orang: blue, petunia and apricot. Its manner of adjustment is very simple. Any girl }can make such # sash for herself. The sash should measure at least six inches | acroas and ts pinned fast at its centre to one alde of the waistline. The ends are then knotted low at the opposite hip. In this instance the gay, striped sash gives @ modern and modish touch to a little morning frock of white mohair and worsted mixture, trimmed with | plptngs of white silk and wh te pearl buttons, and worn with buttoned boots | of buckskin. The taliored nuit of velvet gives an odd effect of being two sults, one worn over [the other, at first glance, and the sui: worn underneath appears to be of light- colored cl@gh. Th.s effect is produced, of course, by very wide pip! which follow the linea of coat and skirt, and incidentally emphasize 1 ines tn | marked degree. This modern little tail- |leur ts made of brown velvet in the hew Lele-de-negre shade and the pipings are of broadcloth In a harmoniaing shade of tan. This of decorative buttuns down one side of the cutaway coat. —— Hambarg-Am Adds to Capital | HAMBURG, Oct, 18—The directors of | the Hamburg-American line announced | toslay that they proposed to increase | the capital of the company by $7,000,000, | ‘The proposal, which is to be submitted to the stockholders at @ special meeting, ie deciared to be due to the necessity of largely Increasing the company’s fleet of freight carrying vessels In connection with the opening of the Panama Canal and for the establishment of a now! enrview Oriented i | I | ow Kult has a row | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1918." HOUSECRIES “NO” | Turkish Tea Gowns the Latest in Style, Suggestive of the Harem in Draperies oe epee WALDO'S NEW COPS CHEERED BY CROWD AS THEY GON PST | (Continued from First Page.) Lepection Diatric Dwyer has ONLY THE ARSENAL MEN NOT MOLESTED. Of the men who formerly had policed this district there remained thi morn- ing only Inspector Dwyer, Capt. John H. Boyle of the West One Hundredth |atreot station, apt. Willan W. Dug- of which command, Inspector | | gan of the West Sixty-cighth street, Capt. Edward R. Walsh of tha West Forty-reventh street the officers and men of the Arsenal station. The latter alone were not molested. Into every other of the four precincts Commis- sioner Waldo sent new and untried po- Hicemen, and officers not new or untried but from precincts other than. thom whose confines bound the theatre di riet, the hotel district, the new T derloin, the haunt of the Gopher Gang and San Juan Mill. Five hundred and one men weat into hese precincts, 191 respective! to the West Forty-seventh and We Sixty. | CAPT. eighth street stauion MY to the West Ine Hundredth street, On their show- ing {n the next few months wili depend the Commlesioner's experiment. He bo- ileves that they will resist all tempta. tion, and that they will remain. the honest, model poli t they aro Along with dyspepsia eral iil health, hy ecaul the food to be assimilated and the blood as charged with poi rt does it, but poor stor protected against the at tion, Fortify the body h work now with an alter ative e: und tablet form More than 40 year Vigorating stomach + he stomach, liver and bh und thi if not, send £0 Nel and Surgical Pnatitute, Bull comes nervousnens, sleeplessness and gen- ‘inordered stomach does not permit digestion, In turn, the nerves are not fed on good, red blood and we those symptoms of nervous breakdown. With poor thin blood the body is not tack of germs of grip~bronchitis—consump- DR. PIERCE's Golden Medical Discovery pi nce, over 40 year wel now also tw had in suxar-comted tablet form of ler nite in One-cent sah {gr trial box to Dr, Pierce's MISS CURTIS LEADS WOMEN GOLFERS IN NATIONAL TOURNAMENT Bostonian’s Score of 91 for | Medal Play Round Far Ahead of Others. Pa ‘Special to The Rrening WILMINGTON COUN’ CLUB, Del, Oct 18.-—A card of 91, turned in by Miss Harriett Curtis, of the Kesex County Golf Club, Boston, was far and y the best exhibition by any of the early finishes in to-day’s qualifying round of the nineteenth annual wos mens’ national golf tournament held over the course of the Wilmington Country Club. A atiff northwest gale that roared across the links made acé curate play Impossible and interjected @ large element of luck into the com- petition. In fret the wind made the golng #o dificult that many wagers were made that not a half dozen women would get under 90. This was the gen- eral opinion even with the full knowl- edge that the best women golfers in the United States, Canada and the British Isles were entered in the event Never in the history of the competi tion has such @ high class field com- peted. Three representatives, Misa Murlel Dodd, present British and Cani dian champion, Mies Gladys Ravencroft, former British champion, and Miss Mabel Harrison, present Iriah champion, are putting their strength against the present champions of this country. Miss Violet Pooley, the first Canadian to finish, had & score of %, which hardly ind!cated her real form. Scores of the qualifying round, | medal play, were ax follows: Miss | Harriet Curtis, Boston, 91; Mies Violet Pooley, Canads, 99: Miss F. W. Allen, Oakleigh, 101; Miss Bertha A, Strat- ton, Cranford, 103; Miss Caroline | Painter, Midlothian, 105; Mra. E. H. | Fisher, Merior, 107; Miss Myra Hel- | mur, Ciioago, 108; Misa Louise Elkins, Miss P. 8. Coleman, , Chicago, Mrs. Frank H. Elde: ; Philadelphia, 110; Miss A. L. Cana: New York, 111;Miss Grace Farrell New York, 128; Mra, H. D. Rae, Ni York, 130; Mra. Cha: H, Fraile: Washington, 123; Miss Margaret Cur- tis, Boston, 98; Miss Ethel Campbell, Philadelphia, 115. JUDGE IN HIGH COURT RAISES A QUESTION | THAT MAY AID SULZER (Continued from First Page) World.) TRY TURKISH TEA GOWN 4 OF STRIPED Sink A OVER Navy re CHARMEUSE. yo now. Commisisoner McAdoo tried it in the old Tenderloin station several years ago and failed, Commisioner Waldo ex- Peots better luck. Capt. Willlam H. Koehler of West Point has trained the present recruits, and has told the Com- misioner they are the finest body of men he ever handled, Ohiet Magistrate McAdoo gave them lectures and practl- cal instruction in preparing tor eourt. No other band of recruit had such preparation. And th t and feel it. DUGGAN GIVES FINAL WORD OF ADVICE. pt. Duggan kept his men half an hour beyond the time they should have gone on post while he gave them a/ final talking to. He spoke principally about the need for elertness, alvili tion and cour “Keep your eyes on the ground,” aald is of particular importance, because the conviction of the Governor rests almost entirely on the interpretation of the law he. “Don't go along with your head in} as announced by the Judge 1! wir and your stick awinging. Don't |” special importance is attached to the think + \'re the whole show. Just Keep | gecision of the Judges on the articles your eyes open. Nothing's too small to} of impeachment charging larceny and notice, And remember, be civil. People| Serjury in connection with his campaign have @ right to ask you questions. | contributions These have been chal- Don't take offense casily. It takes al tenged py the defense na being outalle nto Keep out of ¢ aule. Any | surisdiction of the court hecanse they n get into st, Don't be hasty | with your gun, You can never recall a sot once it’s left your weapon, Don't forget that ‘However, ‘our gun and your stick re for your own protection, to save your own life. Use them !f you have to, but firat be sure you're right.” hough ve mentioned no name Dugi apparentiy vad in inind in his remarks about the careful use of a revolver were committed by Sulzer the privat citizen before he became Suiser the Governor. After discussion a vote wil be taken In executive session on this pzint, which will determine whether or rot all the testimony relating to campaign contrlvutions can he admitted in evi- dence. A majority whereas a two-thinds vote is required vote will decide this, Janes F, Lally, one of the young po- tcemen who had been assigned to —= Dugan's command, but who, last night, not and Killed John J. Deighen of No, Fast Forty-third street, Dr. Hub- bard, @ police surgeon, said Lally was under the influence of an intoxicant when he wan brought to the station after You need not have Grey Hair —you can cure the shooting, INSPECTOR DWYER’ WoRD To|f™ dandruff — stop COMMANDERS. falling hair. —— Use Inspector Dwyer sent @ letter to the commanders of the three stations in- structing them how to handle the young policemen. He advised them that youth, zeal and energy would more than compensate for lack of experience and counselled them to be lenient with the beginners and to exercise patience, tact and discretion. In another letter he Millions owe restored beau bade farewell to the men who wei @ youthful appearance to transferred, thanking them for their [my Us, Restores Grey Hair loyalty during his term of office. I color, stops to ite eomet, ie rates . uelh ot satisfied. joney pn m patiet poorly Rites tear Policeman Beiloch! of the West Sixty- eighth street station, was the first of the young cops to make an st. He brought In a woman who, he sald, was intoxicated and had gathered a crowd around her by her antics at Columbus avenue and Sixtleth street. She refu to obey when he ordered ber to move | on | xd to the blood, On the other hand, which come from this disordered Its not. head work that EARL & WILSON, A Collar of Exceptional 2 for 25 Cts. h them t) dealers in, 'W * WORLD WANTS * THEY WORK WONDERS—TRY :0 *% WORLD WANTS * WORLD on the verdtot of mullty. It ts consid- ered probable that unless all of the Judges, or at least a very large major- ity of them, declare against admitting this evidence, it will be allowed to stand | by vote of the Senators. It will require thirty-eight votes to convict Gov. Sul- ager. Twenty ate necessary to save him. ‘While intensely vital proceedings were wetting under way in the Capitol, there was & strange contrasting gcene in the executive mansion half a ‘mile away. Gov, Sulser and his wife and the pet dog Patsy were indulging in a rainy day household routine of life #0 calm and serene as to appear totally obliv- fous of the impending crisis in their lives. During the morning an athletic instructor visited the “people's house” and had half en hour’ sion with the Governor. It was no conference over politics, Impeachm faire of State. Put- ting on the gloves, the two men in- dulged in vigorous boxing. The pro- fessor eald afterward the Governor was particuiarly vigorous to~lay and got in some aplendid punches. After five or six rounds both men were in @rofuse perapiration and the Governor went to his quarters. At the breakfast table there was an animated session, with the Governor id his wife on one side and Patsy, th had the sulkes and would not speak for a lump of @ugar which the Governor held out to him. All the perauasive eloquence of the people's friend could not win Patsy | over, much to the merriment of Mrs. Sulser, The word was passed around that Tammany wanted the business put through promptly, and that once the session started it should not be Inte! rupted until time for the public votin, There was opposition to this from u State Senators and from some of the Judges, who were disinclined to be put to undue haste and posalble night ses- sions. The questions will be fought out in the secret meetin: Appetite Ho! Ho! Tis a Great Joy CELEBRATE COLUMBUS DAY. 4aiet Anniversary of America's Discovery Observed To-Day. Yesterday was the four hundred and twenty-firat anniversary of the discovety of America by Christopher Columbam, but the observance of Columbus Day will take place to-day. Columbus Day is a legal hottdi twenty-four States nia, Colorado, Idaho, Hlinois, Indiana, ucky, yland, M. ssachusett gan, Missouri, Montana, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennayl- vanla, Rhode Island, Texas, Vermont and Washington, tompeh if healthy says yes. and mouths water and w. = the stomach be sick, then we have mo appetite and are actusily nause- ated. Guest—“"Bally goed. Stuart's tte Teblete make me cnt like o bores.” | sl | & free flow of oa ide the stomach by tts ablilty to mix the food eaten with mouth Jutces which | en it to more readily do ite work. ituart's Dvene ete xo Into the! mente the ‘tod. a nen, Tose and. fluidised. by mn gocs Into gt ang that in pnd mants rn, has Stuart moment you feel turn of Fel rt Fou f ‘been nut of order ana € Riusri'e Drapepsie Tablets were, the me ef restoring ite normally healthy c dition. Wotry arumetst carrion Stuart's Dyspep ta Tablets. and no where vou may Be vatican aiwaye obtain. a box anywhere te — T - ~ | KEEP LOOKING YOUNG, It’s Easy—If You Know Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets ‘The secret of Keeping young te to fee! To do thie you muet bowels and liver. known physician the sub tle in their | They bring| that of’ spirit, that buoyancy which should be by toning up | etem of impuri- Dr, Edwards’ Olive color, 10, and |25¢. per box. The Olive Tablet Company, | Columbus, Onto. Style. WORLD Every Nemo does something, for some type of figure, that no other corset can do so well. No. 506, shown above, is the most wonderful Sigure-reducer ever made for women of full figure who need firm abdominal support, very long. The skirt At the back are semi- elastic extensions of Lasti- kops Webbing. On each side-front are two deep goresof semi-elastic Lasti- kops Cloth, * Two similar model No. 506—low bust {$500 No. 508—medium The picture shows how this corset clings like an eelskin when you stand, When you sit down, the elastics expand, giving all the “spread” you need for perfect comfort. REMEMBER—These patented Nemo elastic fabrics are guaranteed to outwear any corset, AVOID IMITATIONS! Other Popular Nemos $3.00, $4.00 and up. Stores Everywhere

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