The evening world. Newspaper, November 19, 1913, Page 6

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Life,” Said Missourian in Re- Lowa faced er reard to Scotsdyke by Iron Duke's The tron Duke, which is a new super Inquiry Opens. SIONS) attendant, according to a newspaper | = the bi era penton gli Pinay dreadnought, was on her trial trip, and . mae . despatch from St. Petersburg. or i ploye ° o a A several high officials of the admiralty — & the He tala) 7; Wie for me Je morse for Jealous Act. demand for an increase of 18 per cent. Men in English Channel. were aboard, Wile the warship Was Of] pact Attorney Whitman! {n n buving the name seats from | mseaste Bence Sno bas for many on their wages meant the expenditure Ventnor, T. of Wight, fire was seen to| strict-Attor itman‘s inquiry polltan Opera Company for | Monens been an Invalid, escaped with by the British Government of $12,600,000 area rae buret from a vessel on t ‘ang {into the tte ndal resulting from ears, butt only a few bruises. EANGAB CITY, Mo., Nov. 19—Dr.|/more each year and would necessitate] LONDON, Nov. 19—The British bat-| tne iron Luke went tu the oy n by Tyan & Co, of | Tyaon & Co, when h \ \ ‘a SHOT HS WAN, THEN AS DOCTOR DECLARED HIM DEA “Happening That Wrecks My ‘Waitam T. Einm of &t. Joseph, Mo, was charged to-day with murder in the 1 EO OF Che thy Pasoengere: GRO Crew ; sie House with the Metropolitan firet degree after @ Coroner's Ind Et eee ee ee ee hee thes | of the steamer Heotedyke while the |!mmediatets dispatched to ber and CO eee een secure A oan af ateeean, | TEN he applied CASTOR IA Into the death yesterday of W. Putnam | who quit work would be regarded aa| steamer wae burning in the English oom wae beeun this afternoon before Magis- For Infa: id Child: Cramer of Chicago, who was shot by | having resigned thelr ponitions, Channel yy to-day. rire on Japanese tines, J in the oars of the Dine a for nts ani ren, e ner of ie TOKO » Nov —A wireleas omar he comparative. De, iam in a downtown hotel Vetter | |The members of the denutation, who) ‘The steamer, bound from Mediterra. bese rinied Gen ihe. danmiael iD wan crowded with specs | Pet! . "| the Kind You Have Always Bought © private detective engaged by the doc-} would have to refer the P 4 8 for Sanderiand, caumht AFA) oamer Sado Maru, from Seattle Nov. O9-men und women, mont | gece se rein | Pour fete vet?" | ears the ter had for several weeks watched the | General's decision to the men’s union, | ° the Iale of Wight shortly after mid-|) pays cargo in No, 4 hold is on fire. cribers to the opera, squeez-|""""Nac, had two for thie Saturday ture MET movements of Cramer and the doctor's poacsenban>-Snenhenaitey night. The blaze started in a deck cargol‘the steamer is expected to reach this | ina Inte the clome quarters hight. ‘There ure twenty-two pair still g 4 “ wits. WEYLER RESIGNS OFFICE of grass and spread so rapidly through} port on Nov. 2. Assistant District-Attorneys = Train | due me," responded Mr. Dick, .D WANTS WonK Joun Torpey, a hotel detective. tent! fie@ that when he went to the room with Dr. Elam and found Cramer dead om the floor Dr. Blam told him he had Dought an automatic pistol just be- Gere leaving Bt. Joseph and had come @own here to “get” Cramer. C, A. Williama, the policeman who ar- vested Dr. Elam, testified that the steel Dullet passed: through ‘Cramer's chest ena through the back of a chair in Welch the victim wan nitting. Dr. Elam was not called to the stand. In @ etatement made at Police Head- quarters just before the inquest the doc- ter showed intense remorse. “I do not believe there was anything | yy . If this matter on the part of my wife I would be hanged.” dootor, Glynn, @ private de- Rousseau, @ lawyer, and had held a conference in the teddy of a downtown hotel fifteen minutes before Dr. Elam went with (Cramer to his foom in the hotel and shot btm. According to Glynn, the four had Attempted to come to an amicabi concerning Cramer’ teged relations with Dr. Elam's wife, two weeks ago left her husband's in Gt. Joseph to visit her mother, Mrs. J, M. West, in Detroit. Dr. | @nd announcing to his friends that he nad killed Cramer, led hote! detectives to the oom. In their presence he ex- famindd the man in a professional man- mer and calmly pronounced him dead, “He lied to ine and I killed him,” Dr, ‘Blam sat. Detective Glynn eaid that after in- Pestigation he had eseured Elam that the relations between Mrs. Elam and Cramer hed been nothing more than “a Rarmicss flirtation.” Dr. Elam is forty-eight years old. Mrs. Elam is thirty-nine. They were aM THE EV Kansas City by Dr. W. T. Flam, de clared to-day that Cramer was the vic- tim of @ mistake on Dr. Elam’s part “My husband's conduct always was without blemish,” she said. — BRITISH POSTAL MEN LOSE. Government Refuses Their Demand for More Pay. . %—The denand of day by Herbert Samuel, the Postmaster- General. He sweetened his refusal ta the deputation which waited on him by the imposition of new taxation. Mr, Samuel, referring to the threats of the MADRID, Nov. 1%—Capt.-Gen. Vate- rane Weyler of Cuban fame to-day re- signed the Governorship of the Prov- inte of Catatonia on the ground that he was a Liberal in politics and dis agreed with the polloy of the present Conservative Spanish Government. ‘The General is popular in Catalonia and attempta were made to Induce him to withdraw his eralanation, but with. out success. —_—_— Ball Player Matsel Married. BUFFALA, N. Y., Nov. 19.—It became known to-day that Frits Maieel of the New York American baseball team was married here yesterday afternoon to “hristine Hoerl of Baltimore, Md. ‘emony was performed by Judge Noonan of the City Court. Ve his age as twenty-three and hia bride as twenty-two, BATTLESHP SAVES. PASSENGERS FROM BURNING STEAMER House th a1 e Pe aw of the Britian Post- hed scene, ed the helpless persons ‘ ection 3 ie ch mst hk LONDON, Nov. 18—The Imperial t office for higher pay wan rejected te wethe Tron Duke wievat ner nearer. (One Hundred Subscribers to} rx-ste wu Thirty, With Crew, Taken Off | «nip waite tleship Iron Duke effected a timely ren- ENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, vse HN DOE HEARNG 08 INTO TOKET SCANDAL |: SESS BEGUN BY WATMAN sk ec 1913. ~ -| RUSSIAN CROWN PRINCE HURLED FROM AUTO — Boy Invalid, Son of Czar, Escapes | With Slight Injuries in St. Petersburg Accident. few ble to launch the boats, The panie-stric ken pi crew were forced the steamy the tru " Kshure for the aint made by a In the Chonn The . mass of flames when the boats reached | son tickets for the Metropolitan Opera { The Iron Duke pl Mebts upon the ster A her nator Prank D. Paves and | Russian Crown Prince Alexis Nisio- | tw A. B. Dick, inemorrs of the subscribers’ |latevitch 1s reported to have been vommittee jauiry, w of the doomed the rescue crew took all hands safely off. Opera Crowd Room When which occasioned -| thrown from an automobile In which lhe was driving to-day with a sailor burning Scotedyke was ov | Metropolitan Opera | for seats, He sent 1 miles south of Ventnor, and bonte were ers and got an ord —_—_ Lace Curtain EXTRA s 35 Years Oni Chait 77dCo y fo SIXTH AVE... 199 T0209 “STREET IN NEW YORK'S SHOPPING CENTER Stocks having been reduced to from one to six pairs of a kind we will close out, THURSDAY, 300 Pairs $7.50 & $8.50 Lace Curtains at $4, 65 Irish Point, Cluny, Antique, Lacet, Arabian, Marie Antoinette and others, POPULAR PRICES mere The Suit Sale Supreme Fourth oor. Russian Sables and Silver Foxes A rare collection, including ~ Skins from the moderate priced to the most costly, which for dark- ness of color and richness of fur cannot be equalled. + married thirteen years ago. DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 1.—Mra. Wil- Nam T. Elam, wife of the St. Joseph physician who yesterday shot and killed W, P. Cramer of Chicago at the home of her mother here, to-day declared that her husband had i.ocver dispinyed any indication of jealousy and aaid: “He never had any reason to do a0. I wae with him in Chicago last Saturday and everything was all right. 1 just oame over here to visit my mother. I @en't know what to do—I don't know Whether I will go to my husband's as- stance or not. I will have to have ‘more information about the affair.” CHICAGO, Nov. 19.— mer, at the hotel where with her husband, shot A number of Made-up Sets for immediate delivery. Thanksgiving Time Is Replenishing Time This is the season in which thousands of housewives replace their broken china and add a new lamp or table, or rug or or some other piece to their comforts, buffet, be ready for the holidays and the long winter evenings. so as to An ever increasing number are coming to Cowperthwait’s to a tis because oF the great variety of our stocis, prices and our liberal credit. You need no introduction to open a charge account here, We trust you without red tape and 50c weekly bu 100 worth: trices marked in plain we give you a year and a half to pay. It matters not how much or little make, either. Your credit geal eh ca eens = Just come and choose what you want in the way of furniture, tugs and house furnishings. We'll send them home at once} then you pay in small weekly or monthly instalments, figures, ys you $30 worth of goods: $1.50 weekly bu: $2.50 weekly buys §200 oon i ps Unless you have visited one of our two bi stores you ean never know what a wonderful service we r you, store is well worth a call and you will not be 5 ‘a a ee you urged to buy, COWPERTHWAIT & SONS “Oldest Furniture House in America” 3rd Avenue ro and 12ist 8818 to 8334 Third Park Row Street ae, Heres ang Cham Se Biter teeta Every Color A One Price Sale of All That Is Best in Style, Qual- ity and Tail- oring. “‘Printzess’’ $35.00 Suits, $16.75 This is positively the greatest thing New York has ever known in the way of a Suit Sale. $16.75 is the lowest ‘price ever quoted in America on a “Printzess” Suit. $25.00 is the lowest price at which Printz-Biederman Co. make a suit to retail. Printz-Biederman Co. import the choicest of the new Paris styles and reproduce them ina superior manner. The coats of the suits are 28 to 82 inohes long. Materials are BROADCLOTH, DIAGONALS, MATELASSE, CHEVIOTS, TWO-TONE effects, WIDE WALES, POPLINS, BASKET WEAVE, PENCIL STRIPES and other cholce fabrics in every color and black, The SKIRTS show many new and distinguished draping effeots not heretofore presented, The LININGS are,all GUARANTEED for TWO SEASONS. Some are yarn dyed satins, others peau de cygne; others changeable silks; all colors, Third Foon A complete range of sizes guarantees every woman a perfeat fitting sult—all regular sizes, “Printzess’’ $29.75 Suits “Printzess’’ $25.00 Suits, DISTINCTION «Ns ORESS ACG Ud Pav OrniscE As anyone Knows whc read“the excellent ad- vertising of ‘‘Printze Suits in the Ladies' Home Journal, Women's Home Companion, the Butter- ick and other publications, the regular prices aro $25.00, $ 6 and up to $35.00. "PRIN '! SUITS, GUARANTEED FOR TWO FULL SEASONS! ro manufactured by Printz-Bleder- man Oo, of Cl land, The growth of these manufacturers, who have doubled their capacity several times during the past six years, is alone suffiolent to stamp the ‘*PRINTZESS'' SUITS AS LEADEI#S OF FASHION, QUALITY AND HIGH GRADE TAILORING, Prints-Biederman Oo, do not attempt to create their own styles, leaving that important feature to suoh master minds as Callot, Francois, Paquin, all sizes for small women and sizes 40, 42 and 44 Worth and other world-famoua originators, for large women, Every Suit an Advance Spring 1914 Model SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO., SIXTH AVENUE, TO aeTH STREET, NEW YORK CITY —>—>—_>—~p

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