The evening world. Newspaper, March 13, 1914, Page 4

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()} HoH sooo. stones yas re Neto an was | Though Opposed to Votes for, Is} Pee Atte fve years old and reputed SIX-YEAR-OLD LAD WHO is the pster blunting busneen | CROSSED OCEAN ALONE ee AND WON FRIENDS. == | be me ! OANA TOEE ELE DEE EE one aw ! “Women, He Believes Methods Will Win. The Earl de la Warr, who arrived to-day on the Mauretapia of the ) Cunard line, says the British women | will get suffrage. The Bar! is not in favor of women receiving the vote, but he says the militant methods will win their point “Here they are, chopping up things, burning homes, slashing famous paintings and there in no way to! « stop them,” declared the Fart. “What | ‘7 can you do with them? It is hard for gentlemen to treat with women who are not ladies. The jish are getting awfully tired of the militants, but since there 1s no law to prevent their continuing their torch and axe campaign, I think that the Govern- ment will finally give them the vote in sheer desperation.” ‘Tho Earl will spend a few days in “Objection to Tyranny | Obedience to God,” Their ; Battle Cry. Two hundred bogs, pupils of Bry- Ant High School, Wilbur avenue and Academy street, Long Island City, Went on strike this morning, de- manding the reinstatement of @ youth who was guspended iast Fri- day and the transfer of a teacher who ts unpopular with the boys and Girls, The youngsters, ranging in ages between fifteen and seventeon years, congregated in the Queensboro Bridgo Plaza, where they made the echoes fing with shouts of their eee earners \ phed Montreal, after which he wif visit “Objection to tyranny is obedience | Delaware. j te God.” “You know it was one of my ances- tors who founded the State of Dela- ware,” said the Kari, “and naturally I have a great deal of affection for that Commonwealth. I will visit all the historical spots in the State be- fore returning home.” Mrs. Norman Whitehouse of New York, who lent great assistance to the suffrage movement in Amorica, was also a Mauretania passenger. Mrs, Whitehouse said:she was not im favor of the Englisi’- militant Dr. Peter E. Demarest, principal of the school, chooses to iqnore the strike, contending that there to-day merely an unusual number of truancy cases. He said he thought most of the children would find that obedience to their i o THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAROR #ician, , | years old, a travelling bag maker. of No. 385 West Thirty-fourth street, is alleged to have gained entrance to many houses and robbed them. Ona his possession he was arrested on day wan sentenced by Justices Zel-| 94 sald to the leutenant: lor, Hermann and O'Keefe in Special Sessions to pay a fine of $500 and | spend one year in the penitentiary. vestigated Jacobs's record, related to the eourt the manner in which said Mullins, “and posed as a phy- sician from the Hoard of Health. to homes and then rob them. He al- ways dressed in white duck trousers and carried a vhysician’s instrument case. Tho case contained burglar’s ? | tools. made an official of the Eye an@ Far Infirmary at Thirteenth street and | Second avenue believe he was a bona © thle pe ew ile was allowed the {fide phyvtel hompinl for several liberty of the monthe, ; dacobs }o& man's | sician, and that “patie another instance,” Mullins said, “he fave a woman on Avenue B a box of PSEUDO PHYSICIAN CARRIED BURGLAR’S TOOLS IN HIS BAG ~~ on ye operated pills, After taking one of tue pills she was forced to stay In bed « week.” ‘ Jacobs has a prison record. He | came to New York from Boston about @ year ago after serving twenty-one months in the Charlestown, Mass. ( penitentiary for receiving stolen goods," FORGETS EVEN HER NAME WHEN MOON IS FULL) Prison and Fine for Rob- bing Homes. Representing himself to be a phy- Ralph Jacobs, twenty-six {Woman Appeals to Police to Help Find Herself—Claimed by Husband. A woman walked Into the Sheeps- head Bay police station early to-day jarge of having burglars’ tools in b. 26 at 123 Delancey street and to- “Will you tell me the way home?” “Where do you live?” he asked. She looled pussied for a minute ion O . |and realized she bad forgotten. Probation Officer Mullins, who in WWhate four Gale Vaua¥” 6sk68 the officer, She thought a while and couldn't recall that, either. Dr. MoKittriok ‘was summoned from the Coney Island Hospital and talked to ber until she remembered she was Rose Peterson, twenty-seven, of No. 2873 Stilwell avenue, Sheepshead Bay. Her hus- band was notified and west to the station for her, “Aphasia,” explained tenant. “No, full moon,” he corrected. “She has strange spells every time the moon gets full.” cobs plied his trade as a burglar. “The defendant had cards printed,” ‘sing this card‘he would gain access the = lieu- “The fellow was #o daring that he P 4 , PLDODVIDEDIDEDTDTID DONE “Those methods would not do in] ..) 0, ; popular passenger on the thie country,” sald Mrs. Whitehouse |aeuretanin of the Cunard line, which “The suffrage cause is going ahead |arrived to-day from Liverpool, was steadily here and it will not be long | Herbert Kum! *ix years old. Little before all the States have given wom | Herbert travélled across alone, heing en the vote.” watched over by Mrs, Alice Rowe, @ methods. She is Mise Julia Garrity, who teaches algebra, Harry Walker of No. 157 Pearsall street, a senior, and one of the most popular boys in school, is the one i jatewardens. All the passengers became F, | acquainted with him and contested to *jentertain him, He went over the ship ‘from aster to stern, down into the fire- room and up on the bridge to see how ip is navigated, sn ee ee ILLNESS MAKES HIM A THIE Montague Pike May Receive Medi- eal Treatment Instead of Gente ated, stil ar age Herbert went wit is ane 5 FeO ree A Soares | Gather and wcther from his home. tn have ee ete guise of @ Board] Akron, O., to London to visit his grand- srvidsalth inspector, was Arraigned to-| father, ‘The grandfather was so taken ot estore Judge Gibbs in. the Bronx | with the boy that when the parente ro- pm ae ae 9 cpleaded guilty 2) turned to America he insisted on detain- rgee the Court ing him. The mother spent a year with- 4 him, | out her son and capled for him to be ate com sent home on the Mauretania. The father Pica been | aRd mother wero on the pier to meet it_ might | the little voyager and he was almost sentence you amothered in kisses, f aaenmacanls sent ze" WILSON-M’ADOO ENGAGEMENT PLANS Formal Announcement From Waite House Expected Soon by Wash ~ — ington Society, WASHINGTON, March 18,—Fore mal announcement of tho engage- ment of Secretary McAdoo and Miss 7] | Eleanor Randolph Wilson, youngest om'| Seushtor of the President and Mrs. Wilson, was expected to bo made to- day at the White House. } But this afternoon those best in- formed declared it had been decided at the White House not to issue the formal announcement to-day, but to do so in the near future, Persons in @ position to know sald con**mation of reports of the en- gagement had been decided upon hy the Wilson family although it had not been intended to make the an- nouncement at such an early dats, Publication, however, in many news- Dapers of the prospective marriago influenced the decision at the White House. bd Rumors were about that with the of Mr. McAdoo and Miss which. in expressed to take place in June, the secretary would resign from the Cabinet and be ap- pointed Ambassador to France, but White House oMfgials said such re- And Women’s $965| a= . || FOR SNOW REMOVAL, Shoes | sitively S ee | — E fil E g Hi ‘ March Snow Storm Likely to Cost City $2,000,000—It’s $1,- 241,294 So Far. The Rourd of Estimate thin after. | hoon guve Streot Cleaning Commis. | sioner Fetherston $660,204 more for the removal of the snow that fell on March 1, and then, just to show the Commissioner that there was no hard feeling, let him name another deputy, who will receive $6,000 a year, A little more than a week ago the Commissioner received $581,000 for the removal of snow, So far he has received $1,241,294. It im expected that the storm of March 1 will cost the City of New York about $2,000,000—plus the §6,- 000-u-year deputy. It could not be learned at the office of Mr. Fetherston to-day who will be appointed to the $6,000 berth. Radical changes for snow removal are under cohsideration, It is now admitted that the present plan is a} failure, One of tho plans under dis- cussion fs for a tong term contract | for snow removal, which will allow | & contractor to invest in snow ploughs and steam shovels, An out- Mt of this kind, it is estimated, would Oost at least $960,000, 3.50 Value’ ees, V noice of Lasts Selection and Le ‘hers 1,000 Pairs Growing Gina, Misses’ and Children’s Tan Russia High Cut Button Shoes, Misses’ and Children's $: 95 Sizes 6 to 2,C, D&E. Girls’ Sizes 244, Cres Sess $9.15 Regular $2.50 & 93.00 price $38.50...,, Franklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue "Young Men's Shof: 16 West 38th St.—Store Floor i Entirely Separate from Fifth Avenue Store | + New Spring Clothing SATURDAY_AT_ SPECIAL PRICES English Sack Suits’: FOR YOUNG MEN, 33 TO 42 CHEST Three or four button soft roll front models, plain or itch pockets, of navy serge, checked or pencil © ‘i Fripad cassuneres, chavioesee twedoe, Valustes.60 | 8.50, Silk Lined Suits FOR YOUNG MEN, 33 TO 42 CHEST Hand fatered | free hie sack model in poset! triped or oO: re, ni or i cumarmerss MANY *7etue 93800 24.50 lish mixtures. Men’s English Raincoats Made in England for Franklin Simon & Co. SIZES 34 TO 44 CHEST Slip-on model of double texture rubberized tan rdine, lain sleeve. CGamadtencat "” vuwses 9.50 “Aquascutum” Topcoats FOR YOUNG MEN. SIZES 32 TO 42 CHEST Just received i Balmacaan and models of hand- woven Irish Shetland cloth or English whip- and sleeves silk lined. 22.50 28.50 37.50 ‘Men’s Furnishings SATURDAY AT SFECIAL PRICES Mushroom Tucked Shirts In bright colorings with cross or vertical stripes; also white for evening wear. Value $2.60 and 83.00 1.95 Men's Negligee Shirts : Of fine English cotton crepe, Russian cords and mercerized madras, in neat colored stripes. e Value $2.00 and $2.50 Men’s Mercerized Pajamas | Of fine quality madras in neat colored 5 [pearl buttons and silk frogs. Value 89.00 Men's Silk Ties en-end four-in-hands, of heavy imported silk, in a large range of colored combination figures and stripes. ‘alue $1.60 85 | \ “Young Men'sShop”—16West38th St. | S bles hh GOV. GLYNN PROPOSES. [rset | lishment of a single-headed food and | market commission was recommend- \¢d by Gov. Glynn to-day in a apectal ; Message to the Legislature, commissioner to be designated should be authorized to assist and encourage the establishment of local markets under the control of co-operative an- |woctationa of producers or conaumers, and to help them in the establish. ment of grades and standards of farm food products, algo should be empowered, the Gov. ernor believes, to establish general auction markets at such points in the State as he deems advisable, op a tae ey Py $1916 out after consultation with represen. tatives of farmers and consumers’ or- fanizations on the model of the sys- tem which has proved successful in ‘Thero this system yields a substantial profit to the municipality | and the Governor thinks that in a short time the plan here would be at leas nelf-supporting. aaa recommends an appropriation of $46,- 000 to cover the initial expenditure, The entire plan, it is explained, is designed to correct. inequalities in the division of profits between the producer and intermediary seller as produce sales now are conducted, Bills intended to make the Gover. nor's plan operative were introduced to-day in the rerog alg! A und in the Senate by Mr. Wheeler. pentaatec~ Pasenhia STARVING MOTHER STOLE. She Goes to Prison and Children te eters of Mercy. William, Joseph and Herman Wun- Gerlich, seven, five and one year old respectively, were sent to the Sisters’ Convent of Mercy in Brooklyn to-day by Justice Wilkin in the Children's Court of that borough. Their mother is in jail, having ogg! remanded for gen- MARKET COMMISSION France. -o-operative Plan Designed to Correct Inequalities in the | Division of Profits. ALBANY, March 13.—The estab- The Governor's idea is that the tence to-da, about The commissioner | fourth time. Lng Jing % work. ter and robbed The message explained that the the little ones. Franklin Simon g Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts. y Judge Dil pleading eulity to burglary. me @ mother for th the neighborhood, teoelved trem het loot Meantime he by Mr. Smith a ke, after starving wife en- to buy food for Special Offerings Saturday Misses’ Spring Suits and Coats Ripple Ba Lid Suite back in navy, wistaria, 1» copen, tango, black or fined vite flowered crepe; panel skirt with rippled . ate 20 year Value $30.50 29,50 Silk Moire Suits - postition back, in navy, black or green; vest and collar of white ‘moire silk: eunic skirt with 16 to 20 years, Value $40.50 39.50 Girls’ Dressy Coats For Girle—6 ( 12 Years. Full length model of English serge, in navy or Copen- ' tito shophard checks wor 9.75 Value $1450 Serge Bolero Suits draped blouse from and plessed Gores bac! iT ; taivonic cllk ees «(a 14 to 20 years. Value $49.50 Dressy Golfine Coats tape iaage rt whl, coavert ble throug twit alk apg fet 1400 20 years, Value $25.00 19.75 apartments m | sUNDAY WORLD WANTS |: money the! . WORK MONDAY’ WONDERG, Outing and Sport Coats Foe Girls and Juniors—8 to 16 Years) Of imported broken plaids, checked worsteds or navy serge, kimono fe model with kire, ede belt, inlaid velvet caller: Body" ye and sleeves silk. lined. 14.50 Value $19.75 Misses’ and Girls’ Dresses Girls’ Coat Dresses Of French ramie linen, in white, ons, rose or leather, flat collar and of linen with embroidered scal- Skirt with Teta ta fears. ide 9895 4.75 “Oliver Twist’? Dresses ‘White crepe waist with skitt and , detachable bloomers in blue, leather ot yee ore ratine, sailor collar, tie . Sto te yearns Vole $9.75 6.50 Misses’ Wool Crepe Dresses Of navy wool crepe, combined with taf broldery,shawt cella, echt nite oa flounce on tunic skirt of taffeta, se 14 10 20 years, Value $24.50 Misses’ Taffeta Dresses Of changeable or plain taffeta in tur- quoise, rose, pink, white, peach, navy or black, collar and vestee of shadow lace, draped skirt With bustle back. 1410 20 years... Value $39.50 Misses’ and Girls' Outing Blouses—New Models Of white En; tape on collar raid bow. 6 to 20 years. 2 glish drill, sailor collar and cuffs of sary, and cuffs, short sleeves, collarless shield. red or white drill, white Black silk tie with white Bringing HEALTH and HAPPINESS TO ALL No Reliable Draggist Wilt Otter a Sebetitate GEO. BORGFELDT & Co. She ts Ye . is NEWYORK CHICAGO FRARCECO story is one of abject i : ‘The story : poverty, —_—_——e, 18.50 , 29.50 1.45 ‘ Value $1.95 Special Values Saturday Boys’ Spring Suits and Coats New Model Norfolk Suits With Extra Knickerbockers, OF Secees homespun and tweed In gray or brown, shepe English Norfolk Suits With Extra Knickerbockera. Ot 0h veel Mepered fabrics, in fil or brown colorings, Ravy serge, yoke and plalted front, patch pockets, plain back. {0 18 years, 8.75 Value $10.00 © English Guard Top Coats For Small Boys—3 to 10 years Scotch homespuns, in or brown, inverted plait, os half belt, parch pale and ¢ 7.50 Value 810.00 rd oF navy ser, lait ia eae paen footie 7 back, plain front, to 1b years. 12.50 Votue 416.00 Balmacaan Top Coats For Large Boys—10 to 18 vary Of imported Donegal tweed ., in gray or tan, ' new pockets. sleeves, slashed 12.50 value 916.50 “Oliver Twist” ana “Nicholas Nickleby” Suits The Latest Mode in Correct Dress for Little Fellows. 2to8ycars, | Washable suits of imported kindergarten cloth, poplin or ratine, in stripes, plain or combination colors or all white. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY. Misses’ Shoes «4 Pumps Of black or tan Russia calf with low heels, made on perfect fitting last. Sizes 2}4 10714 | 3.45 Widths AA to D Value $4.50, Sizes 1106 : Widths B to E | SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY. Boys’ Damp Proof Shoes The “Franklin” Shoe of durable velour calf, on orthopedic last: welted soles. 4.80 Value $3,50 2.95) Value $4.00

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