The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1914, Page 4

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|_B. R. T. Eco —_—.> t Sk Cars Cut to Three and Four to Preserve Order of Standees. | TROLLEYS ARE JAMMED. What Actual Count Showed on Trolleys of Fulton "Street Line. ‘While the sudden rush of people fer the beaches made travel on the Brooklyn Rapid Transit lines on Sun- @ay more intolerable than ever, the eempany made no provision to give Fesidents along the Brighton Beach line even a half adequate service on Monday ‘morning, during a non-rush hour. Try it on SANDWICHES Ham, PS aF-: GILT THRO CA we Pree! NG ONES - WaT aonin Fully aware that of the thousands | who went to Coney Island, Brighton | Beach and nearby resorts many would remain over until Monday! morning, the B. R. T. cut off one and in many instances two cars from its trains on the Brighton Beach line, #0 | that it was Impossible for the regular | users of the traing along the line to obtain seats, Tho B. K. T. has never made any attempt to put a uniform number of! qoors is the loss of time to each train cars on the Brighton Beach trains at] occasioned by he delay in ant any tine. When the train due at the! and letting off passengers. Te Nee but Church avenue station at 10,02 yoa-| tke lone to Wiel vind every one terday morning pulled in tt was found Ret. No man should Service Commi upon the public. BEADY TO USE. 10 CEN’ THE EV 107 THe FOURTH CAR ARKIVES SnB FARULY GIVES OF THE TRIP AND GOES Hom TO THE VOTERS OF BROOKLYN! eo In the Brooklyn primaries for any legistative candidate who does not pledge himself unequivocally to work and to vote for @ legislative investigation of the shameful neglect which the Public in hae shown toward complaints against the the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company hae committed and is committing jutrages Assertion that it is giving ample ser- vice to its patrons during the non- rush hours, What are the peopl about it? people going to do Will the $10,000,000 Public Service Board do anything? nomy Makes Every Hour of the Day | A Rush Hour by Cutting Cars Off Its Trains ENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1614, 1 DISPRR BULL MOOSE SPLIT. ON PICKING HINMAN AS HEAD OF TICKET |Some of the Leaders Recall or pay the penalty for failure. Mrs. Mary ©. Shields, it Is said. At her What the outcome of all this dis- i, Stem Helen A, Litentietas ae | order, will be the village has no idea, Sits, Ne La Net | 2, ut It isejikely there are stirring ‘ Warden Breaks a Tie Vote and. times in stabe | GREENWICH, Conn. July 21,—Al- in Brooklyn knows the F to be made up of four cars instead of the five and six car trains usually run. Even with six cars the trains are almost always crowded, As a sult of this “cutout” the week-end returning from the seashore had al- ready filled the cars and tho regular | Passengers were compelled to stand up for the remainder of the trip. With an addition of two cars the conges- | tion would have been’ avolded—but the cont of operating the necessary cars was more than the B. R. T. cares to spend. | CROWDING 18 PECULIARLY DIS8- TRESSING. Crowding on a B. R. T. elevated jcar has its own peculiarly distres® sing discomforts, ‘This is evident ‘by the manner in which the pas- sengers are compelled to wedge their way through the narrow end doors of the antiquated rolling stock. It 1s oy Balad Brevsind, oy adding TS. Vineger Stores. CREDIT TERMS: 93 Pm 50 /*7** Pom 2909 5 he 975 /*10 er" *150 2174-3° AVE BET HIB"Z1I9"STS Impossible for two persons to pass at the same time through these regi n which are less than a yard wide, he case of a stout sible for a child to pass through at tl « time, And if the person ts tremely stout he experiences a diff- cult time in getting through the door, Added to the Inconventence to the passengers caused by these narrow doesn't care to epend money for im- ediate improvements. "rhe old cry of the B, R, T. that It is doing Its best to relieve congestion in the rush hours and that Lehi f non-rush hours the service is perfec’ is contradicted by @ count taken on July 15 of passengers standing in the surface cars on tho Fulton street line between 10.29 A. M. and 11.81 A. M, which Is a period of normal traffic. PROOF THAT AMPLE SERVICE 18 A MYTH. e count shows: on car 3519 going to New York 7 persons were standing as the car Passed Clinton street, at 10.29, ‘On car 3512 going to New York 7 persons as the car passed Cumberl On car 3521 going to passengers were standing as the car passed South Oxford street, at 11.12, ‘On car 3516, going to New York, 10 passengers were standing as the car passed South Oxford atreet at 11.20, In the opposite direction car 608 had 18 ge neers by sgl cal ed Franklin avenue a 05. On ear 9531, going toward Borough Hall, there were 26 passengers stand- ing as the car passed Clinton avenue at 10.27, On six other cars passing In the fame direction between 10,80 and 1 there was an average of 12 pas- wengers standing. ‘This is the answer to the B. R. T.'s Will Comn 8- sioner Williama of Summit, N anything? Yes, he will. sight on drawing $15, the State of New York. JONES FILES ANSWER WITH THE SENATE ON HIS CONFIRMATION Wilson Again Assured Chica- goan Will Win—Vardaman Hits at Warburg. That He Voted Against the 80 Cent. Gas Bill. As a result of a conference in Oyster Bay yesterday, in which It ia known Col. Roosevelt told Progres- sive leaders his decision to remain out of the Gubernatorial race is firal, George W. Perkins and State Chair- man Theodore Douglas Robinson were in conference most of the morning at State headquarters in Washington uare, Steps were taken toward the ion of another candidate, who, it 1s promised, will be named within the next two weeks, Bull Moose leaders, including County Chairman Francis W, Bird, who came down from his summer home at Cape Cod to attend a meeting of the execu- on ex-State Senator Harvey D, Hin- WASHINGTON, July 21.—The Dent over President Wilson's nominations to the Federal Reserve Board took on renewed activity to-day when Thomas D, Jones of Chicago replied to the adverse report of the $ Banking Commi tho Progressive ticket this fall, Bird, {t is sald, pointed out several objec- tlons to the candidacy of Himan. Robinson regards the former Senator, who for nine years in the Legislature nate on his nomina- tive committee this afternoon, are split | man, antl-Barnes Reputttcan, to head} went on with his talk. Then tne | SHIELDS’S ESTATE TO WIDOW, Warden went downstairs to Police OVER PERL CP ae ig % Commissioner Lett jf More Than $100,000, John A. Shiclds, lute United States Commissioner, who died several days Ago after forty-five years of service, left an estate of more than $100,000, accord ing to Kellogg & Kose, his attorneys, The will ix to be probated Wednesday or Thursday. ‘The entire estate will go to the widow, Former U. dered to arrest Hubbard. ‘Then up |SPoke Borough Attorney James R. Mead with an inquiry whether the Warden had the right to order the arrest. This caused another squab- blé, and the Warden announced that the Chief would bave to do his duty INTERESTING. NEWSPAPER "ISSUED FOR RHEUMATICS |New Edition of a Unique Publication for Sufferers Has Large Circulation. Orders Arrest of One of Board. (Special to The Evening World,) though this village has long been ac- customed to rows in the meetings of the Board of Burgesses, the entire community has been set by the ears through its latest stormy session. The Warden has ordered the arrest of one of the Murgesses, the offic! generally are at one another sachen | and tongs, and the Chief of Police is! | in a fair way to lose his job because It will be news to n now that there is a rewepaper publ devoted to the interests heumatic sufferers, ‘This journal is ur all the contributors and all news matter deals with this dread diseu gests different methods to relieve their ¥uffering, and evertually he refuses to arrest the rebellious , Burgess, | : * of sige “ sesaitaietnccenensantitiaeens Tho troubles culminated last night | LARGE NUMBER caeie anit YOUNG VIOLINISTS RECOVERY THE CORRECT | MEN WHO WERE HELPLESS |v fl s 0D | ABLE when the Board undertook considera- | Vsit EXWAITTHRIN WhisTs SURPRISE TO FRIENDS FOODEOR | TELL OF REMARK OUT OF SHAPE “+=: : a REUMATISM RECOVERIES. tion of the apparently minor matter of SAYS NEURITIS OVERCOME OY appointing @ special policeman | 1S COmMON, PAIN ke nerve while regular members of the i) { * eee a to force were on vacation. Three names were proposed—George A. Palmer, James Deacon and Francis Evans. | Palmer's apointment was urged by Borgess Isaac M, Hubbard, and it was seconded. Then followed a long discussion over Palmer's fitness and when a vote | | Was taken Hubbard and H. G. Drink- SMALL REPRODUCTION OF THE NEW RHEUMATIC JOURNAL. {water, another Burges, voted for pomnplate relief from, this terrible af-|'The name and address are given in each 4 * , | fliction. article and many of the cases are sworn him, ‘But Burgesses John F. Leaby |" The" most interesting articles are |to, and J. Harvey Finch voted against him. As these were the only bur~ gesses present there was a tie, To break the tle Warden Will 8. Green was called in and he voted against Palmer. Thereupon Evans was voted on and was selected. Burgess Hubbard told his leagues that he'd be dinged—or something like that—if he'd ever attend another Burgesses’ meeting. that he'd heard there would be an at- tempt to “put one over on him" and that it had been done. From this point it was easy enough for one word to lead to another and many of the words were far from nice ones, Warden Green ordered Hubbard to silence, but from men and women wel! known in their hot nd their cases had been considered hopeless by many p sicians and hospitals. They give their experience in detail, tell how they suf- fered for years, how they tried this and that remedy, electricity, baths and al- most everything recommended, en- couraged by relief for a short time, only to have the disea%e reappear with all its horrors. But there was always a hope and the feeling that some day they would find something that would reach their case. They describe how The name of this simple remedy is Var-ne-sis, which is having such a tree mendous sale at the Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores and other reliable d gists throughout the country. It different, as it Coes not contain the or- dinary drugs so often given for this con- dition, Articles in this newspaper for rheu- matics are devoted to ing water, bathing, massage, exerci i rheumatic conditions. A new issue ip just off the press, and it is important that every man and woman suffering they found this one remedy, what little |from rheumatism ve their copy { faith they had at first, but gradually Jat once of charge by addressinj the pain was not so se the stiffness |W. A. Varney, Lynn, Mass. A postal 80 great, the strength improved, until | will do. they could take their place in the home| It was stated that the number of or business world without a pain or an | copies are limited, so we advise that you Hubbard | ache—healthy, strong men and women. |send for yours inmmediately.-- Advt. col- ae, ° waged bitter warfare against boss rule, | tion. The minority ' Remodeling and Repairing of Furs at Special Summer Rates dames McCreary & Co. 24th Street 5th Avenue On Wednesday, July the 22nd Shce Buckles at Unusual Reductions (Jewelry Department) Sterling Silver, White Metal and Aluminum Buckles, in handsome designs and shapes,—some mounted with fine quality Rhinestones, others in combina- tions of Rhinestones and Cameos or Colored Stones. 45 pairs..... ce eeeee regularly 6,50 10 22.50... .cecceeeeceeser +s 47D @l pairs.......sccceeceees os Pegularly 4.50 to 5.50.....ccccceeveeseess OO Ss BEAD NECKLACES Greatly Reduced Real Amber in plain, oval style or Amber combined with Jet, Jade or Lapis. "@ @@ to 40 inches long. 3.50 to 35.00 is regularly 5.00 to 45.00 ey Reproductions of the real in combinations of Amber and Jet, Jade and Jet, . Lapis and Amber or Jet and Pearls. %4 to 84 inches long. 1.50 to 7.50 regularly 2.00 to 12.50 LEATHER GOODS Special Values Hand Bags,—many new shapes in Pannier style or with side handles. Made ef Pin Seal or Morocco Leather in Black and Colors. 2.95 Party or Vanity Cases,—fitted with brass accessories; covered with long and eross-grain Morocco or polished Ecrase leathers. An exceptionally varied assort- pient of styles and sises in Black and Colors. 1.95, 3.50 to 9.75 . Party Bags,—flat style containing seven fittings. Made of Leather in Black and Colors. which supports him at once began working on its ra- port. When it is presented to the Senate later this week a vote may be| forced, White House officials heard un- official reports that Senator O'Gor- | mam and Paul M, Warburg, another of the President's contested nomi-| nees, had a conference at White Sul-| phur Springs, W. Va., to bridge over the dificuities betweon Mr. Warburg) and the Banking Committee, before which he has refused to appear. No word had been received from either Mr. Warburg or Senator O'Gorman, | Senators of the Banking C ttee denied they had any part in ort to induce Mr. Warburg to appear, but | they thought probable ho would do so in which case they believe there will be little opposition to his contirma- on, Senator Vardaman, one of the Democrats opposing Mr, Jones, issued @ statement declaring -he could not! vote for him. | “I have the same objection to him and men of his kind being put in con- trol and management of banking and currency system that the Christian would interpose to a pagan teaching theology in a Christian college or an imperialist administering luws de. signed to establish a democracy, 1 am sotry the President appointed him,” said he. After conferences between Prest- dent Wilkon, Postmaster - General Burleson, Senator Lee and others to- day it was said the Administration was sure that Mr, Jones will be con- firmed. One member of the Cabinet who has been active in seeking sup- port for Mr, Jones told the Mresident he believed that there was no doubt. Son Geo Sk VERY Pair of this Sum- mer’s Shoes and Ox- fords has been materially re- duced. For instance: 5.00 Mahogany Calf Oxfords. 4:40 Mahogany Calf Oxford: 8.00 Black Vi 4.40 Black 00 and §8 Galt Oxtordas 4.50 Rubber sole 7 4.00 Smoked Shoes “4 6 W.B'way 221 Green- wich St. Near Vevey WEW YORK 4 ‘ Ah Onc bre EXCURSIONS Atlantlo City as a strong candidate, Robinson would ry Clearance Sale | Before Invetits not say that any candidate is in the aid 4 lead for the nomination. fl “Although Col, Roosevelt has told me moro often than he has told the ‘ ‘s * * newspapers that he will not be a can- : . ’ didate,” said Mr. Robinson, “I will Clearance of.. Women s High-Grade Shoes continue urging him to run until pri- 7 r mary day. But both Perkins and Robinson 800 Pairs Colonial and Ostend Pumps, of | \ were depressed and appeared to have Patent or gun metal calfskin, bronze kid- L 3 7 5 I abaniesns: oi here Ss Lr lid skin and white canvas, hand turned soles, | ° Colonel to change hia mind. 4 HINMAN VOTED Asan THE Spanish Louis heels. 5.00 to 7.00 Values. 80-CENT 7 “ The chief objection of Moose lead- 195 Women’s Colonial Ties................Regular 4.00 Value 2.95 ers to Hinman was his alleged af™fili: tiona with large corporation inter- ests in Hinghamton and his vote against the 80-cent gas bill aie the ; Legislature several years ago. Hin- ’ ’ man’s friends argued the former Sen- 650 Women’s and Misses’ Summer Dresses | ator voted against the bill only be- Reet ced wes than bed Taken from the regular stock, of White, Striped and Novelty Voile, fore the Legislature, Hinman belteved White and Colored Crepe Cloth, French and Ramie Linen; | the: commission) aheuie: DAYS JuriA long tunic, tailored, Basque and coat effects. | | diction in regulating the price of gas, his friends say. e ch "Chairman Robinson dented to-day Actual Values to 20,00 5.90 ' that he saw Hinman in Cooperstown, { |N. ¥., on Sunday. He sald his visit | to the up-State town was not for the i purnose of BaHNR EIRIOAS, ENC tal 375 Summer Afternoon and Street Dresses | with Stephen C. Clark, owner of the Ew Seeerbeseews fasts ewes SS Knickerbocker Press'in Albany and a = = = I lhiven Rapitiican tect Barnan Bebe Women!s and Misses’ Dresses, of Charmeuse, Crepe de Chine and ineon admitted Re talked pollen: with | Crepe Meteor; box, side and accordion pleated tunic models, Clark, but refused to say whether . S Chara ban ahandinad Sik toraeaion tor in black, white, navy, Copenhagen and eres also smart Whitman in favor of Hinman, Dresses in a varicty of models and sheer materials. The Mooso leaders admitted Hin-| _ ¥ }man, with the backing of Clarx, would be a powerful factor in the Actual Values to 85.00 10.00 , fight on Barnes in the Republican| ‘ ‘primaries. Clark, an extremely wealthy man, it is thought, would! ’ s More libaret. sontriousions al th) Clearance of 500 Women’s Separate Skirts campaign fund, if he should take up) r Hinman's candidacy, iil} ri A - ‘Tho urgent neod of golng ahead with Skirts of Ratine, Linen. and Cordeline Reduced from 4.00 and 5.00 2.95 the plans for the primary campatgn— ° with Col, Roosevelt out of the caleu- | Skirts of Golf Cord and Waffle Cloth Reduced from 9.00 5 00 lation as gubernatorial candidate— | ° was pointed out by Progressive lead- ora at headquarters, 1¢ is emprative High Cost Skirts, various materials — Reduced from 10.00 to 15.00 7,50 that a definite programme be outlined before the unofficial convention of the | Progressive party is held in Utica, in i} | the middle of August. Chairman Rob- i ’ 4 | teseo, MP, Farhiok ex-enntor Fred. Clearance of Girls’ Summer Wash Dresses lerick M, Davenport and other lead-, pL i A Eg | ers will hold conferences almost dally Until the situation is clarified, | 500 smart wash dresses of Gingham, Repp, Cotton : Col. velt wi nat rey ee re, vouttoas ast Crepe, Jinen, Taxi Cloth an Galates, desirable 1.00: act « will omit ls weakly ito Nationst colors. years. Regular Values to 8.03 Breet jos morrow adie [0080 not visit | Bay tor eoveral } — = oF a |

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