Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SFABURY NAY BE WON HS TE Justice Will Prob Probably Pull Through With a Plurality, of 50,000. Democrats Still Hold Majority, but It Is Cut Down to Twenty Votes. ‘ Out of the Republican landslide in New York State the Democrats are sGlaiming to-day one winner, Samuel Geabury, cakdidate for Associate Jus- tee of the Court of Appeals. His campaign committee announced that Teturns indicate his election by 60,000 ‘plurality over Emory A. ie, Re- Publican, This claim ts based prin- clpally upon the very large vote re- ceived by Justice Seabury in Greater New York, where he ran far ahead of the Democratic ticket, receiving a plurality: of 151,88, which is nearly three times as large us that of Gov. Glynn. “By giving Chase the same vote es Wadsworth,” said a member of the Seabury committee, “we make Very liberal allowance and still our candidate wins casily, We feel confi- dent that when all counties are heard from Justice Seabury will be provel @uccessful.” While eastern States voted strong- fy Republican the tidal wave dimin- ed in force as it moved westward, id from the Mississippi Valley on- jward the Democracy, fairly well held own. New York, Connepticut, ww Jersey, Ohio and Illinois’ were Principal States that reversed ir form and nearly upset the PDemocratic majority in Congress. But twenty-three other States in ths ‘middie west and west gave only a met gain of four members to the Re- ‘publicans, _{ Not all the debatable districts were wMecounted for to-day, but there still Femaina, a Democratic majority in the House of Representatives of be- ween twenty. and thirty. *"In the Senate, the Democrats have @ gain of one with the con- @rmed election to-day of Edward 8, johnson in South Dakota. Phelan, Democrat, is elected Sena- in California. Thomas, Democrat, ‘Benator in Colorado. ' Curtis, Republican, is elected Sena- tor in Kansas, on unofficial returns. Paul O. Husting, Democrat, appar- ently has been elected Senator in Wis- consin over McGovern, Republican, al- ythough the claim is contested. ‘The sFesult 1s 80 close that only the official jogunt can decide. is re-elected Democrats have swept everything in Aadiana by 50,000. Democrats have six Kansas Congressmen. Thomas Schall, blind man, has been @ected to Congreas from Minnesota. ®ulzer carried one county In New York, Steuben. Republicans have elected one Con- gressman in North Carolina—J. J. Britt, in the Tenth District. Later returns make woman's suf- Bnet doubtful Montana. Anti- oa ragists now claim the State, leav- suffragists only Nevada: wrence Y. Sherman, Republican, ig an assured winner for the Senate in Diinois over Roger Sullivan, the Democratic bons, As the results stand to-day the roll of the new Congress is as follows: out of eight Benate—Demoer: 65; Republi- cans, 40; Progressive, 1. Republi- Socialist, 1, EAT LESS AND TAKE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers, The American men and women must rd constantly against Kidney trouble, tse we eat too much and all our food * je rich. Our blood is filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out, they weaken from overwork, | sluggish, the eliminative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, | weakness and a general decline in he When your kidneys feel like lumps ai lead, your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, obliged to seek relief two or i during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, mach, or you hate rheumatism when weather is bad, get from your phar- macist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tublespoonful in 4 glass of water before breakfast. f for a few days and kidneys will then act dine. This mous salts is made from the acid of mbined with cf s te slush and stimulat Ye neutralize the acids in the urine so it wo longer is a » of irritation, thus oon bladder di ind Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- makes w delightful “effervescent jia-water beverage, and belongs agery home, beeniue nebody can make jistake by having « good kidney NLY DEMOCRAT TO CONGRESS UNCHANGED. | M MI) WAM hse Gold the Predominant Color Note ‘in Brilliant Dis- play Offered by America’s Best Designers and Fostered by Its Best-Dressed Women— New Rulers Decree Slender Ideal— Woe for the Corpulent.. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. New York has done it. New York has set the fash-| fons for the world. With color of flame and flower and cloud, with tex- tiles heavily sumptuous as a king’s robe or frail as a web of rose leaves, with gold and silver wrought into scarf, sleeve and tunic, with ribbons of precious stones, with a supreme striving after the lovely and the new, and with the presence of the women for whom all this beauty and effort has come into being, the first Fashion Fete ever held in this country opened last night at the Hotel Ritz-Carlton. The best dressed womes in America—so often acknowledged the best dressed women in the world—have successfully co-operated with our most artistic costumers in the achievement of telling the rest of the world what it ought to wear. Paris, London, all the other sartorial oracles, are silent this season, New York has spoken, and more than a hundred street, after. | noon and evening costumes will be on exhibition for the next two days in| proof that the goddess of Fashion is presiding at her new w shrine. What is her latest word to mortal (- women? After a careful study of the varloug interpretations offered by her priests and priestesses, certain pro- nouncements may be passed on to |lay worshippers, Skirts are full and wa scant. The narrow skirt has ab- | solutely disappeared, the dra skirt is in the heyday of p larity, and the full, gathered skirt and the full, ruffled skirt are in- flexibly upon u striking change in and it means woe and lamenta- number of evening gowns have shoul- der straps of gems, GOLD USED FREELY ON Cos- TUMES; COLORS DARING. The color effects in the new cos- tumes are rich and glowing. Gold is used everywhere—black and gold, rose and gold, purple and gold. A sharply brilliant green seems excecd- ingly popular, and Wilhelm blue is a new tint in high favor, In street suits a shade much affected is a pale, pearly gray. One vivid street cos- tume at the Fashion Fete is of rasp- ; berry velvet with trimmings of| tion for every woman whe is not | oi ine tur, abnormally slender. There seems little medium Drapery can be “arranged,” but gathers pile themselves stubbornly over the hips. And one ruffled skirt I saw, a series of graduated puffs from waistline to hem, would make a toothpick look corpulent. It's terri- fyingly reminiscent of the hoop. One wonders if women will really consent ground in the new styles. Either the skirt has a train—perhaps two—or it is ankle length. Either the evening gown has no sleeve ‘at all or there is a transparent af- fair reaching to the wrist. The coat is longer in the back than at the front or the sides. The skirt Pr a3: . ‘THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1914. New York at Last Sets World’s Fashions; First Style Show Dooms the Tight Skirt fur of a darker shade around the bottom of the skirt and a wide fur scart to match, A wrap named “Flames” looked as if {t might have come from the hea: of them, and with it were shown # brocade evening gown frosted with silver embroidery and another of ac- cordeon-pleated white chiffon, an em- broldered square of white satin fall- ing over the back of the bodice like a deep sailor collar. A tea gown of gold-embroidered purple chilfon, its draperies edged with a narrow band of fur, was euphoniously entitled “sympathy.” Nearly all the exhibits had their own attractive names— a “Autumn — Glow,” Petrograd” an a few, id skirt was the distin. ure of “Frivolity,” ning gown of gold-colored ind lace. jolde itting tunic, braided across the afternoon costu clossly followed by gn which hada dainty 0, edged with white not infrequently hi ack panel shorter than the rest of it. With all their daring contrasts of to winding themselves with yards of cloth, after the hygienic comfort of the moderately narrow skirt. The proceeds’ of the fete will be sven, to the Committee of Mercy, for istribution among the destitute families of enlisted fighting men In this country and broad. A large num- | ber of gowns have been donated by the designers, and will be sold on the last night of the fete to add to the benefit funds. The vostumes displayed are valued at $70,000, and the jewelry worn with them at. $800,000. Among those who were at the fete last night were: Mayor Mitchel, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Vanderbilt, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Iselin, Mra. J. Borden | | | ROBBERS ATTACK RICH OLD WOMAN INHER APARTMENT: Beat and Kick Her and Tear Gems From Ears and Hands. No stue has been found to the identity of tho robbers who, as be- came known for the first time to- day, attacked Mrs. Libby Burns in her home at No, 47 Lenox avenue on Saturday night and tore jewelry worth $10,000 from her person, Mra. Burns is the widow of Samuel Burns who for years kept the famous all- night restaurant at Sixth avenue and Forty-fifth street, The last time she had business with the police was May. She did not call for them; they called on her and destroyed the un- happy enterprisos by which she had gained the Tenderloin title of the “Queen of the White Slave Traffic,” in the Wost Side apartment house district. ¢ Mra. Burns ts a rich woman, and though she i# seventy-three years old, has garish taste in self-decoration. Sho affected house gowns like regal robes, and even in the daytime has been in the habit of wearing moro Jewelry about her than the richest of Fifth avenuo society women would wear at the opera. In view of what they know of her past associations, the police do not regard It an strange that she should have been sjngled out for robbery. At the home of Mrs. Burns lived her brothers, George Oliver and Thomas Oliver, the latter a helpless invalid, She had with her also Mias Butler, a young woman, who had remained be- hind when other guesta had departed. Mra, Burns answered the door bell at 11 o'clock. George Oliver was out looking at the tercentenary parade and the other brother was in his room on the top floor. Miss Butler was in the parlor, Two men forced them- selves into the hall, cursing Mra. Burns, and telling her they had been “after her" for years, One of them knocked her down with the butt of a revolver and both kicked her. Minn Butler, running into the hall, was struck down with a blackjack and wan also kicked, The men began seizing the jewels from Mrs. Burns, They tore her ears in getting out a pair of earrings worth $5,000, They roped open the M, Orme Wilson, Mrs, Price Harriman, Mr. and Mrs. J. Gordo: wat, Mrs. The idore Roosevelt jr, Douglas, Mrs, Richard Hicvens: tae | Miss Barbara Rutherford, Mr. and and Mrs. Albert % Gray, Mra. French | Mra. Lewis [sel 8, Conde Vanderbilt, Miss Elsie de Wolfe, Mr, Nast, Mrs. H Messrs, and Mrs, James B, Eustis, Mr. and Bertram (Cr Richard Pete Mrs, August Belmont, T. Suffern Tailer, Mr. Hoyt, Mr. and’ Mrs, Haro, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. D. Lanier, Mr, and Mrs. Insley Blair, Mr. and di Mrs. ad Mee Montgomery , Stewart jr., Henry G, Gray, Stuyvesant Le Roy, Lydig James W. Ba . W. Rhinelander A in Gray, Moncure Robinson, Grosvenor Atterbury and Robert Goelet. The pleasure of livin lies in using good things moderately. It is thus with eating, with drinking, with playing, with working, wit everything. And it is for the man who knows well the benefits of moderation that we distill a wonderfully mild and mellow hiskey and ut it in Non-Refillable Bottles — Wilson — Real Wilson— That’s All! Fr mixed drinks, CLUB RECIPES—Free booklet of famous club recipes for Address Wilson, 315 Fifth Av That's All! lbreast of her gown in snatching af sunburst worth $1,400. They scratched and scraped her fingers in taking rings worth 83,000, i took also a diamond necklace valued at $1,600, Though they tore out bunches of her | hair in taking from it diamond- ‘atudded combs worth $2,000, they dropped the combs in going out. George Oliver found the two wom- en helpless on the floor half an hour jlater, Dr. Katzenbach of Seventh} avenue and Fifty-fifth street was called, and after treatment Misa But. ler was able to go home. Capt. Jonen! of the Third Detective District In-) structed Mrs. Burns to keep the rob- | bery secret and himself to-day re- | fused to tell what the police had learned about Miss Butler, Inspector Dwyer inst May was asked by neighbors of Mrs, Burns at |her former home, a big brown- [atone house in West Fifty-elghth | treet, to look Into conditic Hin detectives tapped her phone wire, and from the loft chureh in the neighborhood down shorthand records of all con- versations, Asa result of what they heard they secured from Magistrate McAdoo a warrant for the arrest of Mrs. Burns and a search of her home. They broke into the place at night. They found Mrs, Burns seated in a | throne-like chair on a dais, made up \hoavily and with her magnificently embroidered robes fairly studded with precious gems, She was woar- ing a diamond studded coronet. At one side sat a secretary who attend: ed to her telephone calls, kept books and ran messages. The room Itself was so crowded with costly bric-a- brac that it suggested a Fifth avenue auction room as much as a@ parlor, There were twenty-eight young woin- on in the house, all stylishly dressed and all of varying types of beauty, No charge was made that men vis- {tors ever went to the house, but in the secretary's de k was found a list of 200 women wno maintained apart- ments on the west side between For- ty-second and One Hundrad and took ‘HEADACHE STOPS, : the house after collie was the informing of the kina inco the of which the police ever he landlords in Inspector D ict information wat that they were harboring in persons, and most of them were possessed, Mrs. Burns, after the women In the house testified against the West Side Court, pleaded and was put under $1,000 bo her good behavior and was o1 vacate the premises, in. whi iceman was stationed for a ti make sure that the order was napector Dwyer men say to Mra, of the raid: ‘ here who raide ju twelve > ago. You promised us then % would be on patrol and within two weeks—and we were, were put out o: the Detective reau and sent to the gas-house trict.” wish you would try to work ull under this admintatrationss rved Inspector Dwyer. as not been disturbed, howevels me rd one Turns at tee ere are two Dr. James’ ‘H ‘Headache Pow, ders give instant relief— Cost dime a package: Nerve-racki Rs throbbing hea: ders which cost only ie at any drug store, It's the q surest headache ‘lied “a the world. Don't suffer. Relieve the and distress now. You can. of men and women have found headache or neuralgia misery is less. Get what you ask for. — Advts Twenty-fifth strects and their tole- phone numbers, ‘The intercepted telephone message: showed that the! apartment house keepers requisitioned | the boarders of Mra, Burns with | steady freqitency. Inspector Dwyer'a men, from their| eavesdropping, had learned that thero were altogether more than 500 per- fone In all parts of the city who were! in communication with Mrs, Burns. | The entire list an checked up by de-| tectives who followed women from EON CREDIT AT CASH PRIC SUITS if Women’s H Misses’ Rough e Cheviot: Pueblo clothe Diagonal. Widest choice, | it models and fashionable colorings. ON MOST LIBERAL TERMS OF PAYMENT. Fine Broadcloths, Poplins, Stag Serges. COATS LONG AND LOOSE; HATS SMALL AND FLAT. As if to make up for the fulnes: below the walst, the bodice unmis- takably shows the basque influence, It is most frequently close-fitting, al- though not pinching the waistline. That is extraordinarily variable, by the With the pronouncedly | basque bodices it is about nofmal. With the costumes employing the tunic effect it is brought well down over the hips, And a number of eve ning gowns bring the waistline just about where the Empress Josephine used to wear hers, Coats are lony and loose-fitting. The shortest come well down over the hips. The longest are below the kne They hang from shoulders and the back panel is frequently made longer than the front or sides. They have deép fur cuffs, and a fur collar high in the back, or som s a sailor collar of fur. A few coats are belted at the waist, military fash- ion, out the majority are full and loose, Hats are small and flat, fitting closely to the crown of the head. Their must usual trimming seems to be a wing shaped like a battiesaxe, or sometimes like a fan, mounted | high on the left side of the crown, | This trimming is usually of a differ. | ent color from the hat and has an indescribably during effect, The hat is worn pulled down over the right eye. Muffs are very small and shaped | like a tobacco pouch. There are some | @ainty chiffon ones, trimmed with ar- | tificial Mowers or rich embroidery,! and carried with evening dress. | J | the new fashions show quaint little! | bits of old fashion, | ond Its full skirt | BOTTLE-GREEN SUIT ON MANI- | high leather boots and a sleeveless | tan coat aqy The Fi en Fete nas already confir conviction of its organ ‘ hat pmvericee de: signe oN their work behind the abe! “importe ” color and their picturesque draperies One costume at} the Fashion Fete, an afternoon frock, had its bodice finished with a fichu; of white silk a la Martha Washington. | fastened in front with a cameo pin.| There was a charming bride's gown) that your grandmother might have worn, with its short-waisted bodice ending at the ankles, Another frock of white chiffon with a blue wash, puffs over each shoulder and trimming of pink rose buds, im- mediately suggested the Victorian heroine, as did a favorite trimming of ribbon-edged ruffles, KIN FIRST APPEARS. A bottle-green suit was the first to appear on the platform at the end of the long ballroom, after a prologue in which Miss Vogue, a dainty damsel in hoop skirts, wagered a dress with the} Artist who designed hers that she! wou't find some fashions for him right here in New York. T Breen) sult displayed the long coat with the novelty of a fur sash tled loosely at the back and hanging nearly to the edge of the skirt, The manikins wearing the costumes walked slowly across the stage and then down the centre aisle of the ballroom, some- times singly, sometimes in groups of two or three. The polo girl made an instantane- ous hit, She wore white knickers, over a white vest, The shooting costume exhibited was also skirtless, and a jaunty brown cape was hung over one shoulder, to give | perfect freedom to the arms. A par- | tieulariy beautiful afternoon gown of | had @ two-foot band of The War Cost-of-Bread Flour prices are higher—but flour is not “dear” Bake bread with iia aaa +KellyS: FLOUR —the low cost will surprise you, Heckers’ Flour means real economy. —more loaves of better bread. —the finest kind of biscuit, cake, pastry. At All Good Grocers HECKERS’ CREAM FARINA—DELICIOUS FOr BREAKFAST contains an he be 4 supply us Isthere : $1975 $94.98 $17: Full Line of FUR COATS, FUR SETS, MUFFS & SCARFS Entrance to Clothing Through Furniture $ FURNITURE, RUGS. #@ ~ 2636" Ave. WW.17* SE. Litieriemeeeeet HULL GRADE A OMEFWMILK dd MINK Ilets: PER QUART Twice a Day Doliveriell Bo ef i Baa a ae Ba oh och hp ch hte RAW average of less than one-t! permitted by the an one: thi For we require our on with milk that averages | rs jess than meat, agon why you should not have ig? _ Phone Bryans tH lige