The evening world. Newspaper, September 21, 1915, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY. FRENDS WIL AD 'f OR HLS: py L—News Oditics SEEKING 10 GET OUT OF “ALIMONY CLUB,” 22S SAMOS SNS “ CuMANIAS . ’ t Wow oo » me “7 ‘ te ge of the on » e * on . “— HE ACCUSES EX-WIFE - ™ WEDDING RECEPTION ; . ; . _ nen PR LANE trom 6 . mere "i> oon — . ropomes wy be 4 . Oe om at the ° - J —o—— hick to havin Galloway, Who Owes £18 0 ° cous! Thirty Society Polk Wi At. ™ : Lot ‘ " . tue . . . ” te Y Plymouth Congregation Rallies PURGLAIO® MG PRT may betray him at Brome Alimony, Says She Lives ‘ . ™ oe he 0 end Simple Church Cere Afters A ville, where in getting 61,000 in jewelry he tof priate hes ‘MM e Around Pastor, Swamped of 6 11% oon Luxuriously mony at Lenox To-Day | iarme roe - " by Business Troubles. ON RAFT 10 FRET UNDERGROUND robbers ——_ _ - te a, : : pettied ots through floeded mine shale tm 2 Armour Galloway's petit ' LONOK, Mase, & ma. | te ta .. e whe HOME TO BE SAVED SPRY AT NINPTY NINE, Henjamin Frankhin Feu Thre he le & member of Nhe °A ellpretinge gy ies Aaen Set | wedting journey GREATEST bes Cw nas ‘ e * arrty the . . ‘ ‘ - : - - proved tt in Newark by wal arcund the block on bis : ah tenant . : wes | er 1 Oe oun ot Dienaey furans Cont Gaaey. attend the weasing | ernie. CIGARETTE Creditors to Be Asked for Time - by alidevite of 6 sensation n of Wo Averti Mar FELAB DOMPBTICA \e charged with 6,000,000 He won bie Ore w . riman and Mine Kitty Lanier Law| peeeeee and Timber Deal May Be merdere vy the Unites & in other words, the) veresd Bim Bine years age ane re: |, rance in Trinity Episcopal Church.) paena Prevost Commun house cat te acoused of Killing that many song. | cently had bim committed for failure The service will be simple Not « th of the Universtiy af Carried Out. The Nev T whe « Piymouns Piehes } De tdrain tart life ‘To-day ered by 8 of bis conare . Who simost solidly are standing ve- bind him, One ts to form @ pool to pay his Gebte and the other ts to take over the timber contracta he has been unable to carry, Hoth suggestions Inge on the willingness of creditors to aid in straightening out the tangle It seemed cortain to-day that it will ae rr without proper being consid mer not be necessary for Dr, Millie to ell his home, According to Frank L. Ferruson, the pastor's former attorney and business partner, he haa handled fully $1,000,000 worth of business for Dr, Ililli# wince 1910. At one time, tt ia said, he borrowed large sums on notes to make first payments on tm- ber contracts totalling $400,000, “During the five years,” said Mr, Ferguson “I transacted all his bual- Ress by way of borrowing money, re- Rewing notes and selling Umber, in all amounting to about $1,000,000, During that time at least 15 per cent. | of his obligations were cleared up. The other 26 per cent, remains,” Dr, Hiliie ts recetving many sagos of sympathy and support. Y terday Williain Jennings Bryan tele- phoned him: “Good morning, Dr, Hillis, I have just read the morning newspapers and have beon deeply impressed by your statement. You have dono right, m= and no matter how harsh critics may | be remeinbor there is a sense of just. | joe in tue world that ii all but wider than religion itself. “You have made @ host of friends in this country, ‘They have contidence in you and love you, Hut you have more friends to-day than you ever had before, I have been the subject of criticism and the centre of storm, but I have lived to seo the right in- creasingly recognized and grow. If criticism could kill a man I would have been slain a milion times. But the more you stamp on the truth, the deeper you plant the seed of justice, “IT have but @ little time in the city, but I want to use that little time in telephoning you this message of sympathy and confidence. man makes mistakes, and when be has made a mistake, all honorable men ought to do what you have done say a0. “But one last word«-do not for one moment allow this to interfere with your work in Plymouth Church or in the country. Goodby and God bless you.” Mark S, Feiler, a lawyer associated with Gen, Horatlo C. King, who in charge of the trouble over the bonds of the Alberni ‘Timber Com- pany which Dr. Hillis owns, repr vented the attitude of Dr, Hill Yarishioners when he eaid; “It makes no difference what Dr. Hillis did, his church folk and tho yoople of Brooklyn will stick behind fim, Honry Ward Boocher was a fused of something worse than that with which rumor has connected Dr. Hillis's name, and after 1t was over Beechor Was a greater man than he was before and he died so. So it ts with Dr. Hillis. Great he was before he made this remarkable statement, but now he is 4 thousand fold greater, It makes him one of the biggest men in this country.” Dr. Hillis assured newspaper men he never “felt finer” in his life and that he expected by the close of the year to be entirely free of money obligations Natalie Alt Playing in the “Girl Who Smiles,” wearing @ London Feather Hat $5 to $10 and a London Feather Boa London ather(o ZIWESTP S4USTREET Brooklyn Store Open Eveninger 522 Fulton Street BELLANS Absolutely ‘Removes Indigestion. Onepackage proves it, 25c at all druggists. Kvery | birds each year MAN WHO NEVER WORK SHOPS except tn winter @ied tn Unton, N. J. Me always sald going in bare feet enabled him ¢o live to ninety-two, and it was © fall that killed » FRED PIGS ON BNAKES and it tmparte @ detict flavor to your pork, New nas Jersey farmer reports GROUNDS FOR DIVORCH trons makes ber wear his cast-off clothes and #hora “CANTSTRUGGLE \GUARD ALL LINERS LONGER,” WRITES | INPORT AFTER LANVERSUICDE, TWO SEAFIRES Bernard Robinson Shoots Self Destruction of Athinai woman complains her hushand in Woolworth Building, Blaze on Sant’ Anna Due to Leaving Farewell Note. Bombs, It Is Believed. “The first suicide of the Wooiwarth | The Anchor Liner Tuscanta is due building,” men employed ‘there sald) to arrive here to-night with M1 pas- to-day in dinounling Bornard 1 jeengers and crow rocued from the fon, thirty-three years old, who shot) burned Greek Liner Athinal, She will and killed himself tn his law offices not dock until to-morrow on the MW floor of the structure, | last evening. Robinson lived at Noi Because of the burning of the 69 Hast Ninety-third atreet Athinal, following the fire on the Sant’ His body was found by watchman) Anna, close guards were placed about who entered Robinson's office to turn] every liner in port here to-day, out lights, after receiving no response) whether they. were neutral or bellig- to Knocks at the door, They found erent ships. Those on the New Jersey him sitting at a desk in an inner) sigg of the river were protected as office, his hand still clutching the re-/ wel as those in Brooklyn. volver with which he had killed him-) Word of the safety of all on board | sett, the Athinai came in @ wireless mes- On the desk lay a note to Mrs. Rob- gage from Capt, McLean of the Tus- |inson, the wife of the dead man. 1€) cynia to the Anchor Line in this city. addressed her in the most affectionate | jt read: ton and read: I regret so much that Ihave to 40/ Ambrose, Have on board 341 pas- this, but I cannot continue the strug | gengers and sixty-eight of crew from gle any longer.” | Athinal. Roumanian Prince has bal- net ak ings 1 ~| ance, sixty-one, ery one saved.” The note closed with loving fare-| Sit tly afterward, Nicolas Galanos, wells to tho wife, Sarah, and thelr agent of the National Steam Naviga- two children, tion Company of Gres which owns | In the pockets of the suicide were|tho Athinal, ‘received this wireless | found pawn tickets for many house-| 200% Wir, fa‘on tho Tuscana en hold articles, showing @ long strug-|" “Woe were on fire from 8 A. M, yes- Blo with povert The pockets con-| terday in No. 1 and No, 2 holds. We |tained uo money, and nothing except | were trying hard by all means to put @ cheap watch. it out, but it was impossible owing Mra Sarah Robinaon, when seen | to the rapid spreading of the fire, At Jat her homo after hearing of her hus | q’ p." M.” sunday. in. latitude 40,64 band's d was heartbroken. — north and longitude 68.47 west, we “Our love was too perfect to last.” | were compelled, after our ehip was all sho said. “It was too pure and too) aname, to abandon her. All of our good, and wo know that it had to/hassengers and crew. were saved, en Sixty-one of our crew are coming to New York on the Roumanian Prince, & British oll tanker; all passengers Sho said her husband met her eight! years ago When she Was a singer In ewish temple, and that he had| *) it Ape Rives in love with her voice pa | one f our crew are coming on are two children, Bernice, eix, and | *Sginer Tuscana. Janos, the agent of tho line » would not discuss the bellef in ing clreles that bombs had been 1 aboard the ship, but that be- lief wes etrengthened when the Cap- tain reported that the fire was in two holds. The Athinai eulled trom Ptor 26, Brooklyn. The Fabro Hner Sant’ Anna, which caught fire at sea but was saved, sailed from the foot of Thirty- -|first Street, Brooklyn, next to the Hamburg-American Line plers. She isa French vessel, while the Athinal was a neutral ship. ried no war munitions, but It was ru- Donald, two, Six years ago, Robinson, a grad to of the College of tho City of New ‘ork and of Minnesota Law Schox ran for Assemblyman on the Repu ean and Independent Citizens’ ticket in the Second Assembly District, and was defeated. Mrs. Robinson sald} she had had a telephone conversa with her husband during the after- noon, in which he showed depre Joseph E, Lauber, former Jof Robinson, told a reporte: |he instituted proceedings aga inson before the grievance o of the Bar Association last w | he also declared he had filed plaint last March in th | Court before Justice Bijur an accounting of funds. ——— '2,402 SEEK DIVORCE IN CHICAGO'S NEW COURT Tribunal Marital Troubles Opened With a For- was carrying supplies to the British m®lat the Dardanelles, She had a cargo on board valued at about $1,000,000, iene DEATH OF HUSBAND KEPT FROM HIS DYING WIFE Mra. George R. Clayton ts lying at the point of death in the General Hos- pital at Elizabeth, N. J., not knowing that her husband died tn the same in. for Ne Docke | stitution four hours after she had b midal le D ket. | imitted. rs, Clayton, who kne See em a ‘ a{hothing of her husband's filness, was CHICAGO, § at dze ee} ken on the train while returning Kerstein opened to-day Chicago's new | 4 Visit to @ Bon at Pueblo, Col Divorce Court, the docket of which epn- | #nd Was taken railroad etation tained 2,492 names dee ae ar ne Judgo Kersten atarted in by clearing nearly 100 sults f the docket. Not were triod. ‘They were setted, contine| NEGROES STORM THEATRE. ued or for one son or another Mie Galery tmect | Attack Philadelphia House Show. anid Judge Kegyten at the end of th n “Mirth of N . morning s. ~ ‘TL shall do my best bad yee OS® aten to expoutto matters, byt it ts not ule] PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 21.—A mob ways going to be easy.” T admit 1 waslog more than 1,000 negroes rioted Ie fomewhat staggered when the calendar |°f Moro than 1,000 negroes rioted last night in front of the Forrest Theatre where “The Birth of a Nation” film ts being shown, stormed and smashed | the front doors and fired shots in the air before they were finally dispersed by the police, who rushed them with drawn clubs, The rioters first couples will mple of such as hay n their slates of their troubles start over again, They have my wishew.” TO REVIEW BABY PARADE. pace theatre about 6 | Gov. and Mra, Whitman will arrive |Perie’ , | About 10 o'clock they collected in Yonkers thia afternoon to attend the |and began, hurling. bricks: Thes best ond annual celebration of Yonkera|over the few policemen left on guar: athered before the o'clock, but were dis- Day. feature of the exercises will |4nd made @ dash for the theatre en- bea baby parade, which the Governor |trances firing revolvers and Mra. Whitman will review. The ushers barred the theatre doors jand kept all nolse of the riot from the | Queen of the parade, He then will at- | audience until the reserves arrived, The | tend a receptios ‘iven by the Chamber | police had to beat the mob back from of Commerc dat 6 o'clock will have |the theatre, breaking heads with their \@inner at th Hi) Ina, J sliba aa they’ did oo The Governor will crown the King and ark and| “Monday noon, 458 miles east of| Tho Athinat car- | mored about the water front that she | | to pay alimony, te living fe than thirty gusste ti been | Lady Duff-Gordon Describes The Flattering Ovation Given The Fashion Shop in West Thirty-fourth Street (Opposite the Waldorf-Astoria) ROM the size of the throngs one would suppose that all of Fashion's devotees in Greater New York attended the formal Opening Reception yesterday of the new Bedell shop in Thirty-fourth Street. From the outspoken enthusiasm, it was plain that the new Bazar of Fashion is one of those instantaneous successes which the metropolis likes to take to its heart. Lady Duff-Gordon witnessed the recep- tion. She was tremendously impressed by it. The new shop, with a surprise at every turn, takes its place as one of the new features of this great City of Surprises. Making ultra-fashion available to the multitude, not in the usual empty phrases, but in reality, is indeed a great work. It is worthy of such palatial headquarters. The stately remodelled building, with its luxurious appointments and atmosphere of refinement, is notable among the greatest shops in the country. It is the New York woman's new temple of elegance from which extravagant prices are banished. “Wonderful Popular Interest” Monday, Septer My Dear Mr. The wonde ul popular interest manifested in the open ing of your new Thirty-fourth Street establishment has be no surprise to me. I 8s it not illustrate the correctness of what I said, that to fashionably gown the multitude, at prices tempered moderation, is one of the greatest works in the field of such apprec tion! I have never seen be pleased to repeat my visit, in this great work which you | with fashion Such crowds! And | anything like it. I shall as an evidence of my interest are undertaking. Your Autumn models deserve all the praise | that is being bestowed upon them. Sincerely yours; Pe Ansbane | a dire To-day’s Striking Fashion Review with Manikins from Ziegfeld’s ‘Midnight Frolic’’ The great triumph scored by the show girls from Ziegfeld's ‘‘Midnight ) Frolic,'’ who participated in yesterday's Fashion Review, is being repeated to-day, with a new assortment of Autumn's latest styles. Scores of New Special Features To-Morrow Constant change—hourly additions to the magnificent stock always on hand——is the secret of success in establishments which keep pace with Fifth Avenue's contributions to the world of style. There will be new rnodels to- morrow~-still newer ones the day after. Evening gowns, afternoon dresses, morning frocks, Autumn suits and coats, millinery of the latest French design, blouses and skirts—colors and materials which have been dicteted by the M ters of Fashion at the very latest hour—-and all at prices governed by actual values only, regulated by the vast economies made possible by the Bedell inter-city organization. eee NE ALTERATIONS WITHOUT CHARGE SR. Unusual in this locality of exclusive shops, the announcement that a price in this new > Bedell Bazar of Style means A PRICE WHICH INCLUDES A PERFECT FIT is creating no little employed this work, surprise, The best fitters and tailors available in this city, many of them former by the highest-priced houses in nue, have been obtained to take charge of The alteration servic re is of the high character expected dered—for which no charge is made | by fashionable wore: New York Newark Pittsburgh St. Louis Brooklyn Philadelphia Nineteen West Thirty-fourth Street \ oe oS viene er . és Manne ee admired by Lady Duft-Gordoa RSS OF BS FUSES USA US USK AS ia

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