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' ; { ; t Delta Upstion Kiects PMcers. , an at has been elected President of the Delta Upsilon s-aternity, now. in convention bere. Other general officers are: Vice Presi- Aor, Chicago, 1, of J. Harrison, Ne- incoln, Neb, : Secretary, Aiprcecte. Ai $ FA Leth 8S. Barker, Swarth- ik, NJ. Prank W. Noxon, been chosen Frasident af thé New York velta Upstion Club for the coming year. Hundreds Will Testify Right Here in N. Y. State. Binghamton, N. Y.—"‘Some years ago T was a great suffer- pepo and Toul a suffer- ed so for an hour or two after eating, ©) could hardly stand it. My aunt urged [ee me to Doctor ’ Pierce's Golden M and I used three bottles in all, At once, within twenty minutes after taking the first dose, I felt sal stonger Sally, and, en ext . was cn- cured by ‘the use’ of the three moreover, the cure has proved as 1 have never hed any aymptoms. starting my husband on ‘Golden Medical Discovery for stomach Mi liquid f This won- = Eres to ite nat and and fe eaetee BOT cppetia gad fall a gee i= “ot the food ton eat. It invigor. ates the liver, ne wels an u . Pi Medical, Dis. duce no evil after-effect. robably many of your own neighbors|of Washington Heights, Mr. Bolton |} pase ling pocommend Dr. Pierce's |mdded that the residents of his sec- Discovery because it/tion preferred an extension of the in body, brain| sisting bus lines to @ continuation Gelden}of strap hanging. s get Dr. Pierce's Rs i ASKFORBLSES IN WASHINGTON HEIGHTS SECTION Board of Estimate Hearing on Rroposed Lines Brings Out Demand for Stages. " - . A briltant array of legal talent ap- Deared before the Board of Estimate to-day on the formal hearing of the New York Motor Bus Company, an | independent, anti-Interborough con. cern, for a franchise to run motor ‘buses in 6 and 10-cent zones in Man- battan. The Franchise Committee of the Estimate Board, comprising Mayor Mitchel, Aldermanio Presi- dent MoAneny and Borough Presi dent Mathewson of the Bronx, has already recommended that the New York Motor Bus Company be granted ‘the franchise, It is now up to the whole Board. 4 Reginald Pelham Bolton, who an- nounced: that he represented the Washington Heights Taxpawers’ Association, declared that while he was not concerned in the controver- sy between the two bus compantos, Kj |he believed that the people of Wash- ington Heights would prefer an ex- tension of the present bus service tn that neighborhood to what he termed a “new service of a doubtful and un- certain character.” Mr, Bolton rather proudly assérted that “we can afford to pay ten cents,” meaning the people Similar senti- i d by representa- in or liquid|ments were expresse: in i sea gle y tives of the Upper Manhattan Prop- Special Thanksgi THE EVENING WORLD, Jecty Owners’ Association, another Washington Heights civic orgafina- tion, | Other protests against bus routes | were heard from the people living on | West Forty-sixth Street on the | ground that there ts no public neces. |sity for a route in that particular |meighborhood; from Barnard College and the Park Avenue Association, It is claimed thi to vacn’ it is now necessary of the cl | ‘The Park Association, claiming to represent $16,000,000 worth of assessed valuations, declared that @ bus route would be a “serious men- ace, would depreciate property values to an alarming extent, that Me city would suffer in tex returns as a re- sult and that there is no necessity for nother route.” It is claimed by the | Park Avenueites that the new subways will absorb the north and south traffic and that Park Avenue, the only lon- gitudinal residential street in the eit | should be spared. Finally, it wae ar | gued, the dangers from skidding on the asphaited grades would greatly increase acoldents, The New York Railways Company was represented by William D, Guth- rie and the Interborough by James L. Quackenbush. John M, Bowers, pounse! for Theodore Roosevelt in the Harnes Hbel suit, represented the Third Avenue Railway Company, and William H. Page the Fifth Avenue Coach Company. The New York Mo- tor Bus Company, which is fighting the traction combine, was represent- ed by former Chairman of the Pub- io Service Commission William ft. Willcox and Bainbridge Colby. | It wan decided by Acting Mayor | MoAneny to hold the final hearings on motor bus routes and franchises beginning November 29, The amend- ed application of the Fifth Avenue Coach Company will be heard De- cember &. — Fire at Lake Hopatcong. LAKE HOPATCONG, N. J., Nov. 19. ly this morni of the old bungalows, a barn, ed @ number of oth uc= Including the schoolhouse, of the Kenvil Lumber and Store ny and its yards, Damage en- ed at $20,000 resulted from the which Is thought to have been atarted by an Incen 2 eee SARCASM. (Prom the Philadelphia Ledges.) Conductor—It you don't like this car you can «et off and walk. Passenger—Oh, I'm In no hurry, in Hoover ° ving Sal Of Our Entire, Winter Stock—Over 5,000 lOvercoats, Suits| and Balmacaans, ALL SIZES FROM 33 YOUNG MEN’S TO 46 STOUT MEN’S Must be sold this week stock Our enormous regardiess of cost or former values. must be reduced withih 6 days’ time. !|FOR ONE WEEK ONLY—SALE STARTING TO-DAY , This need ls Gon dh well sale comes just in time for the festive Thanksgiving season. No man ressed while this big value-giving sale is on. Thousands of Overcoats, Suits and Balmacaans, the smartest, most stylish and serviceable NN § garments that can be found in New York City. N \ You must come to this sale if ioe meen a pmac ec overcoat: £6 cies you wal pe The astounding double our prices So don’t miss this the and not get as ‘eatest sale of the year. we offer this week affords a the greatest ny, to Bay your Overcoat, Suit or wa OPEN ALL DAY THANKSGIVING DAY B Ba sa “ISt0l6 vercoat ult or t 516.00 Sisco Blue Worsteds, Waney In OVERCOATS at $8.00 MMM TE ”, WIE ‘Worsted roadway at 13th St. Vormerly Occupied by Hackett Carhart & Co, 261 Broadway y srs s. Formerly X 4 Occupied by Binith Gray & Co, Satisfaction Guaranteed | or Money refunded REL amAR oars TNPNERS OPIS sewn MEM PHONE CINPANYS ~ PLEA OR A FRANCHISE Realty Owners and Staten Isl- and Chamber of Commerce Are Also Against It. ‘The Board of Matimate to-day con- ducted a public hearing on the appll- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 191 POET LAUREATE HALL MUST SING IN PRISON FOR NEXT TWO YEARS Swindler of Other Poets Found Guilty of Using Mails LONDON, Nov. 1%—Among the names mentioned in the latest official Gazette l@ that of Robert Loraine, the actor-aviator, who has received the military cross for gallantry. Capt. Loraine b Suan down a Ger- man Albatross after it had dived from 6,000 feet to escape his fire, The pilot was a Saxon and the observer a Prus- sian, They immediately landed, ac- entroyed [cused each other, quarrelied, and finally fought, to the great amaze- cation of the Great Eastern Telephone Company for a franchise to compete with the New York Telephone Com- pany. The new company promises a 5-cont message in ail parts of the city, official business of the city at a cent a measage, business services at 2 to 4 cents per message and #4 a month private lines, Commissioner William Wiliamea, of the Department of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity, stated in a commrunt- cation to the Board that “at this stage it would seem sufficient to point out that @ serious electrical control situation will arise if a duplicate tele- phone plant be authorized, with ite many thousands of miles of additional conductors, for which space must be found on poles and in subways.” Edmund L. Mooney, appearing for the New York Telephone Company, opposed the petition, declaring the ap- plcant company was merely a “paper corporation.” A memorandum which the New York Telephone Company ‘4 | Ment of thetr captors, Loraine was formerly the husband of Julie Opp, now the wife of Faversham. CONGRESSMAN LOFT'S SON FREED IN COURT; ARREST A MISTAKE N| "rs, Bryant, Who H Threats Made of Complaint to Commissioner Woods and of Suits Against Policeman. George 1, Loft, the twentythrec- year-old son of Congressman George W. Lott, was discharged by Magis- trate Cobb today after the story of his arrest last night had been told in the West Side Court. Loft hap- pened to come out of the Childs res- taurant in Columbus Circle just as Policeman Richard Griffin and Ben- jamin King were swooping down on & gang of rowdles who had been an- noying girls. The policemen testified te the be- havior of five prisoners arraigned with Loft, sparring with one another, bumping passers by and insulting girls, They tried to get two girls to make a complaint, and when they refused the policemen rushed the eroup, Including Loft. He protested and told them who he was, When they told him they did not care, he made threats and said he would tele- phone Police Commisioner Woods. “I was with my friend, Alfred Rooney," said young Loft, “and as he was paying our check in the res- taurant I strolled slowly out, just in time to be grabbed by these police- meo@ I tried to tell them who I was and asked why I was arrested. They sald: ‘You're @ fresh guy. Come on down to the house, and you'll find CNivrom’ the West Forty-seves Street station Iwas taken tothe Night Court, but Magistrate Krotel refused to let me apeak and sent all the away on thelr own rarole, including me.” Ex-Civil Service Commissioner Al- fred J. Talley of No. 165 Broadway, cl for Mr, Loft, said it was,an outrage that the prisoner should have been treated as he was, and that: in the Night Court, created for the ea- Purpose of enabling innocent persoma to get epeedy justice, he had been refuséd a hoaring by the Magis trate. He asked Magistrate Cobb to send a copy of the minutes to Com- miasioner Woods, » Mr. Cobb refused to send the min- utes or to criticise Magistrate Krotel or to reprimand the policemen, though he sald he thought they had uned poor Judgment. Congressman Loft left court very indignant and angry, He said he would prefer charges to Com- frinwngge od Woods an nat he will press js son's r damages against Gi and King to the | utmost. a PERNAS ARE SENTENCED. tom, Will Quit Hi White Slav ‘William Perna, convicted slavery largely through the werk Mrs, Josephine A. Bryant, Bryn Mawr N | Collese graduate, wae to-day sentenced to Bing Bing for eight years and two montha by Judge Nott in th General casions,” Hie brother, ‘Achat tt was also convicted, was Binira. Mrs. Bryant te the wife of @ Newton (Mass.) chemist and before aiding the here had assisted the United States Department of Justi evidence against white ala Tt first became known that Bry- laid before the Board stated the Great Eastern Telephone Company “is not a lawfully existing’ corporation; the company and ita associates have shown themselves incapable of oper- ating any telephone system; no reason exists for the establishment of another telephone system in the City of New York” and further that “the public policy of this and other States ie strongly in favor of the untfication of public utility propertieg and against competition.” Objections to the franchise applica- tion were raised also by the United Real Estate Owners’ Association, the West Side Taxpayers’ Assoctation, the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce, the Ozone Park Board of Trade and the Rockaway Board of Trade. The petition was sent back to the Bureau of Franchises, which wished more time to investigate its merits. ————_ fing Sing Convict Meld tor Contempt. Late this afternoon Justice Morschauser held Peter Cullen, the Sing Sing convict who refused to testify before the Grand the action of the Grand and ‘by Justice Tomy on the cation of Warden Osborne, he will arraign befor, Judge Tompkins at Nyack noxt Monday, & | bee and hie wife agreed Meritt; Jari forced the fia down the boy's to Defraud. John T. Hall, poet laureate of Col- umbus Circle, who wooed thousands! of dotara out of woores of the muse from Maine to New Jersey and ftom Atlanta to the sea, was to-day found gullty on three indictments for using the mails to defraud and was sen- tenced by Judge Rufus E. Foster in the United States District Court to two years in Atlanta, The jury was out fifty minutes, Judge Foater imposed a sentence of two years on each oount in each of | the three indictments, but made the | terma run concurrently, ao that two} years will be the extent of his pun- Iehment. Hall was apparently unmoved when ordered to stand up for sen- tence. Judge Foster told him that | the scheme to defraud the mails was the most flagrant which nad ever come under his observation. Judge Foster sald: “I will take into consideration what your attor- ney has advanced on behalf of lent- ency and also your age. You are a 00d musician and might yet become & good oltizen. There is no doubt as to your abilty and it ts your fault that It has been miadirected.” Judge Foster said in answer to George Gordon Battle, counsel for Hall, that, in the event of an appeal being taken, he would be inclined to the bail of Hall at $10,000. His bail during the trial was $5,000, eat cnaiiaiiamesaiisk FIND TWO DEAD, ONE DYING Police Work on Theory of Sulctde Pact in Up-State Tragedy, OSWEGO, N. ¥., Nov. 19.—County an- thorities today began an tnvestigation of the deaths of David ©. Larrabee, forty, and his stepson ,Edwani Fred- ericks, nine, Whose bodies were found in thelr home at Sandy Creek, near here, last night’ Mrs. Larrabee wae found unconscious beside her husband's body physicians do not expect her to ive. The suthorities are working on the Gimmie boy's body ‘was’ badly scratched tf ly was ac: and bruised. ‘The police belle - to take polson Npa rather than leave him behind, an orphan. Larral had been despondent because he feared he was about to lose | | | 464-466 Fulton Street, Brooklyn | Only 18 Minutes from Grand Central Sub Express Station to Hoyt Street—KELLY’. Stylish Clothing — ~ On Liberal Credit . At KELLY’S you can select the clothes you want from one of the best collections of fashionable styles in Brooklyn. Our prices are attractive and our terms of credit are most liberal. For fifty-two years we have enjoyed the confidence of thousands of people and know that we can please you. ur Convenient Payment Plan On Any Purchase Up to $10, Special Terms of DOWN & *] A WEEK ——— Alterations Free———— Stylish Coats at $15.00 " ] In New Styles "i> sca of Cordu- roys, Zibelines and fancy mixtures with chin-chin col- lars. Sizes for women and misses, Broadtail Cloth Coats aod fine mixture Coats in new styles, splen- didly trimmed. $19.75 Corded Velvet Velour Coats avd plush Coats, with fur collar and cuffs, Navy, brown, green and tan. $22.50 Fur Sets, Muffs and Scarfs White Fox Sets, $9.98 and $15.00 Raccoon Sets at. .$25.00 | Red Fox Sets at. .$12.50 Jap Mink Sets at 35.00 | Beaver Muffs at.. 20.00 Jap Mink Muffs at 25.00 | Seal Muffs at.... 15.00 hia position. The Kind You Have Always Bought. the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that Das basa menutactared Sader tue Sapervision of Cina, His Piecuner 108 Ore 9) renee the eres Cone 'e respectfully call the attention ot fathers and when ing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears his signature in black. When the wra) 6 same ture ap- on both sides of the bottle in Parents who have used for hair ttle ones in the past Years need no anes counperneite aad imitations, but our present duty eo atten ounger ation to the it of introducing into their It is to Shas there are people who are naw in the netarious business of putting up and selling all sorts of substitui or what more properly be termed counterfeits, for prepara\ not for adults, but worse for children’s It therefore on the mother to scrutinize” ust me ves her child, Adults can do to that for themeel but the the mother’s watoh! Gonuine Castoria always bears the signature of 1 settng | yo, eest—cWith Basting Line and Added Seare Allowance). The May Manton Fashions ETS such as this one that have belonged the older folk that can out over for this pur- poe, while there are also Dossibilities to be found i material’. ‘The tee jushes are wonderfully tif and they make doth, duvetyn or corduroy, and they are pretty indeca, eminently besides bein; comfortable, Gre joined Tt ul ornament be arranged at tho left de. For the larger size will be needed 1 yard of mater- Mra. ‘ant had aided the ice when she tes- Ufled against the Perna brothers, Her husband objected the wo) to her Men’s Fur Coat Specials $25 &8330 Mm Conse... SPECIAL $35 & $40 $14.50 $17.50 ‘mot Fur-Lined with Persian Lamb Collar BER RARE ATTAINMENT. (From the Washington Star,) |. “What makes you think Miss Triller | has such @ marvellous musical educa- ton?” PETTITT , i A tually knows how to prono i“ co) the ‘all thé ‘classical | SUNDAY WORLD “WANT/ ADS, WORK MONDAY. WONDERS: wl eae" ; Child'a Fur Set, @ or 4, 6 of 8 years, ia! $6 inchos wide M yard pattern No. 8831 1s out in two aimes, for 8 or 4 yeare and for 6 or 8 years. Call ry |G WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION new { BURHAG, Donald Building, 199 West Thirty-second Street (oppo- te site Gimbel Bros.), corner Avange and Thirty-second Street, Oven $ Now York, or sent by mai ipt of ten cents in coin oF on for each pattern Grdereg end al MPO! — ‘your and 8 specity stad Wanted. Add two baste for etter postage if tus hurry. i saith 8 Women’s Fur Coats: PONY SKIN FUR COATS $45 Smart 45-inch models, at Serer rrr ery PERSIAN LAMB COATS 45-inch model; Leipzig dye. HUDSON SEAL COATS 45-inch model; trimmed with opos- sum around bottom; chin-chin collar, , Men’s and Youths’ Suits $110 All the Fall and Winter models, Two and three- button Sack Suits in wors- teds and cassimeres; stripes, solid colors, etc. Overcoats in black, and Oxford gray and fancy tweed mixtures; all sizes. The Amusing Adventures of a Correspondence School “Deteckative,”” By Ellis Parker Butler, Author of “PIGS IS PIGS," Are published from week to week in The Sunday World’s Mlustrated Magazine BE SURE TO GET : Next Sunday’s World!