The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1916, Page 9

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WHITMAN OPENS HS SECOND TER CAPM HERE Won't Mention Direct Tax or Other Unpleasant Things in Speeches. IS GOING IT ALONE.| Other Elective Officials Ig- nored, but “My Appointees”” Get Lavish Praise. By Samuel M. Williams, | Special Staff Correspondent of The Evening World. ALBANY, March 28.— Beginning with his two addresses in New York City last night, Gov. Whitman tn- @ugurated his campaign for re-leo- tion, and from now on will be the most active, persistent office seoker in the State. Ho is scheduled to deliver five speeches this week in as many widely ecattered cities, and in each of them to make a more or loss direct @ppeal for another term in the Ex- ecutive Mansion. | The Governor's big political speech ‘will be made in Syracuse Wednesday Bight, when he ts to review his ad- ministration and recite all the accom- Piishments on the credit side and none of the defects on the debit side. It 1s understood that mention of this year’s $19,000,000 direct State tax and Next year’s $6,000,000 more of similar direct burden fe not contained tn the Governor's speoches, nor listed among the items of self-praise, Nor is the Legislature included tn the administration's new Legion of Honor. It is a question which faction embarrasses the Governor the m the up-State Republican combination that plays cold-blooded politics, or the Nagging Democratio minority trom New York City, that always ts clam- oring about direct tax burdens and the 70 per cent. the metropolis has to pay. After many conferences of the Ad- ministration “kitchen cabinet,” there Was worked out a plan of ca ten which the Governor is to prociaim in his speeches. It 1s to picture to the people of the State the wonderful re- forma and improvements accom- Plished by heads of departments in } managing and directing the dally business of government | But the public must understand) there are two kinds of departmental! heads in the Aaministration—thoke ‘who were elected and those who were @ppointed. A wide dite: between them, as vie Executive Chamber, assumes no responsibility for the tive State oitic luke Comptroue: but most of them he passes Without mention, lls own appointees, however, are objects of unlimited praise, for they have done good work, and their shoulders must curry the Administration on to anc r The elective departm: tnclude tho Secretary of State, torney General, Coinptrolier, S Treasurer. They can lo themselves so far as the G ja concerned. Somebody surg it would be a good idea to have th whole State Ucket renominated and all stand together for anotuer term. The Governor shrugged his shoulders and sald something about that being up to- the other gentle- men, as he was not responsivie for| their first elecuon nor for their next Bitempt But for his own the Civil Service © Buperintendent of ie Works, Vax Commissioners, the Com Bioner of Highways and a lot of oils favorites the Governor cannot tind sufficient adjectives of praise. Byen ©ol. Roosevelt could not prociaim more proudly “my administration, my ppointees and my policies” than Mr, Whitman. Any association or meeting of voters wanting a good attraction this e@pring and summer please write the Executive Mansion, A good speech with plenty of “pep” and punch tn It is guaranteed and Y¥, M. C. A, farmers’ organizations Dusiness At-| ons, such as asioners, FAttle Cot seth A hook and ladder company dashed up, @ wrecking crew was summoned, westbound traffic on West Fifty-ninth Btreet was halted for some time and a crowd gathered early last night when Florence Davis, a six-year-old negro child, No, 330 West Sixty-ninth Street, was pinned for twenty minutes, alive but badly crushed, under @ Fift h Btreet crosstown surface car, Just east) of Columpus Avenue. The girl stepped in front of the car when sho tried to crose the atrest at o'clock, was struck and jar er, the forward’ trucks first impossible to extricate her. 6 crowd grew larger, FPlremen of ‘Truck No. 35 finally jacked up tho front of| the car and lifted out Florence. Sho died an hour and a half later in Poly- €linto Hospital. Two-Year-0ld Boy Todidles From Bidewalk and Truck Kills Him, Two-year-old Nicola Boruso toddled from the curb in front of hts homo at No. 804 Metropolitan Avenue, Brooklyn, | yesterday afternoon, directly in front of & two horse truck’ which passed over the little body and cau which the child died Int famsburg Hospital. The driver, i Olsen of No. 154 Utica Avenue,’ Trook. tried to avold the accident but be was arre ie Bafl Left 876,202 Patate, | Barnet Baff, the poultry dealor who was assassinated Nov. 24, 1914, left a gross estate of $82,721 and a not estato 6 tax tra BLUE TIGER HUNT HEADED BY ANDREWS Curator of Natural History Museum Starts for Central Asia to Get “Flying Dutchman of Zoology.” SAN FRANCISCO, March 28—A Guest of the dlue tiger, a beast which has been termed “the Flying Dutch. man of zoology,” because many ecten- tists and explorers have geen it, yet none ever has been caught—ts to be- gin to-day, when Roy Chapman An- drews and Mrs, Andrews sail from San Vrancisoo for the Orient on the liner Tenyo Maru. Somewhere in Contral Asta or Tibet they expect to capture @ specimen of the antmal and > make an exhaustive study of roology for the Amertoan Museum of Natural History of New York, of which Andrews is assistant curator, At Fuchow Edmund Heller, formerly of Stanford University, will join the party, Heller was with Theodore Roosevelt on his African big game hunt and has explored the remote provinces of China, From Fuchow the party will Journey up the Yangtse Kiang River to the border or Tibet to meet Harry R, Caldwell, @ famous hunter and explorer, Here ot euldes, porters and gervants will organized and a start made for Cen- tral Tibet, the home of the blue tiger, The expedition expects to be away from ctvilization for about a year, Se TOWN DRANK 325 CARS OF BEER IN FIVE YEARS Sult for Commissions Shows That| Supply Was Sold and Consumed There, COLUMBUS, Kan, March 28— Alleging that 326 carloads of beer were sold at Weir City, in the north part of Cherokee County, during the past five years, and claimiog that he ts entitled to a commission on all the sales, Mike Simone of that place brought sult against the Dick Brothers Quincy Brewing Company of Kansas City, Mo. for the colleo- tion of $12,000, charging that the com- missions amounted to at least that sun Through tho allegations made in his petition, Simone admits that he| Was in the wholesale liquor business | t Welr City for several years prior 1, 1910, and that he pur- arge amounts of beer from the Dick Brothers Quincy Brewing Company. When September came, however, Simone says he was owin the defendant $3,800 on account and| decided to quit the business, | When the defendant learned of his intention, he charges it asked him to find a’ person who would take the business over, and in return {t agreed to pay him’ @ commission on all goods sold his successor. Ile says knows the company owas him at least $12,000 because he learned of the le of 825 carloads of beer thre business, > Wife of Bx-Governor Harmon Dead, CINCINNATI, March 28.—Mrs. Olivia | Scobey Harmon, wife of former Gov- ernor Judson Harmon of Ohio, died last | Combe, bis successor tn the! | night at her home, aged sixty-five. She became Mra, Harmon in 1870 and { yived by her husband and two dai ters. WSS \N CRG WS WY SS W SS N SNS S WOON SG \ RSX SVN MSG WENN SG \ W THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, ' FEAROF AKER HALTS CTY DOE BLN SENATE Administration Measure! Loosely Drawn Would Per- mit Sale of Water Front. (Bpectal From a Staff Correspondent of The Evening World), | ALBANY, March 28.—On the 6en- | ate calendar last night ready to be) assed was a Dill that at the last mo- | ment aroused suspicion and inquiry | as to the broad possibilities it con. | tained, It was entitled “An Act to} amend the Greater New York Char-| ter relative to @elling and conveying | the right, title and interest of the city of New York tn and to lands under water to upland owners.” The bill had been introduced by Senator Walker of the lower wost side of Manhattan, who explained that it had been handed to him by B. J. Mo= Goldrick, official representative of the city administration in Albany, to be Presented as a city bill, Mr, McGold- rick said he had reovived it along with other approved measures from the city government. Under the charter, the Commisston- ers of the Sinking Fund are empow- AST DSS SONS The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signae ture of Chas, H. Fletcher, and has been made under his ersonal supervision for over 30 to deceive you in this, health of Children— ‘oric, Drops and Soothing plum, stroys Worms and allays Feverishness. thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wi bles and Diarrheea. It regula’ assimilates the Food, givin Jota Th The Children’s Panacca—' The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of ‘e in Use For 362,000,000 Passengers Safely Carried Not a single passenger lost his life on any of the lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad System in the last two years—1914 and 1915—in a train accident. During those two years 362,000,000 passengers were carried on 2,400,000 trains running day and night over 26,000 miles of track through fog, enow, sleet, rain and fair weather. : And an equal number of freight trains were operated over the same lines. The Pennsylvania Raflroad East of Pittsburgh has an unbroken record of more than three years without a single fatality to a passenger in a train accident, The New York Sun says: “Safety First is more than a phrase on the Pennsylvania Railroad,” PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD The Standard Railroad of America jat Counterleits, Imitations and ast-as-good’? are but experiments, xperience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Onstoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Parse ¢ Over 30 Years CLL EH, MAROH 28, 1916, ered to sell to upland owners lands under water lying inside high water 1 his power ts extended by the pr ed bill, #0 that “the Commis ers of the Sinking Fund are an. Ito appr eon sub nitted by the Comr ner of Docks for the salo to adjacent upland own ers of lands under water lying out- shore of the high water mark and in- shore of any bulkhead Ii It 1s understood in Albany that the hill was prepared by Dock Commis- stoner R. A. C. Smith and approved by the City Administration, Accord- Ing to the accompanying memoran- dum, the purpose was to permit the Jamaica Bay in anticipation of dock improvements there, But Jamaiea Bay {* nowhere men- tloned tn the Dill, Its provisions are broad enough to perm! the selling of New York City's most valuable asset, | the water front. It would be pos- sible under ft, with the consent of the Dock Commissioners and approval of the Sinking Fund Commisstoiners, to |*traightening out of the shore line of | turn over the Hudson River shore to || the New York Central Ratiroad. When Senator Walker examined the measure he declined: to be ita | sponsor until further explained, and his request the Senate lald it aside, ——_— PREHISTORIO, Anyway, the antis have an ar- gument. They will drag a ten- ton dinosaur up Fifth Avenue, placarded: “AN Armor Plate and No Brains, TMa Animal Belleved in Preparedness. He ts Now Bx tinct.” ears. Allow no one and endanger the Sy rups. It contains neither orphine nor other ‘arcotic substance. It dee For more than ind Colic, all Teethin; tes the Stomach and healthy and natural alee; © Mother’s Friend. Y, NEW YORK Orr, WIL WS SS WS S The Steel Car Route SS \ SS AARTFOURzS<SCCCRC. CA IW NK S SSS WE WAS WG SS Broadway and 33d St. The Ladies of The Social Service Bureau of Bellevue Hospital write a most beautiful letter of apprectation To GIMBEL _tmployees The letter has reference to the Social ServiceSale conducted at GIM- BELS recently by 50 prominent so- clely women for the benefit of Belle cue Hospital. Fashionable Striped Linings Black and white, 34-in, ofin. and full inch stripe, silk satin, excellent qual- ity, Le weight; just the lining for your Easter suit, 36-405 $1.85 yd. All silk, satin graduated otri, in black and white, and brown and white, me- dium weight; oft finish, frre wearing; the latest ining for the new flared coats. 36-in., $1.50 yd. Cotton back satin, black and white one-inch striped. Lustrous face. Is gua teed to wear two seasons, 36-in., $1.25 yd. Skirt lengths are 10 to 14 inches from the ground. The hips are accentuated by panniers and bouffant effects. The bust line is higher and the waist line The World's Greatest Masters of Fashion are represented in thie wonderful exhibition. GIMBEL Brothers e to New York and all erica the opportunity to knots [cobgae is small, These notes are i Lotus, till, | sea, wide, . itati it weight silk and cotton clusive and suerte authoritative from Paris. wai ory lip Hologs to be ari —the used under chiffon, creps, GIMBEL ” Of aarities One of the notable net or lace garments; soft Las rosdil show in the durables in does not recognize any els shown in elite, ileie barrier between desire to obtain the best, and actual attainment. Promenade is from Dre- coll—unquestionably his inspiration came from Spain, Black net and taffeta, embroidered gray, Alice blue, Copenhagen blue, light blue, royal blue, light navy, navy, i purple, rose, lav le, reseda, emerald, ight ‘and dark brown, Costumes from Docuil- let, Doucet, Drecoll, Lanvin, Jenny, Premet, around — the _ scalloped ae oe vie Martial ~ et | Armand, edge with sequins. The es, 3c yd, Weeks, Agnes, Beer, Ber- Spanish bolero suggested Witchtex” Interlining, nard, Bulloz, Cheruit, bv the sequin design in the new re Aegis Callot, and Chanel. the bodice. a ‘s 6to i aad rippling effects (water or crushing will not injure fabric). 35 inch, 38¢ yd. GIMBELS—Second Floor GIMBELS—Eighth Floor. Costumes Tailleur for Young Women The stamp of GIMBEL BROTHERS in these suits marks their authentici smartest modes for Young Women. We are exhibiting a wide variety of mode some very attractive suits which cannot be duplicated when these are gone. as the latest and 8, among which are Black and White Check Suits $25 Jacket has fitted back with high walst line, Circular peplum widely flaring over hips, Novel side pockets, repeate at sides of ekirt, which ts full circular. Suits of Serges, Poplins and Checks, $18.50, $20, $25. . Suits of Serges, Velour and Gabardine, $29.50, $35, $39.30, Navy Blue Serge Suits $40 The effective use of double rows of buttons aye this sult the desirable cachet. © three-quarter sleeves and unique collar are distinctly new notes, * Button trimming accentuates the flare of oe skirt hem. uits of Silk Poplin and Taffeta, $32.50, $39.50, $42.50, $55, $65. Sizes 14, 16 and 18 years men's Wear is completely equipped with the newest styl 5 d colors for Young Women's Wear, Hien to Sooate, Gultt end Rieter GIMBELS—Third Floor Our Section for Youn: in all the desirable mater ig We ials ani

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