The evening world. Newspaper, May 2, 1916, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| frre THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1916. ‘Stewart $ Co, WFESASPASTOR Correct. Apparel forWomen & Misses 5TH AVENUE AT 37TH STREET WILL CONTINUE TOMORROW THEIR Semi-Annual Reduction Sale | ie ——_—_—- ' gins at Newark. Women’s G& Misses’ Apparel | against | former the rector Rev. of A. Peter Christ Tailored & Dressy Suits Of Velour Checks, Men's Wear Serge, Worsted Checks end Gabardines, in smart tailored, dem:-tailored and Tailored & Dressy Suits Of Poiret Twill, Men’s Wear Serge, Velour Checks, Poplins and Gabar dines; included in this are a nun.ber fore Vice Chancellor ewark to-day, ghter of Formerly $18.50 to $29.50 ‘tion, She was 4 Formerly $29.50 to $45.00 navy and colors. 18.50 Formerly $24.50 to $29.50 with her mother. ing after her inter Judge Thomas F. Henry J. Re jam . Taffeta Silk or Silk Faille, 26.50 Formerly $29.50 to $49.50 ts. Mackay jr. dres, Faille Silk and Taffeta 6ilk 29.50 Formerly $39.50 to $69.50 Silk, in various color effects. 39.50 Formerly $59.50 to $85.00 her daughter, she alleged, The letter, Mrs. to her by Mrs, Dixon, expression: by other on earth.” 10.00 | Formerly $13.75 to $13.50 | | Hackensack last 15.00 Formerly $18.50 to $24.50 Ous M 1 located on t he sumnme he west shor SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” ADS. WORK MONDAY WONDERS. Pian at its Best Buying The Lord & ‘Taylor Piano Department houses a great and comprehensive stock of pianos and player pianos, suited to every need and wish. Piano purchasing is largely a matter of confidence, for not all “can be skilled and expert piano people, and we have taken it as our responsibility to safeguard our patrons as well as ourselves by creating an organization of piano experts who make it their sole concern to select for us only such pianos and player pianos as will give continued satisfaction in the homes of our patrons. The nine makes of instruments which we offer are, we believe, representative of the best thought and highest ideals of American piano makers. Regardless of the price you wish to pay, we have an instrument which will not only meet your re- quirements in that regard, but will justify through the years, your con- fidence in making your choice from our piano rooms, It is our purpose to deal with the requirements of each piano pur- chaser from the purchaser’s view- point—to advise, to assist, in the selection of an instrument best suited to the purchaser’s present and future needs. Payment Terms It is our established policy to arrange conyeni ent payment terms to meet the wishes of piano purchasers, Music Rolls for All 88-Note Player Pianos Complete stock of Piano Stools, Benches, Music Roll Cabinets, ete. Speocen cece -emremipenrannacanseme: Upright Pianos from $195, Player Pianos from $360, G:and Pianos fiom $465. Lord & Taylor 38th Street FIFTH AVENUE 39th Street i} | eee ee ae ff: Se ea es NS es Se eR ee ea Lord & Taylor PIANOS CMP o0= OGhicheriig) VOSE | FISCHER MARSHALL & WE | BRAMBACH AUTOPIANO WENDELL PIANISTA STRATFORD DE pone a member of chureh choir when Tulp was pastor. A sensational letter written by the | Fashioned of Covert, Gabardines, | | Of Faille Silk, Wool Velour, Velour |) “phe ‘Tulps were married in Velour Checks and Poptin, in black, | | Checks and Taffeta Silk, combined }! ‘rhe pastor resign navy and colors; varying lengths. with Serge; various lengths. CUSSED AND WROTE ris ENDEARINGLY TO GIRL |Divorce Trial of Rev. A. Peter Tulp of Hackensack Be- Trial of the divorce action brought | by Mrs, Anna KE, Tulp of Hackensack Tulp, Episcopal Church at that place, was begun be- Foster Miss Eleanor Dixon, | former City Counsel at dieses ites taped in | Warren Dixon of Jersey City, and postly exclusive models. a granddaughter of the late Supreme 16 75 22 50 Court Justice Jonathan Dixon ts ° ° named as co-respondent in the ac- the | Silk Suits Silk Suits ‘pastor to the young woman is the Toitored and dressy models of Taf- | | Novelty Silk Suits, in exclusive de. |! Principal basis for the divorce ac- feta Silk and Silk Faille, in black, | | signs; fashioned of Gros de Londres |' ton. Miss Dixon appeared in court Her father is look- Former nd Matthew | dy are defending Tulp. «Will. | of Hackensack is test! t counsel for Mrs, Tulp. no 7 | Mrs. Tulp, the first witness, Silk Suits Silk Costume Suits —{/ ica that sne loft ner husband In Exclusive new models: some of them Exquisite Costume’ Suits of Georg- | July after have been in our racks for only a ette Crepe or Chiffon, combined | visited the rectory and told her of few days, fishioned of Gros de Lon- | | with Gros de Londres or Taffeta | a letter she found addressed to Tulp, Tulp said, was read In it was this | We are now bound to- | gether by a tie more sacred than any 1905, his charge at me The The} q ‘ wned by Supervisors Ky, hs. 1 of Tiana Tam- + Was | len thelr should 0 —aavt. COUPLE DISAPPEARS FROM PUBLIC LIBRARY Asked to Hunt for Young | Married Woman and a | Young Man, The disappearance of two employees |of the Public Library at Forty-second ‘street and Fifth avenue—one @ young married woman and the other a young | man—caused their relatives to ask the | police to-day to aid in the search for them. ‘The young woman is Mrs. Marjory Albers, twenty-one years old, of No. 263 Utica avenue, Brooklyn, and the man is Willlam Gordano of No. 1985 Seventh Avenue, Manhattan. Mrs. Al- bers took her daughter Marian, eight- een months old, with her. The parents of Mrs. Albe: ir. and Mrs. James Brown, explained that their daughter had been separated from her husband for more than a year and had been living with them in Brooklyn, While they were at church Sunday morning she left the house with her child and did not return, At Gordano's home It 3 learned that he also had left t house on Sunday morning and had not been heard from since. ‘LONE MILLIONAIRE’S’ GIFT | Reappraisal Ordered of Estate of | J. G. Wendel, Who Transferred | $1,525,000 Property to Sisters. | iss Dixon's mother had !| | (Special to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., May 2— The fight made by the State Comp- | troller to have taxed under the State |Inheritance Tax law $1,525,000 worth of property, which was transferred to his sisters by the late John G. Wendel, the “lone millionaire of Fifth @ fixer She accuc a her husband of eruet,|4¥¢hue” Manhattan, previous to his Afternoon & Ev.Dresses | | Afternoon & Ev.Dresses | 4.000), ind brutal. treatment. Once, |Seathy resulted to-day in Surrogate Of Crepe de Chine, Crepe Meteor | | Exclusive modets of Crepe de Chine || she says, he exclaimed: "D—n it, | Wiliam A. Sawyer sending the mat- and Taffeta Silk, consbined with | | or Taffcta Silk, combined with |/ have to attend to my parish duties, |‘ back to State Transfer Tax Ap- Georgette Crepe; some are hand Georgette; handsomely draped: all |) iii. 1 iy ‘eS: praiser William C, Clark of Mount somely ernbroidered. colors. oan | Vernon for reappraisal. This means Mrs. Tulp said her husband wanted | that the State will collect an addi- to leave the ministry because of its, tional $80,000 tax from tho estate, as exactions pertaining to morals and) ang there is also a penalty of 10 per Formerly $16.50 to $29.50| | Formerly $29.50 to $49.50 | other thi She said that he was!cent, on the total amount not exactly to her view in morals, | Surrogate holds that when the a a A Ly property was transferred to his sister A Hahaha by Mr. Wendel, in 1911, it should have Sport & Street Coats | Silk & Cloth Coats do there been taxed by the State and that the Wendel heirs should have brought the matter to the attention of the Comp- troller. For their failure to do this the penalty is attached, r»e BROKAW HOUSE MOVING Fr CALLS OUT ‘‘RESERVES’” Send Sheriff Dispatches Seven Dep- \ uties to Blocked Road. COVE, L. 1. Brokaw attempted to have a house moved across the Oyster Bay and Glen Cove road to-day and stirred up all sorts of trouble. Mr. Brokaw recently purchased the old Mill Neck Club | house which stood across the road | trom his property. | This morning John Holliday, a house-moving contractor of Freeport, with gang of men started to take the across the road, Automobilists who found their way tmpeded_tele- phoned Supervisor James H, Cock: He communicated with Charles T, Mc | Carthy, counsel for the Board of Su- pervisors, and a gang of fifty men was hurried to_ the scene. Later Sheriff Stephen P. Pettit sent seven deputy sheriffs there. Holliday was arrested and placed under $500 bonds by Justice Laysten Ke of blocking the highway. e was left in the road and was obliged to make a all tratfic detour, — DIG IN GRAIN TO REACH FIRE. ry Into Blase in Ship That ave Firemen ouble, A sm | to-day on the k line steamship Vatis, loading with grain, » and rice at the foot of Warren reet, Brooklyn, is being invest sated by the Fire Marshal because an unlighted eandie was found near ‘The ship's oMcers say It ndje such as they use in the and think it rolled down by nt. loannis | acct | The firemen could not trace the fire until the grain had been removed. | | An effort was made to get a lighter | to pump out the loose grain, but none could be secured because of the har- The firemen of Hook and put | dor strike. Ladder No. 110 were then | work with shovels, i Retired Sea Captate Tr! ide. Frederick Atwell, sixty-five years old, a captain, was taken from his home at No. 143 Herkimer Street, Brook- , to-day to Kings County Hospital, from paris green polsonin arrest On @ charge of attemt de, He will re His daug ‘ter, Mrs. Willlam A. Ketchum, In whose hore he lived, said that recent business | troubles had worried him into the effort to |to end his Ife SURE WAY TO GET RID OF BLACKHEADS m. two ounces of from any drug hot, wet P} hge-—rub over the blackheads briskly , and you will be eur nave dinap peared binck honda, no matter whore , almply disecive and divappenr, lenving the parte Wihout aay mark whatever, Rlackheade iro simply ®& tiatura of dust and dirt And socretione fram (ha body that form fn the. pores of the skin--pinching and eonin ny ea trritation, make eens ant them out r he powdered und nply dieavive ckhenda eo they Wash right out, the pores free aud clean and in natural condlt dy tr with thew uf . Oerteiniy try tile fauihod SUBJECT TO $80,000 TAX ™ y Men and, . May 2.—Irving! 1 fire between decks early | estate and ship of the Summit r Amondmont to the Conntl Tho plan of the wor ns out. personal property.” | [tined by Mixa Paul, I fc » who More than $80,000 worth of prop- are able to vote In the States which ton, ance of power hetwoen th cuna and the Der strating thelr atror Ny CAN'T DEMAND ALIMONY erty, including real estate, Jowelry havo ranted euffrage to bind to« | F| A and furniture, was given by Mr.) gethor In an effort to obtain the hale Washington to bis wife in thelr days of romance and she now enjoys full possession of it. Mr. Washington still has a large Income from patent med- icine stock and receives $125 a month in his uncle's munitions factory. But that is no reason why he should be! compelled to pay his wife $400 a month, the Court held, in refusing her application for support pending trial of the double-headed divorce suit. SH, SANS UGE Justice Delehanty Refuses the Application of Mrs. Henry | J. Lamar Washington. Here is an improv RYZON, The Perfect Baking Powder with a new and better phosphate, makes dumplings and waffles that melt in your mouth. WOMAN FOR PRESIDENT, TALK OF SUFFRAGISTS Candidate Ma) tered in Race Against the Democratic and Republican Nominees. CHICAGO, May 2.—Preparations are Mrs. Washington, who owns a fash-| under way by officers of the Congres- fonable tea house and blooded poul-} gional Union of Woman's Suffrage for try farm at Summit, N. J.—formeriy | the organization here of a Woman's her summer home—asked for $300 4 party during the Republican National month, declaring that her husband's| Convention in June, Miss Alice Paul, monthly Income was almost six times Chairman of the Union, says there ts that. In the eight years of thelr mar-/ 4 possibility of the women entering ried life, Because a husband may be able to pay his wife a large amount of all- mony ts no reason why she should demand it, Supreme Court Justice Delehanty decreed to-day in refusing to direct Henry J. Lamar Washing- ton, descendant of George Washing- ton, to pay Lucille Margaret Wash- ington $300 a month and $1,500 to her lawyers, Both are suing fer divorce. Expert cooks get best results with a little lessof RYZON than required of Mrs, Washington told the ; a candic ‘or the Presidency in op- other baking pow- court, hee husband had spent $1364) position to the Republican and ~ mos 5 9 on living expenses alone ceAtle: NOTIN ders. 10, 18 and 35 “Mrs Washington loses sight of the| Three possible candidates mentioned cents, 6 Delehanty says in his were Miss I's Harriet Stanton decision, “that the burden of proof! Blatch of New York, daughter of 8 upon he hi ces lizabeth Cady Stanton, a_ pioneer ls upon her to show the necessity of ifrugist, and Sara Bard Field of the payments asked for, This, in my Q4i\ Francisco, who carriqd the poti- | opinion, she has failed to do, in the tion from the West to Congress ask. | face of her admission of the owner- ing favorable action on the Suffrage 0 yf u ' O Founded 1826 an hi Greeley 1900 Cold Storage ad i Club Ci uncheon, 75¢ | Furs é a Luncheon and | Plant on the Afternoon Tea, Premis y ere) . a la Carte, | Premises. 38th Street FIFTH AVENUE 39th Street fo AM Gee P.M. Tenth Floor pee emoet on Continuation of the May Sale of LINGERIE, NEGLIGEES, PETTICOATS, MME. IRENE CORSETS, BLOUSES AND PORCH DRESSES Offering Exceptional Values i | 6 \ ae | SPECIAL SALE FINELY BUILT FURNITURE Price Reductions 25% to 50%, Tomorrow and Balance of Week There remain from our “Seven Furniture Days” event, just closed, numerous odd Suites and Pieces of the most desirable design and utility. In order to make seasonable floor space adjustments we have reduced the prices on tMs Furniture from 25% to 50%, for tomorrow and the balance of the week. This exceptional opportunity merits your careful consideration, Circassian Walnut Desk. Our for. TREN EEIiee 0. Colonial Mahogany Desk Our former price $66.00 . Circassian Walnut Dressing ‘Table Inlaid Mahogany China Cabinet. _Our former price $30.00 . $12.50 Our former price $70.00. . $48.50 Circassian Walnut Desk. Qur for- ry Gbrvaie Hees INAS aan Colonial Mahogany Library, Table, \ Colonial Mahogany Table, Our Our former price $65.00 iY former price $32.50. A . Jacobean Oak China Cabinet. Our | | Damask Arm Chair, Our former former price $150.00 5.00 pe ie ee .f Velour Wing Arm Chair. Qur {or | enim Sofa. Our former price mer price $149.00 . 855.00 .. F “925.86 Denim Davenport. Our former Colonial Mahogany Library, Table ao price $110,0¢ 67. i Our former pil 845.00 $29.75 Jacobean Oak Dining Room Suite Fumed Oak Dining Room Suite (4 vory Chiffonier. Our former price ur ; DC Our forme ic foo... $40.00 As illustrated. Our former price $625.00.$375.00 Bee OO. Pre 100.00 . Beds Bedding Brass Bungalow Bedstead.. Our § White Ename! Bedstead, | Our $23.00 Osternoor Mattress ~~ full i Upt red Box Spring with Hair former piise #1 50 . former price $8.50....... $6.00 size—so Ib 5 Mattress. Our former price s . oO pri ohn aisis aur form 550 White Enamel Bedstead, — Our g Woven Wire Spring. Our f ae 1 575.00 55.00 Brats Bedstead, Gur former price 4 former price $16.00 $8.00 frie a ah Bi $9.75 iolstered Box with Hair $42.50 26.50 | White Enamel Bedstead. | Qu: a oven hire Spring, Our tgoigg 0 nN S58. 50 Brass Bedstead. Our former price € former price $12.50 $8.50 ib ae Bl ag : $48.00. $28.50 cr ; ee Upholstered Box Spring.© Our § with Hair Brass Bedstead. Our former price ite Enamel Bedstead. | Our former price $22.5¢ $16.50 ier, price rp 5 former prive 613,50.----- 99.00 PCy incr tine seme with Hair | $75.00 Brass Bedstead. Our form 00 White Enamel Bedstead. Our Mattress Our former, prict rand Dow lows, Our $80.00...... teehys 00 1 former price $15.00 $11.00 § — f65.00 $47.50 ner price £6.00 each... $3.95 Bizth Floor eae] DR ey ee Important Special Sale Wm. Liddell & Co.’s Famous Gold Medal DAMASK TABLE CLOTHS eee ee ee A NS ee a ThisVictrola Truly Interprets ” i S { i ( ps ¢ ¢ “The Spirit of Music a In appearance, grace and substan- at 25 per cent. less than regular prices. most pleasing way. Woods--ma hogany, English n oor oa broy Coming as it does when Linens are scarcer and In tone-qu y it cc es favora higher in price than ever before in a generation, with ahe $200 and $300 Vict: this is a trade event of unusual significance. In operating convenience Messrs. Wm. Liddell & Co, have long enjoyed a heavy triple spring, motor world wide reputation as manufacturers to the finest same as in the $300 Victrola ar retail trade, as well as purveyors to the leading Hotels } not found in any of the lowe of Europe and America. Their linens have always been priced styles) requires minimum known as Gold Medal Brand and have been awarded recog- winding, An automatic indicator nition in every important exhibition both here and abroad regulates the speed ; These numbers represent incomplete assortments, In ecordstlling ENT Eyseatie ' broken sizes, and patterns which have been discontinued, PAP eo 077 and on account of the high cost to manufacture could not bad se ley 158 ‘eaten Victro'a XIV. now be produced without an advance of 507%. au A ease enacted pital $150 Some are less than half usual price, and all are an SACD RB ANE ES eat tee sheen recorclal nuh y yuipped with these record albu fully 25% less than present market value. ‘ : Prices range as follows: Bripe S158, | Pure hate Victor Keg sad i red pap Napkina.................dozen $7.50 to $14.75 Victrola and Records. Pay the balance? 4 50 Table Cloths..............each $4,00 to $13.75 on terms of 4 Menth Becond Fleor, Seventh Floor ‘ eee ae seme et eee ae ae ae ee PS MOTE: | eR eRe 22s a 0 RED 0 DO see as em eevee smo am Lees ei RP ORE ER NNO Nm ED

Other pages from this issue: