The evening world. Newspaper, August 10, 1916, Page 6

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-_ Coen ee Hine te ree rey ee " torvler fe OUR cyesht ye only to ee ite reputels precious px + Lecmnetions by | epreterr Physiciors Ne charge or eblipation Portoet Fitting Ginanee as Lew 00 09.66 New York 164 Hiway, ot John 215 W. 42d St. fi57),' ce || Meet precious posers. || fon That's why you fl dhould entrust your Eyes |] fam who conwd wm ite moet son ” 925 Bimwh Av. “16th NLY when you compare KELLNER PRICE, and KELLNER SERVICE can you understand why our business grown steadily for 25 years -why we sell to the same families for three generations. Compare our prices with the sales gone 4 other shops and JUD BY TI Louis XVI. Bedroom Enamel. Soft Rubber ‘bis work carries my guarantes, backed by the largest dental practice in the world DR, FINCH ciosea sundays, 10 Kenmare St. *! gr apyy, yen Crooklyn Office, 409-411 Fulton St, Opposite Hall ot Records—Borough Hal jané a6 Boerum Place ‘L’ Station! Meere ® te r to heatre, Holds a soluble powder for making about 50 cups of a delicious beverage that is fast taking the place of coffee in thousands of homes— “There’s a Postum, made of wheat, of wholesome molasses, is a pure food-drink, brimful of the goodness of the grain, and en- tirely free from the troubles that often attend coffee drinking. If coffee don't agree, usc POSTUM It comes in two forms: Cereal, which has to be boiled; and Instant Postum ~toluble~made in the cup—instantly, FACTS. fo eae’ ‘ia in American Walnut or Ivory The 25 rooms completely furnished will prove instructive and entertaining. guaranteed to fit made with o le f volt H about double the suction ofthe old style hard ra " BOTWINCONFESSES; VOLVES TART IN WIE SLAVERY senierd ty of . Judew ¥ * efore whom wi Aue we $180 Suite, 4 pieces, THE EVENING WORLD, Pony bie « ted Pol.comen Bargtt a it quad Ghose duty Ht © ‘ ne vo Hot ou 4 Anse A wriere we M Ad wed ie © business He main iained am enpens slow h apartment where le lived with & @omen, © the Polloe aay, wae hie ciel aide won tough (hie woman ’ put otwin in & position » Viead wu of “secial promi Hotwin and how they were involved in the business Could not be tained at the District Attorney's oMcr, but it is understood they are oWnere of property whieh has bers rented to persons who conduct dis orderly re ith A» to levy tribute on resort keepers, lad been distributed among, innocent young girls, Hotwin mitted he had obtained bundles of the tickets had giv wtaurant je working In de and factor tion of what which wan at- t y the most vicious oharacters of both ae in New Yérk’s under- world, showed that a grew many of ene girls were present, bah aeoctated with Enright and ir alleged collection of ed a number of the girly were luref@ away that night. In addition to a long prison sent- Botwin is Hable to a@ fine of RAZING DEWEY THEATRE: 20 YEARS A LANDMARK Known Throughout Country as First One Named After Hero of Manila Bay. Wreckers are at work taking down | th Dewey Theatre, Nos, 126-132 East | took pl erat tomt Suction —_—— Plate menuth Gitting around edge of ale plate. Fourteenth Street. For twenty years it has been a landmark for theatre- goers of New York and has been known throughout the country as the firat place of amusement to be named after the hero of Manila Bay, Originally built ss Grace Chapel, it was transformed from a chureh into the Volks Garten in 1896, blossoming out under its pres- | ent title two years later, when | Dewey's name was on every tongue. “Big Tim" Sullivan owned and op- erated It with George Krause and it is sald to have been the money mak- ing property which gave Sullivan his start, After running as @ burlesque house for elght years, it was leased by William Fox for vaudeville and pictures, Five years later J. P. Adler took It over and gave performances there in Yiddieb, Upon the death of “Big Tim" three years ago the the- Reason” roasted with a bit The original Postum, ?ade right, both cre equally delightful, and the \ (42 cup is about the cere, atro became entangled in litigation which was terminated recently when 8. Schinasi foreclosed @ $200,000 mort. 8. What wilt replace the theatre has not been determined, | at night REY CTY GEIS SETBACK NIGHT ON EXPLOSNES it Injunction Permits Lack awanna Railroad to Run Ammunition tutes) ee y Tran fine up Lackaw adian Car and Foundry ¢ arty explosives through the ety the ne 6s before the explosion at Hack Tom Island tion Counsel John Mit oe the order, #aid the pr the other roads A Han Judge Retistad made known hie decision Freder Foulkes, re tral Ka preven fre) iting the Jersey « Asked for a hearing to (he poltee from holding up re carrying explosives of the Trenton All the other railroads will injunctions to the m interfering with explosives in transit) within Jersey City limita, ‘We will carey our fight to the} Court of Appeals,’ said Me, Milton 9 lives of our citizens must be week | prevent polive protected.” Former United States District Attorney Henry A. Nine of New York City argued for th Canadian Car Co, He satd that the 8 of the Jocmay City Commiseton | were not legal. He told Judge Rell- stab that his concern labels ell cars carrying explosives, that no pasen= core are carried on such trains, that specially trained guards accompany all and that full precvutions are taken ‘to prevent explosions. He added that sucb trains are moved Mr. Wise also stated that it was on impossibility for the munitions of his concern to explode while in tran- nit At this sugegstion Mr. Milton Jumped to his feet and described in detail the horrors of the explosions at Black Tom. “They exploded there and will explode again,” said Com- missioner George Brensinger. am sure the railroads and rere will co-operate with the Jerse City authorities regulating the transit of explosives,” said the judge. “We want no repetition of the Black Tom affair.” He stated that he will set a date for a hearing on a permanent tnjunc- tion, After the hearing Commissioner Brensinger announced that a confer. ence of city officials of Newark, Jer- sey City, Hoboken, Paterson’ and New York will be held shortly to de- termine what action will be pursued in Umiting the carrying of explosives. cob bon tha A DEMANDS OF CARMEN READY BY MONDAY Organization of Committees for All Surface Car Lines of the City Begun, f New York City The , geet Ss a TAMMANY SLEKT wel Fe pued from F N 4 eee) ed Hall hee he polley & believe wae pire breetent ke pick their « ton Minor currents of enthusiaem these whe 4 robip Romination Hrookiyn and mention the name Alexander Mullivan. are ‘tate Treasurer Hed as highly prob AS SEABURY'S NAME“ ie the @inew re th jhocker Ke "TEXT OF DANISH TREATY | 'ss2 Ss "| PILFERED, SAYS SENATOR MU BDAY, AVOUET Lu, L016. 5 NOW SOARS | wee sr. hen ot tome i 4 ‘ * OV OF THE FiGHT SSS" WITH THEADVANCE <2! tein ine “ be ree ei th a * Weegers & tery men + ven within @ few , A . . ) ohn OF WHEAT PRES w i map of may hee on Fitty Cents Added to the Bar| canes rel, Which Is Listed in Chicago at $7.25 "Often Tuberculosis on Is Much Relieved picker an telling him how they ed they had been here yesterday Ot by the pater ple which conte a barrel on Nema le we vie will pay 1 to joonte more for it than ale did yes terday ut to-day o for 112) @ barrel wrade Yesterday it In the last month flour * advanced 02 « barrel, and bakers are considering abandonm of the S-eent loaf and @ale only o ‘orm. ' nay ‘ ic u | A a 1. pal ve le | Stone Denounces Publication in Ad | to.cont loaf, olightly emalier than the ener bene, — Yate of Terms of Purchase — | present ‘dime’ loaf, While the four the message back from the counetl of West India Islands. market was advancing to-day wheat fires The tentative draft of (ie platform prepared by the sub-committee under the leadership of Robert Fr. Wagner of New York, minority leader of the Senate, had virtually t rmpleted and is ready for submission to the full Committee on Resolutions. It ta suid to be about eighteen hundred words in length, FITZGERALD 18 TO BE THE PRE- SIDING OFFICER. Uniess unforseen developments should cause & change tn the pro amme the convention will be called order to-morrow nov kiyn, who has been selected as the presid- ing oMeer by the committee, After organtaation has been effected and the committees named there will be a recess until evening, thus affording an opportunity for the committces to perform their duties and for the dele- gates to attend the races before tak- ing up the main work of the conven- tion, the adoption of the platform. the early murmurs of the Convention, hereinafter referred to as “The Con- ference,” began rising here and there above the steady monotone of those who talk of horses and jockeys and the odds, By inidnight last night one wander- ing along Broadway, Saratoga, felt a little bit lese as though he were at Broadway and Forty-second Street, and a@ little bit more as though be were in the neighborhood of Delmon- co's and the National Democratic Club, Charlee F. Murphy and Nis staff officers of the Tammany division, Sheriff Al Smith, Phil Donahue, Thomas F. McAvoy and Secretary Thomas F. Smith took up their quar- ters at the Grand Union Hotel befor sundown. They found national com- mitteeman Norman E. Mack and State Chairman Ed. 8. Harris there ahead of them, also W. A. Farrelly of Broome County and M. J. Walsb of Westchester. TALK ABOUT EVERYTHING EX- CEPT THE CANDIDATE, The politicians who are not frankly General Organizer Fitzgerald be- gan to-day the organization of com- mittees for all divisions of the sur- face railway lincs of the city which have made settlements of their dif- ferences with tho railway officials. He said that by Monday morning all the demands which ure to be made on Aug. 20 will have been put in shape and givev into the printer's hands. Four chaptera for four separate locals will have been prepared before the 2th, he sald. The work of organizing the subway and elevated railway employees was folng, ahead at meetings every night, e added, but he sould not tell when they would receive charters and make thelr demands, So far as the B. R. T. 48 concerned, Mr. Fitzgerald said the situation was urichanged, but that the union propa- ganda was atill going forward, — INSPECTOR FARRELL RETIRED Brooklyn Police Offictal Hi in Depa t 80 ¥ It was announced to-day at Brook- lyn Police Headquarters that the Board of Police Surgeons has ordered the retirement for disability of Inspector John J. Farrell of the Ninth Inspection District, The retirement will take ef- fect. Aug. 15 on half-pay pension— $1,760 @ year. Inspector Farrell is fifty-two years old and has been tn the department thirty years, He has been an inspector five years, The retirement of Michael Keylaher, the patrolman with the longest service record in Brooklyn, also was an- nounced. He js seventy-five years old and has been forty-four years @ patrol- man, ———— ee GEORGE W. ARNOLD DEAD. seoking the nomination of Justice Samuel Seabury as Governor are the most emphatic In explaining tbat this gathering of the unterrified is not to be called a convention but “a con- ference.” It is clear that they do not want to have the issue of the final decision on a candidate to be determined in Saratoga this week. Tho one name which enters into} every discussion is that of Justice Seabury. Even Senator Brackott, a little more rotund and aggressive ant pungent In speech than ever, suy- pends his sarcasms regarding his at- fection for Gov. Whitman with pre- dictions that the nomination of Sea- bury will make the task of true and tried Republican heroes very onerous this fall, OPPOSITION TO SEABURY CEN- TRES ON M’ANENY, Since last night the McAneny talk has become definitely ag- Seabury were pretty much in a worked-out agreement to et gether on the former President of the Poard of Aldermen, Mr. McAneny passed through Sara- toga in the afternoon on his way to his country home at Lake George, He declared with the utmost appearance of innocence that he did not know what the conference was going to do, and thero was nothing in the ques. | tions he asked or his replies to an| effort to get him to discuss the Dem- ecratic situation which indicated a. WASHINGTON man Stone Relations ¢ hownced on the by dishonorable means” and the pub Heation th the treaty for the purchase of Danish West Indies He declared he would ask an Ex- ecutive evening to cv been stolen fr the Benace ever, he said nm out th Senate.” Fried Their Fish in Pla BUNBURY Felton, and George Delbough, membere of a camping party on an island in the Sus: | quehanna River near here, to-day caught a moss of flash and deckled to fry | them. They used a bag of plaster of | In the vast caverns of the hotele|pari# In, mistake for, flour and, rotted | doctor ‘Rencma on Scalp Resinol Soon Healed It Entirely I scratched that would of course pull off the scabs and left my head very sore ol soothed the scal; using one jar of Resinol Ointment and three cakes of Resinol Soap my head is entirely cured — I can rest peacefully and there is no more itching. My tem- ples were almost clean of hair and now they are covered thickly. Resinol ii any kind of you CS lennie E. Wheeler, 120 Woodridge PI Leonia, N. J. All druge its sell Resinol Ointment and Resinol write to Dept. 1-8, Resinol, Baltimore. gressive, as though those opposed te | to- | rectly or indirectly his knowledge of | the way the Democratic leadere were even then talking about him in the hotel lobbies, He talked golf witn Judge Muiqueen most of the time un- Writer and Re for New York aD More Than 25 Years, George Waugh Arnold, for more than twenty-five years @ reporter on New {York newspapers and a writer of de- Mghtful sketches and verse, died terday after an illness of several months. |. He was the son of George W. and the late Mary A. Melntosh Arnold, and mn in this city sixty-two years He is survived by his widow, Graham Arnold, and two chil: rt 0. roline ing at his late est One Hundred treet te Skate Diet Kille Big Shark, 4 shark eight fee long was @shore at Fire Island among a group of bathers yesterday. A skate was found in the shark's throat, with ite teeth gripped fast to that organ, til the Judge dropped off here and joined the other statesmen in dis eveet observation of the unending ————— LIVER ACTING POORLY — TRY HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters ITISA SPLENDID TONIC prices alternately rose and fell amid Aug 10-—-Chalr-| excited buying and selling f the Benate Voreian) nmitter — tod floor the “obtaining rning of eatracts from session of the Senate this neider the matter rongly indimated the text had’ fl information, he shou orned and plined by the, ———_ (Special to The Even Pa, Aue. David Coonville Consisting of Bathing Suit, 10,—tarry Beck As Mlustrated ALL FOR $ 2. 75 The suits are made of excellent quality mohair, trimmed with silk in corresponding colors. ‘They alone are worth every bit of $3.95; some worth $4.95. = In black and blue, sizes 34 to 44. In this sale, you get the suit, cap and shoes for only $2.75. GIMBEL Subway Stores, Lower Floor Shortly afterwant «| All will kept busy —Awful Irritation “I had a severe case of ec- ny head. My scalp itched and and was full of scabs, and when! something awful. it keep my hands out dds became very dry and not feel like there was ication of | inol Soap wonderfully, and after 2,000 Pairs of $1 Barefoot Sandals and Play Oxfords at 50c¢ ie in tan and ef Two Styles of Boys’ Blouses at 28c Every boy should re plenty of blouses. ‘This sale at 28¢ makes it an easy matter. This lot includes fn dark and light a! Finghams. He I must say mply wonderful for almost skin trouble. It does all id (Signed) Mrs, Bsc Eg Md hve eyelets, which A and more.” form Soap. For free samples, 1,000 Umbrellas, 85c and 52 Regularly $1.25, $2.50 and $3 A Special Purchase of’ Men’s apd Women’s Umbrellas at Greatly Reduced Prices Men's and Women’s Umbrellas, ne uel: Men’s and Women’s $2.50 and $3 Um- ity American taffeta, tape edge. G as- breffas at $2. Extra quality union taffeta, sortment of carved and plain handles; tape edge. Beautiful assortment of faney regularly $1.25; at 85c. and plain handles; silk case and tassels to Men's and Women’s Suit Case Umbrellas, hang on arm. $1.10. Fitted in bag, for travelling. GIMBELS—Main Floor Best Men's Suits at GIMBELS Now $14.50 and $19.50 Our Annual August Reduction Sale, now on, is the event where men who shrewdly buy “‘out of season” at ‘‘inside” prices enjoy a clothes feast. The above quotation is typical of the opportunities, M i F ’s 3-P. Suit $14.50 { that were $22 to $27.50 Men’s best GIMBEL Suits, er eres + 919.50 Men’s Overcoats $1 5 { For Men’s silk-lined Fall Overcoats, regularly $25 Men’: GIMBEL piesa dead py Arche at \ $25 This is only a taste These are but four items out of forty. You'll find propor- tionate economies in other suits and overcoats, trousers,. Palm Beach and flannel clothes, auto dusters, riding clothing, etc. Big Day Friday. Men’s Genuine Palm Beach Suits, $5 GIMBELS—Fourth Floor

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