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- t f i ‘a? y ee aid — { | ‘s te Do Bat Spend it. James IZumphreya, who bought Dario] Cererpit Resta’s winner races, was in special seasions for ser tence to-day for driving an auto wh Maxwell Sinde wa eeder and Attorne money. ‘The jawyers told the court all Hum. ~~~ WEW YORK BOARD OF TRADE AND TRANSPORTATION nner NP Peugot of last year's pounds, eee POLITICAL, n os, to the 19 to tlection'to be held in the and sixteen,” be a A carrying capavily f \, we AN ; ; <4 PROPOSITION No.1 jer five hundred and sixty-nine of eases _ POLITICAL, Vote YES on Proposition No. 1 50,000 hard-working men and women spent their vacations in the Adirondacks on the land comprised in Proposition No, 1. No worker, no business man, no professional man, no father of children will have any more important duty on election day than to vote YES on Proposition No. 1. A few men have agreed to give outright $2,500,000 for the Palisades Park if Proposition No. 1 passes. AN SCENIC AND HISTORIC KSERVATION SOCIETY 20° WEALTHY SPEEDER PAROLED. | ; Pati es weal nie J Hemphreys Has $1,000 a Month and) fu ark tye ramphteye’ wae Te: K JAY GOULD ICTS SUIT OVE FATHER'S ESTATE |Answer to So-Called Friendly | Action Questions Legality | of Other Heirs’ Step, ) answer t, dis- to-day In the Su senting from bis br nd The action was brought by George J, Gould and Mrs, Finley J. Shepard among and = Mra. ther heirs whom Drexel, and all jould, Tho t ‘ fendants and are living with Mra, Shepard on h tate at Irvington- Hudson, nts except Frank ced in the object of th jould Hiseretion in making @ pl division of thelr father’s p to #ix equal shares, and apart, ig them, ‘The majority of he ¢ court to confirm and appre account- | which the executors and trustees o make, but to this confirmation k Gould objects, He aska that accounting—the Gould died in 1898—-be examined Ny and the will construed so as to determine whether the execu- tors have acted within their rights In this position, the answer reveals, Frank Gould not only opposes his brothers and sisters, but his former wife and his two children, Helen n her Margaret and Dorothy Gould. PTI EEN Ee rae enrenoermn tenner nee | Rose, 4s oxecutors and trustees under the will of their father against them- wel k J. Gould, the Duchess | afternoon. p ho was Anna Gould; ® | ehildren, first since Jay|¥ TURNED MOHAMMEDAN ' TODIVORCE HER, ONLY ‘ONE OF WIFE'S CHARGES Who Sought Freedom Seven Times, Now | Indicted for Perjury. ‘ Maurice J. Rowe, a prominent and Vv 7 wealthy lawyer of Minneapolia, Minn., ly sult bety the children of the} Hiro ay, this city, was indicted by ~ An late Jay Gould, 1 construction of| the Grand Jury here to-day for subor- { : hin will and an yunting, han de.| Dation of perjury in connection with his seventh attempt, and second suc- comsfial one, to divorce his wife Bertha | of No, 425 Kast Eighty-sixth Street. | Samuel Schleemann of No. 16 East One Hundred and Fifteenth Street, al- leged to be one of Rose's tools in the divorer was also ie] dicted on a charge of perjury, Behlee- mann was arraigned before Judge Rosaisky in General Sessions this! proceedings, Mrs. Rose says that Rose, whose name was originally Rosenberg, was a! Jaw student in California in 1900 when he married her. He lived with her} for two years and she bore him twu They went to the home of his par- ents In Germany In 1902, After they had been there a short time Rose brought proceedings to annul bis Disfiguring Humor Spread Over Face Used Resinol. Skin Now Beautiful. Seattle, Wash., Sept. 7, 1916.—*A | small red place’ covered with little white scales appeared beside my nose. | Then it began to spread over both {sides of my face and the scales cracked causing a terrible itching and | It was horrible looking and | nbarrassing. I tried many salves, but could get no relief. At last I heard of Resinol Ointment and Resi- nol Soap, and applied them as direct= ed. The burning and itching sensa- tion was relieved at once and in three iweeks I was entirely cured. My face shows no sign of breaking out now; jin fac NEW YORK STATE FORESTRY ASSO. Il Restnol Ointment ¥ CAMP FIRE CLUB OF AMERICA ASSOCIATION FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE ADIRONDACKS ADIRONDACK LEAGUE CLI REW K OCIA’ § a join In the concurrence js brothers ‘UB MeN SoC Te ee OF AuDU: He has taken just the Write to + 2S, STATE FISH,GAME AND LONG ISLAND GAME PROTECTIVE eo stand, m —Advt. i. ‘ASSOCIATION - Deutschland Answers Wilson At Shadow Lawn last Saturday Mr. Wilson, in criticising the Republicans’ position on the tariff, said: that the newspapers are to-day telling us that the Deutschland arose out of the ocean yesterday with ten million dollars’ worth of goods direct from Germany. Evidently these goods have “somehow secretly” been manufactured while a large “These gentlemen make predictions about what is going to happen after the war which are absolutely incredible. 1 wonder that pintd can make them with straight faces. They say that these nations, with 25,- 000,000 men devoted to destruction—their own destruction included—con- stituting more than 50 per cent. of the skdled mechanical force of those na- tions, are nevertheless'and somehow secretly engaged in manufacturing a great body of products which are going to be dumped on us after the war, when they are struggling for their breath in the titanic struggle for their lite. Ifthey can get anybody but themselves to believe this, why, then, perhaps we ought to make ready for it; but they don’t know what is going to happen after the war; I don’t know what is going to happen after the war, and you don’t. “The only thing that we can do is to prepare the impartial eyes and methods of inquiries which will find out for us what is happening as fast as it happens, and then deal with the facts as they arise.”’ I Call Mr. Wilson’s Attention to the Fact percentage of Germany’s mechanical force has been at war. happen after the war. Mr, Wilson says he does not know and nobody else knows what is going to This shipment on the Deutschland is something tangible that has happened right now while Germany is at war, surrounded by a wall of see, and is simply a forerunner of what is going to happen on a much larger scale when the war is over. Mr. Wilson says the only thing we can do “‘is to prepare the impartial yes methods of inquiries which will find out for us whatishappening as fast as it happens, then deal with the facts as they arise.’’ sighted policy than this. foresight, some ability to look farther ahead than the end of his own nose, Mr. Wilson’s statement that we can do nothing to prepare for what is bound to happen in the future until something actually happens pretty nearly describes his entire course during the past three and a half years. describe it, because Mr. Wilson has not only waited always for something to happen, but even when it has happened he has taken no definite, final action. GEORGE W. PERKINS. For samples free, ____ POLITICAL, It would be difficult to find a more short- A statesman is supposed to be a man of some vision, some It does not completely Resinol, Balti- and and California marriage under the Ger- man law which prohibits the mar- riage of first cousins, successful and abandoned her, Mrs. Rose says. Until 1905 she heard from him only at intervals and recelyed $15 from him during that time, to * tuted Marital was America, In 1908 Mrs, Rose returned to this | country, | husband, who the | office, had obtain fault from Justice Glegerich tn the Supreme Court and again, Mrs, Rose then brought sult to have the divorce set aside. she was successful, but removed himself and second w Minneapolis, . ond wife live, re —_—_——— OOOO the American Consul and an in- quiry was started, alleges, Germany to Turkey and there em- braced the religion of the Turks « becoming @ citizen of Turkey, Insti- divores proceedings. unsuccessful and returned to in Section|1l to HENRY H.CU PRESIDENT OF THE BOD OF ALDERMEN ] J €@™ Vote for One d PRP] mt |e x] nen, cunman {z= SS ESE ACE a8 THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1016. Duted to be very wealthy. Rose brought three separate tions for divorce from his wife a: he arrived In Minneapolis, He was un- one charged her with adultery, second with incompatability, neither was brought @ thi successful 1905 she went} etlon on the gro: It develo that Rose had go! she from POLITICAL. RETURN OF WOMEN'S Again he She had found that her d his Broadway divorce by de- 7.30 To-Night MEETING 8.30 National Theatre 2d Ave. & Houston St. hod .married In thjs Rose where the parents © They Come and Welcome the POLITICAL. ___ Campaigners Home (tn 44 Cannon YourMan not Charlie Murphys DO YOU WANT Charlie Murphy’s man or your man for President of the Board of Aldermen? Henry H. Curran’s record shows him fighting Tammany all the time. Curran works for you. Murphy works for ? This is the way to mark your ballot: Put a cross (X) efor ac- fter The firet the and | In und of eruel_ and an treatment, Train Arrives Penna. Station CAMPAIGN TRAIN for HUGHES : cra INDORSED BY Manhattan & Bronx Voters!! Vote to Elect George V. Mullan Justice ef the Supreme Ceurt He Has Made Good On that Bench Keep Him There The Bar Association ef the City of N. Y. The Bronx County Bar Association. N. ¥. County Lawyers Asseciation. Citizens Unien. Many Leading Citizens. Vote the First Name in Group 12 Non-Partisan Committee for Judge Mullan A en Uncensored! Inside the German Empire BY HERBERT B. SWOPE — The World’s Special Correspondent who returned recently from Germany, where he made an exhaustive study of military and economic conditions. Begin Reading It in the Editorial Section of Next Sunday’s World What Does Their Handwriting Reveal About Their Characters? An eminent psychologist and expert in hand- writing has carefully analyzed the signatures of the two Presidential candidates and writes his conclusions especially for The World Magazine Next Sunday All Modern Improvements in the German Trenches A large diagrammatic sketch, printed in four colors, showing how the Kaiser’s men have built underground houses remarkably well equipped with all conveniences. The East Side “Pauper” Who Is Wealthier Than Rockefeller and The Battery Dockman with Whom Life Saving Is a Habit Two stories of unusual New Yorkers and their unusual lives, The Discovery of the Only North Polar Artist His drawings, of which a group are presented in colors, are said to have real artistic merit in a quaintly original way. A Mountaineer’s Dau ghter the Ideal Model for “ America” She posed for the main figure in the beautiful pediment just put up on the House of Representatives wing of the Capitol in Washington. A Special Feature “The Two Best Books I’ve Read Recently” The World Magazine sent a questionnaire to a number of men and women distinguished in various departments of contemporary life and letters asking what books impressed them most of their recent reading. Here Is a Guide for Your Reading If you want to profit by your books you could not do better than follow the selections made by the eminent judges who contribute to this symposium, In the Gravure Section The Death of a Zeppelin Twelve Night Photographs (Sanctioned by the British Oficial Preas Bureau) Showing, in order, the discovery of the Zeppelin over London—the searchlights focussed on it—the British aeroplanes attacking it—shells exploding from London’s aerial defense guns—flames bursting from it—and finally, its terrible rush to earth, an exploded comet. —_—_—— A BIG BOOK OF INFORMATION AND ENTERTAINMENT, NEXT SUNDAY (Give Your Newsdealer Advance Notice.) MMMM