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wr “eo Sra EN RP Z 4 THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1917. : Midis won am A. Rote ; ah _ : Awl I ; Army Ematncers’ Stattes Rarned. | mingled in the sane set at the Fox! A 1917 DEBUTANTE y Leta Bag aoick lee ttt oy J ve Femnes. \ eat exes, Feb, §.—stablen of HM Country Club, Staten Island,” 7Yy WED SOLDIER JUST | cota and dry storage warehouses. Ti] carGany, Alberta, Feb. § 7 i Hae “coho Ate ai womrenes where Van Loan, as an officer of the " is argued that if the railroad were to. Kidd, who with twe companions, Mrs, ceils Pon 5 ‘ ere] club, frequently appointed his friend BACK FROM MEXICO 5 F. Smith and her daughter Edna, all of lelniosh Can wor - Pt . purchase the ice company’s stock tt a ‘ ~ ‘ Re Saacks to committees H could monopolize. its, business. and {tt!8 city. were passengers on the Gall- some ot the | a | The first intimation of an infatua- #4444444 2900141044485 i s 9.0L : Cl rornia, was on her way to England to " \ tion between Sancke and his friend's ‘ i make it anctier big money 1 "Jhe with her husband who is hovering ‘ pat the 1 | wite, the court was told, oame to Var : wb ttt Gat es UB Saach RES | Hotween life and death In a British-hee- i ite, 5 old, eto Van ; 1 if the Board of Usti-| pital arter hw | were woek end guests at the Saacke * | iti J : : fr re Smith, and her gaugater . went War Hae } home on Staten Island. Van Loan i | wer honk vrrdia dio a4. * , By alae : ’ ; went there intending to play golf with L 04 pid iain rare wel + EERE Saacke, but on the morning of the! 4 —> | —_>—— at nb the ‘ y+[contest the mining man said he was) 4 . ' 4 Seis tug | Treat Her as Well as 1 Have,” \ii"ana sent Van Loan to the eltb- 3 | Shipping Must Not Be Men-| Harold H. Hatch Offers to , se was; — Van Loan Told Saacke, house ae sa, SuyeN arr cians |4 $ aced by Germany’s “Pre-} Subscribe $50,000 and | . : et papers disclosed, | ® ‘ * ” | | His Former Friend. that day and when he returned he! $ $ tended Right to Destruction.” | Mrs, Hatch $10,000. y ' | a lround that Saacks and Mra, Ven | $ é 22 East 34th Street (Opposite Altman’s) A jury before Supreme Court Jus. Loan had gone horseback riding after % MADRID, Feb. 8§—Couched in frm-| |, 55 r CH! RUB 0 | ce Delehanty to-day ratified the ace[Saacke had oleared the house of his eat tones of protest, and character- aint tan bea HES wind by ts i . son and another visitor. izing Germany's new sea methods as is ton of Willlam W. Van Loan, of No.]"°When Van Loan learned of this “outside the legal principles of inter- |CT®! wealthy New Yorkers to move Store Closes Feb’y 17th 4118 Dorchester Avenue, Fiatbush,| Re upbratded hia, wite, she told him national life,” Spain has forwarded |"°W for peace in Europe along the who made a gift of his beautiful wite,| {he tentimony. At another time, It note to Berlin in reply to the | following lin | af yi . Congress to raise a billion F ded iod, t rmit extensive Louise. to Charles W. Saacke, former| Was testified, ahe declared she would man Government's announcement ean tae racic tl ‘or an extended period, to pei " A ‘ he ‘ d wtand by Sancke because he was a % ®\of the “barred . ollars for distribution tn the vartou fm * Rub pain, soreness, stiffness, sssociate of F. Augustus Heinze and| man who had all kinds of money | wmf) 1 concludes with the expression| countrien in Europe alterations; this necessitates the immediate dis- sciatica right out with [now Vice President of the Stowart| while her husband made only §60 Sensdanconebeneseceesese| tMpain “dora not doubt that the| Accompany notification of thie dis-|| posal of our remaining Winter and Spring stock ‘ “St. Jacobs Oil.” Mining Company of No. 61 Broadway.|" jemuel S. Matthews, a friend of \imperial Government will find means| tribution with a note to belligerents || of fine J : The Jury granted Van Loan a decree} Van Loan, accompanied him on the Edward A. Hurd, son of Mr. and .¢ giving satisfaction to Spain's] asking that they state their terms and adl Count itt e. | of divorce, 4 id. He a how Van Loan climbed Mrs, C, Russell Hurd of Milton, Mass, claims.” discuss their willingness to open peace Rheumatism is “pain only.” Not) After breaking a window and climb. | through © broken window with hin recentiy returned from the Mexican| ‘These claims, the note sets forth, | negotiations along the line suggegsted Coats and Dresses ) one case in fifty requires internal | 'P¢ !pto the apartment of his wife At} room, When Mra. Van Loan recog. | border, where he served with Squadron | ware paged on the inexorable duty|by the President's recent address to treatment. Stop drugging! Rub the| No. 41 Cinrkson Street, Brooklyn, | nized her husband, the witness anid, A. Now, it las been announced, he which binds a Government to protect ; the United States Senate as Van Loan, 80 witnesses told the jury, found his wife and the wealthy min- ing man in scant attire, To Saacke, the court was told, Van Loan sald: “Take her, and I hope you will treat 6: misery right away! ‘Apply soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil” directly upon the “tender spot,” and relief comes instantly, “St. Jacobs Oil” is @ harmless rheumatism liniment which never disappoints and cannot burn or she told him if he had come to the | soon will lead house she would have let him in the | Provost smith proper way and given him all the evidence he needed | ‘The jury returned its verdict tn / favor of Van Loan in less than five minutes Harold H. Hatch offered to con- tribute $50,000, Mrs. H. H. Hatoh $10,- 000. Among some who indorsed the request were Mrs. J. Seageant Cram and Seth Hilliken Jr, to the altar Miss Elise! the tives of its subjects and maintain » one of this season's! in, integrity of its @overeignty #0 jdebutantes and daughter of Mr. and iyat the course of national extatence Mrs. Charles Albert Smith of No. 60) may not be interrupted.” Weat Sixty-eighth Street. They are that Spain's shipping and 510 Afternoon & Evening Dresses discolor the skin. Limber up! Stop complaining! Get @ small trial bottle of “St. Jacobs Oil” any drug store, and in just a mo- ment you'll be free from pain, ness, stiffness and swelling. suffer! Relief awaits you, atica, neural, er gia, pan 7 Our Chub, Plan purchasing clothing for the entire family. Simply PAY $1 A WEEK Until full amount is paid. Satisfaction guaranteed. eprains e 53 to 57 W. 14th St., New York. sore- Don't “St. Jacobs Oil” has relieved millions of sores epdcts Yee in Led i Lend century, a js just as good for backache her as well as I have.” Mrs. Van Loan, attired tn her bath- robe, consented to the gift, according to the testimony, announced that she would marry “Charley Dear” as she referred to Saacke, and then slapped the faces of her husband and two of his friends who acgompanted him on the raid. Before the party left, Mrs. Van Loan called a policeman and threatened to have the trio arrested for stepping on Snacke's cigarette case which had fallen from his trousers pocket. The policeman, who also tes- tified, refused to interfere and the party left the house Saacke was not in court, neither was Mrs, Van Loan. Mrs, Van Loan ts living tn a large house at Rockville Centre, Saacke is married and the father of two children. Van Loan said |in court that the only obstacle in the way of his wife's wedding Saacke was ‘the latter's wife who refuses to di- vorce him Shortly after the marriage of the | Van Loans, the couple became fast ‘friends of Saacke and his wife. They FLEET OF MERCHANT SHIPS NORFOLK, Vi sail and steam, and will convoy them. ‘The munitions been concentratt const are sailing to join the feet. rons of ten or more hereafter. the guarding warships. Franklin Simon a Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets SPRING FASHIONS Misses’ Suits, Coats and Dresses New Spring models especially designed for th e Miss 14 to 20 years of age Misses’ Suit Shop Showing strictly tailored or dressy Spring suits; straight line, belted, semi-fitted or pleated models made of the newest wool or silk Spring fabrics, aleo an unusually large assortment of wool or silk Jersey Sport Suits. The new barrel or straight line silhouette, distended or large sport pockets and many variations in the collar and cuffs are strikingly new Misses’ Spring the cravenette- Spring style features. 14 to 20 years. 24.50 to 135.00 Misses’ Coat Shop Coats are shown in a remarkable variety, from proof tweed weather coat, motor or sport coats for general wear, to handsome silk evening wraps. Belted, semi-fitted, pleated or slip-on Top Coats, three-quarter to full length. Dresses that reveal distinctively new Spring Fashions. vary from 14 to 20 years. 18.50 to 115.00 Misses’ Dress Shop Coat or Paletot Dresses of serge, Poiret twill or wool jersey is the ‘atest Paris mode. Silk Afternoon Gowns are beaded or embroidered in self or Oriental colors. Sport Dresses plain, figured or in striking color combinations. of silk jersey, khaki kool or crepe de chine are 14 to 20 years. 18.50 to 98.50 GONVOYED BY THE ALLIES .. Feb, §.—Loaded to ; the gunwales with war munitions,| Russian—Locked Up When Un- cotton and general suppiles for the! Entente Allies, a fleet of twenty-five British, French and Italian ships, | left Virginia porte | ‘Twenty-five miles off shore Allied | warships picked the cargo boats up| laden ships have! he wag intercepted the man pretended at the mouth Of/ for a time that he could , | puld speak only Chosapeake Bay aince Sunday, Others | rigsian and said he had gone on the from Baltimore and points along the pier with sailors of the St. Louls with Tt was said in ebtpping circles here! nad no pass and none of the guards to-day the Allies have adopted a plan 4, of convoying cargo boats in squad- Several Danish, Dutch and Swedish apips are keeping close trail behind, | the lives of her citizens be not men- laced by “substituting by Germany | for the indisputable right of capture In certain cases, a pretended right of destruction.” Germany's new warfare, It ts de- lelared, “caused a very painful im- | pression on the Spanish Government.” “The attitude of strict neutrality which Spain adopted from the be- ginning and has maintained with loyalty and unshakable firmness,” the note continues, “gives her the right to expect that the lives of her sub- | Jets engaged in sea trade should not be placed in such grave peril It also gives ber the right to ex- that trade should not be troubled nor diminished by such an increase in the extent of the zones in which the Imperial Government in- sists that, in order to attain its ends, it must use all weapons and sup- press all limitations avhich it has hitherto imposed upon its methods ‘of | naval warfare, “Even before the Imperial Govern- ment had set aside these restrictions His Majesty's Government had pro- tested holding them tnsuffictent to! comply with the prescriptions of na-| Uonal maritime law. But the meth-/ ods of war announced by Germany| are being carried to such an unex- pected and unprecedented extreme that the Spanish Government, con-! sidering its rights and the require-| “GERMAN SAILOR SEIZED — ON AMERICAN LINE PIER | Man Without Pass at First Poses as able to Explain Presence. One of the twenty guards protecting he American Line pier at the foot of West Twenty-second Street, where | the St. Louts, St. Paul and Lapland are tled up, saw a man slipping about among the piles of merchan@ise there at 8.60 o'clock this morning. When | whom he had spent last evening. He ad seen him before, they waid. Under questioning by Detectives 'Brownsworth and Hayden, after the discovery of a card in his pocket show- | ing his membership in the Marine Fire- | men's and Oilers’ Union under the | | name Joseph Leelar and certifying he | was born in Germany, the prisoner admitted he was a former sailor on | the Ramburg American liner Penni | vania, now at Hoboken, and was at | present employed on the coastwise | |steamer Montauk. He insisted he! was @ Pole, born in Warsaw. He denied any purpose of injuring | the machinery of any of the Ameri- can liners, but could give no satisfac- tory explanation of his presence and was locked up, charged with enlaw- | ments of its neutrality, must 4with still more reason protest calmly but | firmly to the Imperial German Gov- | ernment and must make at the same, Bugger, URTH RACE Three year-Olde and | je | WASHINGTON, Feb, 8.—The Nether- force Wo 7; oun, 0a: lands Government, through the Ameri- pit year-olds and up: claim can Legation at The Hague has for- 1 . 118, | ‘ious! 1ihe?Ber and mally declined to accept President Blam, Tie: T11;' Pockiohoo, 111; Wilson's suggestion that it follow the| *Fiectabelie, 111 100, aim, C0Urse of the United States and Kc SIXTH {AC Four jurolte and no: claim: ‘oft diplomatic relations with Germany, | |i eo, eke, No: Winaries He Jon: Information to this effect reached here | cunaling | ews, 105; '*iNewt Star, 108; eng Sorday in confidential despatches from i OF Holland. MOR CBNTH RACE Three year-olda, and, on: | Penna CoS etn | clalantng : fanter, 118! Beolen | ag Neo TO; Mone tuk, 10; Imers | Cuba Se t to Germany on ‘fon, 100; dete Loutee, 4 Petry Legend, 102; | Decree. time the necessary reservation, {m- posed by the lagitiate presumption of Inevitable repsonsibility which the ful entry. | ae , Imperial German Government AND THE 86TH. | sumos, principally in view of the I Having lost eighty-five jobs in | of life, which Ulnar eas oy oe | ; ‘ Tho note details at length Spain's America, a former German satlor | complete neutrality and her effo és applying for citizenship papers. fe aah ates NEW ORLEANS ENTRIES. | | Chit Decides to” Aah oi " : | Policy of Neatra NEW ORLPANS, La, Feb. &—The| a. xctGo, ‘Chill, Feb. entries for to-morrow's races are as and hopes for peace in Europe, but adds that Spain “cannot admit the exceptional methods of warfare.” | y 8.—The follows: |mewspapers state that the Chillan ptlast, pRACE-Maiden three-year-olds: ithe | Government has decided to adbere Mehintar iy. ae iam the hy ia: jo its policy of neutrality. | wi ut, aL Shot, 100; Sanburne, | Germany is ready, It is understood | SECOND, RACE, Tepe ress. oht, and ww; claim | that it will not differ in any great de- pe aftr? it held, fat Tae 'Nork lai) gree from the replies of the majority ue Jingle, Yate: °M, Nort Thurman, 110; Sily of the neutral powers, which have pro- 4 ry * {M: tested against infractions of the rules “ening of international law with respect to m. | freedom of the seas, *Zhede! vi, 101; eres yh, oie Ma: | Netherlands Formally Declines to 98 Sdo1, Mavab. o6 | Follow Wiles staimed, Germany's note regarding \celved here ‘Menocal conferred at the palace with the Committee on Foreign Relations and at 4,30 o'clock in the evening the, Government forwarded @ protest to! Germany. Cuticura Heals Itchy Pimples 0 Hand. Cost75c. Skin Red and Sore, Was Alway Scratching. Could not Sleep, Could not Work, Suffered For Eight Months. “At first I had an itching feeling on my hand, and after a week it grew worse | and there was a breaking out of pimples. | The skin was so red and sore that it | would almost crack and bleed, and my hand was all swollen. ‘The’ pimples were so itchy that 1 was always scratch- Scandinavians to Unite Pi teat to Ger | STOCKHOLM, Feb, 8.—Sweden $ and the other Scandinavian nations have decided to unite in a joint pro- | test to Germany over the latter’s sub- | marine blockade, Responsible statesmen declare that, even if Sweden desired to follow the lead of the United States, her situa- tion would render thi impossible, Advices from Christiania say that Norway will not agree to President | Wilson's suggestion in regard to breaking relations with Germany. The | Aftenpost of that city asserts that | ing my hand, and I could not sleep at | Kuropean neutrals must decide on | night. When | washed my hand it hurt | their ‘policy toward Germany, “ac- | and I could not work. 1 suffered for | cording to their own interests, | i} \ | eight months, cording to American sentiments, | '*Phen after I heard about Cuticura | | Soap and Ointment I sent for a free | | sample, I bought more and used only |German Wireless Station Di | one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box | of Ointment when my hand was healed,” |, | (Signed) Wm. Newman, 9 E. Broad- RIO JANEIRO, Brazil, suburban town of Nictheroy, ot ei ay five miles east of Rio | way, New York City, Oct, 16, 1916. thiore was discovered to-day a Wirelend While Cuticura Soap works wonders in (elegraph station established to commu- P 4 most cases of skin troubles it is also ideal plcate with Germ hy enipe which are | for every-day toilet use, Cuticura Oint- ment used for little irritations, pimples, | sw | etc., will do all and more than the major- on to Join the Break, ity of expensive creams in keeping the = Gy dent Wil- shin soft and Saar, Each by Return %0's invitation to Switzerland to join ‘or Free S ‘ e United States and br rela- Mail address postcard) ‘“*Cutieura, ‘2° Val Ms " eye trash 33 188 Dept. Boston."? Sold everywhere the Federal \ ; \ Counc. a CITY GRANTS -ICE LEAS DESPITE SHARP PROTEST Sinking Fund Commission Told New York Central Might Take Over River Front Business. A proposal to lease to the Vermont Hygela Ice Company 400,000 square feet of city owned property which 1s under water on the North River shore south of Dyckman Street was opposed at to-day’s meeting of the Sinking Fund Commission on the ground that the {ce company could transfer contro! of its corporate stock to the New York Central Railroad, ‘The lease was granted in spite of the opposition. Stewart Browne, President of the United Real Estate Owners’ Associa- |granting of the lease. He did not charge it was the intention of the applicant to transfer ‘ts stock, but showed it would be possible. 7 ice company inten to erect, 38th Street Grades we have sold $1.10 Brocaded Silke and Satins color combinations and self 325 Incomplete Sizes, Mostly in Narrow Widths The “‘Creston’’ $7.00 Trim yet roomy last, an easy walk- Black kid and black ing shoe. Russia calf, tion, was one of the opponents to the | Suitable for present wear 7.50 « 10.00 — Formerly to $35.00 270 Smart Winter Coats Fur Trimmed and Tailored 7.50 « 10.00 Formerly to $35.00 Above includes selections from our own stocksand entire remaining stocks of the Du Barry store, purchased by us. All other Coats, Dresses & Blouses At Half Price or Less All Sales Final. No Credits. “The Star Spangled Banner’’ United States Silk Flags, sizes 2x3 to 32x48 inches United States Wool Bunting Flags, sizes 2x3 to 12x18 feet Se err ee ee ere eee eee ee ee ae sae eee ee eae ae as em eens emeeeremn| [VS OSS SS SS S100 S09 SS 9 Sa Sa ( SO Lord & Taylor FIFTH AVENUE 39th Street . Fourth Floor Continuing the Sale of Fine Neckwear for Men Four-in-Hand Scarfs Of the higher grades and in a magnificent assortment of rich patterns and dignified color effects, will be offered at much less than customary prices. at $2.00, Grades we have sold at $1.00, 75c in contrasting Fine Silks and Satins in a large variety of color effects. novelty designs and plain colors. Ground Floor Featured Tomorrow and Saturday Men’s Fine Footwear Pairs Shoes at $4.85 Formerly $6.00 to $8.00 Laced Shoes $5.50 Smart shoes on English lasts, in black or tan calfskin of excellent quality. Fourth Floor