The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1917, Page 17

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)

LP RO ISI PST OT TT angen” ne; spa en) L -— s i‘ STOULSS WANT Secs" HYD AN DENOUNCES Mr. Hillquit said tie Socialists did not want a Kaiser peace, but the kind / ad a majority of the German Varliament wants. Ile did not discuss the baa “Wwe are unequivocally in favor of @ speedy, general peace,” he ‘ald, | “not a Kaiser peace, not a British n | peace, not a peace that will mea | humiliation or thirst for vengeance. | | We favor such a peace as is favored PEACE LETTERHEAD AS RANK FORGERY Would Be Satisfied With ‘Such) py the republic of Russta, by all the Says Artist Faked It, and Tha 1 y Ger-| Majori if Germar | veopie, by the majority of the | may Majority. salt man Parilament, by Pope Benedict. Parliamené Favor. Belgium must be free—" “And Ireland!" shouted some one “We mean freedom for every coun | Morris Hiliquit, Socialist candidate! Mayor Was a Party to the, Trick Judge Hylan, tn the , try that wants to be free. Tie only ‘speech which he read at six ne i foF Mayor, defined last night the kind | oy sunshine out of this cataclysm Of jn the Hronx last night, 0s BY of @ peace the Soclalisis want, gettIng! wap the Nope of a democratic the “Friends of the Irish Progressive 50 Fulton Street, | 1ast night and remarked he was be- i tremendous applause at a meeting of | peace.” | perial H. Paper erooklyn speech.” He attacked Mayor Mitchel ‘ on the score of the denunciation of Mr. Hillquit by the Chamber of Com- merce, As for the support of Judge + Safe Fat Reduction = iiviu: is" tne cloak’ manufacturers Mr. Hillquilt sald it was merely a. business proposition from thelr pint » of view A heckier was saved by Mr, Hillquit waa from belng thrust into the street. | tea, THE candidate demanded that the} - (ing 4°U8*.| man be permitted to ask his question. j afraid of violent «« ©, dreading the (which was; “Is the Constitution unwelcome nr A diet, untit| right or wro they bit upon the carr Marmois 're-! “The Constitution,” replied Mr, tear if thac they! Hillquit, “may contain many features were about 300 pres. ty Aue mogan with hia nawe as an Honorary V ue in Im-|* Mr. Hillquit became very hoarse | president was a forgery Samuel Untermyer spoko from tt | coming Ike Judge Hylan—"dioult of | game platfornf at Hunts bP 163d Street and Southern 15 before 1,200 persons. Ho denvu what he described as an “effor make political capital out of alleged affliations of one or anoth of the candidates at a time when ¥ were at pe with the world At Vubiic School No. Avenue and 1334 Stre spoke after Henr keer voted tn Congress for the MeLen resolution. The cand os aun byuwiNG WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER _2, 1917. THE EVENING WORLD has arranged the following plan whereby you can send bocks and magazines to the army camps where there is an immediate need for good reading material: « TRIAL T0 TEST VALIDITY SEVENTH WHISKEY DEATH. raat “Stre | viPrediment Oath fee Cate | satem Accepts Fricke Offer of OF STATE SCHOOL LAW| ** Aenea | 1 A seventh name was added this! aitau mae bay ona H iad . ‘i >. morning to the list of deaths attributed cogs! . t—The Justice Tompkins Declines to Pass to whiskey cobtainine wood alsshel Granth nae accepted the offer of Henry. on Constitutionality in Action [sot early this week In the saloon of erect @ memorial to Joseph H, Cho tem, Mr Antonio De Alfonco, No. 156 Bleecker| native city. Th *Semertas ; Involving Greenburgh Board. Street. Six men who had drunk there| monument. | " Tuesday died on that and the following | scribe 7 ni Soldiers Want Books to Read SEND YOURS TO CAMP! Special to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Nov. 2— Justice Arthur & Tompkins In the Su- preme Court to-day declined to Di ay The victim to-day w John Warren. THE JUNIOR AMERICAN GUARD, a boys’ upon the alleged unoonstitutionality of i military organization with headquarters at No. | the new State Educational Law, which «“ } 70 Wall Street, has volunteered the services of places all town school districts under D Y F | Pl ed Out’? ; its 3,600 boys in this district to call, {n unfform, a ton 2 o rouree ay / 4 ieeater New & 4 woltel directed a trial of the Sssues, Elmo a ; at the ies in Greater New York and sollelt Brown, Bernard Call and Walter H If 80, you are probably thin blooded and anemic, Thin f V y I Livro two. o ov four| that are not perfect, but in the main, 'Stops were Burland’s ¢ hh : as ve change in thot | especially as to freedom of speech and ;chester Avenue and 14 é ear one Change in {vel | freedom of assemblage, it ta eternally | Luke's Hall, St. Anu's Aveaus and | wt (aval ob Havre: with gota we are hers to see that it isgth street: Schmitz’s Casino, W tt | ee che: enues, chi ith "Cornelius Lenihan, the Casiman, | chester and ¢ Aven ; M Fer ntee defined the present ineveraent for |Vhe Bronx De eaten Ree tap game, Catmousy 3| Hillquit ax one tending to frev the! No, 92 ‘tremon MN the Marmola Preseriptl Irish from Tammany Hali. tsbhe (Dembbiate 10) al rf “7 Vifteen hundred ‘persons at ¥| = oe * fat Ridge High School heard Mr tuinquit waited in the cold wind near ie i ay that beginning this morning the | hours Willis Avenue 1 Fine ston press would turn ite "mud bat-| 4. cyoort Mr Mylan through quest t son hin, He said he merved no- | ea mat z to you © tM he would not be dragged into a| Bronx. No word came from Ladlets. nire of peraonaiitiae.”* didate until 9.45 ove! when Was . = — peenerrrssss= | discovered that ad }to the pubile » mecting was supposed t hua p. 1 : } Democratic Fu Committe \ responsible tor the efor, apparently OPPENHEIM, GLUNS &E—{/icr'ss Soko \ 34th Street—New York Extraordinary Sale Saturday : name as the candic 195 Women’s oe Trimmed Hats a Attractive and distinctive models devel- | oped in Lyons or Panne Velvet and oA beaver cloth in all the leading shades, trimmed with flowers, fur or fancies. Reduced from 10.00, 12.50, 16.00 7.50 None Sent C. O. D. or On Approval | x a — —_————-, ~ behind bis car t the evening. Mr. Hylan led off by repeatine tly charges of Wii an M. Lenne ‘paster” ballots with ican Party i soldiers in training camps. Le suid ECHOES BENNETT'S CHARGES ABOUT PASTER BALLOTS. “The campaign of Mayor Mit and the indicted ecprruptio: unindicted exploiters who are backing him has degen into the most miserable, cofteny exhibition of fr en debauchery ever wi city. They attempt bauchery of the firs ever he in this ci Republican nomination “Now they have fair est depths by attempting & contemptible fraud upo 4 ; frauds to galn th ceive the man who have ’ ly offered themacives as sacrifice or the altar of th “They have deliber 1 tion of every tenet of decency, prin the name of the I the balloty which go to voters, They have done this after the ud, slander and br thossed in t by the de the courts and pro th orien frustrated their attempt to steal that emblem and nit “What a wh bl amply of t mand Am canism of Mitehe f man who will attempt to obtain by fraud and deception (he tex of th soldiers who go to the front to fight for their country his no the reapect of decent “These are stron are no words stror demn such acta, ‘Th you who do not knoy fraud because the newspapers st porting Mayor Mitchel liave done ch best to ignore und suppress the trarh “Two nights ago Mayor Mitchel presented to his audience what he n enlargement of a letter- Friends of Peace Society, it a list of Honorary containing the words That letterhead was ere never was such a The photograph present. newspapers was that of a wn by an artist, who used t letterhead of this peace society and added the list of names of Honorary Vice Presidents for the per sonal use of Mayor Mitchel in this campaign, faim upou this latest x "KELLY C? TRUSTS YOU Established 1863 —Pioncers of the Easy Payment Plan. | Are some of your rooms in need of new furniture? Why not get it now! ‘The. Kelly Co. will be glad 'to help you—not only | to pick out the best style and sturdiest make, but to make it easy for you to pay Why let it rd Call and make you t Prices plain of credit to suit y | selection. t Piece Period Bedroom Suites ia and Dressing Table—in Bird's- Walnut or Mahogany, ranging in to $275 7 ‘I Weekly burniture Larger amounts in proportion, . T. KELL y CO,, ‘near 11th st 195 W. 17th St, | NAMES TAKEN FROM GARDEN PROGRAMME HE SAYS. “This drawing was made some time ago and was concealed by Mr. Mitchel until four days before the election. At the time when V Mitchel made public that poster, wnich he falsely Said was a reproduction of a lette head, he had in * possession a printed document from which the list of Vice Presidents was taken That document was the amme of the Madison Square Garden mass meet ing held by the same + ich William Jenr Wy Nana Gnneaced “on that’ nro gramme without my knowledye names of se . f Vs own managers which my san my knowled the name oft ! Kr k Mitchel © Structure Palen man rsoof ‘ Ia Com. missioner Krack ? “On that pri t two Hundred and bit Sehift a traltor " ha palgn ¢ itbbrt a straltor? substantiating tt have some oot printed for dieu papers, “When air Midd N | have to give to our soldiers, ‘Their canvass will solving stations, to facilitate collections, ‘istorical novela, stundard nd t such books and magazines as you may | Waiffen, constituting the Board of | Trustees ot ool dix Jertet, Tompiina to test the new school law and also sought an injunction re ¢ Greenburgh Board of Edu n collecting taxes or taking jon pending the decision. tbe declined to restrain Hoard — from blood gets thinner, poor blood gets poorer, a lowered vitality grows lower. If you are one-quarter sick you will, if you neglect yourself, soon become half-sick, and then entirely sick. Poor health, like everything else in nature, is progressive. Nothing in life stands still. If you are run-down from unusual strain, worry, or overwork; if you are pale and become fatigued wees in other words, if life is somewhat of a burden to you, try Gude's ‘Pepto ‘Mangan A time-tried remedy for the run-down and half-well, the convalescent and the child who is pale and puny. It brings back the Joy of Ilfe by fortit th very. stream of life--the bleed with bart amounts of the iron need t ontinue for two we 6 Jun HE AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION {il deliver the books und magazines, collected Gard tm Uniform, y the Junior Guard, to the army camps, by the quickest means pos {ple. The New York Public Library bas offered ite branchés as re tion to fro collecting taxes or exercising any au thority over school property upon con |dition the piaintiffe bring the action to trial on the second Monday of Novem ver. lore than 1,000 school districts in the te may be affected by the final de ‘elton In thin action «WHAT BOOKS AND MAGAZINES TO GIVE. particularly are wanted. WAL LITERATURB of ali kinds; mal 0 atiy nilltary text-books, wireless telegraphy, sub- jarines, automobiles, aviation, first aid, French grammars and dic- onaries., FICTION of all sea stories, romance, xe. Also histories ‘of the European nations at war, F JAGAZINES are not wanted If over two months old. Late tssues fall the popular fletion publications and scientific magazines are very ptable, Hoth books and magazines should be in good condition, they must unde onsiderable wear nd tear, siat In the canvass, if you have books or magazines to give, send | | tiene wall we ai your comditon | scsir hale tal card bearing your name and address to the ea at Row Cookers Heuer Mymcon nl! {ey © course of Tt has itor, New York Evening World. Delegations from twenty-elg bettie LET YOUR BOOKS DO THEIR BIT AT THE CAMPS, TOO clubs and charitable inatitutic a Me r | Calvary Chureh, Fourth Avenue and tastes nor looks like — —_——— ---- — | 2iet Street where funeral services Mak + Were hell for Evert Janson ndelt ions © of bim Mr. Mitchel eatled| ciety, We knew that their names| who died in France on Aug. Vo: | ——- es ‘he citizens to Vote for him, iand) Were used with my name at a time . In bottles and package J oll, erted out when the w' ole country was working | he ond praying to bring about beac a ee tween the warring nations of Eurgpa, | never sold In bulk Missal fincer kors and those) He knew that tt was more than uo! t whom he is depending to mellves re before our ¢ shat wos < twa) s KR. Appleton, Anson Ph M. J. BREITENBACH CO., New York publican vote mult not into the struggle, He knew that at! stokes, Nicholan Biddle and James J Manufact t primaries. Were dito that very thoe President Wilson wag | Higginson. Interment was in Wood relat inate Se road fombera of that peace «o-lwotking to brine about peace.” lawn ~ Quality, ‘Service and Dependability he ‘the Things Men Must Look For In Times Like These— Price Alone Cannot Be Considered In Buying Clothes This Winter Wool is scarce, prices are high, labor is at a premium, and you cannot tell from the looks of a suit or overcoat whether its real value lies only in looks—and_ lies, and lies, and_ lies In Kuppenheimer Overcoats and Suits We offer you clothing of known merit with greater all around quality than is offered you in any other clothing at these same prices~ qual ity fabrics, quality tailoring, quality fashioning, quality finish and quality linings, trimmings and findings, and last but not least, quality fit — all sup plemented by the almost unlimited variety of patterns and models which is characteristic of Brill stores. Overcoats $22.50 to $65.00 Suits $22.50 to $45.00 Brill Special Overcoats and Suits At $15 and $20 Among the Overcoats at $20 New Trench models, Box Coats, Form-fittiny Coats and. belt-kack models, with patel iting or flap pockets, and with velvet or elf collars. Among the Overcoats at $15 [ Istey ettes, Balmaroons, Box, Form-fitting and Chesterfield) models, in black or Oxford Melton, fine mixtures and Scotch worsted And in Suits at $15 and $20 an almost end less variety of patterns, fabrics and model Boys’ Overcoatsand Mackk- inaws Specially Priced for Men Men’s Neckwear Special at $1.00 Mackinaws Special at $6.95 With lurve shawl collar This eas newest and suiurt- . ‘ st styles. Silin. | Brovat and printed in gray, brown and red contrasting plaids. Sizes 0 to 1s ¢ ; irps in extra large shapes, the Overcoats Special at $9.95 Jn grays and browns, con From $2.50_to $7.00 snash sielitt rf ever offered vertible collars. Sizes 12 to 18 Stetson Hats forsthe price, We ordered them to sell for 51.50, but have de cided to close them out at $1.00 Russian Overcoats Special at $4.95 Pianey mixtures and $4.50 to $5.00 gray chinchillas, button to neck, half belted and belt all Borsalinos around; neatly made, Sizes 3 to 10. $6.00. and $7.00 Exclusive Kuppenheimer Dealers in New York and Brooklyn 44 East 14th Street Broadway, at 49th Street 1456 Broadway, at 42d Street 2 Flatbush Avenue 47 Cortlandt Street 125th Street, at 3d Ave. 279 Broadway, at Chambers Brooklyn Free The New Kuppenheimer Style Book, at Brill Stores or by Mail on Request.

Other pages from this issue: