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+ hard to get. People me Olver Street, Manhat an, TAS FAMILY a ALBANY ASHETAKES OATH en ife and] Good Mixers where Caesar slept in all this newly found glory. What {is thie mansion on the hill with its wondrous tapestries, ite rare rugs, its wilverware almost as valu- able as a King’s ransom, tts spacious |halls, sumptuous dining rooms, | breakfast rooms and drawing rooms with shiny gold baby grand planos? Why, it’s the Executive Mansion, the home of the Governor of New York » New Governor's Children Prove State. First Day in Mansion, Al. Smith fives there now, also —— Grandma Katherine Smith, also From 9 Staff Coneapondent of The | irs, Alfred EK, Smith and the young Beenine Word Smiths, and Caesar, the Great Dane | dor. Ontookers always find a lot of secret humor in big official events simply because the participants act artif- Mt glowed like an Oriental feast of | \atiy, The atmosphere of the occa- aaailen rar ie ‘ slag gettin sion gots them and they do not com; when most of the town was ake, | emecives as they would & when the butcher, the baker and the | POT eeven tng Salk suid ot the poumen were going their rounds, it | OtiveR STREET'S GOOD WISHES ——dhlggh edad ie FOLLOW GOVERNOR'S FAMILY. ll RT ED But what took place yesterday, be- a | ginning at No, 25 Oliver Street, lower ALBANY, N. Y., Dec, 31.—There is ‘fan ancient looking gingerbready sort of a mansion on one of the haunches @f Capitol Hill in Albany. Last night except | east side, Manhattan, and ending at the Executive Mansion at Albany, stamps the entire Smith family as an | pwgregation of unconscious thorough- breds, Al. Smith and grandma and family tnoved the official residence of thi vernor of New York as natur- ally as they would have gone to @ |moving picture show in their home wn, There were a few tears as the ithe vanished from Oliver Street in two Hmousines indows there were waving hands. The trip to Albany was uneventful. 1. gave the Governor-elect an oppor- Jtunity to rest and discuss State af- |folra with a few officials who hap- pened to be on the train. It was not until the Smiths, great and small, were turned loose in the many-gabled, multi-roomed house surrounded by spaciour grounda that the Governor- elect realized that the Smitha had just begun to witness the realization of a happy dream. And to think that jw Cuticura Produces Skin and Scalp Health ‘The daily use of Cuticura Soap, by occasional touches of Cu: assisted theura Ointment does much to keep] it should come on his forty-fitth the skin clear and soft and the hale birthday! Some friend of the Gov ernor-elect must have tipped the re- ote Tap tiring Governor, Charles $, Whitman, Soe Rae “tire for it was upon his insistence that bed Sait. tae the Smiths moved into their new {home twenty-four hours earlier than | usual. During the trip this conversation occurred, and it typifies the new Chief Executive: “LT suppose,” said State Senator George L. Thompson of Long Island. as he greeted Mr. Smith, “it wouldn't Let the First Dinner of 19193) be the proper thing to call you, “Al. any more. Would It, Governor be a treat to the whole family “Al. is my name, and that iswhat and all the quests. Give them @|1 always want to be called by my Eddy’s Sauce on New Year's and they'll ask for it every day. rat ceremony in the Execu- Jon conristed of the formal n of the certificate of elec- Governor-clect by Secre~ tary of Giate Hugo. This occurred in the drawing room at an onyx table, A trifle awed by the event stood all the Smiths. Walter and Arthur un- consciously stole up to their mother and took her hand; Katherine and Miss Emily stood with their arms about each other; Alfred E. jr. apart, alone, as befits the eldest eon of a really truly American family, Where E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N. Y. } was Grandma? In the vanguard sho \ = sed’ gripped a book of Grimm's Fairy Talos, which sho had been reading to Jone of the youngsters on the train, ace wore a look of benignity nly calm age and an old-lash- joned mother’s pride can bestow. Se ry of Stute Hugo formally anno 1 to the the State Hoard of Ci met yesterday afternoon, had formal- ly declared him a victor over Charles $8. Whitman by a plurality of 14,842. Judge John W. Hogan of the Court of Appeals was at the Executive Mansion during Mr. Hugo's an- nouncement, He immediately admin. istered the oath of office to Mr. Smith. |This was but a prelintinary to the formal inauguration which takes place to-morrow MADE IN U. S. A. ‘At Grocers ahd Delicatessen Stores, You can get a pair of rubbers this fall. But Baco Rubbers are Want more than we can make. A. J. BATES & CO., INC, NEW YORK There was a tense silence as the |Governor repeated the words oath, No pooner had Mr. |Srena the fateful parchment, From hundreds of | known as “The Imp,” doesn’t quite deserve it, though he sauntered taken possession shortly after 4 down the grassy hill on the aomain jo’clock’ yesterday afternoon, were o° his father’s mansion !ast night. | resting. Not even a stir in the collar There were strains of mi within, but Arthur wasn’t a bit tatere ested. He was hungry for fellowship, As he approached a partly dismantled grand stand a gang of boys playing there began to make thomselves 06, sei ‘What are you fellows afraid of?” asked the Oliver Street boy. “ eo on back.” The boys returned. In five minutes Arthur Smith of the lower east side was @ member of tho Capitol Hill gang and gotng strong. By way of courtesy the Capitol gang had the freedom of the very sacred Executive Mansion lawn, Robert Fitzmaurice, the Governor's trusty leutenant, finally had to bring Arthur home. That the Smiths, plain, democratic bumans, are bound to be popular in Albany is certain. As Artirur cap. tured the “boy gang,” so his mother captivated the clubwomen of the city at a reception tendered to her in the afternoon at the Hotel Ten Fyck. Gov. Smith, by advice of hi physician, will keep indoors, perhaps to his bed, to.day, and take ‘a com. plete rest preparatory to to-morrow's inaugural ceremonies, Charles F, Murphy, leader of Tam- many Hall, arrived at the Ten Kyck Hotel last night. He: was accom- anied by Mrs. Murphy, Miss Mabet Sturphy and_his nephew, Charlies F. Murphy jr. The arrival of the Tam- many leader created no atir; in faat, | very few knew he had arrived. FOUR MEN ON TIGKET HAD OVER 1,000,000 VOTES EACH Wells, Smith, “Travis and Hugo Set New Record in State, Official Canvass Shows. ALBANY, N, Y., Dec, 31.—Alfred E. Smith's plurality over Charles 8. Whitman in the contest for Governor last November was 14,642, His civilian vote margin was 7,860 and the sol- dier vote favored him ‘by 7,465. For tho first time in the State's history a candidate received more than 1,000,000 votes, This figure was exceeded by Gov.-elect Smith, Secre- tary of State Hugo, Comptroller Travis and State Treasurer Wells, the last named official polling the Breatest vote of any candidate on any ticket. The whole number of votes cast for Governor was 2,192,970. Mr, Whit- man's total Included about 39,000 votes that were given him as the Guoerna- torial candidate of the Prohibition Party. Charles 8, Ervin, Socialist, re- ceived 121,706; Olive M. Johnson, So- clal Labor, 5,188. There were 43,630 blank votes for Governor, 16,892 void and 580 scattering. Harry C. Walker, Democrat, de+ feated Lieut, Gov, Edward Schoeneck, Republican, by @ plurality of 35,405. The vote was: Walker, 965,471; Schoeneck, 930, ny Mamie W. Colvin, Prohibition, 48, The vote for ‘other State officers was: Secretary of Stat Republican, 1,005 4 Bard, Democrat, 306; Ella lL. McCarthy, Prohibition, 40, 072; Hugo's plurality, 119,120, Comptroller—Eugene M. Travis, Re- publican and Prohibition, 1,007,583; Bird 8. Coler, Democrat, 909,265; Travis's plurality 98,228, ‘Treasurer—James L. Wells, Repub- can, 1,028, Jacob G. Cohen, Demo- 839, George B. Humphrey, bition, 44,606; Wells's plurality, 188, Attorney General—Charles D. New- ton, Republican, 990,863: Miss Sara Price Collier Bride Of Lieut.C. whedernetenmdid detent N. 19990-559666-900 Bee 904.8 SSIS IGE PSH GHD PSESPDHOTES O94 + FHDIS HIS HDS IO HES OSHSTE IOSD DE veces Meee Soo ree MRS. LIEUT. CHAS: FELLOWE 5. FORMAALY SARA Pan! SIDED PIOEROD DOO HY 4-45-ddrOdOROE Pb oae dO Wedding in Washington At. | Thomas's Church at noon by the Rev. ‘ ; a ©. Ernest Smith, the rector, tended by American, British Acting Secretary of State and Mrs. ‘ Shanin at Polk, Secretary of the and French Officis Danicls and the entire staffs of the __ British Embassy, the British Mission OMclal Washington went yester-|and the French and Itaftan Embas- day to the wedding of Miss Sara] sites were present, Price Collier and Licut. Charles el- lowes-Gordon, R, N., Flag Lieutenant for Vice Admiral Sir William Low- ther Grant, in command of the Brit-|the couple left for a brief hon . ish fleet in American waters, The|Some time aext month they will sail ceremony was performed St. lfor England, The bride was given away by her godfather, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt. After a reception at GERMAN SUBS SWAPPED GOSSIP AND SENT OUT “‘S 0 S” DECOYS BY RADIO TO LURE AMERICANS The Gossip Makes the Yankee Fleet Operator Think Some Germans Are Human, After Z. Spriggs, Prohibition, ton'’s plurality, 112,563, State Engineer—Frank M, Williams, Republican, 991,52: Dwight B. La Di Democrat, D. B, Passage, Pro- ‘oun 40 23; Williams's plurality, TICKET LAW IN FO FORCE TO-DAY; SWANN GIVES LAST WARNING District Attorney Will Prosecute Speculators Violating Ordinance in of his i i aia Misa LE ince ne Without Further Notice, ET | acttur, the year-old son of the Governor “Good luck. pon,” Thin broke the ped forward. ho whispered foe, and the few | friends of the Governor-olect who happened to be present, most of whom were newspaper man, crowded ut, offering their congratulations | Just want the newspaper men to | know.” said Mr. Smith, “that the door Jof this house will always be open to them. T also want you bove te know that T have the honor of greeting you leven be fora 1 know where my bed After Initia eeremonton Smiths proceeded to hecetve thelr friends, and it waathen that the fairy- Uke house on Capitol Hill glowed Nike jone of those wondrous places neen in pictures, While the elite of Alhany and the plain folk of Lower Manhat- EAT ENED TAN the HAYNLTON iT 307 FIFTH AVE., NY Near 31st Street. Pointing out that the ticket specu- lator ordinance would become effec- tive aa soon as it is signed by the City Clerk to-day, District Attor- ney Swann guve out notice his office would give the speculators po further warning, but would take jaction immediately, following any violation of the new ruling. “The speculators already have had thelr notice,” Mr. Swann sald, “and we are going to see that the or- dinance is complied with, though of course our province is to prosecute only after there has been a violation, I believe the ordinance ts sufficient for what it is intended to accomplish and I believe it is going to work.” The District Attorney added that tan began to arrive and cutomobites | >a office would not proceed against SPECIAL BARGA | rolled up one driveway and down an-|@BY One Who had not procured a eh other there was another side »|Heense, provided there was proof B. ride io the 2 pi ABY CARRIAGES cture, ‘The Smith kida were out|that application for a license had k ow CR ANDALL’ s on the spacioue lawna getting j been made and the fee of $250 paid quainte And with them was the|>y the applicant, The oldest factor yO0-pound Great ~ ne Assistant District Attorney Talley JUST A FEW SIDELIGHTS ON THE There are man” interestin: side- lights on the family of Ne Ath Phone 2530 Murray ti) ‘ The DIET During and After Horlick’s Malted Milk Very Nutritious, Digestible The REAL Food-Drink, instant): Made by the ORIGINAL Horlick | from carefully selected materials, Used successfully over Y% cent Endorsed by physicians everywher specify HOFTICK’S the origina Others Are Imitation GOVERNOR AND HIS FAM LY, jovernor-elect ome INFLUENZA told Mr. Swann in the presence of reporters that he had received a let- ter from a man who wrote that he had made $500 a week easily in ticket speculation. ——————__. WESTCHESTER NOTES. ilip Re Hoyt, @ brother of Deputy inty Register Charles D, Hoyt of Pleasantville, {8 recovering from a re ent severe illness. Ed" Henry, editor of the Pimwant- ville newspaper, was among the visitors st the White Plains Court House yes- onlay The trial of Bridget Flaherty and An- nie Murphy, under five indictments for jwilowing bables to die while fn their cus- |tody while acting, as managers of a day ursery dn Yonkers, has been poatponed two weeks. Al Jurors hyve been drawn for the January term of the County Court h will be convened by County Judke "rank L. Young at the Court House on Jan, 13. those drawn are Louis * orge Craft of Green Sullivan of East Che: James Frost, Kdward Nugent ward D. Barry ‘and William Funrme! ter of Mount Vernon, Ralph Sutton o! t Odell of Yorktow! jock, Benjainin p eGee and Mich: jalartin of Mount Pleasant, | Sunrogmte Slater will hold his frst term of coun on Jan. 3 at the Whit Plains Court House, Augui nant A All, but for the Rest, They’re Weasels, Skunks, Lizards and Horned Toads. “Now \.c think of the German sailor |u» to Tante Gretchen's and saw your as sort of a cross between a weaacl, | Mother. She wants you to try to buy skunk, lizard and a horned toad, but | tpl ateanie? Wherty, Bein some of “em were sort of human chaps |, Uy Ux Ux The other fel- —wometimes."” So said the radio op- |low tunes up. ‘Thanks. orator of an overseas destroyer as he |Schmidt to come alongside Mee aba aed near Bishop's Rock. We've got some opped ammunition chest ling cigars off a Spanish Habana and darned his torn watch cap. tramp we got this morning.’ “Its a strong statcment to say nd so they'd talk, spluttering they're human, maybe it's exaggerat- | Way for a couple of hours while we'd be steaming circles till we came on one of the gossippers and opened jfire, THE FOE SUBMARINES TRAYED BY THEIR TUNE. “Lots of queer things would come in crackling over the wireless, “We'd get the .. — the 8 O 8 call of # sinking ship, trom ing the facts, But some of 'em have wives and kids and feelings, and they like @ good show and 4 good cigar, like we do. “Funny, you never think of a Ger- man being that way. “I'll tell you how I found out. Our destroyer was one of the first Ameri- ‘friends burstt can vessels to go over on the Queens- | some en latitude and longitude, town patrol. We worked twenty- | But we'd never go to the rescue pee | four hours a day at sea, in all kinds |fecsentee there the ar toate! of weather, rain, sleet, hail and hurri- |vireless and know that it was a cane winds, convoying little tramp jdecoy from some submarine nest freighters that came in from the | They'd send out those messages and | States with ammunition, These boats {then leave stove-in lifeboats adrift] wero alow, poorly armed just the | With @ floating mine attached. They'd | prey for the U boats. kvery convoy {leave living people adrift in life ‘| was attacked, and to protect them 1 |!2 transport lanes, and then Strong escort was necessary. t |About, only their periscopes show.us, | summer wo actually kept. the seas |t Sink any ship that might come to twenty-eight days out of thirty, rescue the lifeboat, That's the kind “Dull , fox, rain, we plugged | Of fiehters they are along, herding the freighters and, with | _.""When we were out patrolling we'd Our guns and depth boms, driving off |Often find traces of where the U boat | the attacking U boats that would | had passed—smashed Hfeboats, rafts | hang on our flanks for hours, |with a wisp of torn distress signal “Phen if there were no convoys |stll fying, but now swept empty by we'd & oOUL and scout around the {the seas, Off the coast of Spain they | Irish coast hoping to track down |Say that the patrols used to find mail some sub. in the daytime, when | where the subs would come we could m, the subs would go n & trapdoor in the side of the to the bottom and lie there, that be uoy and leave their m. o be re- ing the « place they were safe, |layed on by the next homeward bound But at night they'd come up for a|Kiel U boat that passed. J don't breath of fresh air and to give the |know about that, but I often saw re- officers a chance for a smoke on deck, | Serve Oil abd gasoline buoys anchored Then they'd raise up their wireless [tm shoal water off the Irish coast. aerials, and the redio operators of the | "They Were clever, no doubt, and U-65, say, and thy U-76, lying on the somo had & sense of humor 100. surface some twenty “sua” would have a little SUB" CAPTAIN PUNCTIOUS IN ut. were tuned ght they'd and we could listen in, THEN THERE'D BE A GABFEST, ALL 1 GERMAN FLATS. KEEPING APPOINTMENT, “Over in France they tell the story of a Holland merchant skipper who dinned in a Rotterdam cafe one Sun- day n iit ' ht with a jovial stranger who Ud—ud—ud' would come one U i boat's call, Then the other would |showed the customs papers of a Bel- answer, repeating the call to show she | #8 Sea captain. He told his new was ready to receive friend that he was sailing for Amori- hen they'd begin to talk, ‘sending {©%,With 4 Convey the next morning, flats’ we call it, in straight German Goodby," said the other. Ti script. To our wireless operators who |%e®, You at 1 o'clock. T expect to make that convoy my “And at 11 a U boat came up along- understood German it being in some was just like Third Avenue bar be- fore the war. side the Hollander, sank the ship “‘Hello—this is Gus on the U next to him, and when the hatch Say, Hans, we were fitting out in| opened, the jovial drinker of the night before climbed on deck and shouted ‘Oh, Van Dunderdorff, I'm here to keep that appointment!’ sah i at caret ali fun You heard hom echiand used to lie Wilhelmshaven | ‘Thursday and I was "Colds Canee, Grip and ae a pies aes THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1918. | enat the Smiths, formerly of No. 26 Alfred E. Smith. Arthur, who had the sandy Channel bottom at night, the Victrola playing, and the crew dancing, while destroyers scoured (he rain swept seas above her. But in a Liverpool prison camp hospital they have the sole survivor of a sub that ram foul of the American destroyer flotilla, “He hadn't meant to. He'd evi- dently lost his bearings, and came to! the surface to look around. He found himself in the midst of the convoy. and the destroyers opened with gun fire, damaging his diving planes. Ho submerged and couldn't rise. Oil came to the surface and the destroy- ers dropped depth charge after depth charge sunken cylinder heard the roar of the bursting charges about them. The frail shell plates of the sub cracked, water spurted from the seams, the lights went out, the engine room was flooded. And the roar and pressure of bursting depth charges continued. TELLS OF THE HORRORS OF SUBMARINE WARFARE, “As the leaking water rose inside the submarine the air pressure in- creased. Blood poured from the men's noses, their ears, about their eyes, In the wet darkness they fought for tha iron ladder that led to the conning tower, Others tore at their throats. gasping for air. This one man gained the conning tower, lifted the hatch and rose sixty feet to the sur- face, where the destroyers picked him up. He's all right now, but his story isn’t a pleasant one. way dozens of U boats were bombed and sunk, only there were not any other survivors, blue green ofl spreading out on the fea and wreck data. “You know that very often ourown submarines, American and British, for code books and The hetpless men inside the And that’s the Only a smear of a tangle of crushed plates and girders when the English divers came out a week later to search the tactical ORGANIZATIONS PLAN BIG NEW YEAR'S FOR VETERANS Y. M.C. A., War Camp Community and Othérs Will Entertain Sol- diers and Sailors. The ¥. M. ©. A. War Council to-day announced elaborate plans for the New Year's Day entertainment of soldiers and saliors in New York City and camps adjacent and also along the Rhine. Here the special fenture of the fete will be the entertainment of boys in blue, because of the presence of the flect Eagle Hut in Bryant Park will be the centre of activity. A dozen sight-seeing | buses will take uniformed men about the city. In the camps overseas parades and pageants will be held in celebration of the dawning of the first year of peace since 1913. The sports division has ranged interesting programmes, includ- ing baseball games in France and oc- cupied Germany. Further plans were announced also by the New York War Camp Community service. The New Year's celebration will be launched early New Year's Eve, when more than ten dances for men in uniform will begin, The ¥. W. C. A. Y, W. H. A., Lafayette Club and many other inatituitions wilt hold n house for the defenders of world democracy, The great event will be the “Khaki and * dance in tho Tist Regiment Arm- ory. Theatre tickets will be di to uniformed men for New ¥ SINN FEIN’S HOPES — IN PEAGE COUNGIL | were subjected to this same sort of | treatment from our own destroy but fortunately none was sunk. For if @ destroyer sees the nose of a sub- marine poking up out of the water it doesn’t take time to investigate. It opens fire. Of course we knew where our Allied subs ought to be, but if one was out of place and came to the top we'd fire at once, If it dived, we had no way of knowing what it was and dropped bombs all over the lot. Many an American boy lay on the bottom and said goodby to the world as ho heard depth bombs fired by his own ¢ about him. “Some day you may know cf the work our submarines—the Sritish, French and American submarines in European waters—have done in war. Patroling, s¢outing, mine swe ing and mine laying, and Whenever there was action the United § Navy was among those present. Why, one American sub ran through the mine fields at ——, but that’s an- ot..er stox: = AUTO KILLS MAN ON WALK, Driver, Avoiding Another Car, » Control of Machine. James B. Thompson, forty, of No. 344 Street, Brooklyn, died at 1 A. M, jay in St. Peter's } received when kK him at 58th 3 and Avenue, Brooklyn, late last night, amuel Fisher of driver of the car, in trying to avoid hitting another machine lost control and ale sto shot upon the sidewalk and ran WV hompson, who was on his way home. The police reported the accident inavoldable, spital from in- an Fifth automobile | 5118 Fifth Ave- .| Will Take No “Steps | for Irish As. | | sembly Until Its Appeal Is Answered. | LONDON, Dec. 31.—A Dublin ae-| spatch to the Times, under date of Sunday, says that the Sinn Fein pro- pose to set up a Constituent Assem- bly in Dublin which will recognize the laws of the British Parliament. | The correspondent continues: “I understand the Irish Government | is prepared to meet any developments | in this direction, but the immediate: future in Ireland can be described only as dark, dangerous and doubt- ful “It is probable, however, that the Sinn Fein will take no definite steps until it knows the result of its appeal to President Wilson, It professes to be confident, after its sweeping tri- umph at the polis, that ita demand | for sel¢ determination cannot be ig. nored either by the British Govern: ment or the Conference. | “In these umstances, only one | thing is certain, that the year 1919 will be one of the most critical and one of | the most important in the long his- | |tory of the relations between Great | Britain and Ireland.” | | oe 1 | Brasil President Maken Sent Jan. 2. Dee, 30. elected Prosi- | ring, announced | ‘assume the | | RIO JANEIRO, Monday, Dr. Rodriguez Alves, dent of Brazil 1 to-day that he ul Presidential office Thursday. Dr Alves was prevented by Illness from entering upon his Presidential duties on 15, the date originally set for his inauguration. T’is dram Seducat parts of old. It It is not “for adults" only,’ just for the youth of the nation. ' each person in.every audience, young or The One Motion Picture That Invariably Delights Every Audience— Everywhere i not a comedy. at ional,”’ the world. is the It is not a It is not a “‘scenic”’ or an yet it has in it the great things of life, just as they hap- pened in the most widely separated neither is it Living Not Very High for Oat Allied Aide WASHINGTON, Dec, 31.—The many’ British, French and Italian officers who were sent to this cor to assist in the training of American troops were paid $10 per day by tie War Department for expenses, plus travelling allowances. 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