The evening world. Newspaper, October 9, 1919, Page 15

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_THE EVENIN \ rom Sanders near here Inte yesterday. | pressed the belief that the two fuait u HiLAN inh (ES WH) { a man and a wom rer gave the man a lift anc Fugitive and Man Companion, | likewise for the woman | After riding a short dist Sought by Posse, Alleged to {te attoged to have dealt Elkins nders did ty-sixth ann jof the Womans Union oF ce the man Hkins a death- and the woman Bia A presiding. dl } blow with a hammer pron nm amendment mat n Have Attacked Farmers. simultaneously {a suid to have attacked - ~—-— CAVA i, i MACON, Ga., Oct. 9A “manhunt” | Sanders in the same r ne Sanders) Mebert T. fog Dies ta " tp tf \ t 4 1 t with « woman as ono of the fugitives In| ar fovbed of "0, "Aiton which” the | SYTACUBSy Ne Ost, ® ere UPVE NA thu im progress here to-day. Sheriff Hick"! cording to. the police, Sanders’ and |T> Durning, of No, 124 West Bighty f Bibb County, with a posse of about ae one hundred men, is searching the woods mear the nite of Camp Harris for a man and @ woman charged with killing A. J. Bikins and probably fatally injuring Elkins were brothers-in-law [fourth street, New York, died to-day Hammers similar to those with which |on a west bound New York Centr two farmers were struck down were |train just before its arrival in Syra found in a Crawford County banking jcuse. The body was removed |i house shortly after a safe-biowing, ac-jand his brother, Dr, John Durning cording to the police, and they ex-‘of New York was notified. Aspirants in War to Keep Down Car Charge. The transit situation in New York COLGATE’S IMPROVED PROVERBS—No, 1 vas enlivened to-day by Mayor Hy } nnouncement that he woul (4 ive the stump against any candi - ( inte for ffice who will es ¢ otlon lines. itis declaration came ast night short time after Public Service) mimissioner Nixon had declared bus line hint the Mayor's jitney “ + storm,” and had told the New York | Board of Trade and ‘Transportation , ‘ t he had done all he could with uty | success: Induce the city adminis. | tration to join with him to solve tue] tronsit problem, ; Mayor Hylan read a prepared ad-) : A last night before the Mayor's! WHEN ur druggist “te | Vigilance Committee to Prevent In- ‘ ind P?? asks hat kind ? reased Fares, which packed the Al- don’t say “Any kind will chamber, He was told by do” — say “Colgate’s.” he Secretary that in response to a Safe, sane end delicious, <usatlonnaire rent to all the candl- ‘ ICHOUs. dates ety-nine had sald they were A safe policy for tooth opyosed to increased fares. One ex- insurance, pressed himself in favor of them. HYLAN SAYS HE WILL TAKE THE STUMP, “SM will say,” said the Mayor ag he tepped down from the platform, that if there is any candidate for Legislative office who will not pledge h elf against increased fare | will be glad to go into his district from this time on and help to defeat him."* in his set address, Mayor Hylan charged that In an effort to con he Board of Estimate and Ay Sold Evorywhere ninent the transportation panies were aiding in placing canal jates in the fleld in opposition to bert 1. Moran for President of the 1 of Ald jen, and dangerous” sult In an uprising of o people.” In this connection he referred to the riots which ocourred when fares were increased in New Jersey Having asserted that the compan- les were seeking to impose a tax of $200,000,000 a ycar om the people of gain invited them to Colgate’s is Recommended by More Dentists Than Any Other Dentifrice and said that the enabled to rip up BUSINESS HOURS: 9 A. M. TO 5 P. M, HEARN Fourteenth Stress West of Fifth Avenue FRIDAY SATURDAY Sizes 2 to 6 Yrs. 8.17 $13.97 VERY mother wants her kiddies to have the best there is—dainty, cosy things to wear, and of these first in importance is a warm Winter coat. These little coats are the cream of the fashion for little tots. They are of softest, finest materials, beautifully made, and the Start-of-Season Sale Price brings them to you at this unbelievably low sum. This is a once-a-season opportunity which does not last or come again. Mothers should therefore make an early choice of these models, MODELS are trimmed with fur, plush, velvet or self material. Other styles be- sides those sketched, There are twelve models in all, COLORS are Pekin, brown, reindeer, pays Copenhagen, Victory, oxblood, old rose and Burgundy, MATERIALS are frost tone, silvertone, zibeling, corduroy and velour. See also our four-column Friday-as-Usual Bargain Day Advt. on page 31 and other nages for **Start-of-Season’’ Sales of Women’s Housedresses and Children’s Stamped Dresses; also special advertisements of Women’s and Misses’ Apparel and Men’s Stylwear Clothing. To Stump Against Legislature on 1919, ous ' nv \ce exports qtioted by J. P. “ b & Co. w correct, then it ts t “ ‘vident (hat the report of Stone and ‘ 4 Prey Webster is Incorrect, and the reason und ¢ * b stil given to increame fares is likewise borrowed the money to The Tie 4d these muntetpal ratlways TRACTION LINES SHOULD |" 4: hd pooole patronize them in. preference PAY DIVIDENDS. lo privately owned lines. These lines Decent niducted, On any lexit) are paying for themselves so rapidly ' ' wen that In a few years the people will 1) vem Would votinr own them free of indebtednoss. highest dividends to their stookh “The situation with regard to our f f any mupicipallty on ear local traction aystem fs quite plain Whon the Ciiy of Now York enrere’| and easily understood, but is pur- vact, it was| posely beclouded by specially pre- pared reports of private monopoly e dual subway ompanion ) financial respons'. | oxpe ih order that antiquated sur- bility to perform thelr ob face lines may be continued with their ‘ ‘ in good faith 10 to 22 per cent. private leases, and the street cat corpo-| in order that the people may be ration to break its contract with the| gouged owt of additional millions in { i ild be op. | the payment of an 8 or 10 cent fare oi blest, and| lines In which the people have ready invested almost $250,000,000. More than a score of organizations he importance of peace, of giving the public justo for|were represented. The delegate: resentment, | cheered every reference to Mayor Hy~ “An arbitrary Increase of fares Is|ian as the “people's champion” and It is|tikewise voiced approval of references , because it breaks a miract.| to the “traction ploodsuckers” and It tx inexcusable, And as long as 1|“bighbinders,” Aint Mayor 1 shalt continue to oppose) One ot those who was called on to it, in the interest of every cli speak by Chairman Francis P, Bent ‘The Mayor next referred to the dit-|\faq Charles Trieht, an engineer, ference between the Stone & Web-| who made a violent attack on Judge ge to dudge Mayer! Mayer, who bas charge of the t ap imectinn tka tha| treetion recelvrahipa. perta “quoted by J. P. Morgan &| Mr. Bright then otr 0.” when the Interborough waa| Copies of a petition imposition upon the peopl p ed printed » meet!n| float notes in September, 1918, | Ctlling upon Congressmen to inve Th re a that, making allow.| gate the charges againat Judge ance for war conditions, the total net| Mayer, and, if the Congress:nan ineowe 10 to, the. company | thinks warranted, present “a formal woitld be $12,400,000 in 1919, and as-| Motion to Con-reag for tne impeach- serted that the Interborough had) Ment of Julius M. Mayer, United ylelded a profit in the preceding three| States District Judge for the South- years of $22,000,000. jern District of New York. WHERE'S THE $22,000,000 PROFIT, HE ASKS. | Regi “What has become of the $22,000,- vote on Election Day. 000?" asked the Mayor. “If the re- day from 5 P. M. until 10.30 P. M. Ri! yeas An ordinary union suit. No shaping at all. Ien't it ridiculous that you should ever be asked to buy this kind of knit underwear? cotton or lisle knit underwear is cut. Just two slits for the arms, a piece slashed out for the neck, then a “V” makes the legs—and there you are! Back and front just the same width—sides perfectly straight—shoulder lines straight, out. 7 that is exactly the way ordinary But now comes new knit underwear— Kayser’s—tailored with all the skill that has made Kayser “Italian” Silk Under- things and Silk Gloves famous. Kayser cuts each knit union suit by hand—one at a time. Cuts out roomy arm sizes carefully, shapes them—shapes true? es, your underwear begins just a knitted tube But who would want to wear a perfectly straight tube? KNIT UNDERWEAR “Marvelfit Kegtttered and Vacented IGHIBD, 1919, BY JULIUS KAYSER & CO.,, NBW YORK, MAKERS OF SILK GLOVES, “ITALIAN , SILK HOSIERY, KNIT UNDERWEAR $1,000,000 VAN CORTLANDT | ARMY HosPITAL TO EST ATE PAYS SMALL ae ee United States Army General No. 3 at Colonia, N. J., will néxt week after having been July 6, 1918. The work of the at No. 3 has set new standards in Most of It in Stocks and Bonds ‘be Goes to Columbia University. After an Investigation inte the vali of the estate of the late Robert N. Va Cortlandt, millionaire ¢lubman, who committed suicide in his country home 4t Bedford, in Westchester county, sev- eral years ago, it became know to-day that the heirs will only have to pay the state a tax of $2,900. Surrogate Slater has issued an order accordingly. Mr. VanCoriandt owned more than $1,000,000 worth of stock and bonds, | most of which he left to Columbia Uni l versity and these are not tamable w der the transfer tax law. | Under an agreement detween trustees |of Cotum! and heirs, $400,000 | worth of rey ‘cntate divided among | members of Mr. Vancortiandt's family and is not taxable, these were performed by Col. ptm: AE | MISSES DATE; TRIES DEATH. saz 8 E i i oes Weman Changes ™ Calle Help. Disappeta | Minnle Stupal, twenty-nine, who gave] Bout (wo addresses, waa #9, disappointed be-| lations thet canse a friend failed’ to keep an en-| poison the agement with her at Battery Park last lolaea night that she Jumped over the seawall! pelled from near the Rarge Office. As she jumped! dissiness she screamed, and when Policeman Small Kreamer of the Old Slip Station ap- DR. peared she was swimming desperately to escape drowning. Kraemer threw har pol, jar 5 ti |Serwet'sttect Hospital. The ‘addresnen | Sleepleseness and Female she gave were No. 300 West 116th Street and No, 210 West {29th Street. _Genetae mast bear signatere like Now comes the Kayser | Knit Union Suit care- ‘#} fully shaped to fit. It » ied tts comfort, doesn't * it the neck so as to make it lower in front than in the back—shapes the front fuller than the back, makes the hips roomy, Shapes the entire suit to fit the body. Kayser Knit Union Suits do not sag in the back or bind across the front—the waistline doesn’t “ride up” to the middle of your back—the seat is roomy—the flaps are specially cut so they must stay closed. Go to any department store to-dav and ask for your size. Go home and put it on. e how perfectly it fits, how slender and shapely you look in it! JULIUS KAYSER & CO., New York City. ‘ e arm sizes and beoutiful band toy two of at wast a dosen why Kayser Knit Underthings Once they ure kiown-—are always worm, SILK UNDERWBAR, rarer Institortow Has Hedord ter . k

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