The evening world. Newspaper, April 8, 1904, Page 14

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Prt Stee en al Ny . pantaloons of our great grandfathers, the pattern|*here @ cure for exceanive wn: +. whereof cartoonists still preserve in funny pictures of ©) Uncle. Sam. The mischief has always been in making fashion 1 wmioay neice Che Published by the Prees Publishing. Compan; Park Row, New York. Entpred at the Post-Ofice y, No. & tp @ at’ New York as @econd-Class Mail Matter. | — aN, zr HoPR VOLUME 44/.0...0. shecstsssssNO, 18,870. Co MUA Yov .ova A oma THACHER Abl GOOD THE WOMAN BEFORE THE FASHION, CHILDREN LOVE, Fashion, according to Mrs, Van Rensselaer Cruger, who knows’.the “that’s-so-ness’” of what she writes, has done with:the grotesque. The hoopskirt may not return. | In her dress, the twentieth century woman will “have upon graceful lines. Dirt will be abhorent to her. The permitting of a skirt to sweep up the filth of the street will be a crime equally against health and against “good taste.” “<* More power to the Rainy Day Club—or at least |’ to every real Rainy Daisy! . * * * Mrs. Cruger’s news should be good news not alone to the It is a mistake to suppose that femininity has the » fashion items of the daily, weekly or monthly press -t for its exclusive reading. Every man of The Evening © \World’s vast constituency will know to-morrow that the hoopskirt revivalists labor in vain, that the trailing &arment for street.wear is doomed to lasting banish- MeACHER OBARLY. -regard for the useful and the simple, formed skirted sex. Pity the Poor ‘Bashful Girl! ment, and that the net results of these circumstances : make for grace, common sense and decency. oi = fz * * * * *. Fashion has made more cowards than conscience. J This is why there ever existed a hoopskirt. The , banded freak was worn invariably by the woman who * didn’t fashion” has been taken literally through long years. |2 ‘And not alone by the fair sex. Witness for one thing those the mi: which than command: to serve intelligence. It ¢: to the she will perform * “By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Madame; with rea articles in The Evening jotice that thou; uu write of the iggling girl and over-talkative womia no mention whatever 4 ° oor weahos Ce rp ereice tie un es. myself and would do any- thing to rid myself of this feeling. is Jeasure your clever! dare. “As good be out of the world as out of the wonderful, narrow-cut, strap-under-the-shoe meee’ % BASHFUL GIRL, B a rule, exces- sive shyness ‘Is but another name for excessive self - connctonsness. The girl who 48 too shy to talk ts uau- ally the one who thinks too much about what she is golng to say and the effect the re- istress. Hereafter, unless Mrs, Cruger be wrong, is unthinkable, the fickle dame is to serve rather ‘annot be doubted that in the capacity of a help helpless, in indicating good taste to the tasteless, a very high and useful mission. oo i w& The Rapidtoodleum, Like Mary’s EROME ‘MONK TSIE- Alcon ME TO THE w# EVENING # WORLD'S # H Gee! 7ank > M8OUT MARYS 4/7748 LarpL Y Ul nj 7) Y oo ail The G amb, Goes to School. & reat and Only Mr. Peewee. Mr, Peewee Meets the Mystic Strawberry Box, A_GOOD-A ‘BERRY- ONE EGA HORTCARE OUT OF OUR PUD E EVENING FUDGE. JOINS USABE AGAINST ON THE PuBLic! Look At THAT FALSE BoTTOM THis BOX! OME # MAGAZINE. 5900009000 O908 WOW, Wikb YOU pronKkay wiTH THE BAND WHOON 7 By Martin Green. 2." The Children’s Society jand Lee Hoy’s Little Chink Maiden - ee SEE,” said the Cigar Store Man, “that the Children’s Society has lost out in trying’ a to take little Moy Heung away from her husband, Lee Hoy.” “It was a hard lose,” responded the Man Higher Up. “They kept the Chinese girl in the rooms of the society as long ks they could, and then had to admif to the Court that they went into the case blind, an¢ couldn't make good on a sifigle syllable of their scream »| “Here is a little Chinese woman, as ignorant of the ways of New York as a Tenth avenue kid is of domes- tic arrangements in China. A respectable Chink, with 2O5-99-099000099-09000 aia @ 7 BOXES @ good business in Chinatown, marries ‘her according * * * . rf mark will produce | > STRAW) , Probably. not even .Mrs. Mrumieanesitetoube oni Nees Heaters: | @ BERR Ay tothe Chinese custom and sends a woman to Bostor ; 4 » ens 3 There {a nothing | ‘ iE to bring her to New York. The woman he send: hastily assumed that the war against the trailing walk- mere painful to wit- hasn't a mark against her. ing skirt is over to-day or will be over u an exact |ness than the attempte of a shy girl ip “As soon as the ¢hild reaches New Yerk the society make conversation when a new man is |? F to-morrow. . introduced to her. She blushes, moves | gets Its hooks ‘into Wer, yanks the husband and the ¢ , " 3? her hands nervously, almost convulsive- | ® woman who brought her from Boston to court and ‘ io you know how long that war has been on? In D4 & i hy ly, looks around vainly for some means | 2 laccuses them of buying her from her fathena , the seventeenth century there was a New England Jor escape, starts to speak two or three ¢ IT GINE -. ° “When they are asked for evidence they haven't got . 5 th i " ; fatute forbidding any excess of material in gowns Par) NOIRE pound aut |S OU DA aa ®lany. One of thcir paid butters-in ha@ a hunch that‘ /*beyond the necessary end of apparell for covering”—|teeth of determination, gasps out that $ } Poash in The Russo-Ja War |Moy Heung was bought, and they played that hunch and this but f TO) la of |!t'# & fine day, and thereafter struggles > panese ® jthrough several sessions of the court without anything DYES TUE ONG: OF NUTAETOUS, SUMPCUATY, AWS! OU) Ge eat moh Qp met away from tne |S DA FACE! Must Stop, Pg pak the times dealing with what the Rev. Nathaniel Ward |interesting subject she has introduced. | {f c) {to back it up. * described as ‘female foppery.” There are not many bashful giris--| > ‘The Evening Fudce 2| “In a last despairing wail, after admitting that the ; ‘ ppery. not half wo many"as there ary bashful | | comm, earns, the Czar @ [detention of the girl was an outrage, the attorney for This same Reverend Ward, however, finds himself | en, The average iri in rather over-| $ 3 |the sgciety makes the sta:ement that the trafic in Chi- impelled to “honour the woman that can honour herself Bee de Rat, tp be too aasuced, without @ |nese female children in New York is as bad as it was + . with her attire.” And therein he preaches a whole} of tn 3 Ba ie San Francisco ten years ago, when they were =, Sermon on fashion—with the same. theme which is Agron $ auctioned off in droves. If he is right, the Children's indicated above, where it is promised that fashion shall] "Tif Oniy way ents MT tn exceen-| 2 Society ought to cough up its charter and turn ita in’someé hereafter serve intel igence. La by can cure reat ot the fete @ business over to a syndicate of blind people. If the & ae ri A 8 ‘analyzin; at im. |. ‘i ae . The woman who honors herself in her attire will comes to” ners" Saal $ conditions are so horrible, why don't this eaclety choke Gress not to be conspicuous, nor, on the other hand, to jor tear Lat her think about tharnna| 2 »jthem off? I keep pretty close tab on the news, and I il | ak herself what she is afraid of? Sure-| | fail to remember when the Children’s Society, has even the woman who sits next to her. HP rec yaa tease teenies | . Colors and patterns just alike for women as different |struseling vainly to made a move to stop the traffic. that the lawyer says “% from each other as night from day have been fashion's pense "ie ean he ptedea mane 3 exists. ' worst products—next to the things grotesque. |? the shy girl must stop thinking about “Do you find the Children’s Sodiety extending itself + ne = 7 v] In the new order, women will not be afraid to dress| give nome attention te. whe nppetnnt to"hurl any protection at lttle gfrls and boys who are for themsélves; to consult; instead of mathematical Ber terror, He would rat talk than @|put to work before they are able to talk plainly? + charts and printed color schemes, their own curves and 4. ?|And do you over fall to find it interfering in a case mpl a indivi i i ion— is he a New Yorker? If s like that of Moy Heung, or of a child that fs makin; complexions and stature. individuality will reign—| q2* warority of NomaToue we ci | iving f ifling stunt th : which is the real woman. the other places he has ‘ever visited is a ‘good living for a trifling stunt on the stage, eur- Fashion will be, not a dictator, but a friendly aoee to) aeer nie alba foe a ho rounded by intelligent people and guarded by consid- . monitor, he from? ‘Some place iy the Went or |S erates parents?” . E -_ Sor i Pyobanl Renae wit really | “Why don't the city take care of its own kid pro an Sa : 2 f -- DOLLARS AND BRICKS—NOW FOR SCHOOLS, [don't tiko to talk about the weather C> —— G BOs Bal! 2!) LU) tection?” asked the Ctgar Store Map. f Education. talked to and be made talk about rj answered the Man Higher Up. -tma) | themselves—and they are fa In- 6; ag (:17 it a 5 Eaavibelbrievics era shave Petites ito cart: themselves and they ‘are far more tn Tonaay’s $5 Prise “‘Fudge’’ Idiotorial Was Written by Gaynor Allen, 208 West 141 st Street. erin lino ‘ And there 1s "$3,500,000 in hand, with $8,500,000 to |, Neely every man has some. subject PRIZE PEEWEE HEADLINES for to-day, $1 paid for each: No. 1—WILLIAM KLEIN, No. 272 Cherry street, New York City; No, 2-EVAD W rs hs ‘ | upon which he can be really entertain- Pi According to statistics compiled in Havana, Cubéte: follow. : PK. the woman who pleases him 1s | hNA BUSH, No. 350 Audubon avenue, Washington Heights, New York City; No, 3—LOUIS SCHECHT, No. 313 West One Hundred and Seventeenth %, | ee bet taunson tnt thalehiter uci taeer ana intone wi enon ie P q ore led leaf tobacco tc ue 0 . ett : scisieult for onlooking New York to see what | "And ‘uo shy girl Ia more apt to be | getreet, New York City, F : Sl cigars to the’ same) value “America tosic) more™(han ones ‘bstacle lies between the Board and a lot of new . able to do this than the over-confident | @ 5, 4 Fe 2 co in bales ved 2 . aD Seay OF OF new schoole. | ha-for she wants to talk about ner | To-Morrow’s Prize ‘‘ Fudge’? Idiotorial Gook, ‘The Brooklyn Bridge Must Run Through a Tunnel.” Re ee een Pilctaeny orp tare, weeneeae dhe seit. PPLLTOOODOLOHIDDIDD ODE DIDIHOHDDDGOEDIHOSSSOHOHDDOD-H $6000H9496949924HH90 HOH HYIO FHPOHOHDIOGIOSIOTOSGY | cu ee - . . 5 e THE FATAL CHORD, * tie Battling Mystery of we 4 Wonderful Detective Stor . Jy Carnegie Hall Murder. < vane - -_— —-.-. cl " b 10 OTN re iT y Sey d at Wins ranete it You look Ilee an hon-| A violet vender pressed forward offer- ple’ went on the Englishman, checking] tight nor to left. He therefore did not) minal, frowned and took to pacing Se es pats eh pispeovie paseiag: ‘ b Alb rt P. T ‘ Plodding, rather unititelltgent Cen-|ing his wares. ‘The Englishman tossed+|the other's words of praise. “It comes| Observe a gristied, square-jowed man | impatiently up and down. sureteh |i ; e ailediy y e ayson erhune. Ubon |® ‘half dollar into the Iad's flower tray | from cultivating the very common fac-|[n plain clothes who rose from a wait-| On his second tour of the Tong stretch (trepentitely. H . maid short, ‘the so:¢ of detective who, | and passed on ulty of observation. T only wish T could |Ing-room scat whera herhad bern sand- | of stone fipdrihg before the ferry slipai | i¥ouire a detective, I sunpose.”" he acer phled bret teHnated zeal andvatro-! “tndiscriminate charity," observed! find some: such means of deciphering | Wlehed hetween a woman with a equal. |n man stepped quietly wp to him an _am 1 charged: Copyright, 1001. by Publish ing Co. (New York World.) ramke Aus che miedo ee Beckwith tn mock reproot |the Ballard matter. I told you Eformed |1M& baby and Pee La ale rar rh gate SHS jp The Captainen ett you, ‘ Rew Hap Word peuentaa | Habltues of the hotel, accustomed as} Mmake-to arrest the wrong man, search | fying to like honeetiee andere wee, a |e, eeeeTy Of the crime aged. on jue) ee ee eee te toat, Raves} “ON, you've come at last!” he bexan, iat 2" asked n yoice trom be~. syncrs | they were to sectng men of this appeat-| bim and let him yo, with a sulky apol-| or the tal Binira Re | Such observation; but I have had no} vse oking = ‘clear and’ went. there | then paused as, instead of tho tall, dark |"! Clty eeta—tnn turned to face ‘Cyril Baiiara, lel ance with Beckwith, »: ogy. oh?" 7 of the taint of the Elmira Reformatory. | chance to amplify it or. connect the i =) ongranted eins y policeman. | a kified during a ‘muste 1 Craddock's | th Beckwith, scarcely gave a| O8Y: Bestdes, his mother takes a lot of pride n° | fore into the reeking, malodorous, filthy he con const—officer,"” remarked The apartments in. Carnegis Govern ape | S°CONd glance to the pair Nou think you can succeed in thisyin him, She's a reat, sober; industri-; [7 2¥ Brands, thanks to my Inability 0 | Compartment tronically labelled, ‘ ‘Gen- -dressed man with quiet | F 7 parently. supernatural events acient hal ‘The di en risky plan? ; 2 @ Feat, sober, Industti-; oxamine Craddock's rooms. Besides, ts Ci op i} , re jaw. For a frace ain me te the station-hoee yarn tured event, attend op Isguise is wonderful), plan woman, expert with hereneedie, alc r |tlemen’s Cabin.” Thithet the square! stern eyes and #quare jaw. ta fellows wall suction: topay reveals nn trace or | Was, saying. admiring!y, rea T were at home, in England, 1 ried, end!—— visiie no seein pursuing an impropa, | jawed man followed, drawing from his] tion of a second it seemed to Royce its he done?” asked he yayaten), | Ax Gresham a should have nd doybt whatsoever} «on, ¢ ; re 9 theory when one so much more! peefor and lovingly filling a very dis-|that soniewhere before at some time Varrant case, 1 s'p: efoto aay ore, ciacuseinn the art of 1 reaponded | MEU I. But here yout polion meth-| aidn't knoe ne Ok TOMS? TL itkely Mes Just within my reach Tmusc| roputable-Inoking briar pipe which| ha had seen those grave, critical eyes.| |, .Fem',,,,anawered The | Englishman RU pe raed Wig “The perfect disguise} O4* are so utterly different. ‘I'm con-4 “Qn the contrary, T never saw the poy] leave You here. Good-by until’ 6.30. should haxe been thrown away some] But the {dea passed. The man was evl-| “sf “aon't know your face,” went on meahaey Do You mean to tell gie{/® almont no disguise at all. ‘The avery] “tantly running my head into some] ti now," 4 “ + They had reached Sixth avetiue and years before, M dently a total stranger to him, the policeman. “I thought I knew ail Phe city tasiea an erate reply and toils; AA" AMAteNT seema to think that the] Dind wall cated by the difterence| “mut the reformatory, and hie in-|TWOMty-third street, ‘The Englishman |,” “This is the satest way.” though.#fhe| “Wito the deuce are you?” he growled, Murphy’ tees, You must be a’ new fasta, chal the inter, may eters to him | More coverings ho heaps on Ju taco the |! Police rexulations betwoen the two | qustrious mother, who takes auch pride | Walked 03 alone, up the latter thorough-| Englishman, as with back face, he| “Take your hand oft my shoulder, What “Tam. Come, don't iet's waste any Hnnman undertakes torrolvertha Halines RBS: | Detter ho hides it. So he claps on false | Countries. But this ime I've. planted |in his appearance, and all thet | fate, toward the North River. Hleaned back puffing at hi¥ pipe and] do you want?" more time,” i tery. ; 7, | Whiskers, gowgles, paint and all that, | %* 4!) out pretty carefully and 1 can't rely deduction, At. his first step| At almost the jame moment Roy2e eyeing furtively the woll-drevsed man| “f want you, friend,” said the other] VoMicer,’ began, Ballard, ; on. Roses hair, wybactone, at lenath fall And wny one who kuows the gamo can| 8° how T can fall,” I saw that he had the prison walk, He| Ballard re-read. for the third Ume a at the opposite end of the cabin. “It I} gruffly. “We've been looking for youl wourtcously, “You'll have plecteoe ON froth He has reason to belleve that! detoct at a glance that the-man ls dis- | He re you going to find him? By! is too young to» have beon in prison:| telexram he had cecelved a half-hour) arrest him across ‘the river, on the Jer-| for quite a while.” time o talk at headquariers, What's Rove’ cartiee, a eats aN: |muised. That isn't. my T have | SORE to Lis house?” hence the: reformatory. ‘The nearcet | eaziier. It ran: [sey ride, he can't summon any friend in} Ballurd’n tace went sajlow, but with|he done?” he adjed to The Enetishman, Singuisen for nearly twenty That's unsafe. Tve thought |reformatory is at Elmira, Hels work-| “Called suddenly to Washire'>.' a hurry to identify him, and the statlon-| a quick effort he recovered himself. Berane aanwon thet mre nh en tiaras CHAPTER V. and the best of mil te one thet far better plan, But 1 would! ing-and with an evident interest Im his| Meet me: Pennsylvania Station 34h houre to which I take him for the! “What do you mean?” he queried,| him the warrant, He did not ash + American Methods vs. English, {1 Practicaljy’ no diegutac at all. To] MNCL not explain it Just yet, "If youl worly. Hfe clothes are neatly reendea by | BOFEARE. BONA PITTANI." | searching process will be too far away! sharply. . | Ballard to know the nature of the alleg- HORTHY after noon on the follow. | ok at me you would be puazied to de-| UU Gresham will meet me in the catelan esiperienced noedlewoman, What| Royce was of two minds, whether Qr trom his home to permit of any Inter-| “Cap'n wants to see you," replied | Ot Charge of to lone his present stata S ing day two. men walked through | tet ANY artifietal change T have made | NOY Mt halls after six to-night T willl expert needlewoman would take such] 20t to,obex the summons. But the con | ruption before I Iearn what it 18 he|‘The fnglishman in his bost imitation] “rhe oflcor #lanced over othe docu: the Hoffman House lobby towara | I ms’ face.” report progress, I've already .askod] wonderful care of a poor boy's clothes} versation he had had with the-youn | guards #0 carefully in his breaat pocket. | of American detective methods, 20 far] ment, then looked at ‘The Fagitshman dhe’ Firth avenue emrance, “That is true,” said Beckwith, acane | otshtn! {0 be here then, I asked him! put his mother? And, at that, a good|Itallan artist. the provious. eventing,’ I really think this ish't a bad stroke.” as he had been able to observe them. eee ace Aaa eI ALLY 33 | ‘One was, Charles Beckwsin, the other'| ning film closely. “Hut your heuring tat Neen, F Eot the bogua warrant trom| moter, who cared for her boy? ‘There| Coupled “with his prtor experience with! Arrived at Jersey Clty The English-| Ballard made a sudden movement to- | /"®" up?” thought The English- a grizaled man with snuare jaw, bushy | different. You wear your clothes ae if | um ia all tho ‘myster: her character, at-Jenzth decided him! man carefully knocked the ashes from| ward his breast pocket. ‘The English-| man “Hr surely Zean't have ‘sense MASSE! Taba Fenpectatle: but oi #4 : othes aa ‘a wonder Gresham ever helped| jut you wald the mother was left-|to keep the appotntmont. i his pipe, pocketed that redolent treasure | man well knew tho object was to con-|enovh to know the thing's a forrery. pectable but ill-fitting | they were ready made. You walk] you out by potting a false warrant, te pee 6 : ‘nd leisurely. followed Royce from the] ceal, or destroy something he carried | ‘The form and signature on the warrant Glothes, His oldest friends might have | heavily, and there 1s a slouchy, un-| wouldn't do puch thine t dda handed— WeatD (Ah) MFR, Me: started: \on this, Aid Jglaurely bal there, but he preferred to affect the|are rogular enough, But there's a “* Gased long and keenly at this second |kempt alr about you. You've touched | man on earth, But’ you've eat tied tay een ee ate handed whe sews| Journey. ; : PyBiitara ccacele den lot e: Dennagtll Seen ne uae ee a UI Wasi paanraa had /aropneaiive stele fan without recognizing the acrupu- | up your hair in bit to give it a grissled ypnoteaasti is Sot him) from left.to right instead of trom right} Reaching the West Twenty-third} Ballard made a four of the Pennsyl-/ sought. savagels’ catoh-fon Royee allard’s arm ana new caces” look;. but yéur face is not made up. They both laughed It ts only the difference of expression ee ore inued > lobby into Fifth avente Aresved, “well-groomed | Einglish- a i A glanoo at the patches on that| street ferry Ballard passed hurriodly |vania to lest. {rom the} lad’s elbows told me the sbamstress was! through, the! waitingoom toward the Ite all’eo absurdly sim waiting-rooms, compared fateh. with the two big clotks that boat, looking aelther to’ hank at either end of! the great. ter- bis ‘OD he wal, ing des a arrest an Saphe tes itdown-}a step nearer to The rom the region of the "hen he’ added, more Englishman, oad, Clearly there was trouble ahi Continued.) ~

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