The evening world. Newspaper, June 1, 1907, Page 7

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A ) Tall, Short, iii Any Color of Gown Can Be Worn with Perfect Be- comingness, EFFECT OF THE GUIMPE, Por Every Day Use and for the-Country Wash Mate- THE EV N Stout and Thin Girls All It Is-a Style That Suits A rials Are Used. By Annette Bradshaw. HE fumper ts one of the season's! | mueceases, We find ft made tn al- | moat eveiy material. and color, | and worn by almost every sort of fig- Tall girla and short girlie, stout ones or thin, are al! trying on or making some form of this popular garment It fsa style that suits almost any fir- | ure. The arran over the sho broadness in the r pate Bome of these gowns are y ar the over Some Elaborate. | | } | fr junpere r hard usage, t gown, Colored Linen. two is in na: yra Number The et spotted w ‘Theme ate joined to the waist aide. Connecting these two sieeve bands! top of the waist and entirely separate from it, ts anc‘ yer ft wn spotted linen. Between t of waist the te gathered Into the rather trimmed around the bot- of brown spotted hat trimmed with | ribbon looks well mple Style. ree is extremely simple tn MISSED FINE BROOCH AFTER BUTLER LEFT. | J Bengon and] Englewood and | ( 1 Their Arrest i June 1.-¢ Conon, aries ast r days $1,800 on Beynon end his wife y Were raced to Englewood, where | were arrested They are now they looked up in police headquarters here. a SENATOR HALL STILL GAINS. BALTIMORE, June 1-—Senator Eu- fone Hale, according to his attendants @t Johne Hopkins Hompital to-day “wae continuing bis goal progress toward eomplete recovery. very popular u & diamond | A an eatawed and | 7 D’ Amato to Give Italian | Opera at Academy of Music had not nearly been satisfied by Conried's Metrop< )pera - # Company has to appeal fo West End The. last three weeks Mr. has been giv At the rma Mont! Bald ts favorably k STELLA BSKTI—~ lay Rigolett and Fr as Gilda Dink n the Bowery. The “La Tra pro fate Wed nz Kaltenborn and his atr HN begin their summer oc "The Bohemian offering at the V the Van Den B The cast will in Allce Craft Benso: Mr, Abramson's Ita! pany Is to move next Company, | t a Bhalek and Hubert Wilke. n Lyric Com to the Granda STATE AT AUCTION, REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION, TO-DAY IS THE DAY | JOHN S, MAPES, Auctioneer, SELLS THE WALLACE PROPERTY Fort Schuyler Road and La’ Salle Avenue, | WESTCHESTER, NEW YORK CITY 114 BEAUTIFUL LOTS and Fine Modern Residence AT PUBLIC AUCTION, . TO-DAY, JUNE 1, 1907, AT2 P.M REAL ON THE GROUNDS, Lots Ready for Immediate Improvement, | Froe of Cust, 70% Way Remain on Morigage Ty a on ye tl mapa Auctioncers, $5 Liberty Street, New York, | Titles Guaranteed Ave “FIRE TEAMS MUST Arial and Paral Wear “Jumpers’’ Will Blossom Out Next Week lmost Every Figure STRIKE BRINGS mn toy the season Monday M. Cohan, in another . HE New Amaterdam Aerial The | Murtte @ @eamion’s, se | | atre, In & new coat of pink en-| VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. ny A ry \ | | amel and stiver decorations, At tie Qoipoial willbe mo Ite adjoining promenade and ga) redecorated wi r ated with trees, plaw tm, et | his must The plece has been named “The | De renee in shows, will be the attrae- | The & More Seamen Go Out, Many Oreene Industries Threate: Tuneymooners, P poerd atened | . and is a new version of Proctor a d_and | “Running for Offes,” in whieh Sot poner etcck company Government Helpless, Four Cohana were originally seen at | st the on . e Savoy Theatre, With Mr. Cohan | Union Mi be Tocemae wlll be Jerry J. end Helen F, Cohan, | Andou ; dertrude ames HL sla K Hoffman, William Keogh, Manning, Leona Anderson, odes and athers, Fifteen ‘now ie strike of. the! tneors and ‘long sof France wn extendad + Dunkirk, Calets nee Will be liatradueed. Bouloghe, Gravelines, Bordeaux and ee ee ' other fporte whi wwe t affected) ‘ammerstetn'’s Paradine Root Garden | ‘ yemterfiny, and is now complete every-| Will oben on Manday evening ‘with “a where in France, Algeria and upin. the old farm vepresenting a “Mute Thys far the atrike affects only wand & lying woman apparent rengh shipping, foreigh veerels at ed to ashpe in an iilueion called ; Frenéh porte of call being unloaded. Temation. louls de Berg brings de. wateneninit ot uon" from the Albambra The- | W the Mepat rainy industries don, where It is sald to have Lac. At the One Hundred and gated ro, gant 4 a ae 1a | Dat llences. The “elevated de- | fifth Secrest Theatre will be fi} he compelled anut down asd jevated vaude- | Oe N Qoinee cd : workmen In other branches of trade © That Quartet, |in “The Wattle of Two Woon,” i thrown tnt 1 idienena. usiclan; Barngid’s i and company tn The commeretai , ‘The Inebriated |" ‘The “etooke p= 4 age Nx the wo-called dwarde’s Schoolboys Opera-House will p tthe wanimat and Hart, Willy ran as 7 rane fifteen. cot Alnamyee well have Brats port in “The 1 company, Guyer /and wep, Carilele’s eral doge and in the Exposition ‘our, RRs ve stor will Frank Here v ¥ loquist Riraien and Wish i* cd neers; Terry and Elmer. ners at the Jardis | Melburn, ‘eaten sisters t om York Theatre, | ¥ a Ridgeway, Newel and R ahr Seman, alee Adams. Barney aod Dolly Flyon, Ivy, . o and many others. : don Empire Theatre; Mf f pay and the ley, @ Parisian chanteuse and dan pr he sou ane Mile. Dazie, the well-known | xoepted ee Pe 4 th . i t me “< are tem enh Honor ¢ Mayor” will return to how nore’ than thirty big attrac their eer- | Watiack’s for a s er season on Mon-| tens. gclipatng hus former uctieve- ' aged fe da n New songn nents at Coney Tela 2 ot oe ee na dances | ™S°'" 1" Dreamland’s big shows are | must have been tnt 4d. and yi running smoothly. A new feature js pe ® leaving | Hallet of last season has been rep a band of Morceien bendlts WAe GE cs ; ; ved this wee! perform by Alfred B. Aarona’s Dancing Dx (oon vite at “The. Peat of. |trom Je Other ppectacies wo Date” n» Tiller’® school in London. again be geen as Den ma hte Up SAYS GIRL TOOK $300. Charlotte Moore, a City er attractions, the in the company s. Janet Priest, Freder John H ‘@ Mabe! MH. mw tok a e's Journey,” and “The ‘Gtant Van Kenaselae: Pratt, Clarence Harvey and Fleteher Morton, antion Soctety’s Bookk “The Cirele MK n St aw Arrested, ¢ BE MATCHED NOW veo Hee a le and J the colored come: } aundry | tee tins Charlotte Moore, twenty-one dians and will be seen at! at South Beach, Saten _ sbonise at in the years old, was arrested last night by|the Grand ¢ sume In @ new plece . trained ‘animats, oo 1 ga jacks. Central Office detectives at her home. | called “The Sh Regiment.” ;. ie, q Rei enty-fourth street, on a! Miss Geet! Sp v will remain at the vale 4 was not af- |‘ nan was a bookkeeper | Lincoln Square “The Dancer and omg orses ~ been Organization Soctety | the King.” oe enty-etghth strent Misa Adelaide Keim. at the Metropolis, ) hae ‘3 e ena b ake-up amon wae t When Hed tre booker and? . - + = tote a ite tee re pets were n to strange houses | Fi check, retaining | "1l sppear in "The Eternal City Lp Mid er ALF + L ire Department, by ito be matched with strange horses. fhe money ‘ The Bowery Burlesquers will be at and \ REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— BTATEN ISLAND. k STA rEN ISLAND. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— STATEN ISLAND, ee ne Oe REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— QTATEN ISLAND REAL ESTATE FOR SALE— | | J ND. STATEN ISLAND. A Third Talk on Real Estate —Suggested by the Panic of ’73. If it is possible to make people think quietly and seriously—to induce them to make a study of real estate— this country and they will be saved from great disaster. Just before 1873, after a long period of prosperity, the people of the United States became real estate mad, They bought right and left, and prices of good, indifferent and totally bad real estate went up alike sky-high—then—collapsed, and for years after the whole nation suffered, and men saw their savings dwindle away with the ‘dry rot.” Since then Fe have been several small “realty riots,” in Omaha, Kansas City, Chicago, Chattanooga, etc., with the inevitable finale of disappearing paper profits, To-day we are confronting a condition which contains great danger, and at the same time the greatest possibilities for proit in the history of the country. One must not be called a “knocker” who is trying to save the situation by teaching people to discriminate between the legitimate development, based on a clear understanding of underlying conditions, and those where the real and genuine are used to promote the false and unreal. If the public can be educated to study, smdy, STUDY real estate, and learn it as they would any other business in which they were intending fo invest their hard earned cash, there need be no collapse, no losses, and it will be our duty, as it should be the duty of all engaged in the great up-building of New York, to give such information as will enable the average man to judge real estate for himself. New York stands alone in two respects. Now just get this into your head. In two respects New York is : diflerent from any other city. In the first place, it is growing faster than any city in the world, almost three times as fast. Last year a city the size of Cincinnati, or Clevelend, Ohio, came to live within the limits of Greater New York. !n the second place, New York is spreading out as never a city spread out in history. New York has been dammed up to an almost unlivable extent. Now it is running over the top, but better still, the floodgates are being opened and within a short whie New York will lop off about two stories and let out the upper fioors of their six- story “walk-ups’’ to rats. It is all rank nonsense to think that peorle like to crowd together; that East Side tenements will always be profitable. People like air and light and sunshine and will get into it just as soon as our conservative Rapid Transit Commission ( save the mark) puncture the surrounding waterways. lf Greater New York were spread out widely as Chicago is for instance, the cheapest lot over the entire territory, well drained and fairly near transportation, would be worth about $1,000 (we are offering perfect lots NOW for $190 each— 10 down), Within a few years this process of spreading out, already begun, will be complete, and New York will grow like Other cities—London, Paris, Chicago. Then this $1,000 per lot value, or even more, will be normal, not only in our own properties, but others, properly situated and comprehensively handled. You can learn to discriminate between_good and bad if you instruct yourself on the following points: Look at the land; note improvements already made, not to be made; study the cost of transportation, present, not to be; the running time, present, not to be; distance from the station; visit five properties before you buy one; always base 90% of your decision on the “present” and forget a good deal of the 10% of “to be.” The Municipal Ferry to South New York (formerly Staten Island) is a splendid highway, where the city } does the work and you do the resting. It is filling up the Island with home-seekers. ' \ oe Our $190 lot, with all improvements, will soon be a dream of contentment to the forehanded—a nightmare | to the one who carelessly puts off investigating. There is hardly a day passes but that you, dear reader, hear some one relate how much money he would have made had he bought lots in (possibly of us), a few years ago. Now don't let any one have to hear that same moth-worn hi from you: at least from the lack of a visit to the beautiful suburb of South New Yore—or to others if you prefer—not “some day,” out right away.” If you would like to know how to detect a bad investment at a glance, 4 postal card will bring “The Earmarks of a Bad Jnvestment.” P, B.Newt week I want to talk of certain differences between real estate in a ofty and real estate situated outside of a city’s mite. WOOD, HARMON ©& CO, «Main Office, 261 Broadway, New York. To seach South New York take Municipg! Ferry at Battery and change at St. George to Stiver Lake trolley, Property comer Jewett Ave. and Richmond urnpike, Open every day, including Sunday. ‘ 3, aroha

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