The evening world. Newspaper, March 1, 1911, Page 5

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4 }, DOROTHY ARNOLD'S FAMILY EXPECTS STARTLING NEWS Hopes to See Missing Girl or Learn Her Fate Within a Few Days. ALIVE} MOTHER THINKS. = s Police Also Declare She Will? Turn Up When Ready— Excitement at Home. There was noticeable excitement and | expectancy to-day among members of | the family of missing Dorothy Arnold a@t her father's home, No. 108 East | Seventy-ninth street, Frifnds of the) family were told that important news| was expected there at any time within | the next two or three days, Not even) to the most Intimate of given the reasons for the crease of activity, but they were led to} infer that it had to do with the recent | mysterious night trips of Join W. Ar-| the elder of ‘Dorothy Arnold's Miss nold's younger sister, told a friend to- day that she was so sure of receiving | Marjorie Arnold, Dorothy Ar- Ws of the greatest linportance soon | that she had asked the maangor of the telephone company to take espectal| Pains to keep the wire into the Ar- nold homes free of all interruptions and any possibility of eavesdropping through crossed circuits. Despite Wenials of the family that any tangible grounds exist for the be- lief that Miss Arnold is alive, it ie known that the detective agencies which have been employed to hunt for the girl have received reports from their operators which contradict any theory of suicide, accidental death or foul play. Girl Alive, Says Detective. “Dorothy Arnold is alive and will show up when she wants to,” said the head of one of the detective agencies employed by the lawyers, “I don't know where she is, and don't believe any of the family does etther, but I am Satisfled that some day she will put in an appearance. There is nothing to show that she was the victim of foul or has committed suicide, Young | women are not kidnapped on Fifth ave- je against their will, especially in the Afternoon, The girl Ig merely hiding.” Whea Commissioner Flynn's suicide statement was put up to hia he sald: “I would be a fool to say the girl) committed suicide and have her show distant Weigh Hy 8 brings us down to the fact that the girl is probably alive and wilt up when she wants to.” ers of the Arnold famtly do not 1 Kiving opinions about the fate The father has maintained the outset, and with obvious gin- that his da@ughter has been a n of foul play, He has advanced the idea that Dorothy was kidnapped on Fifth avenue and was then slain to conceal the original crime. John W. Arnold, the elder brother, also has sald he believes his sister is dead, but his assertions to this effect have been half-hearted. Mrs. Arnold attended a suffrage meet- tng a few days ago and heard a speaker declare that Dorothy Arnold had been | Kidnapped and taken to a disorderly fhouse and was held there against h will. Thereupon she ostensibly adopte that her own theory, disagreeing with other members of the family who had said Dorothy was dead gel A Atak STOPS RUNAWAY HORSE oint. all of the girl from AT EDGE OF THE RIVER. |" Policeman Downey, of the East One Hndred and Twenty-sixth street station, was dragged a block by a runaway horse this morning and managed to stop the animal as hie was about to wwe into Harlem River. The horse, Bleier, vakers, of No seventh street, and Lynch, of No, a6 street, fr One Hundre owned by automobile at | ‘orw-firet street and 1 and the animal was dently making for river. Dow gontrol a fc Lynch was brulsea REPORTED AS ELOPING, HARVARD MAN WEDS. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, March 1—The Boston papers published a stateme: yesterday announcing the nt Hiram Glass of Poruand, Ore,, ss and h R and another couple had just gone to Nashua. N. H., on an automo bile tour. Young Glass reached Nashua at by C. A. and Mrs Mas noune they good, and noon, had been fasued, tH » residence of the Geor Soper, where the knot | aan Day of Lent. Ash Wednesday, t hy » the r 2 lamb nt, It is al blest « tae lamb and the lion subdued, Possibly the lion has eaten the lamb and is therefore quiescent, If this #0, Leo has forgotten that this is the frat j forty fish days, ORIGINAL FASHIONS FOR # # a at HOME DRESSMAKERS | TWOPOLGENEN 222.93" All questions concerning de: a tio of mental trout when 16 signs and ™") ong naif yards wide and tuck the top| GREAT BRITAIN ACTS. (10 ttt wor sestardas sites terials of dresses of the marquisette lay x woaid $28) —_——. H » had retired early, but during + be ad-) feet & full fcha om the waist shire i ibi ad of night he ped from be should be se |on the shoulders and trimmed on the ; Steamship Magnate Prohibited From Paving, bed threatened to | o baht oe i ere with yeilow chiffon rose buds. A| Entering Country—May Cause | every body in the he H ashion — Eqito ii — 7 | International Row. Steamat a Helper § ee aaeees tn plece in che front of ihe waist ROTTERDAM, Holland, March 1-| Jamon MeGral, ateautiter, of | Ce Ne Bate xt ob iateevaie;| Rudoigh B, Tinsley, difector of the | Soguire yeti uate eearee sade Pi H q i Q Guire of the same ad » Were bad- 3H te a ser de rea tin could form @) Uranium Steamship Line, who !@ now| ly turned to-day when the Velen nein Mie ne in thie column is Gopr lei Habl Boas peahtblted| 4romi Fes | Moliee thoy. were tadcne Ct 70 Man- can be obtained, but with the description furnished it is a simple matter to work out pat- terns. \ DESCRIPTIONS. Cotton votle d immed wi the wa 88 in clover top pink, th a yoke of cream ind also a deep y skirt. Straps of pink satin rit much deeper shade of pink are la the shoulders, passing under and yoke on the skirt, but dimly through it, and hanging below in long ends, knotted near the bottom, Cording of the material strung with the deep pink fints okes, “sleeve bands, belt a Dress of plain and fig made very simply with th sleeves in one of the figured and gathered at belt line into a with a shirring showing bi e 1s of plain shirred ng at the nek undersleeves are of the same. h fits the hips plainly, is of t with a d band of the tiom. The silk cord and tassels ng from the belt Ine give a trim- the s embroider dropping over nvo.dered 1p Knees to encircle thi viting on the edge of t nand of the e t line to the fr is finished out with panel narrow je lavender chiffon avender silk and gestions for the 1 xathered or pleated 1 the chiffon will ular or gored GRACE. Chiffon skirts are usually made on as straight nes ag possible, and a cir- cular one would never hang well. You | had best gathey it slightly, but have the silk lining fit close over the hips. | Dear Fashion Faitor | r ty and dance dress, do you! ink nite sills te with a ellow messaline vould make up wall, T thoug & with a band of inse t yard wide, w 1 T make. the skirt, and ma 6 top. Also What kind e do you think T should for the skirt. ‘The populer kt tyle of wa ing to me, and T hesitate ft that way. Tam twent CEYLON TEA THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAROH 1, 1911, MANIAC FIGHTS | FILLING FRENCH CABINET, | PREMIER COMES TO HALT. experiencing some difficulty in forming & Ministry, but ht Is expected that he Will Announce his definite acceptances of the Premiership to President Fallieves | during the day, and it is possible that he will make known his associates to- | night } Former Premier Ribot has deciined the proffer of the Ministry of Foreign cenenitjenins Three Out - of - the - Ordinary Costumes for the House, With Novel Effects. "AND FOUR OTHERS Boarders Look Look Hetplesty On While Crazed Man Drags ye, Affati and nator Raymond Poin. | Bluecoat to Open Window. | catre, to whom thin porttlte was nese | offered, has A that he will give bis | dectaton Tate Screams from @ tenement-house in| M, Calllaux has dofinttely accepted the post of Minister of Finance. He in the same capacity In the C Cabinet. Last night M. M corner on the |R0UNCed that M. Delcasse had accepted sid hin | {2 Portfollo of Marine and M. Berteaux ng to wi) iat Of War, As he was dashing about Mf No, uz Parla in @ motor car today on his mis- net making, M. Monis, who Lorimer street, Williamsburg, stort!y before 3 o'clock this morning brought Policeman Conrad Jones of the Stark served nenceau + an. street station around t run, A man rushed up and that @ lunatic was threate: every one on the third ‘1 Lorimer street. ove his identity, , When the policeman entered the apart: en route to the Hf a ps wheal ha ee Sara Strosins . jment of Mrs. Sara Strosinsk lceman, who summoned the chauffeur | found the woman and her four » to court for violating the speed reguia huddled in a corner, while Joseph The new Pre tions. | Lenatsky, another boarder, was standing | over them and flourishing « carving | | knife, Jones quickly disarmed the man, | but next instant Lenetsky caught the policeman around the walet, and began | dragging him toward the low |The four men, whom he h the lunatle's fury, en att after a te t ony yelled a | ps Of! Phe police of er station their voices, but made no to helps sent out a gene early this the policeman. The lunatic was pos-| qiorning for Rose lL. Neugent, 17 years |seased of great strength, and he had ‘ Ma Weatchaster asa ucceeded in forcing oman's 3 n missing since Mond: head and shoulders out of the window | itor disappearance was reported by her | before aid came. | brother Eawin | The yells of the boarders coupted | Sith Waa cbs 4 as weighing about | with Mrs, Strosinsky's shricks had been| 199 pounds, ix 5 feet 6 inches in helght heard by Patr Jacquillard, whol fas dark complexic 1-batr, wore a came bounding into the room, just when| black coat, pink ¢ 1 black hat it seemed that Policeman J would | with white feathers be dropped to the street by the mania He sprang across the room and caught | Oo Ss T ° Ss Lenetsky by the throat Then the boarders came to life. Jenetsky gave | |the rescuers a nard tus put the |finally broke his hold on Jones, who T HU RS D AY | fell to the floor exhausted DRESS SALE | Lenetsky then broke from Jacquiilara One of those Smart, Fashion- | | and grabbed up the c c able Spring Dresses, forwhich the | POST Store is gaining renown, | will be offered in to-morrow's | ned sale at a price that usually pre- | | Hospital, where he was removed in a |Vails at the close of the season. | > | etraitjacket, | It is simply unequaled for) | Mrs. Strosinsky said that Lenetsky, correct style, superb tailoring and | | who is twenty years old, and a va nisher by trade, had given no {ndica- | beautiful material. but the policeman’s ch flying across the room top of the lunatic th while Mrs. Str nd sat o osinsky sumi an ambulance from the Kings County thin, Would Ike to have the waist aed nat M neck and short sleeve. E Your combination of materials eae ‘be very pretty, and the lace on ti skirt you cogla make of some all-over with a set figure in it, edged with Cluny bending Make the satin skirt two ai /HOLLAND BARS TINSLEY; turning to Holland, Thie drastic az-|hattan street blew cut. Bo tion of the Dutch a@thorities is the out- is enveloped. tn Keorveen poeple come of the tramsatiautlo emigrant Pa ERO Hood SW ene Hi traMe dispute which arose from Ger- | vefusal to permit Russians r from America aboard the steamer Volturno to pass through Ger- | many | Dro aeree ie wide! Tinsley t# @ Fritish subject. The of yollow eatin, while tiny | Order of the Crown forbidding his pres- | centre/ence in Holland was received this| morning by the Chief Commissioner of | the square Dutch neck and pjice, It 1s based upon the law gov- 4 short tunic on the skirt | ering tho residence of foreigners in jma ake a dress of {ne slosed sample fn ‘pale j yellow, and what would be pretty. trim: |ming, not too expensive? Am sev¥entee }and slender. A U.N. || Make your drese with waist and sleeves in one, tucked over the shoul- aye lively feet ward zest Wa heat (ta liane That we love best.” ged with embroidered net and! frnisna Gm SReleleees LONDON, March 1.—Sir Alan John- Dear Fashion Fator stone, British Minister at The Hague, You want what al of Irish linen (tan) to| reported to the Forelgn Office to-day make a dress, Will you please suggest | the aétion of the Dutch Government in you want. what to trim it with UZZLED. |excluding from Holland Rudolph 4B. Wido bands of Cluny lace would| ‘insley, a British subject and director And you are the only combine well. of the Uranium Steamsnip Company, a E 7 Franklin Simon & Co Fifth Avenue-—37th and 38th Sts. SPECIAL SALE THURSDAY Marquisette and Voile Dresses of Washable Cotton Marquisette or Voile in plains dotted or bordered materials, embroidered in White, coral or Copenhagen Blue, real lace trimmed. 1450 1850 24.50 Values $19.75 to $34.60 Hand Made Dresses Dainty Lingerie Dress of white French Batiste, hand em- | | broidered in Copenhagen blue, rose, lavender or all white, trimmed with real baby Irish lace and real Cfuny insertion. Value $29.50 18.50 $2 TO 44 BUST. 14 TO 20 YEARS. od. Constable ‘ THURSDAY, MARCH 2ND s Special Sale of Women’s Glace Kid Gloves 78 Two clasp overseam; Colors, Black, Grey, Mode and Tan, Pair, Value $1.25, Men’s Imported Balbriggan Underwear, Spring weight, full regular made, shirts 14 sleeve in all sizes, Drawers in sizes from 30 to 38. Value $1.75, per garment, “Long Wear” Hose for Men, Colors, Black, Tan, Navy and Grey; sizes 934 to 134. Box of 6 pairs for 95 a Men’s Four-in-hand-Searfs Value $1.00, one to decide it. Don't be side-tracked Britisn concern. Communications on the subject are being exchanged tween the capitals, Dear Fashion Editor: kindly advise me how to = of inclosed sample? Also OO fe what ‘kind of trimming? Am thirty | 2 - by any so-called “Just. | years old, but look much younger, being Stam’s Tribute to King. Weg tice | small and slender, Would like the dress| WASHINGTON, March 1—Slam ts as-good or “same | for evening and possthle street wear. | paying its tribute to the late King of thing” when you ask that country ‘by carrying out one of = Your material is the same as A. UW. his cherished ideas the erect t for Red Cross hospital and the enlar ment of Mahadlek College, founded the deceased monarch, according to ad vives received by the State Depart Combhile, | $7.98 i ie eters pune A Remarkable $12.50 Value. ov MB. | by idl ceths BEC whith. wa Sou The dainty hand-embroidery and I auggest making the skirt slightly eatablehod in Slam in, 18d, Empire helt and plain over the hips, with a soparate panel in the back of | material could not be had for less than So Oy Pp the price POST asks for the entire dress Charmingly fashi d along the i heavy cream cll-over lace, edged on the iniara iano quate he lines tei eth ball fines Mabe. the. aay 14H 9 ju a just approved by the great Paris de waist and sleeves in one, of the ma- andi ng else is the lineators-—filled with spirit of Spring did value overflow except another can ¢ Style { with sple terial, with t | bust and under th © Campbell’ Lace Yoke, Kimono Sleeves, Soutache hangs from this , ; ; Trimming “new panel Froat Skit |ishes the bolt line, Lace If you've ever eaten it the correct close-fitti oils uh | match the all-over edges the neck and you know this alread Exquisite Panamas lai s in from which also hangs the ball And if youhaven't you are fall the Spring Coloris st d by ae missing the best thing of its ele Ab alaee : VICE-PRESIDENT PUGH | kind made—until youtry it. Aiteraiions PR OF “PENNSY” RETIRES. | 21kinds 10ca can oJ. L. POST . —e Justadt hot x Cor, 14th Street Miving row the retiring age of bring to a boil, seventy Cha Edmund and serve, Vice-President of th Pugh, First Penrsylvenia H oad and an In Afty other cor snee Camvanny with the Pennsy!l- . opined his activitios yes- Camden N J for the company Jpen Lyenings Until 9 o'Clo a per fifty-one yeare ‘and Look for the F venlngs Unsil9 o'Clock, n 7 stlowed on all cash sales red-and-white ~ McCrea and the directors red a reception to Mr, Pugh sast label ht in the board r n of the Broad sfati Philadelphia, Omedts f the system journeyed affectipn for thet WISS! = PiAict: are recognized by many as the Best Ask your grocer about ns * WRITE FOR CATALOGUE ‘ ° MAILED PRE EDDYS GRAND RAPIDS FURNITURE E E CREDIE Kits | J LLI Ss Piano in existence, and the only $30 Worth $3 ivory Piano worthy a place among the He knows them; he knows us, representative achievements of mod. We mean that YOU shall} ern times. To substantiate our be better acquainted, — too. | gy im, we freely encourage pros ' “Cooked in Kettles rective buyers togcompare all other a | Lined with Silver,” pianos with a Wissner Grand P Heat, ano in Upright Form, WAKERU LAS: 06 6th nee cor, 16th Si., 636-540 Fulton St., Broo! OPEN SATURDAY eben. Red Currant, Grape, Quince, Rasp- berry, etc. Select Fruit, home-made Style, at your GROCER’S, B, Pritehard, Maker, 1417- 1423 THIRD AVE 3° AVE: 805 1 Spring St. HE CASE OF THE LEVER KEY is the Title of the Detective Book to be given FREE with Next Sun- ' day’s World. # # % This Ad- venture of the Great London Detective is another Complete Story which leads tothe eventual solution of the Mystery of the Red ‘Triangle, the gruesome thark associated with these thrilling Adventures We Order Next Sunday’s World from your newsdealer NOW. The supply is limited and the demand great. ON eR ORE TE TE a weacenadncomen

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