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Eo HUSBAND SHED Ty WOMAN WHO. | aro Tailor Deported From Canal Zone When He Went for Ervii Ng < Spouse DESERTED Winkel Almost / Be Read LOVER a Citizen a: ed—Wile, before > Mar vouch, i Ne inform: Tandlich Se Gecide to admit MWDLUITIEWRE = MASKEDBATTERY, HUSBAND ASSERTS. Tells Court She Threw Beer (1) Glasses and Crockery at His Head. A mixture of beer glasses, flour and i . nh Theodore A. P. Carney wis ne emeerts his pretty young wife, Wilza ais beth, hurt pers), i. turbed for! and 1 Ma eeparation ty Tus. “ie tee Mew'a!! taand to-a A "Yes, 9 was that T hay fa true, ever me, pulled m arled ¢ @aucers at m beer, kill Mrs. nered, Vagel, and ‘ho: togiy du The couj Jersey in tur years old, Mrs. Carn: A coun sult fo t c > vem Worry IL to the ed Bandlock’s aluil and 4! \ pew a a ban ! X TaD i tea THE EVENING WORLD, ‘PATROLMAN, GOES ~ ATER SUPERIORS Orders Charges Against ( > aps tain and Four Lieutenants at Far Rockaway. ‘MADE FALSE ENTRIES. McGann Recorded “On Duty” When He Was on Vacation With O'Connor. Porice Commissioner Cropney began Mgwing into the affairs of the Far Rockaway police station to-day when Meann, Acting Captain Josept O'Con- nor'a wardiman, and orfered that charges ‘bo drawn against O'Connor and four of his lieutenants MoGann was charged with having @ Long Teland Rati- ne forged pass on the road in hia possersion, and after had pleaded gullty to the « was summarily dismissed force. The lieutenants detailed to precinct, who will be trie charge! with making false entries of MoGann's ‘ours of duty, are William M. Sulll- van, seventy years old, for forty yeara a wergeant and lieutenant; Janes M. | Wheetwr John J. Higgins and | John Kiernan. The evidence upon which the Com missioner began to rake over the offi- cere in the Far Rockaway precinct was obtained by Lieut. Dante! Costigan, het ter known aa “Honest Dan” Inspector Russell's conf Costigan learned th tn possession of a Long Island ade out in the name of Policeman John J. Malone, No, 317 No such policeman has ever been on the force as far as the records show On Duty, Though Away. Costigan also learned that Metkinn, ng Capt street si Far Rockaway, went away on hie tlon to Mt. Clemens, Mich, with O'Con nor last December During four of the days that he was with Capt. O'Connor he was entered in the station | blotters as on duty and drew pay for the time Commissioner Cropsey examined peg po thepsieyl fn grent detail ‘ t Mt ntries on the bl ‘ jess areca lived in the police atation 1 rf Fe they fell into the habit of entering Didi’t Mishehave With Thre |nim ae present. When cornered, tie ” | witnesses fell back on the excuse that 1 tf Menrbers of Pinochle Club, [they might have made the entries ra r 1 [terse @n oversight. After white |hatred Lieut, Sullivan had testified | got up and pleaded fn @ quavering “T ask clemency and mercy, sioner, and I know you will will be fore’ grateful end after is is over I will retire. The reason I am | the Department at my age !s that I he ason wie is etudying to bea priest. | | intended to retire as goon as he See Vicious Roan | | ordained." No Promises of Clemency Commissioner Cropsey replied | to the oh man that he could no’ any promises of clemency. “se were Police Commissioner,” he adie | “wouldn't you be proud of such lteu- mR 160 BUSTER DYN 1 APTER FALL Com show 4 adic Devil Fall Backward on Goldie St. Clair. saetis 1 LADELPHIA, April 18—~Gotate st. |e ting Capt. O'onnor wa hiss pion woman Proncho |! catted he admitted that he had sanc of the world, fs probably dying| tioned the entry of Mec: the at a “Wild West" show en-| rolls as performing poll here. She was crushed by| they were riding toget!: 4 famous man-killing mare, | train bound for New York from Mount matinee performance yeater-| Clemens. Avited why he had done » @ horrifled audience of | this, O'Connor replied | “Rossibly ft was an oversight." delirious on a cot,| Ifeut. Kiernan, when ques big cowboy husband,| about the false entries retort in-flanked, wall-| he wae" eying orders.” 1 beast, te aocurely |i ae narecs against oConnor at ‘ (she by any chance aur- |" phis ts a Kreat police depart Fitz. | Hiss St, Clair will try again) said the Commissioner to Insert it 4 she ly. "Whav's the matter»! ‘ b}die, w 7 i parintnty inct down e? Are the officer th 1 roralined? cs cs a familiar end ane 1 f man/figure w ws for th ft an 5 ar: | As r © earned | ecieann wl for tm vie aoe | TRIES DEATH THREE WAYS, FALLS HEADING FOR FOURTH | Brooklyn Man Found Dyi Railroad Crossing Oppos TUESDAY, APRIL he tried and Droke Patrolman Hugh By sy ted tha for Aged Women wit ‘ MF ‘i an t t « « t la hundred foet of the railroad tly to ¢ jing at Park ay Tama and ¢ . the Hol Von { ’ a “ ¢} both wrist ad dra arbol!: | ,, acid. Ho vered by a duc. | t gyi Mato: for the Long Island Ratiroad, and| 0 ri from the position of his body it 1» be- | we Neved he hea for the mad ‘gh pom crushed her head 42 By ty SPELLS WELCOME, |* [track to 1d a fou » the va 1 WHIT See ft —_ Chureh Soetety to Give reet will present the tdow 18, CROPSEY BREAKS pes and Beauty Need ‘SUES TOPREVENT More Than Money and \\QMEN PLAYING Waistline, Sa jays mae | Mrs. For ‘Deeien Women of New York Have the ‘‘Figures’’ but Not the Brains Neces-' sary to Make the Most of Them. Must Stop Copying Clothes of Those With- out Modesty of Rai-| ment or Character and Use Individual Taste. “Elegant fashions for women a1 ead. To satisfy the feminine cra ing for change, @resemakers have been launching innovations bitnd- ly, Withont reasoning, they step in where angels fear to tread. Or- fginality? yes, but style?—never! “The customer of the dressmaker should be dressed as carefully ae the artist paints @ picture. To re- Produce exactly the same style for varying typos of wearers ie the work of @ mechanic. The dress- maker should clothe each woman According to what suite her.” These words of wisdom have {ust fatlen from the ips of Jean Worth, Worth of Paris, The Great Worth, But the famous dressmaker waa natu- rally Speaking with his own city én closest perspective, Would he have said there were no exqu feminine fashions if he had seen New York's Faster parade? t the question yesterday to Mra Harriet Edwards one of the best known writers on toptes of dress In this ctty “There are many very charmin fashions to be found in the shops, fhe said. "But there are few women pare cl ugh to find thom. “The average New York woman whom one meets on tho streetn tu less well-dressed, from the view- points of style and benuty, than well as she did five or ten | ipes and trimming ning to give ears ago. ~» Ladue "E walked’ up Pitth avenue the other | Re" the he slinest of Grapery rather then | PIANOCO. day with a friend, frankly on the look- 4 close fit. n she should be particu: | Pe) y Established 1861 out for really smart women. Do you! larly careful about her 1 and el- | know that from Twenty-third street | bows. If she wants to wi half-length to Fitty-ninth we saw just two really Sleeves le bbe Ure, Fb Rieder well-dressed women! was getting out What “But why t# Amertoan have good much to do with at “Our women have figures, many of thom have money, but thoy haven't tho intelligence required for good dressing. One necds brains, as well as a waist line and shoulders, to wear one's clot well. “Th And one of @ motor car!” Is Lacking. T asked re 60 women ts what Wo exactly, means, when he speaks of 4 innovation’ and ‘the feminie craving for c his ts tho situation tn a nutshell, A ve t of French dressmaker, Ly r yan at tle point of view, somo start ling novelty w exactly sults t taste of certain theatrical ladies and GTS of not too refined tastes, The: women put on the new costumes, Ike a floc ailly sheep, perfect! respectah nartist! stupid adopt the ode. "If the women of New York would atop copying the clothes and even the make-up—for it's come to that now—of the class that makes no pretensions to modesty, either of raiment or character, wo might see Ny beautiful cos times on our streets.” Need Hand of Expert Hale’s Honey Of Horehound and Tar For Coughs and Colds Free ty Toathache Diops (m Qae Ninute Marguerite Mooers Marshall. | | figures, “However, there i) nothing to pre- | Vent the fat woman from looking well, | Use the old reliabic H “THEPIPER” ROLE Physiques Unsuited to the Part} and It Spoils the Play, Says Dougherty, \ w has be kun suit In the @upreme Court to re. strain the New ‘Theatre and Winthrop “i Ames, tts from producing the Play known as “The Piper,” with Eatth Wynne Matthison, or any other wom. | * A an. in the title role, ‘The case will be o | argued Before Justice Hondrick to- morrow, Dougherty who ownae the play, de | cre he @ranted the New Theatre the | caves right to produce t here untti | 1015, but 1 was his understanding the title role would not be played by a|__' | woman, Despite thie, he says, Mise | Matthiaon wae billed as the star in the play for Baltimore and Washington after the regular seagon of the New | Theatre alosed here. He maya the tm fon wae created that Miss Satthison "wan the only y bergen who [ever played the role in question. “Performance of the role by a weman x Sa pty LUAARRLILL ZPWARDS CAVES of the two other types. New York women ent and drink too much and ex- | erclam too little for the good of thelr 6 knows how to dress, particularly | If ahe has good shoulders. Dark Colore for the Stout. “The fat woman thowld always stick to quiet and, generally rpeaking, dark colors, Baby blue and bright red are not for her. She should avotd elaborate trimmings, In fact, any which tend t ure the lines of her costume, These be and ilowing. The fat |woman can make no greater mistake than to wear her clothes too tight- | fitting, ‘That only emphasizes what | | she would conceal. She should always | [atick to the haif-ftting lines that blur | | | | | must jong | and conceal her own bad one | “In stripes she must be careful, or | ling tone-quality, fascinating to she'll look like a barber's pole. She | for pianos taken in exchange. should avotd all broad eirtpes and | choose only the fine, broken ones, Fi- nally, and Jot her shun large, loose sleeves hort skin makes, value $350.00. late seem to have been | for the very thin wo once of | Empire and ty and the exoessively narrow But, if she t: at all inetined to | ‘be tall, #he should avold longitudinal | above, rw elbow-joint rather than just And let her scrupulously avold Dutch neck. The collar- » showing @ long expanse of | throat, 1% extremely unbe- | i the in-be' too f tween fk- Mt nor too halt up the isters and | and prin What if you put t ae CAPT. L. L. SQUIRE DEAD AFTER A SHORT ILLNESS, Several new Mahogany Upright Pianos, of other :, Bemi-Centennial Sale Price, $10 Cash——$5 Monthly——No Extras “Sunkist”. ‘Oran Seedless—Fibreless—Juicy and Sweet—A Perfect Fruit Five thousand California orange farmers, raising 60 per cent of the state's entire select, each season, their perfect eran fleld from which male actors ot 9 in the play ean be 4 and to circumscribe the selection . mala performers, 4 his pravents a first class performance of the play,” Dougherty oe Dougherty s The Piper* te man of great refinement | Boned tobe a vd large human sympathy, and the perwon cant > howid pot be obliged “to manr riems and artifictalitios tn an effort to depict adult | Manhood, which im inevitable with @ | weeee in the part.” f ae 5 Vain Exterminator Guaranteed to FEL RATS &MICE ‘The Government Uses It Sold AUL Over the Worl “Sat Rf Bed Bugs (Guarantemt) KILLS INSTANTLY : ia Not Stain the Rough on Roaches : Liquid, Guaranteed, i KILLS INSTANTLY rotation | Rough on ~ gxpRough on Fleas KILLS Star 3 wes, Siar w At S.A, 4 A SUPPLEMENTAL OFFERING OF 50 Pelming Pianos and Player-Pianos at Reductions Ranging from $50 to $150 The most remarkable values ever offered; all the newest designa of Grand, Upright and Player-Pianos in magnificent Mahogany, Wal- nut and Oak, rare woods—each instrument possessing a rich, sparke- the ear, Liberal allowance made Very convenient terms. 185.00 If you have any intention of buying a Piano or Player-Piano, don’t miss this chance. 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