The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1911, Page 5

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wt FOL OFFASHON ATURDAY. NovanneEr woeute aie bela licen a ae nena Kites ate ann cme rh” at aly. ap alls aly aba la | Prom by the spread of masses over pp bite: ey dint movement has even more hearty from sociologists and philan' because it would reauit in a vast detter- ment of home condtions, Taxpayers Welcome it bechuse {t would relieve the city of spending money which It needs | j for other things and because the city could not do the work in the short time necessary, All are working for en im- mense suburban expansion. NO CASH IN OPERA GARB. Ellot Gregory, author and aftist, was leaving the Metropolitan Opera House late lest night when he learned that his coachman, Michael Pedeterdot. had Deen arrested. Mr. Gregory hurried to the West Thirtieth atreet station and learned the coschman hed been taken Dame Fashion's Toll--a Tragedy of . CONGESTION as, GREATEST NUMBER im CIV FACIES, pp” tees BEE So Says Katharine Fullerton Gerould, Writing of Trag- edies in Dress. SAME FOR FAT AND THIN, Transit Lines, Living Quarters, Courts Show Urgent Need of Home Expansion. MUST MOVE TO SUBRUBS Te t40 ; . Part is WAT | Immense Population Overflow FAT wouen " WAVE TO WAAR Cannot Wait for Slow aos rea over Work on the Subways. Poor, Woman Must Look a “Travesty on the Success- ful Chorus Girl.” Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “The most damning thing about fashions is that they make in- “The poor woman with intel- Ugence must content herself with looking a travesty on the success- fal chorus girl.” “E have known tragedies in smallish American cities that be- Gan and ended in dress. Katharine Fullerton Gerould, a wetl- known essayist, thus cleverly pleads tho fn the ways of her #ex, has chosen a subtler castigation, she seems to say, with a le, “you may be willing to ly or jmmorally or inde- cently, but, pray, do you wish to loox Bins. “From the earliest ti {t ts the fer from the chorus that it is eas- ier for @ camel to pass through the mecdie’s eye than for anything really ohio to exter the kingdom of heaven. “It ig not, however, with the moral Aspect of fashion that I am concerned, and money buys are adulterated, or sewing women are starved, or shop-!| Girls seek the primrose path, or hug-! bande die of the strain in the early) forties. REALLY “@ooD” MILLINER | MAKES 100 PER CENT. PROFIT. “To much the same music, the. New. York customs offic an elaborate melodrama on the enip pi We know that from ‘near- geal’ to ‘uearsiik’ the poor will sacrifice comfort to cut and that a really ‘good’ milliner makes a profit of 100 per cent. Yet they have only, it would seem. to qniist a few other facts, as good as their own, to be quite sure of success.” And then Miss Gerould launches one of her own little thunderbolts of fact. have become the foes of beauty. They The most damning thing about fashions is that they make inevitably, wine years out of ten, for the greatest ugliness of the greatest number. “Can anything be more absurd Jaw. than to impose a sin style on the fat and the thin, on the mini- mum wage and the maximum in- come. “[ admit that no fashion has been crogted exp: for purse or for the fat woman. Ty maker's ideal 1s undoubtedly the thin millionairess. But the fat woman and the lean purse must make the dest of each style, in turn, as it comes along. ever THOSE WHO DRESS CHEAPLY MUST BE IN STYLE. ‘Then Miss Gerould puts her finger on gnother horn of the dress dilemma, “Xt is one of the few true para- poor woman with imtelligence who seoretly desires s garment that both elude the exaggerations of the present fashion and foreshadow the ‘essentials of the next, That is another thing that every woman knows, “The hypothetical poor woman with intelligence must content herself witn looking @ travesty on the successful chorus girl Tits, unfortunately, she have intimated, the principle of the Miss Gerould goe: fegim over, Recently we have | simply ‘dressed woman could be {1 | severely wrenched internally. THE SHOP Giku Goes WITH SCANTY LUNCH 30 SHE CAN BE FASHIONABLE been known ti now f «@ silk dress that could somehow manage to run.” Then the writer touches @ pecullarly feminine grief. “There is no reward in the world of Decullarly bitter In watohing the super- seding of @ mode that wholly eults one, NEVER STICK TO ONE STYLE MORE THAN A YEAR. “Now and then a woman confides to and fresh zest for life. She keeps to gance of the moment. “The fact is that we are all un- comfortable if we are not fashion- ably dressed. The American wom- te izcome is alter. gratulated on her and scolded for her But the fact & she can clotho herself each season 2 way that both to her and to ‘would have looked preposter- twelt onth before. myself @ known women whose fathers carried dinner pails and whose husbands have never even stopped to! regret that their own education ended with the grammar sch4o! course, who simply did not feet that the shabbily or, thetr | known traged! in) mallish American cities that began and ended tn dress. 1 dress, why not In- are widely adaptable) to different materials, to different oc-| casions, to different human types? It} ticular and publi But we won't ould knows It. “There would be so tremendous a chance for any one who wished to form dress in the interest of beaut, ge, and Miss Ger-| called bedlams! it = DECORATORDYING, HURT IN HOME OF MRS. HUNTINGTON Man Fell Eighteen Feet in But, oh, the pity of seven years 4 St. James pla death in Flower ie es Which he re ived while at work with him and sometimes atopped at the gtove to see him, in the rungs. His skull was fracaured and both} legs broken in several places, He was He was hurried to Flower Hospital and Mra. Huntington gave instructions that he should have every attention monoy could procure, ‘ of Borre's family should he not reco’ She seemed to feel a direct responsib! ity for hie injury because she had sisted on hjs doing work that his ag had caused fhm to stop, except at her | house, ?| game, 1OEAL BEATTIE 10 REST SHOT TO DEATH Police Will Keep Crowds Away From Cemetery During Bur- ial To-Morrow. tery, beside the wife for whose murder he paid the penalty in the electric chair yesterday. Because of a city law forbidding the burial of a person executed for murder It became known to-day that Beattle prepared a much longer confession than the one ultimately signed, but on the advice of his spiritual advisers finally decided on the brief admission of guilt. To-day, os last night, the Beattie fam- | ity 48 alone with its arte. The window | shades are drawn tight and no move- ment is seen about the place, Neighbors and fellow townsmen who would like to offer a word of sympathy have re- mained away in respect to the wishes of the family, as expressed by H. C. Beattle sr. when he sent word out by his daughter, Hazel, last night: “My son as paid a terrible penalty for @ terrible 1 beg to be left alone with him now. There 1s much satisfaction in the Ex- ecutive mansion over Beattie’s acknowl- knowledge that he was being regarded 43 4 inan of nerve. He liked to be called ‘The last visible expression of his face Was the smile that appsared when he entered the death chamber end It was not his first view It reaches the in- is Omega Oil, ‘ough the pores of the skin, | stops the pain, and reduc: the preins and inflammation. Trial bottle 10s, Largs bottige asc. & 50m CIVIL WAR RECOR SAVES HIM FROM Friend Who Knew Old Sea of John A. Woods, retired #ea captain, a Lieutenant in the Confederate Army, and recently @mployed as @ watchman on the company's pier, who dropped car during the Brooklyn Bridge rush. in @ furnished room at No. 3 Lefferts place, Brooklyn. After his death yes- terday his body was taken to th Morgue, awaiting the coming of rela. tives, Early to-day, a mysterious tele phone call was received by Mrs, Per- kins, who conducts the lodging-house where the old captain lived. The voice on the wire told the landlady to prepare the dead man's room for a burtal, ae all arrangements with the undertaker had been made, Later, the call was found to have come from Mrs. I. 8, Plate of No, 311 Sterling plave, Brooklyn. An Evening World reporter talked with Mrs. Plate, who said: Fifth Avenue Hotel. I know he has two! sons in Chicago, who are prosperous, | and as soon as we can get in touch, with them, they will bury him. 1 could not see such a fine old gentleman go to Real estate operators ate getting ready for another big overflow of population fate mew home sections. that spend the winter in town, The capacity of Manhattan and the nearer suburban districts 1s taxed close to the Mmit. Transit lines are carrying all of the passengers that they can handle comfortably. Congestion is growing every week in [oh mapobes the older city. In Harlem the Soe population is being crowded be- yond all former density. Nearly a mil- Indications point to @ continuance of swift growth in both business and home sectior Competition for housing ac- commodations everywhere promises to hold rents firmly at prevailing high this week over @ new demonstration for adoquate rapid-transit construction. It fg recognized that pending subway projects will not meet the urgent needs of metropolitan expansion. Mayor Gay- nor stated yesterday that the city would not have the capital available to finish hor with economic considerations. Some ond, the L I Capt. Wi e within probably | mond, the Long Island and Westchester statistician every month proves to us| B } aia ter tia) fam three: genre, Svea sae Prin aresan $s0te: This te because |#UbUurbs, Realty interests in those something appalling; that ‘since our! fortably with her equals unless Ral bee coy tions are uniting with taxpayers in the the city nas undertaken to finance §200,- 000,000 uf subway construction with only $35,000,000 to be contributed from outside sources, Taxpayers believe that the subway Ucally all of the subway construction. poards of brokers in those sections and civic bodies are ready to exert thelr in- fluence to get the rapid transit situation into more definite shape. Most of them realize that current ‘op municipal construction may be ot | burtal which ts | cent. higher than ruling market prices. alleged extra borrowing capacity is flo- ayatem shoukl be completed within five years in order to prevent the develop- ment of serious congestion. Yet they do not want the city to put its own money into auch big work, mainly be- cause the city has not the legal priv- flege of raising such @ sum within the required time and partly because it van make use of outside capital for prac- Representatives of taxpayers in the a ut taxpayers intend to show that this Creer He waa re-elected president of the tittous and that additional municipal bonds issued under It would be fllegal. jIt the city cannot raise the money by |bond issues, it cannot build the sub- ways, SERIOUS CONGESTION LIKELY WITHIN FEW YEARS. To get outside capital for the work ‘saturation the technical Increases during the past year. Another yoar of similar rgued, would place city to expansion into New Jersey. McAdoo tract in that Stal sections as far a will be practically of transit time to men as are the Wai Bronx di This wit available in point Janhattan busin ington Heights and ositive menace to the development of Brooklyn, Queens, Rich- ricts, be more central city districts to urge all possible haste in the construction of for northward and eestward HOMESEEKERS READY FOR BIG OVERFLOW TO SUBURBS. @mall homeseekers are ready to over- tance which t:ey are willing to go pro- vial the rapid transit facilities will go with them. Officers of the big lending inetitutions and of the bullding-loan associations said to-day that buyers of small homes in outside districts are in iments, reg- he With new rapid tri On Thanksgiving Day, 100 years ago, most New Yorkers dined on Wild Turkey, shot by the Long Island Indians. 3rd Ave. . Two Stores Park Row Cash or Libera! Credit anemia meanest ————$—$—— Real Estate brokers this w nd evitably, nine years out of ten, sromefrg. | 014 centres aro being crowded worse| they weed te rabbcuin (ee come ii for the greatest ugliness of the | Tather a Napoleonic tendency. Occa- than ever with the return of the masses! paign for lower taxes. Greatest number.” sionally we $30,000 for Charity WE Place It at YOUR Disposal. YOU Say WHERE It Shall Go. and to t prom| construction is the case against Dame Fashion in the cur-| woman's dress for a successful experi- Hon persons live in the istrict boteen| aim of the realty antereste, Full particulars at rent number of the Atlantic Monthly.| ment. The most charming design in the One Hundredth stree' a Harlem river. They point to the fact that tt would be Chari For our sartorial sins magistrate, min-| World has no future. And that {s another i] Hven the district courts are swamped) dangerous, to watt until the city could ity Voting Booth, and moral reformer do frequently for it deprives and were calling for help this week to| finish tho lines ler pending plans arise and verbally smite us, But’ Miss of dressing as Clear thelr rapidly increasing business, | Cause Publlo Service Commi Fourth Floor, Center, Gerould, being wis is something and at Information Bureau, Main Floor, MAIN Building. Also at Information Bureau in our GREENHUT Building, . levels and to raise them sharply in the Main Floor. " me her intention of keeping to some ain Confeder: a dangerous condition. . ae tality: oa kaie 4 that the sex of | Ri, that Is especially adapted to her, Captain as ate Vet hy toed Ls petal ine: Gane of [Pb addition to auch conditions which he has foun at it makes the most oi + prevent proper growth and developmen: the more peaceful pursults has been|all her ‘points; it has given her per- eran Claims Body.. CANNOT WAIT FOR CITY TO ‘New York the more exuberantly adorned haps renewed respect for her appearan: BUILD TRANSIT LINES. metropolitan gone from continued translt Greenhut-Siegel Cooper Co. view of the threatened new con- Risse in th) pe CO etctaallnnd iy eT felebin aha Soe taoks gly Mi avant OMolals of the O14 Dominion Line PrN Maspayere i Bn parts ef, the | Cone sree Ta, open ramming bee a ; its “One is certainly vy Lberty to in. sty’s sake she must adopt the extrava- to-day began a search for the two sons | Greater City have been in conference} row. They Sixth venue, Sth and 19th Streets on each hat. Would pure our streets of mane a vorry | RICHMOND, Nov. %—Arrange ents) = “Capt, Woods was @ dear friend of | Queens, Brooklyn and Richmond | more rapid rate than ever in metropoll jut T very much doubt if either nov-|and sordid spectacle, and 1p that. sense | Were compicted to-day for the burial of| my gather in the old days when the|rre uniting i the new movement, ‘The|tan history, One reason is the Tong- You will be pleased with the comfort and con- elist or statisticlan will turn the trick.| would be an aesthetic service, both par-| Henry Clay Beattle jr. in Maury Ceme-| Confederate Camp used to mi t the term mort we nystem which {s venience of shopping here. Inspection isinvited. The Meriden Company “For not even the cynic,” she sweet. | form arens, in the most amused|in a city c grave. incoanttaly/ segaehs it Ess, bees ¥ would pay Sineremiie ly observes, “will pretend that the real | ang dixgusted of us will, very lkely,| permit, the gove c tain was an officer in the| proven thet the Cy Bee eect my oan ‘4 or house Lesinrge es eres object of fashions is to disfigure. It 18| forever shrink from tho task. ‘There| be appealed to. ‘The ser Contederaia Nays ond hed been captain | Paluae Oe UY os) sauce’ moar bee palace | con TTI ED tates aa a teeaeS 49-51 West 34th Street, New York quite without intention that M. Worth |are two reasons why we shall shrink| will be private. A detail of police win} Of @ dozen seam c “ i je years, on account ‘This used for the purpose of giving | system during the past two decad and 68-70 West 35th Street and Mme, Paquin and all thelr proto- | from it: We should have to begin with! keep all outsiders from the cemetery beeen he hen forced to wark the city, @ borrowing capacity ‘lan oe se ne Stan te types, cong and successors, jourselves, and we should certainly e@| uring the interment, Tils wons ‘in Chi, ‘enough to finance subway construction, Me heuoen ta ali Stern Brothers have in preparation for Monday, November 27th, 2 Meriden Silver for Unhurried Choosing You will find in the Meriden Store a remark- able array of silver. In fact, thousands of possible gifts are here spread out for your admiration and selection. Meriden Silver has been the delight of Amer- ica’s families for over half a century. Its .popularity increases with the years. , An Extraordinary Sale of Cowperthwait 2 Sons _ SUNDAY WORLD = BL AFAUSTIOM OF LE WITOIARNE & BONS [IK Fur and Fur-Lined Garments, . Muffs and Neckpieces ‘And {€ one has ever seen a fat woman edgment of guilt. Gov. lana had wor- ° ele of the most reliable and fashionable furs, at prices a a an P F ried himself into a state of nervous T. k Dose jn a hobble skirt—even in an academte Marble Hall of Fifth breakdown through his fidelity to duty, Everyth ing for ‘pan Ksgiving rarely quoted for corresponding qualities. selilen 2 a halinte aerh-ans nee \ Pal the countless appeals seoeived from Al) that this fs nor a ligt J @ alace. over the country, and the fact that puree, It is not only AVENUE EAE Beattie had been ‘convicted on circum- West 23d and 22d Streets that the working-gt —_——_— srantial evidence, He and the jurore xcept f e uar ey If h juncheons to buy ow now that ey not send an Rome eh Se na: One has known Surrounded bt every attention that soEeeet An He Bis oles ay ” he ere: s, Collis P. Ht Ing- any eve that Beatile $ ena! A » oxi people who must dress at Fifth avenue and Fitty- | O°" our years ago, wh was Ss + ob must dress ‘in style.’ The ,» Wednesday. oi he me th - F om : : chonpest "Signin sveune it, for Witham Baum-|\who made an inspoction of the dean | Even in those primitive times our store supplied the dining room furnishings. - Ong which, ret@y made, costs some- | sarien s iifth avenze,}ehamber and looked over the !strue o ie thing and ninety-eight cents, is [who ha a Lad a con-| ment that yesterday snuffed out his life, a i : AS NOW BEIIK i Gare to be hasty end sicasy tm- [tract to keep the decorations of the |= “|Our origina) Chatham Sq. Store was established in 1807. ws itation (at many removos, and los- mn sion in order, It was stipulated L = ing. something with each) of « im the contract that the work should be | e € Fifth avenue model. And that tse [ie oe orice a week to 10K I aver / 4 hard fate for the hypothetiond [ilo Mifintington frequently consulted [ANTRESS, ‘will be mo more conspicuous next Wednesday Murs. Huntington was not | year than this, and longs to pnt at the house, She is staying tomporar- | Acres of some of her money into good ma- ily at the Plaza Hotel. Aare ws work terials. ing at the top of an eighteen-foot lad- “ _|der In the marble hall, The foot of Floor ce ‘It ts only @ very good (and exper | ih) iaaaer slip and he was thrown vio- | st t. Spa at am qd. ay ITTY fLDON ‘ sive) dressmaker whose handiwork can | onuy to the floor with his legs tangled AT 77 NEW YORK THEATRE NEW YORK FREE Mrs. Huntington went herself to | with $ @omes only.too easily to do. Baumgarten & Co. to express her grief. The first thing to think about “The principle of fashion 1%, a8 1] gne intimated thet she would take care) when you have # sprain or bruise ; Victor Herbert ; Be Re

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