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TOVOLDBIGLNE ® ORLTTLELNA So Boat Sails Away, Leaving | Prench Sfar and Her Troupe 17) on Pier, <j o P. AGENT’S GOAT GONE! Mile. Imperia and Compatriots Get Bennett’s Ibex, When He Tries to See Em Off. “Saokry Bioole!” cried Léns in pan- (omime to her belated “company,” a fhe beat upon her forehead and in- Gulged in che of the most"striking” Bite of realistic pantomiming wit» Benged in New York in @ long time. “Vooty! Veety!” ineisted Lina f~ Pantomime some more, with w’, iy waving arms and willowy, » gi body. That meant “Get a “sbve oi you lobsters!" But th / “veaty-ea" too slowly, ¢ quence is somewhere i ‘etre to-day thre Ja one csahpany of Freeh Bantomimists cor gyed of Lina Im- Deria—pet! MA French—Lucy Ger- ard—ditto—O",“Purina—French only— and Maneree Mf, Vaai—doing realistic pantomir@ all over that thoroughfore and erattering ‘excited French exple- tiver,ran about, while the good ship Pravence, under the command of ga! Ast Capt. Mourand, is rapidly push- fag her nose throug the briny on her way to that dear Pare. There 1s alo ono press agent for the Bhuberts who answers to the name of Whitman Bennett, who ts nuraing a fine case of near-nervour prostration, cursing the day he attowed himeelf to be per- quaded to Jearn French, and occas!onal- Ay catching himself saying that same in pantomtine. “@ackry Bloole’ 5 WERE’S WHAT CAUSED ALL THE BLAWSTED ROW! ‘It all ‘happened this wa; Lina and her troupe came over here to be one of the attractions at the Win- ter Garden, That is, the Shuderts ‘wanted her to be one of the attractions, but Lina thought the troupe, particulure ly herseif, ought to be THE attraction, aed then war began. Sutce the Shuberts refuse to learn Cenversational French and the panto- tmimiets refused to learn English, the duties of a go-between and «eneral fransiator fell upon Whitman Mennett, ‘who prides—or did pride—himscif on his French., He nearly went crazy. The trotipe was bolked for thres weeks, but did not play the full book ing, owing to the difference of optnton between the Shuberts and Mme. Lina} as to the importance of the panto- mime. Ro, after much trouble and more ex- ited French Mr. Bennett escorted the temperamental Lina to the French line pler this morning in plenty of timo to seateh the Provence, while the remainder of the company was left in a French Testaurant breakfasting. As ‘the time for the ship to sail drew near and the “company” did not show up, Lina began to pantomime, At sa:l- ing time, Capt. Mourand—gallant chap— muccumbed to the en'reaties af the pe- Gite Lina and held the gang plank for ten minutes. We was Selng drawn in just as the “eompany" hoVo in sight, bidding fare- wells on the run to numerous friend while Lina pantomimed her foudes? “yeoties" to then, ‘When they arrived, however, Lina 4urned to Gnd the gang plank had been drewn wp, and the Provence being nosed out ito the stream by a fussy Ilttle tug. ‘There was more pattomime and more French the party ran for the end of the pier and hailed the staunch tug, John D. Nichols, commanded by “Big” Ray. Wille Lina pantimimed entreatics Bennett explained the etluation, @0 BOAT SAILED AWAY DESPITE PANTOMIME PLAY. Commander Ray declared the ty ould not reach the Provence unless a wireless message could hold the lner up. So Lina and her troupe deciled to try to get their tickets changed so they could gai] on the Baltic, which went at neon, The Stallo sisters, Laura McDonald Helena Stallo, accompanted by thelr father, Edmund K. Stallo, sutled for Paris on tno Provence, to pursue their studies. Cortland F, Bishop, the aeronaut, his wife and daughter Beatrice also were passengers on the Rrovenve. They will @pend six months tn a 25,000-mjle auto- mobile trip. “| hall attend the Aeronautle Con- greas at Vienna,” sald Mr. Bishop, who ip wice-president of the International Aeronautical Federation, “and when I return I hope to aweken greater inter- eat in America in dilgibles, We pay too Mitle attention to them her rien seen GIFTS FOR TRAIN HERO WHO KILLED BANDITS. | Recommendation Made That Ex- press Messenger Trousdale Bz Given $600 and Gold Watch. HOUSTON, Tex., March 14,—David A. ‘Trousiale, express messenger, who Alited two bandits when they attemptod to rob Southern Pacitic passenger train No, 9 near @andereon, Tex., yesteniay, mii be pald a reward of $800, and, in addition, will be presented a gold watch suitebly inscribed. if the reoommenda- tion of Supt. Taft of the Welly Fargo Express Company are followed, Mr. ‘Latt sald he would recommend that the standing reward given for the arrest and conviction of train robbers be awarded to Trousdale, The sual ree ward 1s $90 for eash conviction, Trousdate’s friends descride him as| quiet unassuming. Ho has been in the employ of the company abou: eight years. i THE EVE : at ae Sa ina iy 3 PANTOMIME FAILS ‘| Corset Must;Go’’ Is Ringing Slogan NING WORLD, Raised by the New Women’s Society, But Opposition 4s a Rule, a Reformer’s Remedy Is Immediate AA AAARAARAD RRRARRARARARAR RRA A RAR RRA RRR I eeaamael ly Heard Unbearable Fhan the Evil It Attempts to Cure, Says Mrs. Clio Bracken—Most Reform Cos- tumes Are Absolutely Hideous. It Would Be Ridiculous for Women to Discard Cor- sets—Even the Greeks Wore Them—There Is No Possibility That Ladies of Ancient Greece Were as Beautiful as American Women. - laced in? When I read these remarks I had no dificult: much ugler and more distr BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITI. Cook. ing 5 and without any waist at all. But, le Mrs. States, to advisability woman to discard her cors: my have betrayed me into ervoi Clio Bracken, notable women scuiptors in the express of Philistive one of her on'ni inducing the aeked most Sted as to modern on Mrs. Bracken, who {s a pup!! of St. Gaudens, ts In New York at present to supervise an exhilbfon of her latest work, which will be held next week at the Pen and Brush Club, | THE RELATION OF THE CORSET TO DRESS AND THE FIGURE. In recent specialty of portrait scuiot ‘a she Was made a and s) has very definite ideas as to the reia- ton of the corset to modern dress and the modern figure. “Et 19 trae that the Venu Milo 414 not wear corsets,” Mrs. Bracken, amilingiy, neither did she wear clothes. “For modeiling the nude, a slim, un- Which preserves of the corseted classic a success if them, Ae beautiful lines sculptures Is absolutely necessary. | oretleatly, the feminine figure is more beautiful without the woman of average gowns with much more 4 there is a cor: corse Pp yt vactically, wears her ction and beneath “Z Go sot know of any other period of history wherein the fig- Ures and costumes of women have so much im accord with the classic ideal of anty. “Recently I have been devoting my- self expecially to portrait sculpture, and I have been astontshed at the charming | effects it 1s possible to produce w preserving the lines and spirit of ‘hi most fasilonable gown, WOMEN HAVE LEARNED TO WEAR CORSETS BECOMINGLY. “While corsets are necessary to the average woman of mature figure has learned to chouse and to w so well that her clothes are as and fluent as If they followed the 1 of the ideal uncorseted fi “Then you are yourself with th Bracke! | uscless to propose y in the new anti-corse useless," “L have eympatiy with the effort I asked Mre “Quite swered. formers, re. wil of the “hh not foe: ag Mrs. never been of to » cor! wou ally be or membership | a much dress ¢ “As ® rule, & reformer’s remedy the evil it attempts to curs. more unbearable than antl most reform costumes are hideous. waists, large hips and werkered muscles from generations of corset Wearing ancestors to attempt to Giecard the corset all “Hven the Greeks w jateting of three separa: the waist, one at the hips and \e bust like a modern nd Apelles wor neath While Phidia Ung thelr td bane of female once! corsete Ms, one lov | Melis criddie aged whigg were provably tf{vory Kmancipation in politics means emancipation in dress as well. “The corset must go.” This is the slogan of a new socloty of New York women, which Includes the nanies of many leaders tn the suffrage movement, notably Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch, Mrs, Lee De Forest, Miss Caroline Lexow, Miss Anna Tinker and Miss Elizabeth “L hope and expect the suffrage movement will bring about a reform in dress,” Mrs, Blatch w: saying before she went to Albany to urge that woman's Political shackles be struck from her by the Legislature. “The Venus de Milo, who sculptors have told us 1s the ideal type, did not wear corsets, distressing sight can you imagine than a fat woma: ‘as quoted as What more ugly and 2 Corseted, with her waist * at all in Imagining a igit--that of a fat woman uncorseted uileed to the highest price th the price br de. CONFUSING THE GREEK IDEAL WITH ACTUALITY. “The trouvle with reformers of dress 1s that they confound the Greek IDIGAL. the sculptor's dream of beauty, with actuality, “There is no possibility that the Women of ancient Greece ‘° beautiful in face or figure az ¢) Auvrican women of to-day. Tho Seulptor of the Venus de Plo Would be mnech more apt to fird her Countorpart in Mew York to-day than in his own country and time. “Women 1 so much heaithie> anal freer and happler lives tn America to day than ever before in the world's Corset vit by an unco: beautiful, “It {8 foollsh to think of anctent Greece ae a place wherein Venuses and Dianas and Patlases walked about tn | scantily draped perfection, “The real woman of to-cay approachon more nearly the #culptor's tdeal any woman Ilkely to have been met anctent Athens, “The costume of to-day exprens. Womanhood and ¢ It is much more o' and fnielligent than ments the history Ihas preserved. As for the J whien in its modern form nas called beneficial by many physic! one can only answer to the | formers that a condition, not a the confronts us." oe man Vietim of Gas, ny feminine of vast fa Watch | An unidentified Italtan, hinan | loutwide a Fulton street ing at the Huds. | gas poisoning. Hoe bootblack shed at No, after lighting only one burner of a'pas Policeman dy oof th mwich street station fuund him un | gonsctous, | OY | bility off of the cook. Quick, The H-O Company, Is Much More history, that they cannot fail to be more | then | Good cooks went it; poor cooks must have it. Presto Self-Raising Flour The Flour that's already leavened, that takes the responsi- Recipes in the package. WOMAN HALTS. BURGLARS, THEN ADS IN CAPTURE Hannaway’s Mrs. Screams Bring Policeman to Help Her in Lively Fight, | i When screams took Poltceman Sey- mour early to-day to the second flodt f No, 03 West ‘Thirty-fourth tree, he aw tWo men on the landing aud @ non the steps below them, ." the woman sald. “Those ers, (ivetioned the men, and a : te mour took one man Won grappled with the ot): pairs of sts rolled Seymour he Both down the steps, but when Seymour drew hte th revoly the Wes | men surrendered, and at Wentleth street station gave, 2 ea and Wir. Both satd f 1 t plucky woman Catherine | Hannaway. She sald she heard the men {in an apartment upstairs and went to jInvestigate because she knew the fam- ily was away. All four of the pa Jand tatters when the were in rags jftadon, On Holmes a chisel, jimmy, safety razors und two Kold br In the hall where the battle began were found a gold watch und chaln, two gold brooche sume wearkig appare t had been entered mily of John ry room and Smith we Igned to- eftesson Morket Court. Sey. will have to get a new uniform 'Mrs, Hargaway's hrutsed as ar fight, face badly uit of cer part tn the > NG PANAMA CAWAL VOLCANO, WASHINGTON, t heat of any Where alo: ajor F March ME of v a Rowes, United Kinecr Corps and obtef of the Isthmian Canal Commisston h Major 2 this assertion in aimwer to that awiies the the Pana | | | Boss ma | “added, sald ate from ( Impending dang It is good ts all” reports of onal. but that . Presto Biscuits > are sure to sure; “first-aid” in the kitchen, ‘Buffalo, N. ¥. ‘euuRspay, MANOM « diamond ring and! ma Canal) BETROTHAL ENDED, | SHOULD GIRL KEEP GIFTS OF FRIENDS? And Should Cost of the En- gagement Dinner Be Offset Against Presents? EAST SIDE IN AN UPROAR | | ' | i on i ra Lewis and Sadie Fishel Have Pallen Out and There’s the Dickens to Pay. To the Editor of The Dvening ‘Worla: Kindly advise me, in the event broken, Z received the imclosed reply. Kindly advise me, Yours very truly, DAVID XIDANSEY, Ho, 51 Bast Winety-sizth street, Marob 13, 191 Now York City. The Sregoing letter, which was sent tontay to The Evening World, would féem at first glance to be merely a re- ‘quest from Mr. Kidaneky that hoe be put wise ¢o a nice point of etiquette xo he shoutén't feol that he had commit. ted an inexcumble “foe pah." But there’, much more to the letter then that. It ts one of the shots in a social war that ds raging on the upper enst aide, with skirmishes and minor clashes extonding even to the lower anst side, Hut let us get to the “Inclosed reply" was, went in Mr. Kidnnsky'a tet- Here it is: Mow York, March 8, 1912. Mr. David Kidansky, Wo. Zast Winety-sixth street, City. Doar Sir: Your letter requesting me to return the present given by you om the occasion of my danga- ters engagement receives. Xm reply to same I will say that the cost of the dinuer supplied to you and Mrs. Kidansky om that oceasion amounted to more than the value of your present. Yours truly, HARRY FISEEL, Mo. €1 Park Row, New York. ALL AGREE THAT THE FISHEL BANQUET WAS SOME DINNER, The dinner served “on that occasion” by Mr, Fishel was, no doubt, some dinner, but the only way in which one may get a line on it is by a consideration of the present that Mr, Kidansky gave tu Mine Sadi hel, the young woman in the case, ‘Phe present was a set of silver (rimmed wine glasses and madosty one prevented an inquiry of him as to thelr cont, There were a dozen of them, at any we in hi a M M rate, and it was real ailver with engrave , penker would bo William T. line on It that covered the glasves, Of tenia v7 Ades ae ga Soe or hat cad hot mich Me rene | The .ctyer epeakers will be Bester hg: iy soli genie ng | Btaten Divtrict-Attorney Henry ey oe tok Paine We ante ene inten | Mae Toe Ae Daly of ihe dinner could be found site aay inte | standard and Times, Phila mation on this pase of the thing, Mr.| beter Iriniey Dunne (alr, Dooley Lewis, the young gentleman who was| joseph tee Clarke engaged to Misa I el described the dinner as “one of those regular dinner ‘ It was romance and NINTH BABY VICTIM DEAD. brougit together Miss Fist Lewis, She is the daughter of Mr. Added to Namber Slatin Harry Fishel, who wrote the let by Revengetul Nu Mr. Kidansky, She ts twenty-four yearn a eee Geo eich ee “ ‘The ninth victim of the frenzy of a house at No. 8 E w third street. Mr. Fishel is accou a rich man, owning much real estat TI this olty, including the Ratetgh Bnitd- | yy ing at No, 6) Broadway and the Grand Street Theatre, at Grand and Chrystie streets MR. LEWIS IS ALSO YOUNG AND WEALTHY. Mr, Lewis 4s also @ rich young man, in to ta a partner | muita 1 stent { WHISK! PRANK MORA, aN eter TARRY PMKO M, § ‘ Flavor Convert all to jSUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK f largest compai tounry, #0 when he and Miss Sadte fell in there was! nothing to Indleate they would not be the happlest young people in the wortd. In Celebratl Miahel env home, May 28 1 8 anybody on |. Also there was fc from the lows intended to de a father's fitting! Water Company factory, was toda te to his devoted and engaged daughter, Tie dinner, according to Mr. Fishel's own letter, he belloved to be @ very good for manslaughter brought we Mime (28 the Pestit of th Fishel responded with a present, and) last March, when M6 workers lost thelr there were several hundred of them to/ lives. delight the ‘eye at the dinner. seed to be no doudt that Mins Fishel | and Mr, Lewts Wei peopl Everything went on beautifully until Jan. 4 and then the engagement War! tie ground that the fa no part | beon plo ot this chronicle; it te aufficient that! mu It was broken. And Mr, Mishel, ao Mr. | Lewis ways, put a “card tn th Hebrew papers atating that gagement of his daughter to Mr. Lewis had been broken and that the break Ing had been done by the Fishel family. | © SUT WHAT 18 TO BECOME OF) love and 16. broken, aly, bee Al the Why ¢t THE reason for her to hav very possession of them was an anom- fo wasn't the beat way to try to got the presents back? at any rat one of them, quest but the war is the aame. Mr. Lewis was asked to-day why tho engagement had heen broken, “Social inequality,” he sald, covered a lot of little things about the family for which I didn't care. here's a man, with lota of money and lives y-four curtalna at fine place so long outside, Once you front door {t's different n't any footmen in the en't any walters—nothing. Why, when I announced that T in- the engagement fuet al rooms. every window, 3 You stay on th tended Fishele went right up in the alr, ike ft one bit hel, or some one fe cari in the Hebrew papors saying tne had broken the encagement.” jahel's letter to y made of to the charaater of the didn't On_ ace: Kidanaky an inqw rt dinner, A meeting af the Friends of Ireland | to perfeat ur-| }rangemonts for the thirty-seoond an nital banquet of that roctety, to he held | jon Saturcay night at sixth street and Colum Tt wan announced that the prinetpal | fyrne, | was ‘held On Feb. th th the bables: EY New You, Superior Quality and Delicate MONDAY MORNING WONDERS. | uifred * grand ‘There to br tc Ly than Mr. remember It, !t was a pretty othing inner,” awoll abo ‘There were stand me, I" leat look here: 1, house with ny of ite kind in thie ASCH BUILDING, TRIALS ma engaged of dinner and danc and everybody Upper east aid: rep Peonte who k very lucky his happen PRESENT! Now, what wae to decome of all the presents whch had beén given to Miss Fishel? There were many of them, an’ they had coat good dollars. the problem vexed the givers. Hiked Mise Fishel—oh, yer, that's all right—but 1¢ od hadn't be jow thirt are lace mW Ant they him, pul f Mr. of which jansky's ortions it was ourses, T think, Healy's, latest vi hospital, Ankers died in the Brooklyn Nursery shortly after midnigat to- 1s four-month en Htowenberg, whove parente live at 4 Herkimer street 4% Winifred Ankers, a nurse her child w taken away from her, lead and t) char ay THE PERFECTION OF QUALITY 1S ALWAYS FOUND HUNTER BALTIMORE RYE TH AMERICAN GENTLEMAN'S QUARANTEED UNOER THE NATIONAL PURe voouLaw eevee: ‘Wiliam 8. WY. | cmamntibautemananierrondieeanet meal oxaltc acid in the milk bottios used by ‘Twelve were polzoned, ninv remaliSng the en Of re a the Hning of the == INDIA AND CEYLON Ae ee aS em engagement ntative ride. the e-! drawn wera excu For days onan, Presents wouldn't them at all. Her fome thought fand Mr. Kidansky wae fared with his te. Nas alroady been made clear. Whother any of the others were favored by Mr. Flenel has not been discovered, ing merrily on, jurt “T dia Mr. P hai | Undor- | not knooking the dinner, 1k wan one of those regular dinners ——e— BANQUET FOR ERIN’S SONS. Wriends of treland Society Will) Sixty bus avenue, | Betttiane Hwea Seattle Streete—and Rats of many colors are Hable to te seen about Seattle, Wash, and they 4 ‘It not be the imaginary kind. H The health officials dyed twenty-five rate and turned them loose, each with a price of $2 on Its head, dead or alive, ‘The colors are for the purpose of Iden+ Ufcation, and the object of the enter- | Prise is to trace the drift of the rat | Population as it migrates from ome sec~ tion of the city. to the other. . FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ARE AGAIN POSTPONED. Harris and “Banck Get Another Week of Delay Before Their Second Ordeal, The trlal of Iseac Harris and Max It) Blank, propfieiors of Ue Trangie 8 Mr, | at ht who e wat | postponed unt next Wednesday, Har- ris and Manck had seven indictments ainat them Asch Batiding firs ‘They were sequitted on one of There | the indtetments Aswistant District Attorney Bostwick YOURE | jg anxious to place them on trial on one the remaining indictments, but Max Steuer, thelr attorney, objected on two had already in joopardy and were im- e from further prosecution. tale n from whieh the jury Will determine the issue will b dd. The ease will of abury, If it dx found can be pros ng indlotments A ttorney Hostwick says ring thea velaee Pees es alco w ms jor |D, Th two! that 166 Bask 23032. They icigees st asa e i, the Fashion And you may be sure that Ameri- can Lady Corsets reflect these fashions. The new models of American Lady Corsets embody every detail of the correct vogue, giving the modish low bust, the long hip and back, the altogether straight effect so sought after. suet Salas Now, Mr. | the ‘They hat were dozen good. | CORSETS will produce for you the corréct foun- dation for your gown as no other corset. They make figures—They mark good dressers. Insist that you have an American Lady Corset and just the right model for your indi- vidual figure. Model 291 (as illustrated) for slender and medium low bust, extra long hip, extra long back, fancy batiste, 8-30 $3.00 Ask Your Merchant. la = oe eee ly pur | The World's Greatest SILK STORE Fourth Ave. at 24th St., N. Y. Location: Two doors from 23rd Street Subwa; One block cast of Metropolitan Tower. | Our Brilliant Exhibit of Imported Silks Continues : Al the Smart Set is in attendance § at our brilliant exhibit of ex- clusive and gorgeous silk creations just received from our mill connection in France. The exhibit continues all the week. It includes the wonderful silks that the great modists, Worth, Paquin, Drecoll, Redfern, La Ferriere, Doeuil- let, Doucet, Callot Soeurs, use in their artistic style creations that dazzle the fashion world. HIS exhibit will give you a fresh insight into the dress possibil- ities of silk, We sell these glorious imported fabrics to you by the yard at manufacturer’s prices. Come and compare, Looms to Mills to Consumer ers Thompson Givernaud Co. Ce} Rog Fourth Avenve at 24th St., New Yorls