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ee f | OR EASTER SW ub OFF WITH EAL CIRCUS THING Least Brilliant and Most Self- Exhibiting Sunday Fifth Avenue Has Ever See n. ‘ | BEAUTY ON HORSEBACK. Oh, But Up in Harlem There Were Entrancing Sights to | Behold! What? The Easter parade as tt once wae tas @one from New York. Forty years ago, when there were real pannier skirts, Or Gt least crinoline, euse for saying that sbown in Broadway and Fifth avenue in| New York sct the styles for a nation. | Tt te *) no longer. The people who} here WAS: an Ox- Easter atylen an trampe. weartly up down the alde- | walks Fh av je vesterday were those who» styles are made for them Not those who make atylos, If there be ny such Thelr fee: were sore and their faces strained, they cou'd far more easily ). ve atoriod taxteabs re | thet loyalty () the dieonnied, , ¢|Tenth to One Hundred and Twenty- | the olf shows. For those were founded eidewaiks sof Fh avenue before and) on the fact that on the one great @tter chureh hours on Faster Day religious holiday of the spring of the Along about ‘'d-afternoon when @ dust storm and » ‘had later become + flurry of rain which mething like a cloud- established the styles made Duret hit the city, a cireus-riding young |gunday the time fady, a girt of sixteen years, delicate! selves off. The generation 88 @ musk rose and openly indignant at upon er, surrounded ore of boobs sar uniforms, cantered up Fifth avenue to Fifty-nint!: | Street and down Madison avenue, And} thus ended the jenst brilliant, the most | self-exhibiting Easter Sunday that. New Merk has ever seen. Perhaps it may ‘BEL. in the opinion of those who have een observers of Eabter parade for| Many years, be a bad les: There} York & score of years ago that , S214 events had followed themselves to What politicians and playwrights call *® logical conclusion. ‘There are three streets where the curl: ous and observant New Yorker has to hunt for his impressions of Fifth avenue from W. fom Gquare Arch to the park en! Riverside Drive for its entire length and Geventh avenue from the park to One Munéred and Twenty-fitth street. BASTOR PARADE NO LONUER SETS THE FASHIONS. As for Fifth avenue, it was a pathetic Gemonstration that the Easter parado Whleh was supposed to illustrate tho fashions for the coming year ts gono. Phere were thousands of women and hol! of were dreased in the clothes in whic! the male of their specios at ta UPON | they toxged themselves out after thi the sidewalks, There were aisrettes|had observed the so-called, Which looked ae thouzh they had been| fixing parade of a year ago, @elored on the scale of sunset across M4 of the Grand Canyon of the Gelerado, There were hobbled skirts (ade like trouser legs with long widths cloth Detween them. There w Which looked like @ nut Sundae ® Grand Junction, Neb, etrictly drug store. observer saw young ‘women swinging along with the gaij of @ eowdoy wearing bearskin chaps, with lgce aprons like those adapted atone laying gentlemen. Some 4 and some in front. Sing developments of fashion Gay be decreed that it 1s for men to wear troun- Gay comes the type of | > Women who went out to| {1 in the streets of New | a f an to £ : i I in ie fi ney Hl 4 FY ‘up later in the after- was nothing in the skin tight costumer who ended the day's it which could outdo them. bi T COME FROM? enue and on Riverside was a queer reversion to ‘was the return of the hansom knows from where the old came. were more two-wheelers than the main up-and-down streets Riverside Drive yesterday trom the yeliow-and-wet dust si- a if i i i cil | HE es HE semblance of the old Easter ft has long since ceased to be the crowds which all day Long clogged Fifth avenue in front of y Cathedral—and defore the storm Many of the other sacred edi- Quietly dressed women . substitutes for the models of form an feshion of other days) slip from into church entrances. New and then somebody called a name Im more than one case the obdserver | mew thet the person named was at least '@ thousand mies trom New York. ~ But what difference did it make? Is rs a r Mut the great glory of color and of extreme dress patterns wee that pea- gece thoroughfare from the park to One Hundred and Twenty-ffth street fn Seventh avenue. Tne rustle of changeable silks filled the ears like the whistling of the winds through the |. Pines in a Maine night. No Hawatian horus‘ going up stage trom the foot: 5 ever awitched 30 and #0 wide. hats bobbed like Of seagulls & Canarsie fishing boat. It @ display of beautified beauty, by | for a Seen & swelling, undulat- it and left curving of beautitul | avant AVENUE TAKES THE| son Gauare year—when ail anyway—tho people of the town who one wears The clergymen, who to make their Easter sermon the bes are not seeking—det their York at the to be everything which {t {s no number of them {n public conveyances This thought HE MANSOM CABB | nue Bund and the watchmal But it ts true that | Baster around lett forty ‘To which may ve added the t of a lady with ruby dyed hair who had been riding for an hour on the inside of a Wifth avenue stage, waiting for @ chance for herself and her friend with the silk hat and frock coat uniform to They were talking of the squabble in Washington square which occurred when an unsentimental believer in small profits and quick col: these busses, whose hat was a cone of concentric of them and public photogr: soore of plumage is Kaster was the great prevailing holl- day tn spirit and sentiment has gone. Easter has become a day not when ‘8 best to siemify @ holl- day spirit, but @ day when one uses a latest clothes. tday to show off on udy thelr y wives and daughters tell it—to make their greatest appeal for Him and Him crucified and risen again as they are to the richest and most fashionable of thelr congregation who come to church on Easter Di But even the preac! fe begun to jose faith in Darade tradition. For one who dropped Into churches from Washington Square tv the park was impressed not by the simplicity and severity of those of the actual church attendants who turned out from the procession of gawky rub- bernecks along the street but by the straightforwardness. and sincerity of the words which were addressed to = 10, t the fashions, Is gone. tter—who put COUNTRY FOLK CAME TO sEE THE PARADE. The most comforting and for showing them- if never again in the aster parade, 20 far as it » Seventy-five Der cent. of the women—and men, for | that clothing yesterday on and went out and pounded the sidewalks with thetr heals, changing, Buster to which for weeks here must the Easter unusual standar fact. (THE £ EVENING WORLD, LA FOLLETTE FLAYS PINCHOT IN TALK (From a Photograph Taken Es; OF DESERTION Senator Accuses Roosevelt’s Friend of Trying to Make Deal ir. Presidential Race. LINCOLN, Neb., April 8.—Denouncing “deserted* | —_—<>— % t : ., Gifford Pinchot “and others" who pro- “The attempt of any supporters to justify their desertion of my candidacy by making Houser their scapegoat ia a cowardly perversion of They know that no one had authority to withdraw me as a candi- Gate, and that no one ever professed jto have such authonity or ever attempt- @4 to assert #. And they know, and all, nd stated to again that, entered upon the contest, T pa ighways of fashion | would not back out, ut heal thelr aed innocence id on the etreets was al convince one that public conside: yesterday were the od do kindly-faced, | pudgy figured, from the farms and ret 3 Who came inned folk 0 see } t appea! The jon, not diminished by the fact that the many der) pave been WORDS THAT GHOW THE REAL SPIRIT OF MODERN EASTER. Qn @ lower Fifth avenue ner, waiting for that human tmpossi- bility, an unfilled seat on a Fifth ave- tage sight-seeing deck on Easter porter of The Evening ® conversation be- in overalls, obvie rd on treet oor of an office building, ell," m all said the “because your kids had two-an dollar shoes for Easter and the shove our kids was only @ Bal ne. et a seat up top. ions tried his wiles on ¢ buses, just one awful Judi nal “Ther Ireled artific wful lgihtly escorted year ago that I 1 rosebuds. onde ond \.¢ event id of the old for women who are not ‘As getting up on one pickpocket cut my stock. tng so I didn’t feel it at all and got my pocketbook and a lit however, & gray coat private aid Bive-and-White, “how's ur house?" crying when I come watchman, half. dollars timony. he hundreds who were waiting for a seat or a foot. hold on t thing about id the lady, “They are woe Just @ chamots full lateat pto- which fixed tradi- 1 soclety people to p) red-breeched, oated, started out Garden “to join @t about 2 o'clock, Fifth avenu and Fifth rode back down Fitth fe et an Easter parade in |G bet it be that Sev- an ‘s—-came dlack-#hakood, when a red-tunicked, imitation from Madison the Easter y came Leck siipping ing, but safe. the: end the 'y insistent just as « @idacy began to strength in Oblo, Michigan, Iilinols and that Roosevelt's name should East yet has an advantage over the Horse Show |e ccned, With mine in resolutions of elsewhere, indorsement and that their desertion,” that T persistently refused to withdraw in favor of Roosevelt or any one el “Pinchot and others who professed to be my supporters, but who, in fact, Were supporters of Roosevelt, became fessed to be his supporters and then him for (Roosevelt camp, Senstor La Folette, in a telegram to Rudolph Spreckles in Gan Francisco, to- day charged these former supporters with @ “perversion of fact in trying to Justify eays. La Follette of my former one them again and on as my ca: ow promising \t still pro- poet that he was not @ candidate. “I refused to consent to this and di- rected that my headquarters in Wash- ington, Qhio, should be run strictly deadquarte: aying to or any other man. Michigan and Illinois as La Follette Pinchot and his friends that I would not play @ double Game or be a Btool-pigeon for Roosevelt “Pinchot thereafter called conferences of my eupportere to meet at the head- quarter: Ing in this he called a in Washington and sought to force me into stich @ combination. Fale nal conference at which time he and his associates put up to me the following “1—That 1 continue “That draw, but not in favor. continue to stump—lea' etump. they choose.’ that T had become earnest solicitation of publicans because I ing for these principie: “Pinchot knowe that Mt was so understood headqua, \y that day; that when had to yield for a fer cuperation he seized opportunity to make p wh velt’s candidacy “7 Bentleme before Pinchot left and after he hi all no power to prevent me; that I had told b remain @ candidate to I would hot release Mgation, and that it would bs © oqaasisnte ets ‘a Follette should with- uals of the group to take what course that if I became @ candidate I should alternative: Follette shovid -with- draw in favor of Roosevelt with reser- vations as to differences of opinion and of anybody, and ving the individa- “I answered that I had never played that kind of politica and never would— candidate at the Progressive Re- stood for certain well defined, progressive principles; that I did not recognize Roosevelt es stand- 3; that I refused absolutely to be a stalking horse for the candidacy of any other aman, Jan, 2 ended his connection with my candidacy and that when he left ‘the ® after, the conference on five daya later I w da: rest and upon that as his public the support ch he had long been giving to Roose- 1 know that just the headquarter: finally made his tn- tention plain, I said to him that I had this quitting, but that he was obliged himself to support him at the outset the end and that him from that ob- | he left me he e to reconcile hig course with e@ could. With Pinchot was he orate amen; on Megill Mec- Cormick and Gilson Gardner. wentlemen quit ¢} most it made est of all.” of the nail, the jelly.” and there.” ———- ROOSEVELT AGAINST TAFT ON RECIFROCITY.!| MATTOON, ML, April §.—Col. Roose- velt put himself on record to-day as Miredtly opposed to President Taft on the subject of reciprocity he would never sanction the reintro- duction Canadian Reciprocity bill- which Con- gress passed of @ measure such as To a large latements about r was I have looked into “I am perfectly willing, ture tariff arrangement I wish to sec @ square deal in the inter- ‘The Colonel brought out a shou: laughter when he introduced a new fr- ure of speech. Speaking of the Panama | Canal, “Somebody asked me why I did not get an agreement with Colombla. They might just as well ark me why I do not nail cranberry jelly to the wall It would not be my fault or the fault ft would be the fault of he sald: —_—— ILLINOIS VOTERS READY FOR PRIMARY ELECTION. CHICAGO, ‘Apri final instructions to thi leut ants in the Mlinols campaign to-day; candidates closed their speaking tours and the lines were drawn tight for the voting tomorrow which ie to determine the complexion of the ballote in ¢ ction next fall, ‘The presidential preference vote con- tinued to occupy the centre of the po- litical stage. Col. Roosevelt planned to close his campaign in the State with epeeches in the Congressional district which for years has returned. former @peaker Joseph G. Cannon to Congrens. The speaking campaigns of the Taft and La Follette forces in the State re over. On iad Democratic side the Wil- a wound up their ‘ik peak aspirants and the-host of seekers after aminor sn tur their attention tri ila and audiences to the sele: tion Pry pesehers and personal wor! who will take the field with the op ing of the rolls to-morrow. Chicago hag also to vote on the ad- visabdility of woman Lua local suffragiat represented polling place the local precincts of the city. —— LANDLADY CAUSES STIR AT MRS, NICODEMUS’S TRIAL. Says Woman Accused of Killing Husband Declared He Smoth- ered Baby. Mre. Murphy, wa: it October, Mra. Murphy said t! while Mra. Nicodemus lved with she had men callers other than husband. Vincent Nichols, Mre. Murphy caused Judge Rosai and the Jurors and Abraham Lev counsel for Mra. Nicodemus, with surprise by saying told her she to Frank Nicodemu left him the first tim, He declared the ‘owd in the Opera House at Decatur the Colonel made one of the vigorous @peeches of his cain- and T am —Political leaders the gubernational Congressional ‘The former, landlady of Mre. Gene- an‘s trial for the killing of her husband One of them called himeeit | Self-Exhibiting Easter Day Pageant on Fifth Avenue pecially for The Evening World.) ‘Thea people,” mons the procity. My desire was to support the Admin- tetration on every point where I vly could, and at first I eupposed that the reciprocity agreement upon which I could support it; and was iad to do so. carefully, and under no circumstances, as far as I have any power, will I ever sanction the reintroduction of such an agreement. poasi- Oe it ot} n= he in on hat her her ky | BY RIVER FLOODS | Lake, worked in an attempt to bolster up the! and on rafts and levee which has been weakening *for| booted election clerks completed theli as Vicksburg, Miss., where the 1 being strengthened against a threatened break. ‘To the break at Hickman, Ky., however, mammoth gaps near M: low and one the situation at Vicksburg. GOVERNMENT SENDS FOOD ro|! rhe mately 2,500 refugees at Hickman, Ky., must be fed, according to an estimate ter’a Department. of this number are, being fed by the city,» Twenty thousand rations are due rid, Mo., 20,000, and to Caruthersville, resolution providing that the $250,000 appropriation recently made for flood relief along Gippi as well as on the big river itself, _MONDAY, APRIL _8, 1912. ‘food prevention funds at Mound City, IL, which is on the Ohio River. A teleg to the Army Engineer's | Headquar this afte n from an xineer in the Mississipp! flood says that the levee at (Mound City, |near Cairo, is becoming saturated and should a heavy rain and wind come it would probably go out. ate \**WETS” LOSE ELECTION IN FLOODED TOW: ST, LOUIS, April &.—New Madrid. | Mo, flooded by river waters to a depth | of several feet, 18 nevertheless, “dry.” | At le the “drys” | tion election Saturday. Voters went to 1,00 menjthe polls in skiffs, In motor launches when the rubber- ARE WITHOUT FOOD (Continued from Firet Page.) | | | Ark. There, nearly sure I speak for the farmers when I| days, Thousands of bags of sand hay; |Count it was shown that the “we say it, that the farmers e@hoult pay| been dumped against It to stop the on.| Were beaten by 300 votes, Belated re- their fair share, but they are not to be) rushing w but atill tt continued to| turns from the election were received required to pay everything for an} ccumme reatened. to divia here to-day. agreement lke that. And in any fu- vide. The flood to-day extended as f: ae ees FLOOD HAMPERS MAIL SERVICE, WASHINGTON the postal superin Mississippi River have been a th April 8.—Reports from ndents in the lower ection show that It town, both on rkansa: This may relieve the! Until furs outiwest must py Way of St. Louls, South ¢ Memphis the mail service 4s badly demoralized. jos ea NORFOLK RESULTS. FIRST RAC urse $250; for twos year-old maldens.—Spring Mald, 111 (Foden), 11 to 5, even and 2 to 6, first; FLOOD VICTIMS. WASHINGTON, April 8.—Approxt- phed to the War Department to- Capt. Logan of the Quartermas- He says about halt here: tssey, rijebe cre pega cee ee te tie at and 2 to 1, second; i ‘The department has sent to Colum- | putwell), 6 to 5, 11 to 20 and out, third. bus, Ky,, 10,000 rations; to New Mad: lume, 6. Martin, Amorous, Exton, Roser + Lottle K., Ma- Mo,, 2,000 ration rine, Cordie, F an also ran, The House this afternoon passed a] SECOND RACE—Purse $20; four- year-olds and upward; Rue, ® (Forsythe), 6 to 1, 2 to 1 and even, first; Ethel’ Lebrune, 9 (Am- brose), 6 to 1, § to 2 and 6 to 5, second; Royal Onyx, 108 (Butwell), 8 to 1, 3 to 1 and 3 to 2 third. Time, 1.17, ' Varne Loulse Wells, Anna . Daley, Joe Gal- tens, Mason, Roseburb also can. six furlongs.— the Mississipy! River available for strengthening tributaries to the Missis- Fowler of Illinois ae a, AAA ¥ GRECIAN-TRECO O the woman who would have slender girlish lines—in uncor- seted effect—and without discomfort, the Bien Jolie Grecian-Treco Corset is absolutely essential. Made of a light, flexible and hygi- enic knitted material—the scientific, boneless construction of the Grecian- Treco Corset gives the figure an am- ple support, , yet retains the soft, pliant ines of nature, without stiffness or rigidity. Grecian-Treco is made of a one- piece fabric over the hips and fits the form with a glove-like smoothness, In various styles, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00. You will find Bien Jolie Grecian-Treco Corsets epg att the following stores: << 2 oot a, Mf wet eo. bi he aa A Bien Tolle Brassiere will always give shapely and unbroken lines above your corset. 50c, $1.00, 91.50 to 012.00, BENJAMIN & JOHNES, Newark, N. J. | QRIRST,, RACK Four, turongs: won in a local op- | RACING CHARLESTON RESULTS. FIRST RACE—Two-year-o' purse ola, Kk), 9 to 5, 4 to & and 2 to 5, first; a Johneon, 19 (Allen), 6 to 1, 2 to} 1 and 4 to second; Little Dad, 112 (Bauer$, 15 to 1, 6 to 1 and 2 to 1, third. Time, 49 1-5, ins, Faustina, Follane, Mite, Uncle Obie, Lady Rob- Fred McEi- roy and Billa Grane also ran and fin- tehed as named. BROOND RACE — Three - year - oka; purse $300; welling; five and one-half furlongs.—Charley Brown, 8 (Koér- |ner), 4 to 1, 2 to 1 and even, first; De- | 4. |tour, 115 (Goose), 5 to 2 even and 1 to 2, second; Little Wp, 15 (Fain), 2 to 1, 4 to 5 and 2 to 5, third, ‘Time, 1.08 4-5, American Gir', x uv, First Ald, Charley Obrien, Daimatn and Monsieur | X also ran and hed as named. \f THIRD RAOK—Three-year-olds; purse | $380; conditions; six fu .—Jamnes | 5 Dockery, 108 (Schwib . 8 tot and even, won; Lady Lightning, 103 neinhart), 6 to 6, 3 to 6 and out, second; . 108 (Louneberry), 6 to 1, 2 to t third. Time—0.48. Dilatory, and Brown JAMESTOWN ENTRIES. RACE TRACK, JAMESTOWN, vi April &—The entries for to-morrow’s| races are as followe: two-year-olds; felling, Pretty Mole, 10g; Dowwood. 8: Latent. | rns sig 10h; Mingling, 164; Alcinous, i Sees and a, mit, four. ms Welier, ‘i, “Via gs; ths | ‘two, 143, And ougtalf furlongs: | ate a8 ea tener Bie ‘Clem ‘4 c Batters, Ni: fed math 110. SIXTH RACE Mile and a sixteen coward Mn; Bist Knight, e 8. 108, Many Fy tit, i bial | CHARLESTON ENTRIES. | RACE TRACK, 109 | HARLEST( C., April 8.—The entries for tomorrow's recs are as fol CR TRAC selling: old and up; purse | *Choptank, Ra K F-0 $200: woven furloogs 107; | Hd This is the display box that :| holds the tooth ‘| wear transparent Dust Caps. ‘| Brisco-Kleanwell tooth: doe | brushes are made in a variety of Latin and in four sizes, l5e, 2 ‘of high-grade, . | Siberian bristles in The transparent Dust Cap prevents “fingering.” parts oT Hoa Yah iy on Sobre | Alfred H. Smith Co, Bi iden trea ite ‘tank ances i “i fanopin a ry olde dae are 10}; Packer, tf H Ba tet Alnecbots io: ni de mptan, 113, mureeyearoits and upward: tio it six furlongs, Helen Rar an Fe Sk Urdea, 142s Cath f—Four-searaolds and Argon 2: s Camiver 114; Cooney Kes —Frar.nearokty and wowed mile wad seventy Ei * riridgewnter, ite, 1 ches . that 25c, 35c. Same quality Sri re limp New York James McCreery & Co. | “ DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT. 34th Street Store Orders Tailored Suits Mixed Fabrics will be taken for a period at very moderate prices. Afternoon Dresses of Crepe de Chine. Made to order from attractive models. 75.00 of Linen, piece Dresses for morning wear. 50.00 Tailored Suits of Fine Serge or Fancy 75.00 and 95.00 Thirty-fourth Street limited also one- 23rd Street Furs, Fur 23rd Street office buildings ? ‘ James McCreery & Co. FUR STORAGE ; Dry Cold Air—New Improved Method Storage Vault on Premises (Open for inspection) Trimmed Garments and Rugs received for storage. To facilitate delivery in the Fall, cuse tomers are requested to send garments to be altered or repaired as early as possible. Charges for alterations and repairs are lower during the Summer months. MR. RETAIL MERCHANT D”™ you ever stop to consider the vast possib’ of putting your goods before the thousands of women employed in the downtown business sectior by establishing a branch in the arcade of one of the large “Write or phone and our representative will call on you and explain the proposition. E. A. PRATT, PULITZER (World) BUILDING, 63 Park Row, N. Y. 34th Street é 34th Street