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COATS FOR WOMEN 1S THE MANDATE OF FASHION NO. They Are Three Quarter Length to Show Part of the Gown, LACE FOR THE SUMMER. Newest Evening Wraps Are of a Draped Nature With No Sleeves, Overhaul that chest contetring grand. mother's old wardrobe, and if you find Re Of those lovely lace shawie or coats You will be fortunate indeed. The for. mer can be made into a fashionable ‘Wre and the latter can easily be con- verted into a smart up to date coat. ‘With the present backwani trend of a. {t ie riot surprising that the bas gone forth that it is no longer @errect to go without @ coat. Grand- mother would never heve thought of Gag out without her shaw! or man- tila, eo thie coming season no well- dsessed woman will appear upon the atreet without a coat or wrap. Then, tea, Paris hes eet tier aval of approval upon the mode, and so we may safely rest assured that the outer garment vogue is an accepted one. This ex- pletas why the ahops are now making such wonderful displays in this line, fer, of course, every dress must have {te appropriate wrap and there must be © eultable outer garment for every oc- caston. KOC KiNDS~OF COATS “ARE Dis. PLAYEO, ‘There are the emart steamer or motor conte, with their long straight lines that are made up in strictly mannieh tons. And then there are the utility feeblon, with big pockets and large but- Coats that are shown in serges, whip- Gordes, subdued etripes and fancy mix- ¢ures, with collar and cuffs of plain cloth, silk, eatin or lace. These coats ,@8® eultable for shopping, morning wear @a@ all general purposes. Navy blue, _tam and gray are the favorite colore, , aad the low elde fastening is still the ‘ @avorite. Wor afternoon wear there is a wide \weange of styles and materials. The cut- away effects will be decidedly prom!- ‘neat and the three-fourths length coat will probably be the favorite. The fash- fonabdle materials are taffeta, voile and charmeuse, Mistral is a new volle weave that ts being ly used in coats this season. In either black or blue, mounted on red or some other beight-colored lining, it makes a very rich gatment that requires little trim- prac Tt te also made up without jin- Ia white the Terry cloth {s popular. ‘This fabric ts also used in other colors, and trimmed with bands of matohing ratine lace it gives a costume the desir- able chic appearance, and these coats promise to become very popular. MUST DIGPLAY PART OF THE GOWN UNDERNEATH. {A essential of the new fashionable @oat is that it must display the gown Underneath at some point, hence the popularity of the thr ené the cutaway cffects. While the three-fourths length coats ‘Will be very fashionable, the short taf- {gta jackets wii find great favor with the coming of the warm weather. The changeable chiffon taffeta is now largely used for coats, and th are generally of 80 theee jackets are trimmed with ruches, yuffings, boulliones, fancy cordings ‘and Mngerle lace collars. ‘These short coats are sometimes matic to ‘the hip line. Others have long coat tail effects, Some ere cut in dolero Hines, and many extend only to the waistline. They have short sleeves and will be ‘worn over lingerie frocks. These nov- elty jackts are also made of the new Turkish towelling, and when trimmed with the ratine cut-out embroidery are mty. 'e coat will no doubt be a fea- ure in the summer warirobe. These ed4 so little to the warmth of a cos- ¢uste and so much to Its dressy appear- dhey cannot fail to become popular, Many handsome models in three-quar- ter lengths are now being shown In the shops, and every variety of lace is being used. They are usually made up in the narrow, straight lines, and whether of black, white or ecru, they are very pretty over a white or colored gown. ‘white If elaborately braided, embrotdered or trimmed with lace will ‘leo be much worn. 80 strong will be the vogue for outer garments that many ef the summer dresses have attached tod postiltion backs or some modification of the peplum. PROPER STYLES IN EVENING ‘WRAPS. ‘The newest evening wraps are of a draped nature, and these, as well as the Gressy wraps for afternoon wear, no sleeves, Large slits for the arm: pass through have taken their place, and these are edged to correspond with the trimming of the garment, usually a ufing or ruching. Pibvening wraps of taffeta are unlined, and a new feature is the huge wired hood, that ts often lined with flowered chiffon and sometimes trimmed with fuches of taffeta and outlined by small flowers of satin. Moses Weinm monla Thursday night in his home, No. 961 Madison avenue, The funeral will take place to-morrow. Mr. Weinman was & member of the firm of Guggei heimer, Untermyer & Marshall until t! pesinning of the new year. He tern in 1862, and retired from active practic ear. oF the New York County eoclalond Se a VENING WORLD, Coats That Will Be Worn Outdoors By Women This Spring and Summer wate contr STVLE, TOBOY SOLDIERS (SHERIFF BALKS CAPTURE AN AGED WOMAN W CHORE With Pocketful of Keys She Is Found Behind Altar in Will- iamsburg Edifice. The United Boys Brigade, a boy scout organization of Williamsburg, drawn up seventy strong in battle array, assisted early to-day in the capture of Mrs. Della Kennedy, a gray halfed hometess woman, in the Church of the Transfig- uration, at Marcy avenue and Hooper street. ‘The brigade had been drilling in the Forty-seventh Regiment Armory, at Marcy avenue and Heywant street, and was marching back to its point of dis- bandment when word was brought to Col. William L. Hunter, commanding, that the church was being plundered. Col. Hunter Jed a doub!e-quick chari to the church and surrounded it. He arrived just as Father MoGuire and two detectives were coming out of the rectory. A woman whose windows look down on the church had telephoned to the police and notified the pastor there were lights moving about in the edifice. Father Mcutre led the detectives into the vestry and switched on all the lights, Mrs, Kennedy was found crouched behind the altar, She pleaded that she had gone to sleep in the church at prayer services in the evening and that when she awoke she found herself a prisoner. As she had a pocketful of keys she was arrested and arraigned in Man- hattan Avenue Police Court on a charge ‘of vagrancy. She was held for further examination Monday ee ae GIRL CAUGHT BY ELEVATOR ‘WHEN SHE TRIES TO JUMP. Thinks Car Is Running Away When Switch Is Turned—Chopped Out by Firemen. Confused by the method of operating a servants’ elevator in the apartment house at No. 221 West Fifty-seventh street, which she visited to-day for the first time, Olive Patrick, sixteen y: car started up from the basement. Her legs were caught between the floor of the car and the wall of the elevator shaft and although no bones were broken she was eo tightly wedged in that It took the members of @ fire de- partment truck company half an hour to saw and chop her out. The Patrick girl lives at No. 68 West Ninety-ninth street with her mother, a laundress. She visited the West Fitty- seventh street house to deliver a basket of laundry. She got into the servants’ elevator, which is operated by a switch from the basement, The operator turned the swite | four feet distant, and the car started, |The girl, fearing the car was attempt: |Ing to run away, tried to escape and attached to a pillar was caught, The boy turned off the current and yan upstairs, Policeman Brawley summoned Hook and Ladder Company No, 4, Nobody wanted to tamper with the electric meohanism, so It was decided to chop the girl out. ‘The wall was of lath and plaster, but the working space was so confined that the task of releasing the prisoner was tedious. Dr, Critchfietd of Flower Hospital administered stimulants to the girl, who kept her nerve admirably. she ce at the beginning of the present | was able to stand up when they got [ clothes, Cleopatra's trridescent und: lon as before with tl QN ATTACKING AN ELEPHANT'S TRUNK Harburger Wanted to Take Circus Zoo, but Welcomed a Compromise. Sheriff Harburger achleved the dis- tinction to-day of attaching twenty elephants’ trunks, also forty elephants’ ears, not to mention other incidentals of pachyderm physlology. Moreover, Mr. Hanburger attached sundry Hons, tige Giraffes and their young, enus, kang: rooa, monkeys, pumas, zebras, ho! camels, one ant eater, one untamed ibex, Mark Antony's toga and small skirt, her &c, May Wirth’s ridin ahems! and the Amazing Strong Wom- an's lifting—ahas! Dexter Fellow's whiskers and heaven knows what not else that appertains to the “Biggest Show on Earth now Dazzling a Delir- fous Multitude’ at Madison Square Garden, Of course the genial Jullus did not at once take possession of all these things above mentioned and transport them down to the Sheriff's ofice. His per- fectly good attachment did not empower him to go to such desperate lengths, and just as soon as the Barnum and Balley people had put up a $50,000 bond the elephants breathed freely again and the Big Show went on as per wont. Bond or no bond, however, the circus is attached, and in a way of speaking is provisionally the property of the city of New York, and all because a young bareback rider is suing to recvover $2,- 000 damages for a broken arm, The young lady is Miss Florence Kennard }and she alleges that she broke her arm in Cleveland while in the employ-of the Barnum & Batley Company. Once Inside the Garden the Sheriff hunted up half a dozen managers and informed them of his dire purpose. “I've ot an attachment here, said, “that covers the whole show. “How soon do you want possession asked one of the managers. “Instantly,” responded the inexorable Sherif. “All right,"’ sald the manager, happily. “It's just feeding time for the elephants, he * your men out f old, © negress, tried to Jump out as the | Lod Your men out for forty bales of hay, one ton of bran and two tons of oats-and 1s it your purpose to attach the felines and ruminants?’ “It 4s," said Harburger. “This writ | covers the whole outfit.” ‘The manager got out a pad then and | wrote down a menu for the rest of the woo, When Harburger read it he was eager to talk compromise, and #o it was that @ bond was furni: ‘and all went Greatest Show on Earth, —_— CAFE MAN WANTS DIVORCE. Declares Wife Has Charles Furthmann, a wealthy Park Row cate owner, filed a suit in the 8u- preme Court to-day for @ divorce from his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Furthmann, Furthmann declared Mrs, Furthmann acted improperly with Edward and Joseph Pommerer, Merwin Meyers, Paul Chanut and other men from time to time in this ctty, W. and on Long Island, } floally that ehe had frequented the Hotela Belmont, Gregontan, Savoy and Astor with the spondents, ‘The Furthmanns have been iiving For seven years he was President | her out and wanted to go home but {until recently at No. 440 Riverside Drive, Lawyers’ As- ee, Graeaeld took her to the hos-|Theygwere married in Millville, N, J,. ‘1986, an@ Dave ao children, TURDAY, APRIL 138, 1912 BEACH BLACKMAIL HIS GYPSY WIFE, CHARGE ANGERS NOHALTBYPROSECUTOR} Sutsoing steamships are being Joseph Harriman Denies All Chester, whore gypsy blood drove her Knowledge of Attack, but tera and turn her face again to the Stands Up for Beach. AIKEN, 3 ©. 18—with |t"be that is now in Manchester, Eng- 5 . Joseph Harriman, prominent mem- her ber of the millionaire colony and ratings te ae ma wie raed her nephew of the late B. H. Harriman, |iwo years ago from a brutal husband openly charging that an attempt {8 |could stifle her wanderwust. *|being made to blackmail Frederick | “she ts the most beautiful sypey tn O. Beach, who is charged with trying jhte world,” declared Bell, who broke to ki Mra, Beach, the town of Aiken jlast night into Police Headquarters and fe more excited to-day than at any |beseed his old friend, Lieut, Murphy, time heretofore over the Beach mys-|to find the fleeing wite “Her hair 1s as There in every indication of p id ter legal fight between some of the}, port chester wtih her own three town officials and residents and the lgaughters, Hertha, twelve; Agnes, nino, Beach has/and Florence, four. Sho had eloped “Am returning lfrom England with @ sypey named Make every effort to/Herbert Smith, and on reaching Amer: hurry up trial.” This is met by the Prosecuting Attor- |famous Copper band. ney, Robert L. Gunter, with « message to Gov, Blease asking for permission to use the Governor's contingent fund 17 young smith beating @ beautiful girl. The mee lr grrented Smtih, but I beat him first, “1 understand Northern land the next day Judge Wilcox ordered colony here think their money can hush /him out of town. I need money to} MARRIED HER DE send detectives North to investigate cer- TIONS OF 118 FAMILY. tain stories, I also must locate Pearl} “Then I became interested in the “Northern millionaires.” cabled from Paris: “to prosecute to the limit.” up the Beach case. “It's blackmail, eaid Joseph Harriman. Ing elee to this case, They are trying |went to Connecticut and were married. to get money out of Frederick Beach, “I noticed a faw weaks ago, when the “We, who are the Northern represen- | snow began melting, that my wife wai of this colony, will not stand for | getting restless. She told me she 1 know | longing for the old free gypsy li that my name has been mentioned very | told her we would all be gypsies for the jeasantly in this affair, Lng favor to me, please deny that I| wagons and had them painted red. Then had anything improper to do with it. |1 began making arrangements for the HARRIMAN WILL “SWEAR WHAT | summer outing. My plans seamed to BEACH SAYS 18 RIGHT.” “1 would rather not be quoted, but if you insist, this is the true situation: I did call on the Beaches the afternoon of Feb, 2, It was a rainy afternoon out on {thelr front porch and talked with ‘me. I stayed there some time and then I rode over home and dressed for the dinner with the Lyoneses, I had dinner ith them end 4i4 not return to the|Oélieved the baby would Keep Ber from Beach home until after I had heard about the assault on Mrs. Beach. “Fred was terribly excited that night and said to me, ‘My God, what shall “There is not! any kind of @ deal ike this. “*You better have a drink, and I went to the dining | 2) and. room and ordered the maid to bring him a pony of brandy. This story that Fred began drinking hard the minute after 11 on his family 1s pure rot. DEVELOP YOUR BUST — “Why should I not visit my old friends, | —<=__ —— Is there anything wrong Should 1 be held up to public IN 15 DAYS condemnation for that visit? “After this affair my wife called on ad there been anything | A Full would such @ call have been Mr, Beach is not @ drinking He takes lets to drink than « lot Bust Is of people who are far from credit with being prone to intoxication. He Worth would not have had that pony of brandy | More that night 1f 1 had mot urged ft on him.” | “CAN'T RUN THINGS HERE,” |{0 & SAYS THE MAYOR. “Blackmail, eh?" said the Mayor of Aiken when told what Mr, Than AFTERNOON COAT COURT SENDS BACK LOVELESS CHILD TOFATHER'S HOME Fourteen-Year-Old Sarah En- the Beaches? gler Fled When Parent’s Love Ceased. millionaires will teach them that they cannot come | | don't care their own way. ’ This Is not Koing to be any Havemeyer |how thin plenty oflyou are, sense to understand the charge which h old they have made, and we are not going |"°™ to stand for It “Take all the money and ail the in-|how fallen fourteen-year-old Justice Platzek of the Supreme Court that she never had loved her father and that she did not believe her father had loved her, the Court to-day sent the child back to the Parent from whom she had fled, The girl is a Engler of No. These people raise; it will do no good. This matter will not be hushed up. They cannot come down here and spring stories like this negro assault and get away with daughter of Charles 1484 Eastern Parkway, , S$ ago she left Mayor Gyles was plainly indignant, Oliver Iselin had “prety rough way." He naturally did | irm, youthful bust quickly, that will be the mother and several half brothers and and sought refuge Annie Newman, wi lives at No, and Sixty-elghth street, was not related to the child, known the former Mrs, Engler, who is dead, She told the small refuges that He said that Mr, called on him and of a plumber, who ast One Hundred Mrs, Newman of South Carolina," ax no idea of tolerating |}. We need money and we be cen but I expect the Gov- such @ deal. need it badly, ernor to furnish it.” but I have perfected « treatment that I want to share with my ‘What it did for me it nm Taken to:Isttp. |can and will and | now offe Conner Wo ‘a Conner, the young woman found | it to you. in @ room with the body of Louts G. Parma, @ professor of mus euddenly early this week, was to-day | gag ken to Central Islip, examined the woman at Bellevue Hos- y she ds hopelessly insane, But Charles, Engler, the father, sued out a writ of habeas corpus to regain ession of his child. The evidence » who died | drugs, greasy skin foods, creams, di Physicians who court asked little warded her father, never have loved him, bechugse I don't think he ever has ¢ The Justice ing if she would like to go into some institution, where she could be educated. “1 would rather do that than go back to my father,” the I would not like to go to an inatitutloa, because bad girls are sent to institu- tlone, I would like to stay with Mrs. She’ the only one who ever was good and kind to me," Newman testified that she was ily able to give little Sarah a| home and that she would be only too glad to do #0, but Justice rected that the child be surrendered to | Highest ‘priced’ artist's ‘model in’ the | a ‘what I'did for myselt 't care what your age may be, I ask on! | that you be ot least sizteen and not an invali : Pisces trae salon ta he Gk eo | Sore Feet x 22inciies| ‘of womanhood. Oi, id soothes the mus= Trial large bottles asc., soc, , If your feet ache, burn, lich oF ar@ | Communication shal be held in absolute contt-| Mary Carroll, forty years old, who was It strengthens an cles an wurtace car at Perry and streets shortly after mid- died early to-day in St, Vincent's tal of @ trectured skull, “Northern Millionaires Can’t|Mrs. Frank Bell, Princess of Run Things Here or ‘Hush Her Tribe, Took Four This Up,” Says Mayor. Daughters With Her. watched to-day for Mra. Frank Bell, wife of a former congtable of Port to leave her home with her four daugh- grean countryside of England and the nomadic wanderings of her native tribe, Mrs, Boll is a gypsy princess, the |daughter of Elias Boss, king of the land, All that is blue in Romany blood black as jet, and har eyes are big and blue. Find her for me, Murphy.” Bell then told haw his wife had come fea had become connected with the “I was constable in Port Chester,” Bell explained. “One night I heard woman screaming at the gypsy camp. ITE OBJEC. Pretty gypsy woman, Her daughters are as beautiful as she ts. I fell in love with her, My family objected, but we epe-| entire summer and took two of my make her happy, but two or three days ago ttle Agnes told me her mother had Just burned something in the house and nothing that can T learned later she had burned the marriage certificate, bus I said nothing to her, “ { knew she cared for me very enuch, ‘Then, too, there was our own ehild, Frances, born .eleven months ago. I ving me. My wife had $200 I had given her. I have no right to detain my wife if she is bent on going back to her father’s tribe, but I have got a claim ‘on little Frances. I mean to have the Fred,’ 1) Siyy if I have to follow my wife to De eel Firm jouare, can | and flaccid are the lines of your figure or how flat | envy of yourfellow-women and will give you the he | allurement. of @ perfect womanhood that will ey ay there is nothing new under the sun, Others offer to build up your women a luxuriant naturi treatment never before offered the public. massaging, nothing to take, nothing to wear. | 1 was skinny, scrawny: and | will undertake todevelop your bust intwo weeks. All [ ask is five os ten minutes of your | time every day, Write to me Today for my Treatment } it will cost you a penny fora | Myger Pitt mall yoo this wondertal | ion ina plain cover so that no | | one wl now YOUF sect Don’t let a false pride and a silly sense of | dence and secrecy. Write me to-day. PENROSE CONCEDES eve of the primaries which will be heia| Wil! be for Taft, but whet in Pennsyivan: is _& question. " gates to the National Convention sen- e Democratic camp it spare ob ator Penrose, who three weeks ago was! most certain that Gov. Wil 1 TEN T. R. DELEGATES, sive et tees twenty of the sixty-four delegntes O8 PHILADELPHIA, April 11-On the| ‘lected. The to-day to elect dele.| °° 2 instructed by the State C MOST WOMEN are interested just *” Style now in the question of buckles. These. Notes are to be had in such variety that it is simple enough to satisfy one’s fancy by _ for the artistic and unique as well as for the strictly conventional slide. Madame YOU WILL SEE a great variety of.» 'f e charming styles at the Queen Quality Boot Shop on Thirty-fourth Street. They are of silver, gold, steel, jet, : crystal and porcelain beads. Oh, yes, there are some of enamel, too. IT WOULD BE an injustice to put anything but a pretty buckle on aQueen | Quality Shoe, for they deserve the very. best that is to be had. FROM THE MOMENT you enter: the shop you feel that it is distinctively feminine, in fact, it is the only boot shop in New York devoted exclusively to women’s footwear. ‘ OVER A HUNDRED different Spring. » styles in high and low shoes are now on exhibition all priced at $8.50 to 95.00, .: we « Read THE SUNDAY CITIZEN and get a Handsome Leather 4 Gun Metal Watch Fob}. ‘The Fob is useful and ornamental; on the back the score of the game can be kept. A most unique novelty. MANAGERS Sem| - Professional and Amateur Base- ball Clubs ure requested to send news of their clubs ta the Sporting Edi- torof THE BRooxLyn, Crmsen, which will publish Sunday and Daily a page of News of Semi -Prefessional and Amateur Baseball. Tell your Newsdealer in advance to deliver next Sunday * THE BROOKLYN CITIZEN Another Real Estate Concern Testifies to World Advertising Results : : ORANFORD ESTATES CO., 64 Linco: 4 Grentord, Ns, J, April 10, 1912, The World: W nie to give ‘oredsi 10. ‘be fe Bi zor awe E have come to the condsio stealaht, bene povoation rered i The’ Word “cused ve gved ; . CRANFORD. EATATES 00., by 8. ¥, Bhaheen, Pree, Sunday is the big day in Real Estate Advertising If your Real Estate advertisement is printed in the Sunday World to-morrow it will get a circulation in New York City greater than if published in the Sunday Herald, Sunday Times, Sunday Sun and Sunday Tribune COMBINED.