The evening world. Newspaper, May 20, 1912, Page 3

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ay $0, 19 “WHO STOLESI51 GETS | OF STEALING WALLET i VEY HT UIE ke Sad Pye pe re Is HY Ideal Beauty? © vite desi Ks ome at} out warning and’ his Newark, tor | prow THROUCHPARKS TO ~SEERUDES PAY Also Takes a Peep at the Bears and the Mongoose and ~ | Tells About It. Sentenced Despite Pleas of|Held on Bootblack’s Come. Scores of Friends, Because | plaint, Funk Says He Can | | Trust Demands “Example.” Prove He Was Asleep. ‘The pleadings of more than a score of echooltpachers, priests, public officials Semen end business men of Jersey City aid Policeman Frederick Funk of the West | lone Hundred and Twenty-fifth street | station, was arraigned in Harlem Court | to-day charged with grand larceny from | “SUNDAY PLAYING O. K. Even John Calvin Bowled With His Neighbors on Sabbath, Gaynor Says. ——— ‘Phe parks of New York were the sub- of an interesting discourse by | Qieyor Gaynor to-day. Accompanied by “@ pdliceman, he mado a round of Central yesterday in his automobile. He x the children at play, watched a | ‘baseball game, viewed the tennis players @Ad studied the condition of the park, ‘whith 19 constantly drought to bis at- | téntion by numerous letters. | “The moral the Mayor draws from Bis | Saeke trip, which also included Cohoy Bath Beach, Fort Hamilton and the ‘ocean front about Averne, is, that the people of New York want outdoor [ recreation on Sunday and that they ‘He emphnsised this | point ang described the innocent amuse. | gent he found everywhere. “§ euppose you ail know we have & fine’ park over in Brookiyn, and that * Brooklyn ts a part of theéity,” eaid the + “I went through Prospect Park And it is in good condi- I waiked all through it. I ev the bears and the raccoons, | end also the menarete. I also saw the edjoming perade ground, and not a soul! 0 Ut. I tooked particularly at that It was @ mos: lonesome looking piace. “In the afternoon I went through Central Park. 1 found children at the tmerry-go-rounds and swings, and the tennis grounds were covered with play- ‘era. They were enjoying themselves The boats on the lake were to be people that are indoors during the ek. wi PARKS ARE IN FINE CONDITION, | YT + THE MAYOR FINDS. i * “T-found the parks in fine condition. e of the fields had been ploughed nd Ure being ceeded down’ anew. “Same people aro very much disgusted gbout that. It 1s a necessity to do that periodically, Even the farmer knoy grace dies out after a number of yearae those we ha’ se oy especialy after three or four dry immers like vi “— ha’ complaints Et i: Central Pa: only park in ‘That 1s because there are #0 meny people who think Mantattan 1a all. there is of the city of New York. I pai Bronz, in Brooklyn and in Queens Bor- ho write complat people who write as they ride or ish. They seem to think | pork. te just for thotr special de- | to look at as they ride or drive I invariably write to them and ask them to ere not made those who are can ride or| Qfive through them, but that they are | made for ell the people. NOT SINFUL TO PLAY ON S8UN-; BDAY, HI8 HONOR THINK! | i if ls with Ne nelghdore, think people ought to go to forenoon if they want to ike recreation In the after- ere is no Sunday question ‘We should all observe the the Sunday, but we must honest views of every one of doing it.” <> — . @ New-Bore Baby. Carrie Ghaes, eishicen years O14, & In the home of J, sath rere at F l F way oir omer charged with the killing of her newhorm child, The young woman was removed to the hospital before the orkne was discovered. Dr. C, H. Smith ‘af No, 28% Brosiway reported to the police that the decap.tated body of « new-Ddorn infant had been found tn the from which the young girl wan taken by the ambulance surgecn, THE FORCE OF RESULTS. As the man advances who does his work well, 80 an. advertising medium forges to the front as i “makes good.” . 6,359 Wert ote, ee Wi ot Want ae Weak 4,616 More Than the Herald. This striking World Ad, showing @ould not possibly have been made were not the mighty structure built firmly on the rock foundation of World Advertising Results, Not save seventedn-year-old Eiwant J, Morris from @ prison sentence to-~lay when he was arraigned before Judge | O'Sunt convicted bY" his own jof the theft of $161 from the Bankers’ | Trust Company. The demande of the | Officers of the company that the boy be Tey THE mor. WOVSE PEACH LITTLE PEACH IN A GARDEN GREW, WARMED Ay THE SUN AND WET BY THe Dewe The Athletic Girl, the “Peach, Ripened by Wind - and Sun,” Is Favored by Many as the Choicest in the Orchard—Independent and Healthful, She Is a Helpmeet,.Not a Burden. ‘A young man r of The Evening World Led taken exception to the classifieation of the College Girl as the newest type of Beauty. “There is another type much more novel and in- teresting to sensible men,” he writes, in defining what | beauty means to him. “She Is the girl who can pull an| oar, swing a tennis racket, ride a horse or take a ten- mile walk. Shes sport, not a milli on a vacation ou other peach in the whole orchard that compares with my ideal of feminine beauty, the outdoor girl.” A great many men will agree with this outspoken variety of peach, “warmed by the sun and wet by the dew,” and the number of her devotees is likely to increase with every. year. Halt a century ago she did not exist in this country. Fifty years from now she may be acktiowledged the Queen of Love and Beauty everywhere. admirer of the orchard Already she seems to baye cornered Tremunerative tanoy. of the artists who make them, WIND AND SUN RIPENED PEACH 18 BEST. Pretty soon the costiior variety of hot-house ch will find herself ripen- ing alone on the trellis. For more and more men are learning that the extra expensiveness of the useless and help- less woman {js not compensated by su- pertor flavor or quality. A hothoue peach ls a very delightful thing to loox ‘at. It te grown or shape 1nd else and complexion and # has all these things, but when you have paid $8 for it you find that it is not jy 80 sweet or lusctous as some little etx-for-ten push- cart peach, « rter of its size, that had @ chance to ripen in wind and sun. If I were @ young man in search of & wife I should think very seriously ot the outdoor girl. In fact, there Is just one type of beauty I should prefer to her, The outdoor beauty has the oute door virtues, Sbe plays the game, what- ever it nay be, fairl "t cheat to win or play baby if she loses. If there ‘a forfeit, she pays, for with her boy- h clothes, her swinging atride, her low heels and big gloves she has acquired certain gentlemanly qualities—once held to be the exclusive property of the | male, Bhe 1s sincere, frank, sportemans | Uke. ‘On the other hand, she may acquire | the meeculine vices of bluster and assert- ivenese, and in certain cases she may borrow man's simplicity of dress and under her t clothes retain the serpentine indirection of the old-fash- foned lady with her futile prettiness, her simpering inanity and her belief, shared by the mates of her generation, thas it was rather clever and fascinat- ingly feminine for a women to lie and cheat, MODERN WOMAN QREATEOT OF MODERN WONDERS, Cornell College the other day they Won Gere of the Modern World, And not one of those crude young undergraduates ought of mentioning the greatest won- the difference between our mothers’ tallow dip and our own elec: tric Nights wae not so great as that whioh s between the women of 100 years ago and of to-day, Never has « chasm between the two centuries soomed so wide end vast a that between the women 1800 and of 191% Looking beck upon the average woman of’ 100 yoare ago we can't blame men for thinking themselves her superiors, They were! ‘What @ contrast there is between drooping miniature basu of the fit- Hop and the splendid, equare-shouklered, treesairiding outdodr gt of to-day! And yet thie physioal contrast te the ‘eamt of all, In the innermost oprner of Ber soul jd-fashioned woman felt that to be jo be Inferior, Whe had in eedh, in costume, a subtie of may teth century knows nething yf men were pleased by and respon: tupine amiability of the old-fas woman, They resent the absence of the sox eringe in the higher grade women of todays But she man of Aner genet THE HOT-HOUSE PEAcH ‘ON the girl who ‘s a comrade and a real hase tne ao tah a char hn wip Tor wet toy JUSTICE MEWBURGER'S Woman Who Left Synagogue for St. Thomas’s Church Did Not Feel Isolated in New Circle. sacrificed as an example to bank mens- engers carried the most weight and Morris was sent to the Pimira Reforma- tory. The boy's widowed mother be- the young prisoner jefore whom the boy lened, held that justice would not be served by eending Morrie to prison. He said after the bo: pleaded guilty: : “I know what ending you to prison the | home, No, 49 West One Hundred and money. When he was arrested fn Cht- cago several days later he had 9100, which was returned to the trust com- pany, making the actual loss $151. ‘The boy had been employed by the Bankers’ Trust Company four years, His salary was $37.60 a month. He was constantly intrusted with large sums ot money. The only child of a widow, he had been carefully brought up and was highly thought of by all who knew him, had | later Pesani misstd his wallet, contain- the person, the complainant being Lais Pesant, who has a bootblack booth at No. 2% Old Broadway. Bail was txed at $1,009, which was furnished, and Funk | was allowed an adjournment to bring witnesses to prove the alibi he asserts he can establish, Pesant'e story is that on iast Thurs- | day morning 10 o'clock two men in| ottizens’ clothes, one of whom was ot of rough horeepiay, in the course of which both jostied and manhandled him in @ joking way. About an hour ing $145, which hed been in his inside walstooat pocket. ‘ The boothlack did not go to the station house with @ complaint until Wednes- day evening when the platoon was turning out. He tok his story to Oupt. ‘Thompson and picked Funk, who was in uniform, out of fina, Capt. Thompson ordered Funk to appear in court to-day, and Posan! wag there to press the com- plain. Bunk's defense is that he was at his Bixty-ffth street, esiqrp, at the time the robbery le alleged to have ocourred. Last Thursday was Punk’ home at 9 o'clock, and she out. A neighbor, who called at hold arti¢le she hed borrowed from Mre, Funk, saya the policeman came to the door in his nightclthes and took the article from her hands, Mre. Funk Glares her husband was in bed when a! returned from mass and remained in the ‘house al) day. emanation emescigin BLIND SKIPPER DROWNED. a Mye- | teriously Disappeared. | A body floating in the East River on Gaturday was identified to-day as that ‘ce InY our CircleofF riends Summer travelling wear. Alterations FREE Stern Brothers will place on Sale To-morrow, Tuesday, ‘At Extraordinary Purchase of Semi-Made ©” © Embroidered Robes the magazine covers and the highly bilities recognizes that for the first time {t fh possible for a wife to be a friend and comrade as ‘well as the female of the species. The change in wom: outlook upon life has bad @ tremendous effect upon her physical appearance. It is the Greater freedom of the American woman which has produced what M. Rene Bazin described a short time ago as “the flaring beauty of our imperial young girls.” Our youns girls are im- erisl merely because they are em- Dresses of themselves, and not, as fore elgners are apt to believe, because they dominate American men. The supreme ‘This is @ story told last night by Jus- , tice Joseph BE, Newburger of the preme Court inner at Delmonte “It “will you to learn tha eeveral women of my race have recently ‘become members of St. Thomas's Epis- copal Church. Among tham ts an estl- mable lady. who,was born on the east side, had attended a synagogue all her fe and married « Jewish merchant, who 80 prospered that he found it In keeping with his means to buy @ home in upper Fifth avenue. Not long after they had been installed there the wife called on Dr. Stires, the rector, and ex- pressed a desire to join the fashionable Fifth avenue congregation. The Doctor received her graciously and said he would be pleased to welcome her as « ber. She was duly confirmed, —In Any Circle there is always some } one man who stands outasbetterdressed than the rest—whose clothes look so well on him, and the well cut lines of which somehow appeal to you, yet you know not why. That man always of Imported Voiles and Batiste, all white or embr me roidered in the newest colors, Actual Values from $15.00 to 25.0 They have in preparation for Wednesday, May’ An Extraordinary Offering of SUMMER DRESSES, LINEN SUITS AND WASHABLE SKIRTS in entirely new models and a complete range°of sizes. Also in their Shoe Departments, 4 “4 ‘A few days after confirmation in called on Dr. Stires, and wi conversation deftly had been Jed to worable point said, ‘Now, Doctor, I am a member of St. Thomas's, I would, of course, deeply appreciate it if you would Introduce me to some of the ladies of the \sregation.’ “The rector’s assent was immediate and cord! ‘Certainly,’ said he ‘tt wiil give he greatest of pleasure to o #0. The ladies have a gathering here next Friday afternoon and {f you will ‘be present I shall be delighted to present really ite cleanness. And no gin Gulse than the outdoor girl, save one— ‘the last best girl of all—the one I em {saving for to-morrow, i (fig eee AUCTION OF SEATS GOES ON. Orchestra Chairs for Lambe’ Gam- bol Put Up To-Day. ‘The public auction sale of seats for the Lambe’ A Star Gambol on Monday evening, May 97, at the Mamhattan Op- eve House, was continued this afternoon at the Hudson Theatre. So muoh time was consumed in auctioning off the boxes at the sale last Thursday aft goon that the orchestra was scarcely touched, Nearly all the orchestra geate were lett when Augustus Thomas opened the sale this afternoon before an eudience that packed the lower floor of the house. Besides MP. Thomas there were De Wolt she arrayed herself that afternoon wn and her most ‘The lst of those esent would read Ifke that of a high society function, The merchan nt with expectatl made a short address bearing on the church matter under consideration and then beckoned the new member and od her to atep into an adjoining room, ree ladies were there and the rector, who followed close behind the mer- wife, with a gracious gestuzp, rp. Levf; permit me to present | Mre. Goldstein! And Mra. Rosenbaum! And Mrs. I contoneere, ne St volunteer! HONOR A DEAD MERCHANT. uottonears, Se nake” Car Bein, Out Many ‘prominent business men called Boston yoaterday at No. 18 West Beventy-fitth street, the home of Edward F. Brown- Crooked Streets, ‘The latest in street cars is being tried out in Boston, and is known as the) ing, a t¢tired merchant, who died gat- “anake” car—e coach with @ Joint to|urday night, He was seventy-five and enable it to wind ite way through the, was for twenty narrow, bent streets of downtown Bos-| firm of Brownin ton, | apt twelve ye ‘The car's joint 4s in the mid¢le and tt) Mr, Browning com pas @ flexible platform covered with a! tha Browning fam hood, It appears in one unbroken length leaves two clilldren, when on a straight track, The Boston ing and Mrs. George P. Biggs. The name for it {8 “the arttoulated car, funeral will be to-morrow, in A “straw” vote will de- cide overwhelmingly in fa- f vor of Young Straws. Cast our “‘vote”’ to-day for the topical style candidate ahd be on the winning side, $2, $3 & $4—all correct bratds, Panamas and Bangkoks at poputar prices, 1350 Prosdway, @ Broadway, 190 Becafwny, oun Cy 008 Broadway, 40 Broedway, Onty roohiza Sears, Ovpesite Oty Hat, has his clethes made to his own measure to ex- press his individuality, for he knows that no two men are alike in build, and that while ready made clothes seem to answer the purpose, they but clothe the body in a general way—the same for all men and devoid of individual expression; that the only true fit for any man is the fit of clothes and to conclusively prove this, we offer today, tomor- row and Wednesday only 681 Single Suit Lengths in Blue, Brown and the Russian Gray Suitings ‘D0 Made to your own measure at.... We do not usually make goods to measure for $20, but it is to show you the difference; and, gentlemen, believe us, there isa difference. PH. WEINBERG & SONS Nassau & John Sts., Southwest Corner GLEAN YOUR LIVER OF BOWELS WITH “SYRUP OF Figs,” More effective than calomel, castor oil or salts; gently cleanses the stomach, liver and bowels without — Children’ dearly love it nausea or griping. You know when your liver is bad, when your bowels are sluggish, You feel a certain dullness and depression, perhaps the aprroach of a headacho, your stomech gets sour and full of as, tongue coated, breath foul, or you fon ind!gest'on, biNous of cpnstipates and } must take something honnigbt” Moat people shrink from a physio-— they think of castor oll, calomel, salts or gathartld\pRles eran Us differeat , Its. effect ts an that of fralt' of aie coarse food: of exercise, Take a toa- Nassow 64, Mo, OT, | ap enful of aeiicious cup of Figs to night and you won't ,ealise ye \h taken snyibia until mernin, vhen all the o ood ip waste pats ter, sour bile and constipation polsons meve on oud out of your aystem, with: You say, “I om fi made to his own measure, New dese, 936 to 840 Quality) New York City AND oO FEET out gripe, nausea or weakness, Noth- ing else cleanses and regulates your sour, disordered stomach, torpid liver and thirty fect of waste-cloggod bowels like gentle, effective Syrup of Figs, Don't think you are drugging yourself, Heing composed entirely of luscious mna and aromatics, it can not jury, VM your ila Is cross, sick and fever- (sh, or ite Uttle stomach sour, tongue coated, eye Syrup of Figs at once. It's renily all that fs needed to make children well and happy egain, Thoy nny love its pleasant taste, Ask your druggist for the full name, p of Fige and Eliair of Senna” look on the label for the name— WOMEN'S COLONIAL PUMPS At Special Prices, West 23d and 22d Streets Andrew Alexande Men’s New Oxfords Tan Russia Calf, perforated vamp, flat last, broad shank, low heel, $5 Many other good styles in Black or Tan Calf and Patent Leather, all the popular shapes at the same price. Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street Sur Storage FOR : FINE FURS At Lowest Cost t Telephone 5900 Main Balch Priceéla Fultoné Sraitt St3., Brooklyn od Subway fr Centrale Borengh ett Secctes 98.75" é

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