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LUSTANA LATE FAS NEWS OSCAR COMING HOME efiving Day Tardy, Hammer- @ein Representative Says fpressario’s Homesick, , SAVAGE WAS A “SUPE.” Manager ‘Hired Out’in Chinese Play—Turbine Accident Delayed Ship. Ap accent that deranged the meoh- ‘aniem of one of the nigh power tur- Dimes of the Lusitania caused the big ‘veasel to reach her dock in New York one day lat She arrived to-day with an unusually large passenger list, 261 @aioon passeng 369 second cabin and 869 third cl @ total of 1,699, ‘The engine accident reduced the great Cunarde: speed to twenty-one knots. Her average is twenty-five. Among the passengers was George Blumenthal, New York representative of Oscar Hammerstein, who brought the assurance that the {mpresarto, very homesick for America and not particularly delighted with the suc- cess that has come to him in England, will return to this country to live in August. le has had numerous offers that will enable tim to sell out to advantage,” said Blumenthal, “and also has had of- fers from rich Americans who want to eee competition in grand opera here, to make good the $200,000 that will be forfeited if Mr. Hammerstein puts on grand opera in New York in less than ten years after his sale to the Metro- politan. HE CAN’T SEE POPULAR PRICED ‘ OPERA. “He does not think popular priced opera ever will be a success in London and thinks {t {mpossible to buck against Covent Garden. He will continue his popular opera « few weeks and then come back home. He ,has long-term contracts with Felice Lyne and Orville Harold, whom fe will bring to this country when he opens here in the fall of 1913." Henry W. Savage, returning frgm a trip around the world which began in January, was in fine spirits. He took keen delight in telling of an experi- ence at a Chinese theatre on the island @f Hong Kong, Were he served a ” He was introduced to the theatre management by some English friends, he seid, who thought he could get some local color for musical com- emies. ONE CHINESE COIN THE WAGE PAID SAVAGI “Here is my wages,” he said, laugh- fing and Aisplaying a Chinese coin; “they wanted me to stay on the job till the show was over, but I declined The Chinese plays last for weeks, and I they haven't at closed the last o one I was in.” bog ae has bought a 100-foot motor boat crulser upon which he ex- pects to fit an office and transact much ‘business while he is enjoying himself) immer. ard gurGornelus Vanderbilt said her ‘and son-in-law, the Count and Eh ha pe Szechenyi, were in the best of health when ade her goodby in in. vad Storbeck, the South African | pugilist, who was recently defeated by Bombardier Wells, appeared in a boxing match with Herbert Bailey, one of the | Lumtania stewards, yesterday for the) enjoyment of the first cabin passengers. | Bailey, it was said, showed constierabl i. | wet manager insisted that I fight | crouching In my go with Wells," said Storbeck to-day. I like to fight stand- ing straight up. I think thet fs why I lost, and I hope to get another match with Wells while I am over here.” . —-— NEW YORK WINS Commerce RATE CASE. Get no Shipment Favors. WASHINGTON, June 1 City to-day won a decisive victory fore the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion in the so-called export and import differential case. The Commission held that all rail and lake and rail rates to Boston on all ship- ments for export other than grain should not be lower than to New York and that import rates from Boston should not be lower than from New York. ‘The Chamber of Commerce of New York and various civic bodies of that city contended that New York was being discriminated againat by unfair differ- entials and thag export traffic was there- by being diverted to Boston, Philadel- phia and Baltimore in violation of the section of the Interstate Commerce law which prohibits unreasonable discrim- ination. ‘The commission holds t ts not being treated unfair St t New York York | be- | | THE. EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, Miss Brooklyn Wears Startling Gowns And Her Mother Glories in Her Plumage ter’s plumage. appearance this side of the bridge. and anctent knights. ‘The effect of this figure like a sheathed umbrella topped vy the helmet with its rioting plumes is striking not to say alarming. Yet the little girls who wear it are not prouder of the attention they at- tract than are the sober, middle- aged mothers who walk beside them. old and the new generation Uttle, tired mother, form of emancipation daring cut of her spectacular gown, of Ver of sex characteristic Revolution found clinging and First Empire, ‘The Empire phaso !s upon us, sixteen-year-old girl of Harlem Brooklyn to-day expression in Josephine, The pannier we know coming, debutante fashion plates. ‘The purpose and effect of the Empire gown is to emphasise the feminine bust; ‘the purpose ané effoot of the pannier gown is to exaggerate feminine hips, The whole history of fashion strik only these two notes from the great primitive chord of cox, But why should they be struck in the reas of innocent little girls? Per- haps the mothers may take @ Bartender Not ble for Ro Fred Lucas, a bartender at No, ® James street, was arrested recently, when the police raided the place, He wes charged with violating the Sullivan law and was locked up in the Tombs for eeveral days. He was before Ju tice Gerard on a writ of habeas corpu: towiay, Justice Gerard held that as Lucas was merely an employee in the saloon he could not be arrested as the owner of the revolvers found in the pace —_—_—_—_——_ Policeman Shoots Sherif, prinoipal business street in this city, with scores of persons passing, Police- mean B. R. McCann shot and badly niel W, Scott, of thin ing Between the two men ever since t last eleotion, when Scott arrested Mo- | Cann for interfering with the elodtion | shadow lace, white stockings and pumps, Over the very short white skirt was a ljong black satin opera coat, lined with | 1080 colored satin, and every time the ~~ | girl took a step there was a display of i tents were saved, Jor and a flash of legs that would|force at the academy turned out and fought the flames and helped to remove count, McCann was arrested ——< LMANAC FOR TO-DAY, Ea ete ne io strange joy in seeing their daugh- ters attired in costumes they ‘would not themselves dare to wear. ‘The sim Httle Brooklyn girl with h speariike figure and helmeted may seem to her mother a sort of sar- torial “bill of rights.” But it seems singularly unfortunate that an age which shows women clamoring for recognition as human beings rather than jas incubators should also strike a note of license of sex emphasis and sex ap- girl peal even in the attire of ite children, A STRIKING EXAMPLE OF FIG. URE DISPLAY. MOTHER TAKES DAUGHTER City of Homes Headquarters for Glaring Fashions Exhibited by Young Girls Who Resemble Sheathed Umbrellas Topped by a Helmet With Rioting Plumes Producing an Alarming Effect. Looking at the contrast between the esterday, I could not hefp wondering 1! many @ overburdened and underpraised, does not find a strange in the floating plumes of her daughter's hat or the REFLECTIONS AND ECHOES OF FASHION. We know that fashions reflect and echo the psychological spirit of the age which gives them birth, that the license ailles Was oxpressed \n the pan- nier which appeals by {ts exaggeration and the moral chaos of the period following the French the corsetless gowns of the The or wears no more pett!- coats than Mme, Tallien or the Empress is} has in fact arrived on our m Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). To to show very there is to the children Here ts a from one of cerning the young girl street goes attended th: years, and J school. Bet “But one use powder, The young girls have, mothers ki about ft. put before the powder. blame? on Accompanied by a stout and beaming | money funds middle-aged mother, phimp young 611 jected a (of sixteen or so walked along Fulton | tmputions. | street yesterday afternoon, very shor ‘have She wore a white open-work dress with done credit to # burlesque show, iT he effect of @ very long coat parting the furniture Point, owned by t “THE The other day a Evening World criticising the attire of magistrate, jo. 170 and stating that the little girls use paint and powder. There are about three thousand c: dren in our school, and possibly in that number there may be @ few who troyed yesterday, “MOUIES® BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Little Miss Brooklyn took her mother to the moving pictures yesterday afternoon. Great was the parade of juvenile fashion along Fulton street, and wonderful the display of juvenile form, Mother Brooklyn, as I saw her, was al: jably attired in sedate black, but it was evident that she enjoyed a vicarious pride and glory in her daugh- I say plumage advisedly, for th year-old daughters of our sister borough are much and marvellously feathered. Erooklyn, the city of homes, seems to be headquar- ters ‘or a startling fashion, which has yet to make its It begins with what might be called a| culrassier hat, a huge helmet of biack straw, which is untrimmed save for) a yard or so of white ostrich feathers, which are attached to the tops of the crown and float backward over the crowds of Fulton street, conspicuous and beckoning as the white plume of Navarre, usually a gown of black satin, #0 very narrow and so very tight that St sug-| stage trick anyhow, but seen on Fulton! gests the articulated armor of plumed | street, yesterday afternoon, chaperoned by a beaming and obviously respectable mother, it had all the appeal of novelty. | ‘Mow there is little use in saying that this girl’s mother could not help her daughter's attire, nor thet mothers generally are not respon- sible for the startling clothes our very young women wear. The motehrs buy thom or permit the girls to buy them and that is all most invar e sixteen- With this hat is worn short skirts is an old the bject. an wrote to The attending Public School letter and an explanation the little girls: “Dear Madam-I have read your article in The Evening World con- paint and powder on the faces of girls on thelr way to school. 1 wih to tell the young man who s that these girls belong to P. S. 170 that he Is mistaken. Nearly every that he may see ‘made up' on One Hundred and Tenth to work. Iam a pupil of P, 8. 170, and see those girls pass'ng, but they are not schoolgirls, I have at school for about two find It @ most respectable tter teachers cannot bo found in New York, and we have a most excellent principal. thing I wish to state. but by no means paint. man says he would like to know what kind of mothers these ‘Well, I will tell him thelr now =nothing «whatever “I know @ certain girl who takes a ox of powder to school with ho: going home she removes Now, is the mother to She {9 at home attending to her duties and knows nothing about | {ty yet she is the one everybody re- flecta upon. MIRIAM G." —_—_—_- HUNGER PARADE IN LONDON. king Dockmen Collect =» They March, June 16,—Several thousands mothers and children of the striking dockmen and transport work- ers to-day paraded through the streets from the Fast End to Trafalgar Square | firat str a “hunger march." ‘They solicited along the route and col- good sum of money in con- —~. Went Pointers Fight F: The old West Point Hotel at West a four-story brick structure, he Government, wae de Most of the <on- The entire military “THE dq IRREGULAR SLASH SuaPE Lire Hutents OF OLD JUDGE'S LOVE CURE FAILS TOWORK OUT WAYWARD GIRL SEEKS DEATH WHEN SISTER HAS HER SENTENCED Strikes Head Against Bars, Af- ter Spartan “Little Mother” Testifies Against Her. Sadie Aichardeon, seventeen years ol, | pretty and wayward, was sentenced to | four years In the "louse 9% the Gool | | Shepherd Magistrate Naumer of | Brooklyn to-day, on complaint of her Sister Mary, twenty-two years at, stenographer and both breadwinner and “Uttle mother" .to her sister. ‘The girls &re orphane and live it No, 385 Wil- loughby avenue, Brooxtyn. ‘put T have tried ev in the world without avail and care wore no more eff probation under a court order. stays out late at night and will not be a good girl. It is hard to say #0, but I think she shouki be praced in somo {n- etitution.”* ‘When the magistrate announced his decision both the sisters buret Into are, They embraced and kissed cach other boodbye, Then Sadie was led to a cell to await tranefer to the House of the Good Shepherd In the cell she became hysterical an dashed herself against the bars, cutting her forehead, “Oh, I will end it all when I get a ything Tenderness chance!" she cried. A court officer, who endeavored to caim her was attacked and had to blow his whistle for assistance, The girl wae bound with ropes and sent in an ambulance to the Kin, County ‘Hospital to receive medica! attention tor her nervous breakdown. alan PAIR CAUGHT WITH LOOT. “Two Littl: Fellows" Accased of Robb Harlem Apartments, Thomson and Flynn were One Hundred and Thirt standing at -first street and | Fighth avenue, when they saw “two | little fellows,” | When searched, they proved to be | walking jewelry shops, having over $800 worth of rings, ‘pins, watches, bracelets and other articles of adorn- ment, The “two little fellows” gave their names as Joo Allen, eighteen years old, and Wiliam Brower, twenty-one years old. Mrs, Minnie Rutledge of No. 149 Bdgecomb avenue, Mrs, Young of 22 West One Hundred and Forty- t and Mi J, O'Neil of No, 185 Edgecomb avenue were sent for and all three identified several of the articles of jewelry found on the prison- ers ae belonging to them, — ‘Two Men Killed by Gas, Arthur Hoenberg, thirty, and Alex- ander Kagi, twenty-four, were found dead {n bed from gas poisoning early to- |day at No, 47 Forty-ninth street, South | Brooklyn, Mrs, T. Towame, with whom | poarded, smelled gas when she it. Their death ap- | due to accident, y | came from Sweden three years answer, ago SAR ~~ LACE CURTAINS HANGING TO Rt COAT COLLAR FOR FIRST TIME All Fault of Daniel W. Cupid, Who Got Assignment and Fell Down. Dan W. Cupid was given an assign- ment ‘by Magistrate Gates Avenue Police Court three weeks ago and told to report to-day, 1 fell down on the job. ‘Three weeks ago two young things came before the Magistrate to settle their fove quarrel. ite method is to sentence couples who have quarrelled to a period of “ab- sence «make: and with frown warns them they must not see or communicate with each other. are ordered under grave penalty to a pear in court on a given day. and r port. mercy, &c. didly and the Court sees them no more, In other words they never come back— to court, at least. So when Miss Naumer tn the Dan His Honor's favor- the-heart-grow - fonder," ern mien and awe-inspiring Both Meanwhile may the Lord have Usually it works out splen- John Reinhold, who owns the Supply Company th “T love my sister," sobvel the “litte Magin- mother,’ as she told her story to the| trate simply smiled in a fatherly way z a and suggested the usual experiment. He was sure they would defy his or- ders. Court opened to-day, thing the Magistrate did for the coupie, be seen. There was a glean of triumph in his eye as he called their names, About half an hour later while he was trying another case Magistrate Naumer received a start on beholding Miss rounded by three aunts in heavy mourn- ing filing into court. a] later John Reinhold saunt the door, glanced unconcernedly at Miss Nettle and found a seat on the oppo- site side of the room, Mise Nettie declared that John had not obeyed the Court's orders, she sald, had tried to smile at her three times when motorette. “a lady friend of mine” who resented John's longing look, was longing in the look, Very distressed and sorre ing, Magistrate Naumer told J never again, and John agre and the firet They were No ve! Nettle heavily ed and sur ed through he was ri She was a Ing by in that time John denied there in never to see or speak to Miss Nettle 1. When you two came here a * said the Magistrate, “1 whil though Ode you had quarrelled after four yeurs’ For several weeks the West One Hun- | courtship and I expected to hear wel dred and Twenty-fifth street station| Ging chimen after the period of has been deluged with complaints from| sation. Rat 1 see you don't. love on Harlem householders of their apart- other any mor It's too bad, but Ive ments being ente: nd robbed. The | Gone my . robbers were described as “two little fellows.” Late last night, Detectives Manufactured only by JAMES PYLE & SONS, New York. ( Nettle @Qehmidt of No. | 18 Schaeffer street, Brooklyn, complained | | that Reinhold Belting and of No. 174 West Sixty-fifth street, had been paying attengion to years and she didn't want him to fol- |low her around any more, er for four | was to look nowhere to A few minutes John, #0 his with ful look- JUNE 16, NO ‘DEADLY BOMB’ Mysteriols Package Sent Mrs. MERELY STORAGE CELL. Now She'd Like to Know Who was snatched from the hands of Mra. Henry Siden tings-on-the-Hudson yesterday and was thought to have explosive Bidenbderg su to-day by Chief Michael H. Landy of the Yonkers Bureau of Combustibles to be a harmless non-explosive stor battery coll. der to frictt a fernal machine then calmly it cont to do any ings were to Mrs, Sidenbers phoned Mrs. quaintance, whos salsky, some tim gerous package th cause we had never thing just Landy to~ tents showed that three parts carbon and one part sal- ammor proportion of contents is used extensive- | ly in dry storage batteries and these shell cylinders are found in electrical | supply stores, None on the American arkets, howe answers the dimen- sions of this one and that fact caurod us to go slow The tube Is a manufactured in Gorman; and three-quariefs of an inch in meter. tents appeared to the eye to be black It bore an ordinary mailing wrapper, but the name of the city or town from which {t originated 1s #0 blurred that the place ts not dectph packed In a paper box about #ix inches square and in German were the words “Sample, of no value ALARMED BY WIRES CIRCLING berg residence, places on the Hudson, Thuraday even- ner, Wagner became frightened and doused the which he carried It to Chief Landy's offive. | 1912. “My ONLY JOKE SHEL FREATENED HE aky's Henry Sidenberg Proved to Be Quite Harmless. and Where the Witty Sender Is. The supposed lyddite bomb which St. org in her home at Han- ntained enough high the roof off the nmer residence, was found to blow Chief Landy subjected the zine cylin- 1 and heat tests up to 400 nheit. The alleged in- did not respond, He tore it apart, knowing that ned no explosive deadly enough Chief's find- to the police and Sho at once tele- Otto A. Nosaleky, an ac- husband, Judge Ro- ago received dan- ough the mail, 1 look suspicious be- run across an’ like it before,” said Chief | y. “An analysis of its con- it was composed of rees Fahri hotel repor tiful | hotel “The package harmless ingredients. ‘I'hts in dissecting the shell. clal make and was The shell 1s about three inches long dias It ts made of zinc, Its con- ble, It wi wat THE MYSTERIOUS TUBE. The package arrived at the Siden- one of the picture v ing. Mrs, Sidenberg and her husbana, | “8 a wealthy lace importer of No. 293 | Wife Broadway, W ne alone, She tore | MP off the outer r and saw several | Pihu fine wires circling the body of the | Clark tube Mr, Sidenberg took the tube from his wife's hands and advised her to turn the vial over to Otto Wag- | an electrician lving near by. Mrs. eylinder in a pail of water, in belleve that an fo not one intended A auling rich, creamy Iather, a delight and a duty, *3,00 *3.50 § °4,00 Boys woar W.L.. 2. W.L. Douglas makes and sells more $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00shoesthan any other manufacturer in world. iY? BECAUSE he protects the wearer aga inst high prices and inferior s price on the bottom and guaran- teeing their value. BECA ISE for style, fit ond, wear they are superior t rors of shoes. Don't take pal : stitute for W. L. Douglas shoes, dealer ply W. E. Douglas shoes, » Brockton, Mass., for catalog: Shoes sent everywhere delivery charges prepaid. » Caillat W.L. Douglas Store: | 99 Nassau St.; 755 Bro: | tase Bt ved ww cor. A 1452 Thi 203 Th 147th hth Avenue 4 Poarl it. Gates A harm me,” seid'Mrs. Midenbers to-day. expected him to send me a vial of per- fume I had heard about. Mr. Landy found the thing harmless. It must be that some one planned a| twenty-four years’ service on stupid joke on us, ence due to any other reason.” to a Hoboken pier where she will meet fome relatives coming from Germany. She 1s not tn the least disturbed over the incident and stated that a mistake hado been made in saying Judge Rosal- acquaintances, Rosalsky on learned tube was a harmless contraption, OA BORDEN SE FOR HOTEL BL OF ESTRANGED WIE “Pin Money” Advanced to ‘Her and Daughter. Gall Borden, son and an helr of the founder of the Borden Condensed Milk | Company—whose death of was numed, milion dollars, City Court by Charles H. Davis, a pro- prietor of the Hotel st. vanced by the hotel to Mra, Gail Bor- den. ' Miss Romona Borden, their beau- papers in |supplied with a cash allowance by the furnished with meais and apartment: with her mothgr. A year ago social ciroles Los Angel @ palatial home, were stirred when Mrs. Borden sued for a divorce. | dented | came known that the couple had agreed to separate, Mr. Borden allowing his | Wife, it was said, $60,000 a year, Ac- cording to Intimates of the family and a lawyer tn the case this sum was not paid, and a few months ago Mrs, Bor- den came here to force her husband to live up to the agreement. Mrs, Borden and her daughter took | apartments at the Hotel where Mr. and Mrs, Borden were well known, suit, when Mrs, Borden required ready cash or her daughter needed pin money it was readily furnished by the hotel |Mr. Borden then Hved at the Hotel | Manhattan, When reached $2,000 and Mrs. Borden said she | E unable to pay, Proprietor Davis! engaged Lawyer John Leary of No. 19| Broadway to sue Mr, Borden for the| amount, leaving a balance of $1,592.77. biN of particulars, which, however, was not forthcoming, the general statement being made that ‘hotel accommodation and cash allowances were furnished to Judge O'Dwyer of the City Court is) expected to give a decision in the case Monday. Mr, Borden, “1 was not at all frightened and do| qotel Plaza, refused to-day to discuss the suit, the head clean and deodorizing shampoo that makes a and cleans the dandruff, dust, dirt and disease germs, In hygienic tubes, 25¢. W.L. DOUGLA oes, by stamping his name and ¢< ghth nh 708-710 Broadway, cor. Thornton tt. ; 1007 Broadway} 78 Fifth Ave. eldest son is in Germany and I and the Sun Alumni At hold a luncheon In the Hotel at 11.30 o'clock Sunday, honor of George B. Mallon, 1 am glad I can't Imagine its) staff, half of them spent as city has resigned. Ladies, Don’t Grow Old. Sidenberg left her home to go wits la her couvin, They are : She called up Mrs. Stay Yo ne the telephone after she trom Chiet Landy that the} Any Woman Can Do It an She Knows How fot a secret, It slaply taking prope: of the . clten neqlec! that, and take te _of artificial aids. ‘ The Positive Rejuvenater of womem . ; in 7 Foray Use Partola and your mirror: will lect a face glowing with health. You Won't Have Wrinkles. Phat face never shows ‘ Andrew Also Demands | peppermint candies that the entire body and you that the secret of beauty is and that health comes from Pi Any good drug store has them—' 50c and $1, or from Partola Co., 160 2d Ave. FREE 160 24 ay., New York, store at which You bought Part NEE BD. Inheritance his father, on the} after whom he was eatimated at several | {9 being sued tn th for | ad- Andrew, accommodation and cash sixteen-year-old daughter, the suit declare, also was the People, as well as having been | MATCHLESS LIQUID GLOSS here where the Bordens The courte Tt then be- ti% application. St. Andrew, | E According to the papers in the the bill of the St. Andrew A partial payment was made, affidavit alleges that Mr, Bordon to defray all expenses of his and daughter, This is dented by Borden, who 1s represented by Root jr, of |the firm of Root, & Bint, Mr, Root demanded a Borden.” who now lives at the air and scalp of Its use is both You've heard the old sayings “He don't know where he's | but he’s on his way.” Well, the person who starts on @ Se vacation with such a lack of 4% Standing usually returns “sadder » wiser.” THE WORLD’S |Summer Resort Guide for 1912 ¢ will present announcements, and illustrations, of over 2,000 Resort Hotels and Boarding Mousss Rome ang abroad. ‘i ty at hand, ‘e | With this great diversity ai = © j vacation taker should be at a ‘oss. a NOW just WHERE to go to find Ge 7] particular rest or recreation he seeks, a! Copies will be ready for FREB a, § bution at The World's Main and a) t Offices next week If you cannot call for FREE copy t= person, send 6¢ to defray actual and a copy wil be matled to you out cost. WORLD'S SUMMER RESORT Room 103, Pulitser Building, New bet. 146th and — BROOKLYN or. 11th St.; 1779 Pitkin Avenue, eX ~ 10 VORRR.