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"S000 WEATLESS, + BOYCOTT SPREADS TARO EAST SDE No Disorder or Violence: by, Women Now, but Pickets Watch Markets.” ‘BUTCHERS IN DISPUTE. Poultry Dealers Won't! Close, ': Their Shops---Housewives’ , League Back Them. ‘ ‘Three hundred thousandtyeople of the Mast Gide, at a conservative estimate, are not eating meat to-chy and not more than fifteen butcherp shops in the Aietrict between Chatd m Square, Tenth street, the East Réver and Third @venue are open for Pousiness. The Meat boycott, begun ay week ago, ap- ears to be almost confpletely effective Absolute lack of d er or violence @iaracterized the sp dof the meat Boycott to-day, several hun- ‘Rhagi @red women in the ganization spon- sored by Mrs. Sadie Braman acted as Pickets and vi t markets to determine whethe not they were | gelling the prohibited 4 stuffs, at no place was there any sting and n of the few housewives who purchased meat was attacked. ‘A new development ins the widespread boycott has arisen oup of strife be- tween the members of the United Re- tail Kosher Butchers’ Protective Asso- elation, Because those members of the association who are jsoultry dealers have met within the past week a quadruple demand for poultry at the expense o the majority of the association me ders who are butchors the latter wing im the organizution has tried to force the poultry dealers to close their shops too and share in the loss which has been forced on the dealers in meat. This the poultry doalers refused to do + after @ stormy meeting of the assoc! tion yesterday in which the Gisoussed with vehamence several fist fights. The kosher poultry dealers in: thelr product is not controlled meat trust, that thetr prices are fair and | @hat they should not be included in the | meat doycott In this contention the housewives of Mrs, Erdman's league ack the poultry dealers up. They sald to-day that they would @rom éhe chicken stores | 0 ascertain that selling meat. Many of the butchers who had closedd ther places of business last week re- pened to-day with a etock of fieh. Some hat ¢hey would go into the vegeta- business and for both of these eub- @itutep the housewtves promised full eupport. —_—s-— ST. BERNARD BITES BOY, Autma) Had Been Teased to Anger Dy Crowd Just Before, @ tig Ot. Bernard dog owned by Tony excited and darted after the anima! returned to the @aloon and MoGalio gave him a bone to estore bis good humor, but when Ar- thar @cheron!, @ fifteen-year-old school- boy, pamed the door, a few minutes '/ later, the dog made a dash for him and dit him on the left hand and forearm, His wounds—small punctures—were cau- iterised by @ surgeon from Flower Hos- pital and he was taken to Bellevue, ‘The dog was taken to the West Sixty- eighth street station to be examined by the Board of Health for rabies, a ee 200 ARE ROUTED BY FIRE. More than 200 half-dressed tenement Gwellers swarmed to the street early to<lay from the double building, Nos, 161 and 163 Monroe street, as Polic man Joyce ran through the hallways, pounding on the doors with his night- stick and shouting a fire alarm, A pile of rubbish in the basement, probably smouldering for some time, had burst into flame. Capt. Martin, of Engine No, 16, and his men extinguish- e4 it. While searching in the rear of the smoke-filled cellar, Fireman Will- fam Keplowitz was overcome by gas escaping from a melted meter joint >——_——— Major Ell I ALEXANDRIA, Eli H. Janney, inven ftermaster on the sta’ E. Lee during the Ct Janney Dead. June 17.—-Major 4 fleld quar- f Gen. Robert war, died here last night in his eightle Major Janney was the inventor of @ car coup- ler in general use on the country over. WILLIAM JENNINGS BR! ly retained, will report ¢ to} for The World we New York ne’ ee for no other Before Taking || Your Summer's vacation be sure to || select the house or apartment in || which you expect to live this com- || ing winter. “The Books Are Open” showing present and prospective | vacancies in many of New York's finest dwelling houses and apartment buildings, as you will see if you follow World advertisements during the next few days. | 6,017 World “To Let’ Ads, Last Week, || 2,055 More th>n the Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune and Press COMBINED, Cheese from the Greatest Variety GIRL DRESSED TO RESEMBLE A| T HE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, Rouge for Young Girls Vulgar, Not Immoral; ) ndicates Lack of Good Breeding and Ideals. e (> AGI 4 AND BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “I notice,” writes a New York echoolgirl, “that you criticise the dress of New York giris of fifteen and sixteen, and that certain young men have written say- ing that they would ‘pay a bachelor tax of any amount rather than have why you think it and why you don’ cant My dear young lady, and all other young and fool ish creatures who seek to destroy the supreme grace of youth and sim- Dlicity, I do not think make-up, insufficient dressing or any other device of fools is immoral. It is merely vulgar and common. that the New York mother should not be blamed for the make-up on her daughter's face, because, in many cases, she does not know of it. The schoolgirl, I am told, puts her com- plexion on after leaving home in the morning and removes it before returning home at night. MOTHER'S DUTY TO BE ON THE LOOKOUT. One might as well say that a mother {s not to blame {f her children are Ill- mannered or of slovenly speech, be- cause she does not see the rudenesses they commit or hear the careless errors of their talk, Ifa mother has given the proper love and consideration to her daughter's mind, to her code of con- duct and social ethics, it should bo as impossible for the latter to rouge her faco as to appear with questionable finger nails, Also if the mother has| given intelligent attention to the girl's) exercise and general personal hy- giene, the use of rouge will be as un- necessary as it 1s undesirable. Saturday afternoon In Brooklyn 1 saw, | a mother lead two little girls of four! and six years of age to @ vaudeville matinee to see and hear Valeska Sur- ratt, a young woman whose usual per- formance {8 considered strong meat | even for the seasoned and sophisticated | appetite of the habitues of Broadway, ‘These bables were the youngost in an} audience of girls who averaged perhaps seventeen years of age. ‘| Looking over that assemblage, I won-| dered whether the startlingly general effect of maturity and worldly wisdom | was due merely to its extremely grown- | up clothes or whether the sophistication of our s**oolgiris !8 wo complete that clothes have very little to do with it, and the sixteen-year-old girl of to-day would look just as wise and bold in or Quaker’s ature, rv of the audience, I was impressed by fact that !t was, impossible to distinguish from the backs of their heads the girl of sixteen from of forty unless the latter gray, Debutante and ma- tron were alike welghted down wit! false hair, curled and tortured and fil- leted. | nun’ Seated at the ré BARBER POLE. Oh, thase ribbon fillets! I saw them of two colors in Brooklyn, one you woman wearing bandeaux of black and pink suggesting a barber's pole, while pelle AGE I@ hy THE THEATRE Paint on Their Faces Is an Undesirable Label, and It Is the Duty of the Mother to Watch Over Her Daughter’s Conduct and Social Ethics as Well as Her Morals. will lose any sleep over the disapproval of the average young man in New York, but I would like to know "t think a girl has a right to make herself just as attractive to the eye as she possibly ETHEL land Sev Copyright, 192, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). SHAVING BRUSH ‘Tor-PIECE 4 us for wives.’ I can’t eay that we is immoral to use paint and powder, @.” which may be useful in concealing or distracting attention from the ravages of age, but which no young girl needs whose hair is most charming and ef- fective when it is unadorned end un- curled, I think the most vivid and disagree- able impression I have ever received in my life was furnished not long ago by ® young girl of seventeen or eighteen ‘who walked into @ drawing room filled with persons she had never met before and, seating herself at the piano, began to strum and later to baw out a rag- time horror of which the refrain was “This te no place for a ministers son.” She was beringed and powdered and rouged. Her skirts were much too short, She had no voice. She did not know how to play the plano, Yet there she sat with an assurance I am sure Melba has never attained, pounding and howling ragtime! And the utterly unmusioal air, the illiterate words were com- plete expression of the girl's soul. ‘Thoy seemed as appropriate Personality as melody is to lark. For she was a ragtime girl, the complete epitome of the type ‘that will gathor around New York's Pianos this evening and shout in syncopa‘od ecotacy that they “want to be in Dixie’— Where the dog gone hens are proud to lay Scrambled eggs in the new mown hay.” I care not who makes the laws of a} people nor whether {t has any so long as| its songs are made like that and are | sung by our ragtine girls with thelr ragtime manner and thelr syncopated clothes, TO PRESENT ISHAM PARK. | Women e Clty Property Border- ing on Spayten Duyvil, Mrs, m Taylor and Miss Flora BE. Isham } iven their family homestead, consis of n and about seventeen acres of jand, extend: ing from Broadway and Two Hundred and Eighteenth street to Spuyten Duy- vil Creek, to the city of New York as @ public park, The formal presentation will take place next Saturday, Borough President McAneny will make the presentation address for the Isham family and Park Commisisoner Stover will accept. These ceremonies will be preceded by a parade of the school ohil- dren of the Dyckman section, Fort Washington Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Daugh- ters of the Revolution, the Historical Society, the Ame and Historic Preservation Soe! City History Club, the Washi Heights Men's Assoctation, the 2 Manhattan Taxpayers’ Association and the Dyckman Taxpayers’ Association. | ‘The parade will start from Two Hundred h street and Amsterdam ave- nue and will march to the entrance of Isham Park New York —eEEE Archle Ready tor Ha CAMBRIDGE, 3 vard 4s to shelter the Roosevelt family enother had adorned her purchased locks with red and black ribbon. There the third son of the ex-Pre this city now taking his entrance exam- brother ut is in dent, is in Two CUIRASSIER Le ‘S FEATHERS Se WOMEN BRICKLAYERS TO GRADUATE FROM THIS NEW SCHOOL Ground Broken To-day for Johnson Female Trade In- stitution, First in U. S. BARBER Poe Gas ja” GANDEAU SOLAR, BUTTON Canrerre Some EAR WNGS 335 CASES EXHAUST JUDGE. Freschi Has to Adjourn After a Record and Two Hard Nights. Magistrate Freschi had to suspend the sitting of the men's Night Court at 11.80 last night in fear of physical col- lapse. He was absolutely exhausted. Up to that hour 137 prisoners had been arraigned before him, and there were more than @ score of cases yet to be heard. Last night's work was not solely re- sponsible for the Magistrate's condition, JUNE 17, 1912, '_ _|atrest, Newark. RICH ISAAC HOPPER TELLS HOW HE FOUND | A WIFE IN JERSEY Harlem Contractor Quietly Married by Priest After a Year’s Courtship. Tease Abram Hopper, the Harlem con- tractor and banker, announced to-day that he bad deen married at Newark, N. J, last Wednesday to Mre, Mary G. Ludwig. Mrs, Mary @. Ludwig Hopper was the widow of Daniel Ludwig and is the| Gaughter of Jacob and Madeline Ga » Ghe lived at No. 2% North Seventh Mr, Hopper, when seen in hie office at the Empire City Savings Bank, No, 21 West One Hun- drea and Twenty-fifth streo' “Yen, it te true that T am happily married. I have been courting my bride for @ year. She ts an old friend of iny family and we determined to get mar- tied quietly, Father MoKeever of the Church of St. Rose of Lima officiated at the wedding, Mrs, Hopper and my- self are living at my country place at Mahopac, Westchester county. Some Practical joker with a wierd sense of humor inserted an announcement tn one of the morning papers that I had bean married at Temple Beth-Janiech, Jersey City, It was @ pointless bit of humor to say the least.” Mr. Hopper {s sixty-one years old and | his bride fifty-two. Mr. Hopper’s first wife, Mrs. Margaret Duncan Hopper, died Sept. 21, 1910. Mr. Hopper has been active in politics for many years. He | was at one time Superintendent of | Butidings and former Tammany leader of the Thirty-first Assembly District. He was School Commissioner for a time | and was mentioned as @ candidate for Commissioner of Public Works during Mayor Gilroy's administration. Mr, Hopper was president of the Harlem Democratic Club from 1908 to 1907. | Aa a contractor Mr. Hopper has erect- e4 many of the public buildings in New York and @ number of hotels. He also | erected the Third avenue bridge. —»———- SERVED HIM COOKED CAT. Mra. Hand Gave Husband 3B; for during the Saturday night and Sun- day morinng session he had set « new record, having disposed of 198 prison- a. “The session lasted from 830 A. M. to 8 A. M. At its close Masistrate and attendents were on the verge of col- lapee. ——————__—_ Dead Baby Found on “L.” ‘The body of @ baby in a paper wrap- Ding rolled before a man who was es cending the steps of the dlevated at Broadway and Driggs street, Brooklyn, early to-day. Policeman Cavanagh took the bundle to the Clymer avenue sta- tion. The child was about seven months ol. On the neck was @ bruleé. An topsy will be hel to determine the cause of the baby’e Geath. “Way for the lady bricklayer, plasters er and plumber! The initial step of an invasion of flekis of labor iong held ex- clusively by wearers of trousers was taken to-day when ground was broken at Winfield Station, L. 1, for a female trade school. This school, which will ‘ve called the Johnson Female Trade School in honor of Wire Commissioner Johneon, will teach all the details of the buliders’ art to women. The Johnson Female Trade School Wil cost $80,000 and will be bullt by the Master Builders’ Association of No. 108 Park avenue. The achool, which will be the only one of ite kind in the United States, will open on Oct, 16. Already sixty women have been enrolled as stu- dents. These women will be taught carpentry, plastering, pluinbing, briok- laying, steam heating and steel work. Thomas J. Buckley, President of the Master Builders’ Association, originated the idea, For a long tino the associa- tion has been receiving requests trom women who wished to enter trades, Mr. Buckley discovered a female trade echool in Beritn with over 800 students. He suggested the idea to his organise- tion and work of raising the money was begun. Edward L. Middleton, a ctvil engineer, and @ corps of six assistants will have charge of the female trade school, the cornerstone of which will be laid next course will be two years and the tuttion feo $300 a year. Frank X. Grady, vice-president of tho Master Butlders’ Association, said that was great need for such @ school women. “All over the country women are en- tering the building field,” sald Mr. Grady, “and a school wh they can recelve @ practical tra{nin \. lute necessity. Wom: strated thelr ability too well to ®e sne n have the 1 at. non- ling Une Alleo M. Durkin of the firm of Durkin & Laas of New York, for instance. Misa Dur- Kin has erected a large number of structures and has ntly received a contract from the Department of Edue cation for the erection of a public school {n the Bronx which will cost $340,000,"" Boe HH. W. Mabie to Lecture tn Japan, Dr. Hamilton Wright Mabie, an asso- clate editor of the Outlook, will go to Japan in October for ture tour, He will » universities and will also address @ number of chambers of cammerce and organizations of a public character, been absent from eol- month, probably by, Mayor Gaynor, The | Kftten Supper—Gets Six Months. BINGHAMTON, N. ¥., June 17,—-Hav- Ing, a8 a joke, served @ boiiel kitten to her husband for supper, Mrs, Nora Hand hee deen sentenced to six months in the Onondaga penitentiary on @ charge of intoxication. . Hand had complained that her menus were scant and that his mea's were not satisfactory, When he came from work he found her in @ jovial mood and she inquired ff he would iike a chicken fricessee. Recetving en af- firmative reply, ehe brought to the table @ platter containing @ steaming eat cooked in ts fur. She was arredted on @ charge of @is- oréerly conduct and wentenced for m@- toxtoation. A 3-Day Special Offering of Imported Fabrics for Men’s Suiting There are just 247 single suit lengths to choose from —some are two-piece, others 8 Included are real Irish Homespuns, French and English Flannels for outing suits, Wool Crash Fabrics for city and country wear, and for the man who minds the summer heat Tropical Weight Worsteds that hold their sha; There are also pleasing designs in Blue, Russian 5 many shades, Browns, Shepherd Plaids and Hairline Stripes. i when these 3-Day Sale O The garments produced and modern facilities can mal Nassau and DELICIOUS “SYRUP BAD LIVER OR This gentle, effective fruit your stomach, liver and A harmless cure for sick headache, for sour, gussy, dis for pstipation, in- tor sallowner ac coated digestion, 1 implor—take delicious Syrup of Figs For tho cause of ull these troubles lies in a torpid liver and sluggish con- dition of your thirty feet of bowels. ‘A teaspoonful of Syrup of Figs to- without gripin, It means a many bright days t! f nausea or weakness. heer Syrup of Fi ‘ou are dru, igs, senn: jure physic. remarkable fruit preparation le 7 x ae Originally bolts of cloth they sold for $85 to $40. Made to Measure are the highest attainment that human abillty, experience | of an establishment whose time and sole energies are de- voted to the production of made-to-order clothes only. Early selection advised— PH. WEINBERG & SONS ———-———"Thirty-four years of knowing how. bile, poisons, gases and clogged-up waste. to-morrow— Please don't think of gentle, effective Don't think 6 yourself, for luscious | of nd aromatics can not in- three-piece suitin, well. ray in single suit lengths were full 20” by our tailoring organization nly $ ke them. They are the result John Streets WIFE BEATER CLUBBED. Woman St. A wi avenue bruised and bleeding. She told how she had North Bruno had attacked her with a her tnsenstbi: @ former marria, in bed. ato to Sammon Ald. ‘oman staggered into the Bedford pollee station early to- met Buch!insk: Snedeker aga every pane of gings, the policeman dropped Buchinsky broke Bracken's hold ai threw him across the room, After hard battle he was mission. rawied from her home, u“ Fifth street, after her husband Buchinaky, had beaten her. # ick, boatin, while her five children by lay terror strict . She anid ho was jealous of her, found the door the door and at the head of the The iron worker fi 5 st a window, found Policemen Bracke a irricaded. nd 68 ‘They for The sash held to the bed Into sit % At the Willlamsburg Hospital {t a that the wife was a mass bruises from head to foot, and her com dition ts sertou: Tuesday's Famous Annual Event $20 Novelty Worsted Suits $18 Imported Serge Suits $15 Rich Diagonal Suits The one great sale you Dollar Suit Event. An annual occasion ve been wait $ iting for. The Bedell Five. where, regardless or perfect condition, many superbly tailored suits are ruthle sly Early to Get Your Size cut in price to $5. Pid coats, I skirt beautifull as well as ever: ality, and colors of ev Astounding Coat Clearance $15 Dressy Serge Coats $12 Smart Mixture Coats $10 Lustrous Mohair Coats , This annual event means a real live bar; te Kena coats, and they must Fe ormorde Sizes early, you will realize what a genuii FU FE OF Fico” FOR A SLUGGISH BOWELS, laxative thoroughly cleans 30 feet of bowels of sour ® wonderful stomach, liver and bowel eer, regulator and tonic, the and most positive ever devised, day of violent purgatives, such pills, salts and castor oil They were all wrong. got relief, bui at what a cost! acted by flooding the bowels fluids, but these They with fluids were digestive night means all poisonous waste Syrup of Figs embodies only matter, the undigested, fermenting | hi leas laxatives, which act in a| food and sour bile, gently moved on jnatural way, It does what right food and out of your system Wp morning, | would do—what eating lots of fruit and what plenty of exercise will do for the liver, stomach and bowels. Be sure you get the old reliable and enuine. Ask your druggist for the ull name “Syrup of Fig and Elixir ”" prepared by The California con 0; Tae paek, with 8 Byrap tation recom: sti te goo” Fig Syrup toonded os You | | | are broken, but all sizes are go to-nyorrow and if isitely peau de cygne lined, every smart, grace- i peloeel . Elaborately or simply trimme/ : desi vored tailor-mades. Materials of beaut favorite hue. Now $5. $ in day. Wecannot carry over tegardless of cost, GRAND RAPIDS RNITURE parime: m_$49.98 to . dd 50 Purchase. is WE PAY FREIGHT CREDIT TERMS "Sev ° FIRE-PROOF BUILDING T TELEPHONE 8867 COLUMBUS 1 i CARPET CLEANSING BY COMPRESSED AIR IN FIRE-PROOF STORAGE FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS M-STEWART 488, 440, 442 WEST 5iet 8T.,