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ve dae adbegeseten sedans EACH OTHER AND SUMMON POLIGE Two Jimmy Way Into Pal’s | Flat And Force Him | to Produce. VICTIM THEN SHOOTS.! Prisoners “Squeal” on Com- Plainant Whose Rooms Are Filled With Loot. When a pair of burglars burgle a) Wergiar and the tyirgied burglar @ore over burgled that he shaote | at the duraling burelgrs and then assists fm their capture and appears against eaid burglars tn the role of an inidig-| Mant citizen can you blame the burglars | who burgled the burgiar for squealing on aforesaid burglar and confiding to the police that in the flat ef the burglar they byrsied there are large quantities of loot? While the above may eound Yke one of those ‘pint of pickled peppera” Jumbles it ia simply @ statemept of factya fact very pleanant tp the police of the Mast One Hundred and Twepty- @ixth Street station, for it led to the capture of three very had tyirglare, who Ritherto have been friends and pale Jeading @ merry burglarious ife amid the teeming fiats of Harlem. Likewise st of Mra. or Mise juth, one flat at No, 418 One Hyndred and Twenty-third street the burgiar wag Durgied of some of MMs. five gripsacksful of loot, @rank Irwin, and * seoms thet he and @irs. or Misa Rosenbluth were sleqping peacefully when James Murphy, aftas wometixing or armed with two MWe, a knife, and an icepick, ‘ané Ed Murray, elias ‘The Little Nick- @,” armeg with one 3%, two knives, wo jimmies and a string of skeleton keys, went up to the Rasenbluth flat and entered without mocking. JIMMIED DOOR OPEN ‘WALKED RIGHT IN. Ge was 3.4 A. M., with’ dawn break- and Ed and James were in a AND mied apen the dgor, flashed their ord- Bance and walked right in. Burglar Irwin woke up with a start and blinked bie eyes at the sattery of Upftt te ial THe BABYS CHRIS TENING SPLURGE NOt Crs sou a S°wAee No.2 ‘Tre bursied dursiar calls ttmecit] Girls at Home See None but Flashy Dresses, Hear Nothing but Talk of the Latest Paris Creation and the Last Sensational Novel or Play, Says a Miss of Fourteen. BY NIXOLA GREBLEY-SMITH. ‘We dave heard from the mother who says that she cannot control or even suggest that her schoolgirl daughters dress in a manner suitable to their youth, without inourring the contempt, or, as she says, the hatred of her children. Here is a letter which gives the other side of the picture, the complaint of a child who says that her mother eeta ber an example of loud and extravagant Greasing: visited) and am ameng gttle of my me, it is not entirely the fault of the gins. At home they eee no other dress, hear no other leaguage, but talk of the latest Paris creation and ‘the last sensational book of play. Can you blame them for being what they are when they have Mstened to thie from babyhood? Their mothers teach them the alm end object of their existence i# matrimony, and that no means of reaching this end ahould be neglected. ‘But there are some tittle girls left. ‘There are, gitis who have sensible parente who dresa them simply and sensibly. The giris can often sew in a way that our erepdmothers might have been proud of. Gome of us can coek simple and dainty dishes, These Gre the opinions ef @ fourteen-year O86 girt RL Now, the remarks of thts fourteen- year-old philosopher ere not without jus- ‘Meantime 14 and James had been #0 "lengelide o' him. It availed Burgler Irwin nothing to protest. detectives went back to the Gat with him and quickly found severe) thousand dollars worth of loot, g@ome of which had been obtained only as recently as ery at the fi the procead: jaries were found Mrs. or Miss Rosenbluth ‘was arrested with Irwin and charged ‘with harboring stolen goods in her home. —_—————— WORLD “AD” FINDS HANDBAG. Lest June 10, Recovered as Soon as ‘World Made Loss K &. Miller of No, 239 Fifth avenue @eanked The World yestertay for the recovery of @ handbag and contents lost June W in @ Sixth avenue elevated | train, | Mr. Miller said that the handbag con- | tained personal effects of consideravie | Value, some of which could not have | been replaced, ‘When the advertisement for the bag appeared in the Lost and Found col- umns of The World the response was fmmediate, ‘The finder called Mr, Mil- | Jer by phone th and sald he | hed handed the bag e Lost Arti- cle Department of the Interborough. ‘With the trajn numbe~ and other in- formation given by the Ander of the! recov. | tifestion. The most casual observer of; American life cannot fat! to notice that extravagance marks the attire of the fe- male American chil@ long before she has “Dear Madem—I have been reading with in- terest your erticles on echoolgiri's dress. It is true many of our girls dress ae you say, but not @U of them. I attend @ public echool (P, 8. No. 170, which you recently one int, and Mother Does, Too;’’ This the Defense of a Schoolgirl of 17 Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). wmew, THESE GRADUATIONS ARE EXPENSIVE bsg f Own age almost every day. Believe arms of these apectacuias young women Whose fathare and mothers and little aistera looked on in @ frensy of ai- miring pride. And some of these gtr! graduates had thelr faces “made up.” ‘Was it thetr fault? Not at att, deed ¢o fashion this season that she has Bot worm to the alter a “fish tail" tren? JUST WHAT A “FI@H TAIL” TRAIN 18, @or the benefit of the uninitiated it @hould dp explained that the ‘‘fzh tall" | train te a long, elim, vifureated affair Now, nobody can blame the baby 0 hand-embroidered chris- tening » Decause Mrs. Joni aon and heir or Mra, Brown's little girl ap peared jar function in an im- borted creation. PALGE PRIDE A SOURCE OF @LOOM AND PARSIMONY. ning {# too good for my child” t# 4 maternal sentiment that plunges whole family into gloom and debt \d parsimony for months after the baby's baptiem, Meantime the baby grows and is promoted to short dresses— white, of course—with white shoes and stockings, because Mrs, Jones's children are thus attired or because the baby's mother had regd tn her favorite maga- zine that “all white’ {s so smart for children, After a while the little girl goes to schoo) and begins to vie with other lit- tle «iris In setting Juventic fashions, A girl of fourteen who attends a private school calmly explained the Other day that the girls of her “get” always determined the eligi- bility of mewoomers to their select society by looking at the labels in ‘their coats! Graduation, whether from public or private schools or colleges, has becor an occasion when girls vie with ea other and families with other families fas to which can spend the most money for the most startling results, FOOLISH EXTRAVAGANCE AT GRADUATION, A few years ago I attended the com- what is perhaps college for aw in the parade of the sentor dozen young women wear- ust have cost $300 or of orchids or ahi bouquets containing A{ty or more Gowers ae 0S @) aplece Billed she Aine £08 | echo en | sired ne EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, BURGLARS BURGLE |‘“Certainly I Paint, ar JUNE 18, 1912. Induce them to change their waya, I don't think any other part of the elty can equal Harlem, and my friends and I are sick of It. BE. L.” “Dear Madam—To me, an admirer of woman for her gentle and lov- able character, the extreme atyle of | to-day seems to be a concomitant outgrowth of the morals and tastes of the present time. The styles must keep abreast of the times. This edict proclaimed by our modistes te more than carried out by our young You Loon 50 girls of to-day, Not only can we see PALE OEAR these young, undeveloped girls parad- ny ing @long the atreets of Harlem ike ~~ a troupe of hired models, but even here in slald and holiest Brooklyn do we gaze askance at these light headed children promenading about. We cannot lay the blame on environ- ment. In the poorest sections of New York We see the young girl using her utmost endeavor and ‘n- wenulty to copy her wealthier if In style and manners. Does the fault Ne with the mothers? To Judge these parents culpable would be a fallacy. Their one desire Is to pl the children, and to do this they sacrifice themselves. Is the fault, then, with our girls? Indeed, to e these dear children of sixteen, and at that youthful fe crammed full of knowledge not aoquired at schools, would appear to some to be @ sacrilege. Thege is no_ defense for ¢ extreme and sug- gestive costumes worn by these vapid and ineipid children in their vain en- Geavor to rival the hired models of the Parisienne dressmakers, dusau ‘cineca DK” smorst | | NEW MOON’S ODD ENTRANCE, It Peeps Forth Wh Black Bands Part Like Clock Hands. BURLINGTON, N. J., June 18,~Hun- dreds of persons watched a peculiar at- mospheric phenomenon here shortly be- fore 8 o'clock last evening. From low thunder clouds as a base two wedze- shaped bands of dlack out the bright sunset sky, reaching to the senith, where they attained the width of fully twenty degrees. Then slowly the peculiar black shad- ows moved apart like the hands of a clock and the new oreecent moon was disclosed between them. The phenome non continued minutes, until the zontal with the horizon, pba sat 20 REN DIES OF WEDDING SALAD. Mra. Josephine Smith died at her SPLURGE NO 8 and thet no mesns of reaching this end should be neglected?’ LETTERS THAT MAY THROW LIGHT ON THE SUBJECT. 1¢ thie maternal policy is at all wide- epread, the letters of a few young mon and women which I append may be en- lgttening: “Dear Madem—At the close of your article on the ‘dress’ and ‘makeup’ of eschoolgife in The Evening World you make the tn- ; quiry, ‘What are the mothers ¢hink- ing about?’ I would reply, es far es my Umited knowledge ana ovserva- tion go, they are thinking of the same things their daughters are. I hed ®@ pretty young girl’ come into my home s few days a week to do fittle favors for me. I was astounded et @eeing the paint on her face. I made inquiry about & Bhe repiied (ehe ts eoventesn), ‘Certainly I paint; mama doen, 400.’ 1 repited in my tndigne- end Goguat; ‘Well, I have my jon of women who paint.’ Need- © eay I have not seen my help- youn@ friend eince. Mothers are @o blame; they gat the oxample. ‘Yours truly, MRS. A. A." “Deer Medam—I have been an in- terpeted reader of your articles ¢or some time and would like to inform you that there are gill some old- fastioned girle ieft in Harlem. My sister @nd myself have never used rouge nor powder in our lives, and our parents would not allow either of us to dress as the young ladies do in ‘these days. Mother makes nearly all our clothes, and we never have any desire for the extreme styles which are being worn. We wear our hair very plain and have never used rats or puffs. ‘When we go out, it is only for @ short walk, and 4ve are June 1 of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Bishop jr. of Newark, et No, #@ Park avenue. ¥ The diagnosis of all the physicians called in to attend the wedding feast iy victims was ptomaine potsoning. It is believed that a chicken salad wi fault. The i home by 9 o'clock. We never filrt or attend theatres without our parents’ consent, Mother has often asked us why we have no friends of either sex and sometimes says that we are too quiet. We hi therefore, been un- der the impression that young men do not care for ‘home girls.’ “Upon seeing Thureday’s Evening ‘World, I was rather glad to read that there are some men who do care for an ol4-faahioned girl. 8. Cc” “Dear Madam—I want to congratu- late you on your articles of this past week, particularly that one on the ‘Harlem Girl.’ Everything you say is true. I am a Harlem gir, havo lived in Harlem for years, and am thoroughly disgusted with the girls in my district. All that occuptes their minds is loud, freakish cos- tumes, vulgar books and plays, and the male sex. Maybe one out of twenty-five you can talk to on an intelligent topic. When they walk along the avenue, their one aim is to have people turn around and com- ment. Maybe, if they heard what remarks are passed on their )paint and powder, their outlandish hats, idjotic dresses, &c., and maybe, if they had read your article, it would bride and bridegroom aid not trom the wedding a under the care of a physician, All of the guests save Mrs. Smith ral- led after a few days. Discouraged About Your Complexion? pe nels, Moule Weed SS She ‘And no one can dlame the girl gradu- |. | ate or the bride, however judicrous or extravagant her attire, During this discussion of the dress of in New York I have received many letters from the girls themselves, admitting and regretting their sartorial errors, and many more letters from young men, criticising the attire of women to-day, But only ome letter from ao mother of girls, and that letter a pathetic admission of the writers imability to control her daughters. What are the mothers think | What have they to say for themselves? | How do they exipain the lawlessness in manner and attire of the present-day school#irl? Is the child whose letter I have quoted to-day right tn saying that mothers teach their daughters that “the aim and object of thelr existence {s matrimony, GRAY HAIR Easy to Restore Natural Color of Your Hair by Simple Method any, Hae Short tame This, “ecleatitic Qquanu” ory ale iat, makes any de leering the hair Solon that ! Otis Elevator Building Otis Elevator Company Begs to Announce the Removal of all its Offices and Departments to its New Building Eleventh Avenue and Twenty-sixth Street New York Day and Night Telephone Service Chelsea 7500 dames McCreery & Co: ~: 23rd Street 34th Street .. On Wednesday and Thursday, dune the 19th and 20th. a STAMPED PATTERNS. tm 2e«s oteree, Women’s Underwear. Gowns........... value 85c..... Chemises..... \ ‘ \ +..25¢ oe Drawers.......66 “ 50C..405.0.25C Corset Covers.... “ ‘igkZe Princess Slips.... .“ ...50e Children’s Stamped Underwear and Dresses in various materials and models. Size 1 to 4 years. ' Skirts and Drawers ..30c and 40¢ ...65¢ to 2.00 «+. -value 2.00, 1,00 siseeeeeecesess 20C and 75¢ value 75c and 1.25 7 BLANKETS,COMFORTABLES&SPREA At Reduced Prices. For Summer Cottages and Hotels. Blankets, full size.............. cc ceeee 3.00 and 4.25 pair Comfortables,—figured Silkoline tops.... 1.25 each Bed Spreads Crochet, hemmed............1.15 each Satin finish, hemmed........2.00 “ HOUSEHOLD & DECORATIVE LINENS, Lower Floor, Twenty-third Street Second Floor, Thirty-fourth Street 625 Irish Damask Table Cloths..... 2.00, 2.50 and 3.25 former prices 2.75, $.50 and 4.25 Napkins to match................ : ; 2.25, 2.75 and 3.25 doz. former prices 3.00, 3.50 and 4.00 950 dozen Hemstitched Huckaback Towels. former price 3.00, 2.25 doz. Madeira Hand-embroidered Tea Nap- kins. former price 6.50, 4.50 doz. Decorative Linens 1-3 less than regular prices Tea Cloths, Centre Pieces and Scarfs, —hand-embroidered or lace trimmed. 23rd Street 34th Stree: The Interesting Adventures of Kitty After Her Marriage Drawn Especially for the Sunday World By JAMES MONTGOMERY FLAGG == SEE NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD 4