The evening world. Newspaper, June 24, 1912, Page 16

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| Prey . ' STOEN AUTO HTS SURREY, URN FOUR ONEFATALY On Way to Prospect Park, | Rig Is Struck in Williams- burg by Speeding Car. Rarnett Bielson, of No. 18% Monroe Street, having once paid a visit to Pros- Dect Park, never tired of telling the neighbors what a perfectly lovely place it was, for though Central Park some breathing spot, he thought the Brooklyn garden had more attractive MEN TAILORS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR WOMANS DRESS, WRITES ONE | HATE my pA many WALKER Copyright, 1912, hy The Press Publishing Co. : THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1912." (The New York World). “1 USE POWDER MYSELF” WRITES A MAN Men Tailors Design Suggestive Dresses; That’s Why Girls Wear ’Em, Writes a Woman LVEWANTS TIGHTS | EVE OF MUD PILE EDEN WHO WANTS TIGHTS TO PROVE SHE’S A BEAUTY. HUD PLEEDE'S TO PROVE BEAUTY | Mrs. Unger Is Willing to Show Court Her Pulchritude Wasn't “Seeming.” Max Unger, a professional strong man and teacher of physical culture, made & vigorous protest to Justice Brady In the Supreme Court to-day against the Payment of alimony to his wife, Mrs. Melanie Unger, pending the trial of a GOMPERS, MITCHELL: | AND MORRISON HELD GUILTY OF CONTEMPT‘ District‘ of Columbia Court | Against Labor Leaders, Who Will Seek New Appeal. WASHINGTON, June 24. — Samuel Gompers, Jolin Mitchell and Frank Morrison, the labor leaders, were to- day held gullty of contempt of court: by the Supreme Court of the Di Columbia, in connection with @ court's injunction in the Bucks Stove and Range boycott case. Justice Wright sentenced Gompers to quilt she fas brought for a separation, ‘one year, the same as upon his previous features. He said so early to-day at Mra. Unger's lawyer, Jacob Kletn, onvietio and baba AD Cy coos H Mi of 101 regen ni tenes an onst wide wedding, and to prove his asked for & counsel fee of $00 and an This cee acteved. Wee one GE & contention, when the party dispersed tn- weekly alimony of $25. Many volum- term of nine months at the last trial vited his three best friends into a surrey he had hired for the occasion and 4 away for Brooklyn. It was shortly after daylight when they crossed the Williamsburg Bridge. | sitting with Blelson In the front seat | was Morris Kolinsky, of No. 188 Monroe | street, On the rear seat were Mra. Ko- | linsky and Lena joviteh, of No. 182 Monroe street. | The surrey was going south In Bed- | ford avenve avout 109 feet from Mush: | ing avenus, when an automodvile from the garage of Kexsier Brothers, No. 160 | Clymer street, came up from behind. | The chauffeur, Thomas O'Brien, tooted | out to the left, art | tor swung to ihe left. The mastine hit the surrey with a! \ som, unexplained reason, crash that was heard several blocks away, turring the rig over and pushing it apan the sidewalk against the house ‘The occupants were hurled far vut by the Impact and lay motionless in the street, Awakened residents ran houses and took Im the ins from Snakes of Williams. Bieivon had the moth head and his wife tured forearm. Lena Keaselovite shoulder was dislocated and she had sprained ankle. automobile was badly smashed and ts motor oar damaged. O'Brien at the Flatbush stat jd he we ployed by Ki ir Bros. and w: swering a call from Eastern Parkw: One of the Kesslers, notified by tele- phone of the theft and the wreck of the machine, hurried to the station and O'Brien was charged with grand World ha | Wear French Heels and Low Neck, but Not to Attract Men, Because I Would Rather Attract Snakes, as You Know What to Expect ”? Says a Working Girl. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. At last we know where to place the blame for the spectacular and often inadequate attire of the ruling type of New York's young girls. It 1s not the fault of 1 have been inclined to believe; nor are the girls themselves responsible for their sophisticated clothes as certain masculine readers of The Evening ht to indicate. Even the men who have been arraigned as forcing girls to wear freakish garments by their visible preference for theatrical effects are herewith acquitted. For a woman reader, Ss Mi SNARES whose letter appears to-day, found an explanation so H novel, so improbable and withsl ao soothing to feminine vanity, besides placing the blame where it always belongs—away from the TWO YANKEE STARS, "MEN WOULD RATHER TAKE OUT A PREAKY DRESSED GIRL" SAVS ANOTHER, “DIVINE RIGHT” OF FAMILY IN HAVEMEYERGRAB Reached Out for Sugar Be- cause It Had Been Their Business 100 Years. That H. O. Haveme: for being in the sugar business was be- cause tt was hereditary was the testi- nous affidavits from Unger and his wife were presented to the Court, and Justice Brady said he would reserve decision. In her complaint, Mrs, Unger declared she had married the strong man, who ‘e known on the stage as “Lionel Strong- fort,” within an hour after he divo ‘us first Wife. He told her, she said, that the Garden of Eden would be a mud pile as compared to the home he would bulld for her. Unger, however, @enied he ever made such statements, adding they were more poetical than true, and that all the love ma! prior to the marriage was on ¢ of Mi Unger. Unger's lawyer told the Court that soon after the marriage Unger discov. ered his wife's “seeming beauty” was only artificial. Replying to this, Mrs. Unger submitted her photograph to the Court and sald would gladly appear in tights before any one Justice Brady should name to disprove her husband's charges, PUT COUNTERFEIT MONEY BAG, SHE DECLARES. Mrs, Unger declared further her hus- band had desrted her in Paris in Febri ary, 1912, and left her penniless, su stituting counterfelt money for $1,000 real money she had in her handbag. said she was compelled to go to the Pfe- fect of Police, who gave her a free soup ticket. ‘ “It seems almost impossible to belleve @ man, a husband, can sink to the d the defendant has done in his afMdi declared Mrs, Unser. “He all had to use force to compel me to desist from certain habits. Can the court imagine the coping with a man who They will attempt to appeal again to the Supreme Court of the Umitet States, which reversed their former conviction. “ Justice Daniel Thew Wright announce the decision of the court. It covered seventy-two closely typewritten pages ‘and took about two hours to read. Bondsmen were on hand and at- torneys for the labor men gave notice of an Intention to file an appeal to have the Supreme Court review the judgment. In its previous review of the case the Supreme Court reversed the conviotion on the ground that the contempt pro- ceedings had been improperly instituted. New proceedings were at once begun. ‘The charge was that the three men as officers of the American Federation of Labor, through the organization's off- cial publication, had disregarded Justice Gould's injunction against the publica- e Range ‘boycott list.” Seal Glennon of Sunbury, Pa, Rhode Island Red James A. has eight blooded a chicks that are musical, each “peep’ being so different it makes a compl herd and when all eight “sing” at the tame time it sounds dike running the scale. ‘He can't explain the phenomenon, un- less {t (8 a result of leaving the ess on the plano before they were put un- der the hen, James McCreery & Co. ° 34th Street | 23rd Street 1 apparent ( styles himself a strong man, one of arceny, ‘He eave he ls'o chauffeur ens | Vomen chat ite truth becomes apparent iimnediately, Here te the letter: lives No. 1 South Eighth street, Brookly WALLSTREET. The stock market at the outset wa: subjected to heavy Mquidation, Read- Ing was the weakest feature, with a cline of 2% points to 166%. Steel Union Pacific, St. Paul and Northern Yacific also yielded to heavy seliing Pressure, with losses of over 1 point ‘The unloading movement continied all through the first hour, but toward mid- day a firmer tone developed, The Cop- per shares were instrumental in bring- ing aboot a recovery. Ae noon as the initial prossure was Ifted, large buy- dng orders appeared for Copper, with the result that the saue was quickly vointing upward. ‘The at continued to rally In the sub- sequent dealings. Continued strength in the Coppers tn- “duced a further recovery in the early afternoon period, baying, Copper crossed 96 on caused by @ sensational in- metal in the cked an in- ly and during the final hour prices settled into @ slow Aragging movement thet finally culmt- (nated at closing ti when the mar. consideraly below the high- Lusaee was the rule at jest of the day. the nish. $ 3 cen. f 3 ° Wedd P Peed eg eta + oe re ESCCEECES PEEBEECEGE OE EF SLEEPS er ie 5 tittl Killed Her Baby When She Fatted to Find the Math Catherine Evano’ the nineteen- , year-old Hungarian girl, who has been , on trial before Judge Malone in General Sessions charged with the murder of her new-born child, pleaded gullty to manslaughter in the second degree this afternoon om edvice of her counsel, and was sentenced to Bedford Reformatory ‘tor Women for an indefinite term. According to the story she told her :counsel, she wae abandoned by her flamce in her home town and came to this country in search of him. She was homeless and friendless BLAMES MEN TAILORS FOR THE WHOLE BUSINE! ‘Dear Madam: I have read your ar ticles in ‘The Evening World about the way the young girls and women are dressing, You are just right. They are wearing ballroom costumes and bathing sulte public highways. there are so many theat And the other thing —the big thing. tatlor who makes ladies’ clothes, and he fashions them as nearly ae he can like & man's coat and trousers, his ideal cos tume. The skimpy skirts the girls and women wear are an exact pattern of @ man's trou! Theso men tailors ti nearly all the work-—sewing—from work: ing women. They call themselves Iadios' tallors; they set the styles; there are! five or six of them on nearly ‘every block in New York and other citics. Food 1s s0 scarce and so dear, no men to work on farme or raise food or cat- tle—but a fot of thinge in men’ sitting hunched up in every city making ladies’ clothes! rAA” Extending this novel theory we recall hat men are at the head of practipally all the great dressmaking establish- mente of Paris, London and Vienna, where fashions are born. Therefore the modern woman's notion that everything evil comes from a man. A reversal of the omnis ab ovo dictum is thereby sus tained. THIS GIRL SAYS IT 18 THE FAULT OF THE MOTHERS, Quite a different view appears in the following letter from a young girl who attends Wadieigh High Sohool She on; ‘Doar Madam: IT ha ber of your articles in schoolgirl, Though 1 perfectly agree with you that some girls vie with one another in the matter of dress, yet I @on't think you should condemn the sehoolgir! as much as her mother. “The mother ts to blame. She thinks Gusie does not have enough taste or style e heaps all the latest etyles, re- of color or contrast, until Susie the age of simteen, when she would not think of dressing otherwise, ae her taste has been formed, or rather deformed. ‘lam a Wadleigh High Schoo! girl, and girls in my school usually wear middy" buite twice a week, which is just what a girl should, because it looks Gainty, graceful and refreshing. “The other day I saw o girl with a large, ungainly puff at the back of her head, tied with @ scarlet ribbon ebout six inches wide, and s skirt which I think may have had ebout two more yards in it, This te the kind of girl you mean, and I know thet she ts not the regular schoolgirl. "Wadleigh is @ large school, and can be considered as the object of our dis- cussion, I think that most girls in Wedleigh dress simply and in good taste, though @ very few do crave fash- fons and try to create new styles, SHE PREFERS SNAKES TO MEN, SHE DECLARE! Next we have the frank admission of ® young woman that she wears French heels and a low neck durtng business hours, but that Ig, apparel, also ball-| neg | Was driving their car, id young woman, biped would rather attract snakes” 0 “Dear Madam—In discussing ‘Dress Reform’ I would Iike to know why every one takes it for granted that if a girl wears & low-neok gown or swathes herself in pretty sitke she wishes to at- tract men? > “I am considered attractive; if I were not I could not do the work I am en- gaged in. I wear low-neck dresses ways, of just as pretty colore and soft, clinging materials as I can get. I ve worn French heels for sqven ra, My foet are as soft and smooth as @ baby’s and without @ blemish. I like low-neck dresses and French heels. Why shouldn't I wear them? I.work— my money pays for them. I am happier in them than in harsh and heavy cloths and heavy boots, My neck is, always ke ar anything else? “As for attracting men, I would rather attra:. snakes. Youatle:”' inow what to expect from snakes and are therefore prepared for defense, 1 would rather eat @ 76-cent dinner by myselt than @ $10 meal with some fool man, talking ‘mush’ and asking ‘If you do not like him just @ little bit,’ or don't you think you could become very fond of nim? “FROM A GIRL WHO LOVES ALL wes why should I weer SURE “PONT MEN” HURT ON FLAKD Mel Sheppard and Mike Ryan May Not Compete in Olympic Games. BY LAWSON ROBERTSON, (pectat Cable Despatch to The New York Eve ning World) Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World.) ANTWERP, June %—The American team's chances in the Olympic Games at Stockholm next month have been seriously impaired by the injury of two Of the men looked upon as sure point winners. ‘Mel Sheppard, the great middle dis- tance runner of the Irish-American A. C., who has been the biggest point winner for America in previous Olym- piads, notably the one at London, pulled ® tendon while sprinting on the deck of the Finland just before the boat arrived here, Mike Ryan) the noted run upon whose shoulders America pinned most of her hope of winning the classic Marathon tn the Swedish games, twisted bis ankle. ‘The injury to these two star athletes fe #0 serious that the Likelihood of thelr rounding into shape for the games is BEAUTIFUL THINGS—NOT MEN," “Why should I not wear low necks In the street if I like them?" inquires this H zE Hig gi would be arrested tn that case, because they would be vio- the law, which cannot go Into the fine points of ethics cr the relative power of the nude an¢ the suggestive piel oot acak the TWO HURT IN AUTO, Car Hite « Po t Sanders, thirty-one and her son, Charles, Were severely injured in an automobile misbep in the Amboy roed between Princess Bay ani Pleasant Plains, Richmond borough to-day. ‘They were treated at a house nearby by Dr. Ren- wick and later were transferred to their home in the Bronx Mrs, Sanders, her son and her hus- band, Albert Sanders, an inaurance broker of No. t One Hundri land & had been to a \ J | were returning nome, Mr. Sanders Tt sitidded and before he could control the car It hit pole, ‘The front of the car was amas °! and Mrs, Sanders and tho boy wore hurled out. Mr, Sanders escaped with bruises and shock. Mrs, Banders has a fracture of the loft leg the boy lacerations of the fa head and body beside general con- jon@. rather remote. With this pair out of the meet, the scoring power of the wonder- ful Am athletic machine t# badly hampered, Ryan \e the youth who won the bis Marathon run at ton last April, un- Ger the most adverse conditions, in rec- ord-breaking time. He was absolutely confident of capturing the big race at Gtookholm. Most experts were just as confident as the harrier himself that Ry- ‘an would win if he ran in anything 1) the form he displa: tm the Hud Ryan is also a member of the L A. A. BANDIT ON TRAIN PICKS HIS PLUNDER IN RAPID HOLD-UP Covering Three Men With | Gun in Mail Car, He Selects Pouch and Escapes. LONGVIEW, Tex., June 24.—A ban dit made his way into o mail car of a train on the International and Grea mony to-day of Thomas R. Cutlery vice- President and general manager of the Utah-Idaho Suger Company at the hear- ing of the Government's suit in equity, “Sugar Trust” before Special Examiner ‘Wilson B. Brice in room 43 of the Fed- eral Building. Richard Young, counsel for Mr. Cutler, on cross. had been questioning fim Havemeyer's reasons for buying into the Utah and Idaho beet suger factories fn 1902. “Did he say he wanted to stop compe- tition?” asked the attorney. “T am pure he didn’t.” “Did he say he wanted you to co- operate with his company in raising the price of sugar?’ jo, he did not.” “What reason did he give for wanting to buy @ half-interest !y your factory?” ‘The only thing I recall was when he said; ‘Myself and forefathers have been in the sugar business for a century. I belleve the beet sugar business has come to atay and it {s right that I should have a part in its development” At the beginning of the hearing to- day. Mr. Young questioned Mr. Cut- ler as to the reasons for establishing a “Qifferential” between the price of beet sugar and sugar cane. This “differen- tial” has made the beet fr market price from 10 to 6 cents on a hundred pounds cheaper than sugar cane. Mr. Cutler said the reason for this “differ- ential” was because beet sugar at first not as good as cane su; ‘There were numeroi about it,” he satd. that it would discolor preserves, fruits, syrups, &c, I am free to admit that coloring matters were used in beet sugar. Prior to the passage of the puro food laws English pearline was used. Since the law was passed not one of my companies has used coloring matter of any kind.” et QUASH RAILWAY STEAL CASE. CHICAGO, June 24. — Indictments against four former ofc of the Il- Mnols Central Ratlroad—Frank B. Har- riman, John M. Taylor, Charles 1. Ewing and Joseph BE. Baker—who were alleged to have bean implicated in oar repair frauds by which the road was swindled out of $1,500,000, were dismissed to-day in the Criminal Court, Absence of indispensable witne: forced the dismissal,- so Assistant State's Attorney John E. Northrop de- clared. BE. H. Polley of Sierra Madre, Cal, was said to have refused to come to Chicago to testify, Henry C. Or mang could.not be found, and F, Niles was reported ill at Richmond, Va. Civil proceedings, which had also been started, Were settled out of court. pained Mat Ai SHIPPING NEWS. a! gender Hook | Geren | Heit to cause the dissolution of the alleged | © whose feats was to hold on his chest a platform containing an automobile with it—and I a woman weighing ‘Mrs. Unger then descrbed in detail the courtship and marriaxe and exhibited letters showing all the love-making was on the part of Unger and not herself, as he claimed. “And such a man,” she added, “is permitted to come to court to besmirch me in such @ fashion that the very walls of the court room must cry shame!” Here ts a copy of one of the letters which Mrs. Unger said Unger wrote her, shortly before they were married, and before he was divorced from hie first wit CALLS HER “BELOVED WIFE” IN PERFERVID LETTER. “My Beloved Melainie: In the beltef that you will get this etter Tuesd: morning at the postoffice, I will confess to you things which I did not have a chance to tell you to-day. From the time you left me at 10 o'clook last night I wandered ali night with a bleed- ing heart. I even passed the house several times in the faint hope that you would yet come out ta see me, but un- fortunately I was again compelied to go alone. My beloved, if you could only ~ealize What pain you meke me endure you would not hesitate any more, and not torture any longer. This is a feel- ing which I have never in my life known before. Melanie, I tell you, and my word you need not doubt, that I can- not and will not stand this any longer. You, Melanie, have created @ love which no other women were able yet to awaken in me. You awoke love in me for the first time in my life. You are & woman, the perfection iteelf that has enraputred me. In my heart, my con- sctence and before God you are my wife, and I wil get you from there and claim you as my wife, and if you nesi- tate a minute, I will know how to break all barriers. I beg and implore you to e to me and be mine as we promised ch other. Believe me, I will do every- thing to make myself worthy of you and promise thet you will naver have to be sorry. Good night, my beloved wife, and think of your Max.” a NO PENNSYLVANIA STRIKE, When & report from Philadelphia that % per cent, of the employees of the Pennaylvania Railroad's lines east of | Pittsburgh had voted for @ strike was shown to representatives of the Penn- sylvania in thie city to-day, it was sald that nothing was known of the matter. General Manager 8. C, Long, tn Piila- delphia, #aid he nad received no official news of the reanit of the poll taken oy the men, It is understood that if the disagreement comes to @ head both sides will offer concessions and a break will be prevented, “There will be no etrike, in any event,” declared @n officer of the Pen sylvant sialic: ONLY SON OF THE CZAR HAS KNEE TUBERCULOSIS, VIBNNA, June Alexis, elght years ~The Czarevitch, 1, {8 suffering trom tuberculosis of the rig LEATHER NOVELTIES. EMBROIDERIES. WOMEN’S HOSIERY. On Tuesday, June the 25th. In Both Stores, , Suitable for Travelling. SPECIAL PRICES. Fitted Tourist Cases...5.00 and 8.75 Fitted Manicure “ Pedensie see aaseine 3.75, 5.00 and 7.50 Clocks........+22+++--2.00 3.75 Jewel Cases, withtray..2.75 “ 3.75 Enamel Drinking Cups.......7.00...008 1.00, 1.25 and 1.75 Writing Cases.........1.50 “ 2.75 In Both Stores, { Bands,— 12 inches wide; Flounces, 27 in. wide. usually ssc, 50c Edges,— 414 to 13 inches wide... usually 58c to 3.95, 30c to 2.50 Colored Bands,—3}4 to 9 inches wide. usually 1.00 to 5.50, 50c to 3.50 In Both Storea, UNUSUAL VALUES White Gauze Lisle Thread, with double tops and spliced heels, soles and toes. 40c pair, 6 pairs 2.25 Black or Tan Gauze Lisle Thread, with double heels, soles and toes, 30c pair, 6 pairs 1.65 Pure Thread Silk with double tops and lisle lined soles and toes>~ Black, White and Tan. 95c pair, 6 pairs 5.50 HOW I WRITE A PLAY David Belasco, George Broadhurst, Eugene Walter, Margaret Mayo, Paul Armstrong, George M. Cohan, A. E. Thomas, William C. De Mille, Rupert Hughes and other noted Knee and wil! Northern Railway today, covered! i be crippled for life, according to ad-| * . Aires cin Min hipteven ceraciiel PORT tua Mesa peed iecal acaall cant aotes dramatists tell of their methods of work in ‘A kelected one inall pouch out of a pile! oar ry Garew | It ds stated that a conference of physi- ts s . (<4 Jot weveral, kicked It from the car, thea) > ihr was callod to attend the only articles they have written for AN alighted while the train continuéd at ¢ dg ied choles, and after a careful exa’ abe jae is —:—THE EVENING WORLD—— The holdup occurred near Port| Ban Juan. * Bolivar, ‘Vietien: teeeeeneee oak aan “ " " , - What was tn the pouch ts not known,| OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS, Series Begins in Thursday's Evening World apparently, except to e 10d a SAILED T)-DAY — —-— —~ Ameer | ates, etal — —— SS ae bo one ate 2 RECN eR RRR EE A ARR Ra RR A EE a

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