The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1912, Page 22

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ee ee | | [LASHED TO TREES, FEE” RRR AAIR INR RHR ATR GOR ERR RRR RRND BAB RIL LIES Mistaken Mother Love Is to Blame For Daughter’s Garish Bedaubing BS SAY ROBBERS TOOK THER CASH Youngsters Employed by To- bacco Company Tell of Thrilling Jersey Holdup. 2D BOX WITH COIN. “They Poked Pistols in Our Stomachs,” Youths Declared —Then Made Escape. SEI Chris Van Eckern and Harry Gruber, who are drivers for the Tonn Tobacco Company of Jersey City, have decided that dime novels are too tame for amusement. They had an adventure of their own yesterday afternoon which put the exploits of the heroes of ten- cent fiction completely In the shade— in thelr estimation, at any rate. They were returning to Jers.y City from Fort Lee, after a round of collections, with $40 in the money box on the driver's weat when, on the lomliest part of An- derton avenue, three masked men sprang out of the underbrush, selzed the horses by thy bits and pointed real revolvers at their heads. The story of what followed is told by Chris, with occasional interjections by Marry. Harry wan not permitted to #ay much, for he cried yesterday when one of the masked robvers poked him in the stomach with a revolver muzzle, and Chris permitted his few interrup- tions with a somewhat lordly air. Chris f@ a stockily bullt, thickwet chap, with the self-confident manner of one who has made his way in the world,,where- as this was Harry's first adventure perilous. “You see,” began Chris, as he and his companion weré waiting @ call to toatt- ty in the Oakland Avenue Police Court to-day, “you see, me and Harry think we know two of the guys that stuck Us up, but we ain't quite sure, ‘cause they wore masks. There's the follows we thinks we knows.” pointed to two forlorn-looking youths of about his own age, sitting disconsolately in tie pen. “They're William Behrindts and Charley Diets. We couldn't seo their faces, you understand; but we sus pected ‘em by their voices and the way they acted. Last night 1 was sure they Was the ones, But now I aint so sure. Things look kinder different now, and then those masks were good disguises.” wutzes.” “Nee, and there was a third feller,” OW ia Merry. ‘Don't forget to tell about feller, He wap the worst of i Jot. He hit me awful hard, mister. the stomach.” een WENT ite last slipper, mia FTER CAGH. ‘aw, up," said Chrii ‘Let me toll be Fos, aig, thie other feller was The police Une on him, They say A aparrin’ partner 4 from the Tonn couple of weeks ago boas thinks he told hin pal fe and Harty, and the route haa, and where wo curried our meney, and when wan tne beni ims to stlok un up, The feliers that did the dod knew what they were about all right. They went right jo the cash without askin’ us for informatio passed, children come to Fe of the band. La helpless It ts painted Hed and mood tan mothers “Tell him how they Jumped up at us, “hria,” sald Harry, with « shudder, “On, It was" — commanded Chris. Pretty scary. about 2 or half past 2. 1 shou! and all of a sudden, right desolate, lonelier: part nue, three fellers in at us out of the wo abbed the horses wlashed mm omtuck thie th no, T wouldn't, The hen they tokl me they'd shoot snanent ery wae beginnin’ to cry, so 1 ryopeestsy men watchin’ him to leave him al Rele.ot 1 got down. “Mhen the feller vy the horses uuick we could whoMl been of soal ped for th standin’ | 0x so | look at) a home Dim, jabbin’ Harry ip stomach to} are the controlling fo a mother, eyebrows oe Meeaye od in Cg B0- hove him out of ihe way, and he, seldom has to tell he ughters not to ous Pp coreg cc bbed the box and bent it, The other | paint thelr faces or ext their | pense, of Lip all, tt pets tbe, iexreee ne Pate ice Wrogge. ae tg Ua \bodies. 1 think thie view Is most In+| urge the very young mau to simi- aA terestingly expressed in the following| lar extravagances., Certainly the T began t, {letter from a young woman reader of | rece segttees is mot less strong in tinued Chris, “it |The ng World, as follows: \ : minutes to get] TOO LATE TO CORRECT THE \ ane _ panoecks prende bia wondrou free, and them T got into my | tail, the burnis! jove takes on the ‘out my knife and cut the PAST GENERATION. liveller ivis celebrated by Mr. 'Cenny- out Hare too,| “Dear Madam-Bolling down all tis| son In the name of the race insijnct— and we beat it out of the woods, found|pro and con and anent the dress-paint-| end these are masculine beings. Fort Lee and si ht with hb City cops lookin’ | and- | that for | « and some Jersey the robbers.” The two young men who were rested on the complaint of the ‘Tonn Company's drivers both tearfully pro- tested their innocence to-day, and the police seemed doubtful of being able to hold them on vidence, Both of ed their ability to j past Ke Sgnoran | plies, b who wo BETTER THAN | RACIA and enjoy life as it should be en- Joyed, "LINE MOTHER LIWE DAUGHTER” WRITES CORRESPONDENT There Is No Excuse Except Ignorance for the Girl With | | Pienty of Money if She Dresses in Bad Taste— The reign of the father and when neither the rod nor the child was spared, The reign of the rod hea happily archy in the relationg of parenta and of human cruelty, among’ civilized men and womel daughters than that they should have been bul- force, ana too often does not know although she does not realise it, her! how to influence them by love ana | desire for beautiful clothes ts to a large! reason, yet she who controls her- [@xtent & result of this. I have visited Self hae her hand om the steering |'R¢ Tenderloin, the east side and places well as of her wrath—is seldom et @ loss for ways to influence and 0 govern her children. her daughters, plenty of control tiem, Education of the young. working comes hol DRES Copyright, 12, by Ti Another Writer Blames Race Instinct for the Conditions That Exist. . \ BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITRH. expression of opinion a; young man concludes a con- tribution to the diacussion of the sophisticated attire and demeanor of schoolgirls in New York. Undoubtedly mothers are largely responsible for the lack of taste and discretion shown in their daugh- tera’ clothes. But in the last hundred years such radl- cal changes have come about in the relations of Parents and children, more partieularly in the United States, that men and women are at a loss how to enforce the parental authority of which they are no longer sure and which their offspring refuse to recognize, ber until the last balf century was in analysts the intimidation of the weak by the strong. The mother's the father’s lash enforced the parental decree in the bruta] days werat pf gore isd elothes of xoung Girls in the "Dear Madam—y, w var | World, on the of the py eolally erie av le @ practl atudy of the and whatever the present an- itm well that Americans have Tealize that the lowest form the beating of ® child, has reached its ¢@ x to me, and theoretical | f queation. One of the lundamental facts that should be con- sidered is the desire of one sex for Association with the other, As a ag ault Of this instinct, each one ef us le nxious to be weil thought of, or, ‘ather, admired by the opposite sex. Indeed, there are few people that do not feel this pride of sex, although | most of us will not admit it. As this! instinct matures rather late in life, the irl of fifteen or sixteen is confronted | with an entirely new situation, and, better that New York's little should walk ite avenues and bediasened aa they are intimidated into decorum and te as perhaps their greatgrand- wore, patronized by soclety, The same sit-| uation confronts us on all sides—a aitu-| ation composed of pain hair and extravagant 4 {a the untversal desire for admiration by the opposite sex, , “a. ©. Ty WHY ARE YOUNG BOYS NOT PROMPTED TO PAINT? race inetinct, desire to be admired by the op- pouite sex," or whatever we choose to call 1%, prompts the girl of siz- teen to paint her face and lips and influences tha are most per- fare seldom ously exerted, ther of Kood taste, good mane | broad humanity and nareplty | i] ix a perpetual object lesson to When girls are reared tn where simplicity and sanity | | But the young man in love merely | brushes bis hatr a lctle flatter or wears * [a blue necktle instead of a brown one, and taste, The girl who haw) gnould the young girl seeking a mate ney has absolutely no eX-| exceed the speed limit set by the young sing in bad taste except! man? It Is foolish to blame the | » fongit is too the | neration: as | t as thelr problem, It ®eems to me # all a matter of education, clr- —>- — NEW YORK LAWYER WEDS. Francis Dwhght Dowley, a young New York lawyer and nephew of ration one subject in question | ¢ Bllad of this" olty, was married re, up to somebody. AX to the | Tay. in MEL Azaie a aman’ Caches “As the mother, so the daughter.” With this terse] : __THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JUNE 27,1912. Yo, (The York World). ABRAHAM’S JAG LASTED 5,475 DAYS, SARAH SAYS. She Declares Hubby Holds Long Distance Record, But He Says He Was In. Synagogue. ‘our Honor, this man, my husband, has been drunk continuously for 6,476 ays without a let-up, and I want bim Dut away as an habitual drunkard.” So spoke Barah Wellnsky in the West ide Court before Mawiatrate Butts to- “Your Honor, I have spent most of thowe days in the synagogue in West piney th street. You can send for a Mr. t, at One Hundred ond Third street and Amsterdam ave- nue, and he will tell you Tam a man Of oaier and religious habit of Sarah, Abraham has hung up a new world's 4a record, according to court archives. Magiot about It to-morrow. meantime Abraham is held. ccna ll GUNS AND JIMMIES LOOT OF YOUTHFUL BURGLAR. Policemen Find Lad Hiding Under Counter of Sporting Goods Store. Patrolman William Ryley was passing Kertland Brothers’ sporting goods store No, 98 Chambers street, late last nigh when he aaw the filcker of a trie} Mashlamp, He found Detective Vaugh| And the two returned to the store. The door had been forced and they walked, in, Searohing they* found @ man under @ counter, He could give no reason fo being in the store, In his pockets they say they found a -88 calibre revolver and three automatic pistols, all with the price tags on them; two fountain pens, and two “jimmies,’ He was taken to Leonard street station where he said he was James Gurnee eighteen years old, of No. 2706 Boscobel avenue, Bronx, He said he had no occue pation. He locked up, charged with) burslary. ee $100,000 PHONE SUIT. . | Lawyer Sees, Deol | Removal Instrument iflable, Edward P. Curran, president of the Kings County Lawyers’ Association, of No. 36 State street, Brooklyn, has |brought sult against the New York | Telephone Company for $100,000 damages, because they took their tele- | phone instruments out of his home and ERNE OMEN ENED ELLE LUNE VEN LENE NINE NE ENE NEON ENE ENE SENSO EY S-PAINT-AND-POWDER P MRE ARRAN HARRI THE REAL REASON Wry WOMEN OVERDRESS = WRITES A READER irl, the same, argument ap-| jie Greenwich, Conn,, to Miss yut with modification, A gitl’ Helen Agnes Blackburn, who lives with vrks ten hours a day And then | Greenwich to take care of a family| he ceremony was performed by the MEDICINE J has, ovviounty, no time to educate her-| Rev. Walter Dwight of this city, coustn ; nelf to dress properly. And there are)! {he bridegroom, assisted by the Rt. The person who ives right |) many of these girls. It i amuring to ar, Bide of Ublladsiphis. 096 usually feels right and thinks right, |[read the vari letters ot defense | We Hv TJ, Wltexerald, pastor of St, But who can “live right” if their || from the Kirin themmeives, A few have ling the ceremony the bridal couple 4 heen sensible, but some of the young: came to New York and to-day they house, apy Or boarding place |! cies, ike our friend who prefers the{her, aunts, the Misses Bivekincrn’ at does not afford them the rest, com: || society of snakes to men, weem to have {sailed on the Hamburg-American liner forts and service they require? ‘gone up in the air’ quite unnecessar. | Av usta Victoria “for a two months® Hy Noney i001 6,085 | “Phe Senegambian tn thie makten's s woodplle {# probably the painful thought “Teo Let” and “Boarders Wanted” Ads, |} that some man, more desirable than| Miss Marie Agnes Gilleaple, well i . |known in. Brookly lal ctrel inted last many snakes, has remained inpervious | n Bo roles, was were printed week In eo combined bait of her unblem.| married last evening to Fr © THE WORLD | feet, ‘clean neck’ and pretty | Hall of Parkville in st | which last, of courre, she only | Yah Catholic chu 2,685 More Than in The Herald | wears because she likes beautiful things |jonsr wha eliotn Nat Ci To save doctors’ bills, live long || @#d4 not to attract the nasty men, Fkin avene, directly aft Bay | BETTINA M." | after which tho couple moon in the ountatns, Father Motlancey pe L INSTINCT CAUSES GIRLS R TO WEAR FREAKISH CLOTH ony. The bride. w y her Read and Profit by World Ads. To-Day || “guother letier, written by @ masousteister: klten, AY vrother of the era lime reader, finds the cause of the 6% acied ae vest man ‘ Jotfices on the pretext, according to ‘an, that he owed money to the pany, Curran thinks that the con- quent damage to his reputation, personal and professional, in th - |munity, can fairly be fixed at the sum for which he 1s sueing. . The fact of the sult only came out | to-day, in the course of an argument |before Justice Blackmar in the Su- \preme Court, Brooklyn, on a motion |for a change of venue entered by counsel for the telephone company. |The suit has been brought in Queens County, ind the telephone company claim that as their main offices are in Brookly’ and most of the witnesses to be culled live there, it will be simpler |in the long run to try the case in the | Brooklyn courts, Curran opposes this, jhowever, Justice Mlackmar reserved cu ,, | Mectston in the case, ia | ee ‘Train Kills Two Joy Ridere, | NEW RICHMOND, Wis, June tu Charles Olson, twenty-one years okt, and ra Lee, elghteen, were instantly killed last night when a locomottve, backing eder on which ‘The victins ome in Drum- mond, Wis, from Lake Owen, ROBLEM LONE MARKSMAN OF STRIKERS FIRES ALL NIGHT ON LiGhT (Continued from First Page.) overtime, Orders have been @iven, in view of the recent battle and the threats that have been made, to shoot only when it is necessary, but to shoot tonit, —¢ ‘ NO TROUBLE AT PERTH AMBOY, IT 1S DECLARED. That disorders consequent to labor troubles have ceased in Perth Amboy 1» Butts became so interested | was the statement made to-day by Mr. that he sent for Klein toyierbert Leon of the Perth Amboy In the) Board of Trade, who called at The Evening World office, “There are but two small strikes on in Perth Amboy now," sald Mr. Leon, “There are 1,100 people — mostly women—out in the Perth Amboy Cigar Factory, and about 20 out at the H, Rosenthal & Co, handkerchiet factory. There are now no guards or deputies in Perth Amboy, and every- thing 1s peaceful, “There were but four strikes in Perth Amboy that amounted to any- thing. They were in the American Smelting Refinery, the Barber Asphalt Company, the Standard Underground Cable Company and the Atlantic Terra Cotta Company. All these strikes have been settled and the men have gone back to work, “During the strike all the saloons in the affected district were closed by order of John H, Fritainger, President of the Excise Board, Most of the dis- order in Perth Amboy was occasioned by hoodlums, who were attracted there by reports of strike riots. “ert is not true 62 per cent. of the voters of our town are foreigners, In fact, lese than 20 per cent. of the voters are of foreign birth, Our for- vign element {# not a bad element; they are the people, who are saving money and buying (heir own homes and sending their children to the pub- He schools. “We Jesioned, by agitators from the 7 occasions y a Tiuustrial Workers of the World. As goon as we learned this we told those agitators to leave town or be arrested, They ‘and the trouble ended. Had Consumption, Was wit Dying; Now Well ‘s Alterative ts being used with Ecler ta the treatment of Tuberculosis in of the trouble of the country. Persons have hen. it improved, gained weigh hauating night sweats topped, fever minished and many ree vered, If you in Taltrosted to know more about It, we wil put you in touch with some who now ’ ud of Mra, Govert’s recor val Mane FE Grittitn, Ind. a men: In 1908 my mother-in-law Pag ore Govert) was takem sick with Catarrhal Pneumonia, and continually grew oer yequiring # trained nuree, ‘The ni informed me that she had Tuberculosis nothing could be Gone fai The R mmended that I « * rative and seo if it would not ome relief, The physician told > had Consumption and was be- So I immediately Practically without hope ted that she try the he did, Tam glad to say an to improve, Now, she owes her life and heaith rive her me that she yond all medical aid. sent for a bottle for recovery, I ra ) "Jos. GRIMMER, e in Bron- roat and im the a, Hay Fevor, and in upbufldin in polsons, Jaane Hoskter, who is at present in Rom |savining him of the robbery, To-day y Ip cable from M.°. Hoskier to Chief of & BY EXPERT THE N RARE LBRARY Manuscripts and Art Treasures Form Loot Taken From Hoskier Mansion. Priceless art treasures, atecient manu- scripts and folios of dead literatures which canno’ bo daplicated in any of Ithe libraries and museums of the world have been stolen from the spacions man- sion of Herman C, Hosider, a wealthy collector of literary rarfties and paint- lings, on Rdgewood Road, South Orange. The total amount of the theft, the greatest in the history of the Police Department of the Oranges, is placed by an art expert of New York at $50,000, ‘The robbery was discovered two days ago by Mrs. F. KE. Martin, a sister-in- law of Mr. Hoskier, whose home at No. 21 Ridgewood Road ts only a few doors removed from Mr, Hoskter's residence, | During Mr. Hoskler's absence of a year In Europe, where he now is, Mrs, Mar- tin had made it a practice to go to the closed manston once of twice a week and make a tour to determine if every- thing was safe. On Tuesday when she entered the house she was met at the very threshold by a scene of confusion. Furniture was overturned, books strewed the floor and there were marks of muddy boot hee on the floor. In the great Library, where the collector had his cabinets of ancient art objects and his books and follos, centuries old, shelves and cabinets alike were stripped. Some of the books of lesser value were thrown carelessly about the floor, but gups in the shelves and empty spaces in the glass cabinets Indicated where the hand of a discriminating thief had passed. A closer examination showed that everything that had a marketable value in the world of art had been taken away, The plunder would heve filed a dray. OWNER SENDS CABLE TO 1009 Broadway, near Willo’by, Bi POLICE TO MAKE SEARCH. | {80% Q + Bklya Mrs, Martin did not communicate St, opp. A. & &. Bilya with the South Orange police, but! 697 Broad St.. near Haline’s, Newark a — - —_— & cable immediately to Mr. Police McGuire of Orange notified him of the robbery and detectives were immediately sent to search for in- criminating traces which might have been left by the robbers. One fact was determined for the tectives speodily and that was that th have no ordinary thief to deal with. It would take a connoisseur, not a cam- mon porch climber, to see the value in an original Caxton print or the worth that lay in the yellow pages of a first edition of Beaumont's plays. ‘The same discerning hand had taken fragments of Coptic gospels, long burled In Egyp- tian sands, the emblazoned pages of monkish manuscripts and delicately Wrought missels of the XVI century. Nobody but an art connoisseur, so the detectives determined after consultation over the telephone with some of the New York art dealers and expert: would have undertaken to rob a colle: tion which has value only to collectors and students of ancient crafis. It waa somebody with all the refinement of this recondite knowledge who took advan- tage of the absence of the owner to sn- rich himself from the great store of precious things which Mr, Hoskier had laid away. ————— Running and Jumping will not shake eyeglasses off your nose if attached to the It will hold your eyeglasses | on the nose as surely and safely as spectacles. Attached to your lenses for 35 cents in German Silver and 75 cents in Gold Filled. Sold only at our eight stores. 23rd St., near Fourth Ave. 27 West 84th St., bet. 5th and 6th Aves, G4 West 125th St., near Lenox Ave, “3 ve., 81st and 82nd Sts, 70 Nassau r John St, ——__ dames McCreery & Co, 23rd Street dune the 26th and 29th. “McCREERY SILKS.” Famous over half g Century. Several Thousand Remnants of Plain } and Novelty Silks and Satins, adapted for Waists, Skirts, Bathing Suits and Millin- formerly 1.00to 2.00 55¢ a yd. ery. WOMEN’S GLOVES. “BON full figure. IMPORTANT Galatea Suits. and 10 years. Mixed Cheviot ers. Mixed Cheviot. 23rd Street 1 clasp, Natural Pique Chamois, also 16-button length Mousquetaire Chamois Excellent models for slender, medium and well-developed figures. 3.00 Models with extra boning and strong supporters attached, “Royal Worcester” Corsets,—many models for every type of figure. 1,00, 1.50 and 2,00 BOYS’ & STUDENTS’ SUITS, 1 Both Stores, White Sterling Linen: and Stripe Odd sizes between 244 value 3.00, Breasted Jacket Suits, two pairs of trous- Odd sizes between 8 and 17 years. values 5.00 and 6.50, Students’ first long Trouser Suits of Odd sizes between 15 and 19 years. values 10.50 and 11.50 8.25 34th Street Ta Both Btores. In Both Stores, Lisle. usually 1.00, Sc per pair’ as the most authentic and com- . plete political handbook now. in print. ° CORSETS, 1 Both Stores, ! They can learn at a glance how TON” 4.00 and 5.00 suitable for average 3.00 and 5.00 REDUCTIONS. ol 1.65 Norfolk and Double 3.50 34th Street @’ of graysandtans, WILSON, In fact all the leading politiciaas vote first, last and all the time for WORLD ALMANAC man: on the ninth ballot at the Demo- cratic National Convention ‘in 1852, or for Garfield on the 35th ballot at the National Republican Convention in 1880; the electoral and popular vote for President 1824 to 1908, and the of the National Commit political platforms on National issues, or date on which Jonn W. Kem was elected United States Sen- ator; the duty on horseshoe nails and full text of the Monroe doc- trine; Congressional apport ment in 1830, or list of States permitting women to vote; civil service rules of the city of New York and schedule of U, Internal Revenue taxes; gro of the Textile industries of U. S., or total liabilities of com- mercial failures in this country, 1910 and 1911; average annual net of law relating to publicity ud ist of Governors of the States or pounds of domestic cotton ex. ported in 1850. And there are 10,000 Other Facts Equally Interesting to of Buffalo and Pittsburgh, 30c.), 386, by mail, WORLD, New York City. “‘Itooka sport: ing chance and I’m winning” season, million do! five stores, a ly ‘THE CRISIS OF " CAREER. What did I de? I took a sporting chance the confidence of the publiey: came out boldly and “tol about it, and elnshed ices Us OF before in my experience of 33 years, dutting all my thousands éf, Suite and lightweight Over. coats, regularly ranging $18 to $40, down to $9.90 ° $21.50. And the public te snatching at the Dargalny I'm doing the busine Norfolk Suits The ae thing you would expect to find reduced, being the newest style of the sea- eon. But I hold nothing back. Big assortment ad plain and fancy, in Velours and English Hom e- spuns. Ths models of Fifth Avenue Tailors, most of them ust received irom their shops. I intended to mark them $15 to $25—but now | 4” Between Broadway and Sth Aye. NEW YORK. fs ‘and Réthblished: 187 Srictentor “ealtedatot Merchant eee et Georges Model Clothes, | Tee Also Stores at BRYAN, - . GAYNOR, THE 1912 votes were cast for Pierce rsonnel ie of all parties; State party S. price of government bonds f the United States and full text of litical contributions; compléte and Figures the Politician. At all Newstands, Price 25¢, (west Address NEW YORK

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