The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1912, Page 4

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| , | THE NEW IRELAND. ~ IRISH REVIVAL OPPOSES SLAVELIKE CONDITIONS IN THE FACTORY CENTRES +- Industries Fostered at Fair Dun Emer Are Carried On in Neat Surroundings With | Surprisingly Good Returns. BY MARY SYNON. | Specia) Commissionerto Ireland forthe Gaelle League of America. (Special Correspondence of the Evening World.) Third of the series of articles describing the renaissance in Ireland which is effecting extraordinary changes for the upbulld- ing of the industries, art and literature of that country | 4 DUBLIN, Ireland, July 6.—There is in Ireland to-day a little band of | women who are setting thelr poetic dreams into the more practical form of philanthropic fostering of the spirit of self-dependence that they belleve| ersential to the upbuilding of a nation, Their work in the Irish schools) and In the Irish industries has been one of the important factors In the making over of a country whose economic weakness was the result of op- Dressive legislation and years of decay rather than because of any Innate traits of character of che people. Chief among these women is Miss Evelyn Gleeson of Dundrum, founder and head of the Dun Emer Guild, which teaches and employs scores of women and girls in the manufacture of rugs, poplin, laces, embrotderies, and in the arts of bookbinding and enamelling. Dun Emer fs, in appearance, so far removed from the American Idea of a factory that it is difficult for the visitor to adjust the {dea of manufacturing products with the charming house In the beautiful garden behind the walls of the main atreet of Dundrum, the road through which fashionable Dublin fweeps by some dozen times @ year on its way to the famous Leopardstown races, The gate lodge, bright with fuchsias and geraniums, gives entrance to the greensward gay with roses. Roses clamber up the trees and almost cover the gray stone house, Within, roses make bright every table Im every Toom, from the bright drawing room to the spotless kitchen. On the watls of hall and massive) ing rooms in the house {teelf and in Wbrar ‘here vellum- und books line the wing away from the first floor clustering cases, hang lion and tiger and |!!brary, are big, Mght, bright rooms, leopard kina, trophies of @ hunting | Purninhed Just an they were for sitting eeson who sought dig game In Indie |e eet ney “Wate conented to and Africa, Dun Emer has in there latructors show the girls who attend And in all the smaller touches of Per ithe school how to embroider, how to fonal assoctation the qualities of @/npin, now to make Inc Irivh country house of a Katherine | design: Tynan novel, And it is on this very | fgocount that Misa Gleeson's giving o | her own home to the use of Irish indus-|™MAke gowns of every deneription. Tn | t her| time the school will be self-supporting | tries, as well as her sacrifice o} ie . the | through the fale of ite products. As time, her money and her energy in cls ubW, itlne Giopwon bee cha adn cause, makes the project of special in- of each year, terest. Philanthropista in nearly every! ‘The first workroom, where there ia eountry have a way of withholding| woven the exquisite poplina whone Ana: their personalities from thelr projects, | ues of texture and Hghtness of weight Mins Evelyn Gleeson does not. sive it a shimmering appearance of he is a little, gray-hatred, low-volced | Wonderful richn hes windows woman, whose blue eves beam brightly | through which the elimbing roses coma from Debind her apectactes and whose) Modding close to the looms. Here a he wpeaks | ozen girls, their cotton gowns face grows luminous when 8i eavered with ig? biusigisckon seed af the girls of Dun Bmer and the future | that give them ihe appearance ef are of the Irish race, She disclaims the /atudents, work in front of the looms, holding of any apecial theories of eco-| To one who visiis Dun Emer the {m-| Homics, but she has worked with the pression is immediate that the girls conviction that Ireland's trouble has) Not only have an interest tn thelr work Been more economic than purely politt-| but @ real enjo it of the place work @al and jn the belief that Ireland soil | @F the comradeship, of the comfort. Rot be truly established as @ nation |. rough the workrooms, the Iace- |room where girls are making the cob- Ratit industrial prosperity ‘hae been! wey rabrics that are winning for Iriah how to draw | how to mix colors, how to cut | patterns, how to enamel on silver and copper, how to bind books and how to established, lace @ reputation moro artistic than the fake Bo woman away from FOLLOWING LINES TRACED! better known Irish crochet has brought: Mise Gleeson anid, “nor ave ‘the embroidery rooms, where giris work sing the girls to go to the OUT BY HER FATHER. jwith linen thread, 0 glossy that {t| Cities. We want the Irish industrial re- Her father, an English practising | looks like the fnest allk, patterns from | vival to be a genuine one. We want to Physiclan who came to Ireland on a/old Gael t in colors that reproduce Bleasure trip over forty years ago, was | the soft sof the Irish hills, the Tos of the first mon of bo time to| Soft blue of the Irish ekies gnd the ave Fealioe the industrial need of fretand. |StAY of the Irish clouds, the atmosphere Hie awakened interest Jed him to estab- is one of quiet and ple ant enjoyment. Heh @ factory in Athlone for the pur- | 2nat the girls of Dun Emer adore Mii \Gleeson 18 evident. That Miss Gleeso pose of giving vployment to thelregardis every gir) as her personal Poor of that district, paying better | triemi is equally evident. Wages than the Belfast establishments | of the period and turning out goods of fuperior quality. Dr, Gleeson's project BEAUTIFUL IRISH LACE, not only took out money, but forced him! “One of the reasons why we're toach- to kive up his English practice aito- jing the finer lace work,” Miss Gleesoa gether, and the famtly was on the/ explained, after she had left the lace: Verge of bankruptcy when, by @ cire|room with its exhibit of fairy handi- cumstance that sometimes happens out-; Work, “ls because of the frequently Kide of fiction, a wealthy relative died, | Mle statement that Irish Ince is @ fad leaving @ legacy sucient to tide over | {Pat Will ko out of fashion, leaving our the precarious finances of the Athlone |herore tne dome of than they were Meas |before the demand for the lace arose, |'But the people whe « a The puccess of the Athlone factory has | q THIRTY-EIGHT VARIETIE OF ply a rule, mean sin I Deen the means of giving Miss Gleeson there are at least (hirty-e! opportunity of establishing the Dun| varieties of Irish lace, some of them hardly known, and many of them finer than any other lace that {* being mado at the present time. There is no reason Enmee Guild, Althougs her animating, fea has boon the same that her father's was, her idea of factory conditions 19 i ven more modern than Jane Addams’s, | hy ine ae Why, when thie lace te kno n the Iace-purchasing ros herself @ reactionary in) markets, there will not be as muoh des that she deprecates the conditions that|mand for it as there has been for the set men and women in huge buildings, Irish crochet. That is why we are ene #pecializing and centralizing power at|courading every lacemaker we know to the risk of expelling initiative anajlearn to make as many designs as po sikwe inte 2a6 aible. Proficiency. ta human beings into fac-similtes | ev easary to. mu er against the work, Postibility of lack af For this reason we allow no girl | “If I thought that the Irish industrial revival would mean the establishment) who comes to the Dun Emer Guild. to| of @ condition of society similar to that) consider that she has completed her| of the typical factory towns that I vis-| education and ts equipped to meet the! {ted before I began my wo: Miss | World wu! she can do more than one | Gleeron declared, “I should be fighting| {MINE Aiequately enouwh to earn her | the Irish revival now as strongly ag Tyo ee ie revival in am. uphoiding it. I pray that Ireland! mmer is the rug ma May never come to know the sort of suxgests to the A les of Dun s making an a busy fac er’ boverty—the poverty of mind, of heart, | tory, dusty, rini, filed with whirling y of soul, as wyll as the poverty of | Machin on Emer rugs are made in wr - a bright, pite ro that opens on one bedy—that I have seen in some of these| Or the jove'lest gardens s where great manufactures had| been rugning for many year. our teaching of these gine mean that | peas, And the rug makers ar; such conditions could ever obtain in| girls, who sit before the biz looms, | Ireland, 1 should close Dun Emer toe] MOOT WES wonrerenl repicuy. thal co gel ave nad pexarsy aeolian ao that when thelr work 1s done the re- . sult ds one of those soft, deep rugs that ter poverty, sometimes hopeless pov-! are even now winning fame for t n erty; but the people of Ireland have had! product the gunsbine and the rains, and the blue) | There are 26,000 knote in @ square yard sales, and the hills, and the flowers, | of nee ree ne tee enrger ruse and some inner brightness of epirit that) Wye" Hieause Dun. Emer pave tte has survived every other misfortune, | workers a higher rate than any other but that would die, I know, if it were! industry of the kind, the price of Dun Set under the heel of tho iton giant of| mer rugs !s correspondingly expen: what you call ‘modern industrial sys-| sive. The certainty assured by the price tem,’” much the same as the Irish tri LABOR PERFORMED UNDER| Tg" ctaitions of lator” Una? g004 conditions of Jabor.” GONDITIONS THAT ARE IDEAL.| It ts on this account, perhaps, that Dun Emer ts, therefore, a protest | the recreation times at ‘Dun Emer are Aistinotly different from the usual fac- against the grinding power of factory Pr poet ready ype Alp OA i a work, as well a4 p proiwise to Irish | whenever they > from their ta women Of the ponsibiiities afforded them | to the garden, to ‘wn, to the ten- akilled Jubor under almost ideal con- | niy courts, whore balls and rackets wait them, And, although there is not an ‘/TBe Workrooms, adjoining the éraw- idler in Dun megs, there is plenty of garden of roses, and hollyhocks, and Bhovld| foxgloves, and sweet William and sweet elht On oe eee of fellow. done muc | couraged Mix Gleeson at times when whe doubted ti one of tho girls who showed the Dun Geetic Lea: ~ THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1912. D OUN EMER INOUSTRIAL HOME: healthy enjoyment of healthy outdoor sports, FINE PRODUCTS OF THIS NOBLE HOUSE OF INDUSTRY. The result of the Dun Emer work may be seen in the exhibition room oft the drawing room, where cases of books most beautifuly bound, not only in the tooled leather of the earlier days of the guild but in the Irish linen, brilliant with Celtic capitals, that would make @ bdtbitophile out of any one, vie in interest with cases of laces and embroideries, The Dun Hmer gowns, designed after an old Irish fashion, but conforming entirely to the most modern atyles, have had a wider vogue in London than in Dublin, on the principle of the prophet out of his own country. The reason for this is the fact that Mins Gleeson herself has a warm per- sonal connection with that band of Irishwomen in the British capital who are leaders in art and letter: whose app’ tion of her work tistic Interest as w bit of patriotic sentiment. They have in furthering the cause of and have en- the Dun Emer work, possibility of making her home work a success, ‘Three of the Dun Emer girls, one of them Miss Bride McLaughlin, who was oducts in Father O' Flanagan's Geetto I extibitions, have visited America, none of them was tempted to rem: What Dun Emer means to the com- founity of Dundrum, which was a typ- Jealty poor Irish village a fow yeara ago in spite of ite charm of beauty, was shown In the cloning exercises of the parish school, The parish priest of Dun- drum says that at least 40 per cent. of the children who graduated from the school, as neat and well dressed an ag- regation of children as you could find in any well-to-do American school dis- trict, were able to Anish their school work and be able to continue in the in- termediate schools because of the money that their mothers and sisters have ed from the Dun Emer industry. avoid from the very beginning the mis- | takes of the great industrial nation: believe that prosperity should not be at- tained at the cost of contentment., And ‘we are trying to show the giris and the women here that the best way to keep| contentment and peace and dreams @. to weave them right Into their work. “REMEMBER TITAN” 1S STRIKERS’ WARNING TO SHIP'S PASSENGERS Waterfront Littered With! Handbills as Strikebreakers Take St. Louis to Sea, In spite of the elaborate, though peace ful efforts of the strikers to prevent the ot American line to-day, the vessel be- jan her voyage to Southampton right on the minute, President Frankitp, watch In hand, was greatly pleased, es 1x members of the crew struck when the liner reached New York last Monday and thelr places were taken by 108 negro firemen and coal handlers trom Balti more and seventeen white engineers and twenty-five seamen, with two or three ollers, all white, Feorulted from various As the passengers went abroad the to-day they were acconted by ‘s who placed in thelr hands pla- cards reading: Passongers! he steamahtp St, Louls is manned incompetent crew, Remem- he Titantic.” Wagons carrying a message of similar Import, in very large letters, were driv- en up and down in the vicinity of the |Pler and several boats in the river car. jrled etrikers with megaphones who shouted pleas to the Dassengere to abandon thelr trip and to the crews to leave the boat. eee ACCEPT STRIKE CHALLENGE. NEW BEDFORD, Maes, July 13.— |The New Bedford Cotton Manufac- turers Association to-day accepted the Strike challenge of the Weavers’ Union by voting to refuse the weavors’ de- mands for the removal from the mills of notices concerning the adoption of a #rading system in the cloth mill | MISS GLEESON ON EXTREME RIGHT; GRANEFOR WILSON, WAL CONTRIBUTE TO CAMPAIGN FIND La Follette’s Chief Supporter Makes Announcement After Luncheon at Sea Girt. SBA GIRT, N. J., July 13—Charles R. Crane, who gave $20,000 to La Fol- lette’s campaign fund, came out this afternoon with « deciaration that he would support Gov. Wilson for the Prosidency and would contribute to the Democratic campaign fund if the Gove ernor would permit him to do #0, Mr. Crane said he had always been an admirer of Gov, Wilson, and wished now to do what he could to bring about hin election. He thought the Governor's nomination insured the brightest, pos+ aidle prospects for a progressive ad- ministration @t Waaliipgton. ‘The progressive Republicans, sa far) as I can learn,” he said, “feel very! kindly toward Gov. Wilson. I have not} spoken with many of them, but will wo back to Chicago and get in touch with the progressive leaders there and work for Wilson." Messrs. Crane and Van Hise wei welcomed as they alighted from the! carriages on the Governor's lawn by William T, McCombs, the Wilson cam- paign manager before the convention, GOVERNOR GREETS LA FOL. LETTE VISITORS. The Governor himself appeared @ moment later on the porch and greeted them with hearty handshake. Mr, Crane was accompanied by Pr dent Van Hise of the University of W conein, a former La Follette leader, | whose sympathies are also with Gov. Wilson's candidacy, Both were the Governor's luncheon guests, Three of the most tmportant confer- cea in Gov, Wilson's oareer as nomi- nee of the Democratic party were on to-day's echedule at the Little White House here, Finishing « hasty breakfast, the Qov- ernor went at once ¢o his office this morning to consult with Robert 8, Hud- epeth, William T, McCoombs, Josephus Damele and Edward KE. Grossoup over the final details of his mossage to the National Committee. So pressing was| this matter that the Governor ‘tad to| Postpone his usual morning talk wita the reporters—eomething he has roligi- ously observed for the past two weeks, Not the least significant of the ap- polntmenta for to-day‘ was that with Speaker Champ Clark, after an ex- change of letters and telegrams with the nominees in which the Speaker ex- pressed @ ‘willingness to consult with Dim on the programme of the Democrats 1n Congress during the remainder of t session, Gov, Wilson id he would be ftad to wee the Speaker at Bea Girt, ™'COMB: TO BE NATIONAL CHAIRMAN. Professional and amateur forecn, ers took up the Governor's message to the National .Committ for dissection to-day, Willam T, McCombs in the chotce for National Chairman, A good many thought that Joneph Davies, Na- tional Committeaman from Wiaconsin, would be elocted secretary. Some few thought that Willfam G, McAdoo, the builder of the tubes under the Hudson, would be elected treasurer or chair- man of the finance committee. Some of those with whom the Gov- ernor has been in frequent consulta: | tion belleved that a single body would| direct the campaign, and that there| would be no division of authority be: tween the National Committee and «| campaign committees, To none of the forecaster! aia Governor Wilson atv: rain of comfort | or an inkling of what his message would contain. Mr, MoCoombs planned to leave New York this afternoon over the New York Central for Chicago, He will be accompanted by Nathonal Committee. men Josephus Daniels, Col, Robert Ewing, John ‘T. McGraw and Thomas Pence of the Governor's campaign staff, Robert 6, Hudspeth, who will represent the Governor at the tlonal Committee meeting, and Kdward BE. Grosscup, Democratic State Chair. Man, expect to leave for Chicago to- morrow afternoon over the Pennsyl- ‘ania Railroad, The meeting in Chicago will prob- The weavers have already voted to strike Monday in case the notices are not withdrawn, Buch a strike would affect 20,000 operatives, ably last only for one afternoon mes- |must wait for @ bookkeeper's s: Jon the un Emer, the Spring of Industrialism in Ireland; Miss Gleeson, Founder BURGLARS CLEAN DUT TEN FLOORS OF BG BUILDING Make Laborious Preparati and Cut Out Glass of Elevator Doors. Painstaking burglars laboriously re- moved ten panels of glags in levator doors from the fifth to the tenth floors in two connecting bullings, Nos, 132 and 14 West Twenty-first street, to- day, The thieves ransacked the rooms of tan firma and got several rings and @ Watch, @ald to be worth $1,200, and pos- sibly 890 in cash. The robberies, com: mitted between midnight and 5 A. M. must have taken all of four hours, A policeman wae on fixed post at Sixth avenue and Twenty-first street, 100 feet away. When the robberies were discovered and the police notified Detective Reid made an examination. He decided there were two men engaged in the work. They were evidently famiil with the buildings, which are used by firms in the cloak and sult trade, In each building the elevator was used to carry the burglars from floor to floor, as they pried out the glass panels in the elevator doors. ‘The safe in the store of Sig Hor- wichter had been left opened and sev- eral pleces of jewelry were taken. At first 1t was said the stolen rings and watch were worth $600, but later the figure was raised to $1,200, On every floor piles of merchandise lay un- touched. One firm reported losing $60 from a drawer in a desk, but said mont before they were sure of the amount. The police belfeve the burg- lars were looking for light valuable plunder. No safe on any floor w: forced or tampered with beyond trying the combination, The gli were removed to Police Headquarters where the finger prints on them were photographed. nemo manensnns STRIKERS’ SECRETARY GOES TO JAIL RATHER THAN PAY, Fined $2, “Unjustly” He Says, and Takes Tombs Sentence Instead. Milo M. Woolman, secretary of the Natlonal Transport Workers’ Associa- tion, is a prisoner in the Tombs, be- cause, believing he had been unjustly treated by Magistrate Corrigan, he re. fused to pay a fine of $2 imposed on a charge of disorderty conduct, Woolman was “farm” on West near Vestry street. There had been a disturbance there and Policeman No, 0098 ordered Woolman and @ group of atrikers to “move on." According to the policeman, Woolman refused and “talked back,” His arrest followed. In the Centre Street Polloe Court He denounced the arrest police tyranny. “How many persona were Magistrate Corrigan asked man. “Aout 200,"" “That la not #0," spoke up Woolman, “There were leas than fifty.” Magistrate Corrigan adjudged Wool- man gullty and imposed a fine of ®. { must refuse to pay it," remarked & “plece of there?" the pollce- Wovlman, “for I do not believe it ts Just Magistrate Corrigan shrugged his Woolman wan sent to t where he will remain, unless the fine is paid, until 4 o'clock’ to-morrow afternoon, ee Firebug at Stamfor (Special to The Brening World, STAMFORD, Conn., July 18—An at- tempt wae made early this morning to destroy @ barn on the premises of Joseph Gerlil, @ wealthy New York merchant, who resides here. The fire was discovered in time to save the prop- erty. On Feb. 18 last a large barn and part of Mr. Gerll'’s house was destroyed in an incendiary fire entailing him the Executive Committee, The chair- man and secretary of the committee will be stationed at Chicago and th alan, A committee of ten will be named heads of the various de- San Franciaco, Mkely to develop some in- features of the campaign, © arrestod early to-day Joseph 1B, Dariing defended Wooiman, | / HAS HAPPY HOME IDEAL, SPANISH DANCER WHO CROSSED SEA TO ESCAPE KIN DANCER WHO LE HERE FROM KING SORES FLIRTING i | “It Spoils a Girl’s Modesty and Cheapens Her,” Says Mile. Doradora. | Hopes to Meet Mr. Right Man} and He Needn’t Be Rich, if | He’s Honest. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Mlle. L'Aerolla Doradora, the seven- teea-year-old Spanish dancer who h been “commanded” at a dozen royal courts, is in New York solely to escape the unwelcome attentions of Albert, King of the Belgians, At the little Gancer's last performance in Brussels the young king rushed behind the scenes and testifed to his admiration with @ fervent kiss. L’Aerolia fied on the next boat, For several days she has been living here quietly, under the Protection of a woman friend at whose house I met hi L’Aerolia is @ beautiful young woman, with the unique combination of gold- long | her perfect teeth remind one of Gaby brown hair and biack eyes, The eyes are long, narrow and heavily lashed. ‘The full, smooth oval of her face and Desiys, whom royalty also made fa-/ mous, albeit in somewhat different fash- fon. But L'Aerolia's animation pr serves her from Gaby's doll-like pul- chritude, The little Spanish girl is not! tall, but her straight, supple young fig-| seo UF ACDUSE SUFFRAGETTE BS AN INCENDIARY TRUE LOVE WAITS. “My mother married for love,” she Caught Prowling-on Grounds of Harcourt Mansion With Stuff to Start Blaze. MLLE CAEROLIA HER said, “She was a Frenchwoman and| my father was a Spaniard. They have always been devoted to each other, and 1 have five brothers and sisters, Al- ways I have grown up with the ideal of ® beautiful home life before me. “My mother is @ dancer, and since I was ten years old I have been on the stage. But I have never before been separated from her, and indeed our. whole family has kept together. I have) been ‘commanded’ to appear before the! Czar tn St. Petersburg, and to dance| before royalty at Madrid, Brussels and Vienna. For several seasons I have danced for the Prince of Monte Carlo, and many, many times for Queen Wilhelmina, I was born in a little town in Holland, FLIRTING 18 AN INSULT To ONE'S SELF. “E @hink flirting ts abomin- able!” Me tte dancer deciared, “It is am insult to one's self and the right man who will come by- and-by. Z insult myself if 3 play the coquette, because I give cheap- ly the smiles, the giances, perhaps the Riss, which I should hold very precious, And I insult my fature husband, beosuse I offer him what you Americans call the ‘shopwora goods.’ “It i nonsense to say that flirting! does no harm. It spoils @ girl's mod-| eaty. It cheapens her, makes her bold end vulgar and coarse. “Then you think marriage the happl- OXFORD, England, July 1%.—Helen Craggs, the suffragette, who on June %, at Cardiff, Wales, broke through the Police cordon line and sprang at Reg! nald McKenna, the Home Secretary, while he was driving with King George and\Queen Mary, was charged to-day at the police court in this city with being found in Nuneham Park, the country Secretary of State for the Colonies, with the inten- tlon of setting fire to the mansion. The used Was remanded. She declined to say anything in court, Helen Cragg was found during the mght with another woman in the grounds and was caught by @ watch- man, When searched she was found”to residence of Lewis Harcourt, material and spirits, The suffragettes are particularly in- censed at Lewis Harcourt. est for a woman?” I asked, “Yes, indeed!” she assented, vigor- SPER, RTE ously, ‘That ts, of course, if one ts| NAME CHAFIN AND WATSON married to the man one lov “What is your ideal? I asked, HERE'S HER “IDEAL” OF MAN FOR PROHIBITION TICKET. ATLANTIC CITY, July 13.—Hugene FOR HUSBAND, W. Chafin of Arizona for Presiednt, and “He must be honest and sincere, first} Aaron 3. Watson of Ohio for Vico- of ail,” she enumerated, “and he must | President is the ticket nominated 1 know how to work hard. Lazy men|nigat by the National Pronibition C are silly, He must be fond of children, | vention. They were the standard vea I hope he will be nice to look at, and,| era four years ago. ; {"Atvev w nikht session of the new payerays ge rut be strong and self) x tional Committee, which adjourned bite , and he must never care for| oli, to-day, W. G. Calderwood of any one but me. ted for r “But he-meedn’t be rich. Minnesota was de! If I loved|am sucretary by Mrs. Frances Beau- him I should be so glad to work hard|champ, President of the Kentu and share with him, Or, if he didn't|Women's Christian Temperance Union, want me to do that I could help him ery Pepe save, My mother has taught me how WANT SHANK OUSTED. to keep house. If I had a little home Pisani of my own I could do all the w MNANAPOLIS, July 13.—Deciston to But I shall not marry very young,"'| begin impeachinent proceedings to re- L'Aerolia went on, wisely, ‘In my| move Mayor Lewls Shank from office father's country of Bpain ittle girls of | tor not enforcing the laws prohibiting twelve are married women. ‘hat 's| certain resoris last night foollah.” by the Indianapolis Churea # “How do you ike American men?” 1| and several hundre! dollars inquired, seribed to ald the prosecution, “They are #0 nice! she exclaimed, he proposed action against the Mayor 008 10 follows an investigation by the Boctal rong and good looking and Committee, which repeatediv lection In was reached one ie eee Sproad: ad the city's Executive to en- ahe added: “And your American w. force the laws. Mayor Shank has held are superb! that conditions would be worse if the clan’ plan of segregation ts abandoned, wt Dili SHIPPING NEWS. Nattonal Bank Gains, WASHINGTON, July 18.—The Comp- troller of the Currency's report of the condition of national banks on June 14, s vompared with April 18, shows « of $71,787,884 In loans and disco $13,512,733 in cash and $118,419, dividual deposits, ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY +, 4:40i8uB sete,, 7.80) Moon Tikes... 8.06 22 6.0) Port of New York, ARR! Resinol Shampoos Stop loss of hair INCOMING STEAMBHIPS, DUE TO-D, HB soothing, heallng, antiseptic balsame in Resinol Soap sink right {nto the acalp, stop itching and it {reo from dandruff, permitting perfect scalp’ hi causes that lead to loss of hair, In se vere cases of dandruff, scalp-cruste and falling hair, @ little Resinol Ointment mcona, Genos, eaten y# Xork, Southampton Mayary, Port OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS, SAILED TO-DAY, ‘Bt, Lo Bouthampton |. Jacksonville, eo WEaloats uthampton. |. Tamme. should be massaged into the scalp at A Seenothe, Hemtiags, night, followed by a Resinol shampoo Chy of St, Low in the mornin Creole, Ne Onl Your druggist sells Resisol Soap (260.) and rab Colne, Resiool Ointment. (80c, and $1)... For Bample onc Hull. eof each write to Dept, Gi, Mesincl Chem, Go. ribo X. and N,v, | gt skh vig 4 | Lloyd, Tom McNaughton, Eig! be carrying a quantity of inflammable | TWO BIG FEATURES ~IN'NEW OFFERING AT WINTER GARDEN santiilpatis |“Passing Show of 1912” and “Ballet of 1830” to Be Seen Next Week HE Winter Garden will reopen on T Wednesday evening with amidsume mer production divided into two arte—"The Passing Show of 1912" aad he Ballet of 18%." Among others in jthe frst entertainment will be Trixte Frigansa, Charlotte Greenwood, Anna Wheaton, La Petite Adelaide, Sobyna Howland, Charles J. Ross, Clarence Harvey, lye Beerbohm, Sydney Grant, Howard and Howard and Moen and Morris, The piece is a musical satire with travesties of well-known plays. ‘The Ballet of 1830" is from the Alhambra Theatre, London, and with it come Emil Agoust, Nellie Brown, Greville Moore, Emile Zajah and B. ‘anfretia, In all there will be eighty dancers, ‘The 100th performance of “The Row Maid,” at the Globe Theatre on Mon- 4] day night, will be celebrated by euch |notable additions to the cast a |Christie MacDonald, Louis Mann, Alice Bowen and Lionel>Walsi |_ “The Road to |farce-comedy by be produced by stock company Theatre, | “Three Weeks" will be the offering jof the Academy of Musie stock cum- pany at Fox's Theatre. VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS, At Hammerstein's Roof Garden and |Theatro will be Don, “the talking dog,” from Germany; Burt Green, Blose fom Seeley, Joe Howard and Mabel |McCane, Max's Circus, the Bison City | Quartette, the Apollo Trio. and othe: | features. | The bill at Proctor's Fifth Avenue Theatre will include Bessle Wynn in new songs; Olive May in “The Specta- tor from Kansas,” Donahue and Stew- Mandalay,” Carl W. Hunt, will the Corse Payton at the West. End a new jArt the Strolling Players, and “Vistons @Art.” At Proctor's Twenty-third {Street Theatre will be Hal Davis in “The Money Getter, ing Animals, Hilton and Bannon tn “The Rattle of Too Soon,” and the Colliers, Tho Fifty-eighth Street ‘Theatre will have Robert Emmett Keane, monologist; nfleld and Driver in “The Section Boss,” and Gray and Peters, bicyclists, On the bill at the One Hundred and Twenty-ftth Street Theatre will be Amelia Summerviile In “Her Excellence Hermony'a Fly- the Governess;" the baseball skit, “Swat Milligan;" the Killarney Giris and Coyne and Lee. Keith's Union Square Theatre. will have Carter De Haven in @ musical sketch, Fannie Brice, singing comedi- enne; Homer Lind, baritone, in “The Opera Singer;” John and Mue Burke in “Two of a Kind;" McCormack and Irv- ing in @ musical offering, and Went- worth, Vesta and Teddy, comedy gym- nasts, Ethel Gtikey, a Western soprano, 1s & now feature of the cabaret show at the Madison Square Roof Garden. PARKS AND BEACHES. The dill at the New Brighton Theatre, Brighton Beach, will include Stella Ma. W, assisted by Bille Taylor; “The Rose of Mexico," a spectacular panw- mime; Belle story, singer; Bud Fisher, cartoonist, and Victor, “the talking dog.” ‘Ai Henderson's Music Hall, Coney Tal and, will be Nat Wills, the mp com dian; John T. Doyle in “Putting One Over,” Sully and Hussy in “The Sales- man and the Sportsman,” Joe Keno and Rose Green in “The Boy Across the |Street,” the Harvey de Vora Trio and others, Sato, the living statue at Luna Park, offers $00 to any one who can make him smile, . ‘The Mixer” Is the latest amusement device at Steeplechase Park, W vaudeville features at Pallsades usement Park will the Ten Pi Girls; Harry Thomson, comedt dancer, and Work end A Jami Della Stacey, Play, comedy a (From the 1 you really mustn't y “Duke, stay #0 late.” Why not, my love?" “Papa has heard that you are des- perately hard up, and some one has been stealing our milk of late, he vur- cae m for Adress ou red. sis ' iy NEW YORK WORLD

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