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MOTORBOAT RAID THRILLING STUNT BY WIFE'S SLEUTHS for Two Fat Detectives to Board Yacht. FIND BLONDE ‘STEWARD’ An Illinois Clubwoman, Proposing That There Shall Be Federal Cen- | Owner Gates and Pretty Singer Not Exactly Ready to Receive Visitors! Fashions, Says: ‘It Is Time to Calla Halt on Wearing Boudoir Gar- |’ ments in the Street.”’ | Willa: decorating cont ates, a wealthy Intertor ctor, Was arrested last “It Is Only Dyspeptic, ign on board his ninety-foot motor! Middle-Aged Men Who yacht Nettie, tied up in the Harlem Hi Ss } River at ‘Two Hundred and Fourteenth ave pent Much street, by Detectives Cottinge ant| Money on Fashionable Waleh, who had warrants, aworn out] yy, | vy Mra. Gates, for Gates and Mise Min- omen That Groan nie Anderson, a concert singer. In the! Now at the. Barbaric Harlem Ce Miss Ander t to-day, when the pair—| m having been found on) board th -were arraigned, Mag- istrate Bu eld them in $509 bail each | ” for examination next Thursday. K. There was considerable mystery when ‘ the two detectives, t of whom are exceedingly large, left the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street po- Jiee etation with the warrants. They took a subway train to Two Hundred and Fifteenth street. From there they had to force their way over nearly a mile of vucant lots, climbing over fences “nd tumbling into mud puddies, It was piteh dark and Collinge’s electric flash Dight got out of order. USED PLANK FOR ’ SLIPPERY BOARDING JoB. When the detectives finally floundered out of the mud at the foot of Two Hun- dred and Fourteenth street they found themselves at the shore end of a long} and narrow runway. Squeezing through, | they were disappointed to discover that | the Nettie was not warped close in, but | Jay about eight feet off the pier, A light| #limmering {n the cabin was the only about the yacht. Collinge got a plank and lowered It to the deck of the yacht to serve as al bridge, It clattered against the gun-| wale, escaping trom his mud-siippery | hands, and aroused the occupants of ; Attire of the Gentler women. John C. Bessler of Illinois proposed the cabin, No longer endeavoring to | Wixot A GREELEY SMITH conceal thelr presence, Walsh and} Collings tished over the Wapriviecs: | #nd measures. This ought to leave shaky bridge and descended tnto the | Clothes. cabin. sorship of the Women’s; Sex,” Writes ‘Harry B.| BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Now comes the suggestion of Government censorship of fashions for! At a meeting of the Cincinnat! Women's Club yesterday Mrs. ‘THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1912." relsieleleieieiek by The Press Pub Copyright, 1912, | @ national bureau be eptablished by Uncle Sam with the purpose of !n- vestigating and establishing stand- ards for women's garments. Of course, this would be a delight- ful task for Uncle Sam—quite a change from the dull routine of State and Treasury departments. But isn’t it carrying the matter a Httle too far? Isn't it giving that gay old gentleman an opportunity of becoming a little too paternal? The State has taken over the care of a woman's children | for the greater part-of the day. It’ vaccinates and otherwise medicates | them, In certain vases it supplies them with breakfast or luncheon. Also it does tts best to sce that her butcher and grocer do not get the better of her, by investigating weights her leisure enough to chose her own Moreover, I'm afraid that the meekest anu-suffragist of them all ; Would resent governmental interference in woman's sacred prerogative ot | the Illinois clubwoman made the: They baci on ee door “ the | dressing as fantastically as she likes. But in the course of her proposal | owner's stuterc and Gates atlength answered. He refused at first to open for Government control of fashions ‘the door, but the detectives told nim | CXeellent remarks, suggesting reforms In the matter of the garbing ft women who can afford to dress in nt and threatened to Then Gates turned the key “AM womanhood suffers definite deg- clad in a bathrobe and the! radation from prevalent hions, al- young woman also was scantily at-| though they are structurally excellent tired, according to the testimony. She! That is, we now have nfortable | was blond | and good looking. WIFE NEVER KNEW OF BOAT OR! HOUSEKEEPER. skirts, comfortable sleeves and the privilege of wearing collars or of g0- Das detectives retired and a few| (MS without. All these are good, but It minuces later Gates and the girl, fully|!® 11 the abuse of these comfortable decane’, out. und accompanted| f@8htons that our present difficulty Hes. ina “Improper transparent Bodices, no petticoats to blur outline of the figure, clinging skirts, too low necks or ultra short sleeves for street wear | these are th Jus Tt 4 wearing street.” And so it is, But can't we m- plish this reform without Fe terference? 2f anything on earth could make 1f-respecting woman conservative attire pear in the street in the “garment of the boudoir’ it would be having somebody tell her she must not do it, came the station house, told to the po- wife of t garments on the deral ine hat he had a. “housekeeper” on. Since 190%, she sald, toward her had been different than in the earlier years of thelr married life, ———_—— HOLD ON! LISTEN TO THIS. ‘Are you interested in the Balkan mix- Gates's manner up? A young man contributes: @ Maybe not. Some people aren't fashion. Mis But it's dollars to doughauts and anxious that kohinoors to carrots that you're inter- | a ested in love and 4 good PARSER Rat ina)ae ge Also in a story of a Yankee youth| how ‘barbarous’ lar who can phinge into the Balkans and) nighly-colored plumes, &e., fight with fists and brains and find| a5 they achieve an effect of distinction, time to win a glorious girl, besides. | ina measure she is right, for so long That's the sort of thing that happens) as the effect of woman's costume is in “Hawthorne of the U. S. A.’ bY| harmonious, the incongruity of its ele- Albert Payson Terhune; founded On| jients do not matter at all. J. B. Fagan’s successful play of the game name now running in New York.| “Hawthorne of the U. S. A.” is going | to run as a serial in The ing World, Beginning Tuesday, November 19, | It's a great story. Don't forget to read it Remember, the date November 19. Ja ales SEERA Turn Sleepless Nights Into Bright Morn ings, Med Cross + Cough Drona, Be R E A D! | thing so undesirable. Why should | Women be less careful? Why should innocent girls of sixteen and eighteen appear as they do with artificially colored cheeks and Ups? Why should simple, serious- | minded wives imitate the flaring coutumes of the professional siren? | Nose of us knows But I am sure | we are all agreed that at any rate | Uncle Sam as @ censor of fashion | couldn't do anything about tt. | nT not Jewel and t eure mati clubwomen, which are misleading. there were among 1m recognized class dedicated to mur- | @er or larceny or some other pi suit without the Puesday, of the proscribed trades: most unlikely that other m: honorably occupied would imitate the uniform of crime, ‘They would strive rather to have no suggestion in their attire of a Ho'se-hunting is easy when you can find what you want by simply reading the “Apartments To Let’ Here 1s a defense of barbarous fashion | | fom a man's point of view: Young men, Advertisements in TheSundayWorld | s!:"soinsth'" nonpl ALL SIZES ALL PRICES ALL LOCATIONS THINK! ons iny partners ¥ thought to th n's coat barbar- It ts only and disappointed middle- aged gentiomen wao have spent o | waists, shorter and less voluminous | blems that confront! alled a halt on the] ave so long |! Une with the fashions: mney in the past on who groan now at f the gentler sex, HARRY B, K great d j fashlonat } the bar | CHRISTIAN SCIENCE WORLDLY BUSINESS... GLOVER CHARGES Eddy Will Contestant, Filing Amendments in Case, Says Church Is Run for Profit. N. H., Nov. 16, hat Cartstian Amend- voNncor he case of ¢ of Lead, 8 D., whe aside the rosiduary his mother, founder of the denominat to the HMrat Church of of Boston, The er’s bill were filed William 1, Chandler Mrs. Mar atural That he Int luary his claims that sai st ie void, because not a charit and Hiet with his allegatio t Christian gion but is a worldly @ privately owned by by Its owners for money profits to them xelves, and that the execution of satd attempted trust will result, and was tn- tended by the creator of sal armful and particular!y Md ex vy means Juary SATISFIES MILLIONS 1T ALWAYS -PLEASES ved | when he arrived. roleteleleleleieleboleleieieielnleleleleleleleleiieiel aS [ppastions for | Tjomen [BJaRBaRous? 16TH ARTICLE OF A SERIES Here’s New Job for Poor Old Uncle Sam! Slippery Plank Forms Brite! They Want to Make Him a Ladies’ Tailor! vx: Divorce Because ioe plishing Co. (The New York World). i "MAD, BESSLER THINKS THAT UI es Fasnione LEAS 11 STORIES FROM HIS WINDOW IN MILLS HOTEL Suicide’s Body Crashes Into Skylight and Starts Panic in Reading Room. | | | man who registered at the Mills No, 2 Thirtyssixth street and eventh from ndow on the eleventh |the “Poor Man's Waldorf” | crashed through of early to-day, an iron gril at the) bottom of the West court and sprayed! the crowded reading room below with} glass from a scattered skylight, There were more than a hundred men} in the reading room when qusten—| whose real name {8 belleved to have been John Takarfhi—made his leap. Ag! the grill gave away beneath his welght and the thick glass of the akylight| crumbled and descended in a dangerous hall, the loungers were thrown into panic. The man did not fall all the way through the Krill. His body, caught by the shoulders, # above the heads were unabte | from Ue avce windows. which are barred ended on a ladder from the 4 , and carried the man up th ladder while he was still breath though there was hardly a bone in body that had not been broken, In the time the ambulance was on the way from New York Hospital to the hotel, members of the Mills stafl went about the work of identifying the win- dow-Jumper, was clad only tn a There finally was on the eleventh floor untenanted and in which bby suit of clothes and a ce to the register proved pant of the room to have been Joon Lusten,” who had been staying at the hotel two nights In a pocket In the sult of clothes, hows ever, were naturalization papers in the name of John Takarfhi, dated Septem. ber, 1890, There Was also a letter ad- dressed to John Takarfhi under date of | Augustin Max Tells Police He venue as John Lusten, jumped! \akipper's shout and thre | WNCLE SAM SHOULO CENSOR S CONFESSED BY BANKER OF PARIS Misappropriated Money of His Clients. Augustin Max, known t France as the “blind banker 14x created a sensation In cireks here by surrendering elf to the police and confessing that he has misappropriated $2,000,000 of his clients’ money. Max declared that he had Invested the depositors’ funds in copper and nickel mines in New Caledonia, The enterprises wero complete failures. Max, who enjoyed the highest reputa- tion in banking circles here, declares he had decided to commit suicide, but was persuaded by his family to give himself up to the police. stumbled » gungplank, J. Hogan, on watch aboard the Jen heard his Dr. Cook of Bellevue called and gave tho skipper a glass of grog to take the taste of salt water out of his mouth, | part of the Supreme Co $2,000,000 STEAL TOREADOR'S JABS. wesssesseseet| LORMENTED HEART OF RICH SENORA' fighter Made Many mands for Money. Her six monthe’ life wi Amar was Nke a cont Don in the rote of the te neg he ney for prociivitios Argentinian belle in jera fore her elopement to the States her marring porita: Ja Torrens, pr matic al clrcies of Buenos Ayres 804 The Don and the Se ath Amer ‘Dhey lived at No. Washi here until last June, when returned to Ruenos ; Ayres, leaving tis beide yong strat A beautiful skirt of [header i ye a” Pr i charming style, with wealthy and, vie retum and p : annoyances, she bean suit in the Bt unique front fastening, preme Court for a separation. Her hus-| diagonally band att not ts i He wae served by | side—three large self publication in ntine. | Senora Amar tokl of meeting her hase] covered button orna. band at during a perform-| | ments—girdle t op— ance of “Carmen” in which Maria Gay| f black, nav sang the title role, The Don, she ¢ $2.98 '¥, brown . amidst blushes, flirted, and be the acts ma ed to obtain an ction. He Wax young and of ng manners. She was not lack- 0a romantic traits of het 9 nit the meeting { wie nto a pened oe Don mot frie and quickly, fe die life, gamb! Ing acquaintances whieh « him © says, and paid hie gan thelr maintenance Then her Castilian tempera sed, One morning he took $400 corsage ths, she as “the tlons. The Court will be a termine If threats to Kill, tsued SO¢ VOLT Feb. 2, 1912, Dr. Golding, the ambulance surgeon, marvelled that the man Was still allve He said that in addi. tion to his other infjurfes is skull had been crushed, Lusten, or Takarfhi, died y to the hospital on clean, crisp lines, easy fi Button or Lace. $6 Sixth Avenue At Nineteenth st, with blind eyelets to top, flat last, re- ceding toe, broad shank and low heel. Tan Calf, Lace; and Black Calf, | | Andrew Alexander Sau A Young Man’s Shoe itting, made 548 Fifth Avenue Above Forty-fifth Street Times and American. PUT THE OTHER FIFTEEN CENTS IN THE BANK. Eddys | | TRY IT YOU WILL SAY 80 Yo GROCERS SELL B, Pritehord, Maker, 341 5) K CREDIT CEN TLEMEN'S | ‘ i, Vb MANHATTAN CLOTHING Co. pen Eves, 1ddn Bd Ave, Tad Ht. De- | his gam~ declared a beautiful) ards , Be . an | Ceewons “ Exactly Matching Waist «and mak- In until he struc! told the worst that Altho) does not und: $10 English gh ni int Libis A ° ele $20 ‘wo-Tone Diagonal Coats. $10 Pegi ae cee Peart uy en $22.50 Rough Cheviot Coats . $10 that the fire In hile TH attitude $25 Rich Broadcloth Coats, F. $10 and his raised hand indleate lila inten- language not understood by the person [ast One Hundred and Twelfth str to-day, She slipped and fell from fourth floor to the street. She taken to Har Hospital with a tured left leg and arin. FREE worth of | for re-plating at howe Cold: qo dertl Pkidvrer sd Ta See next Sunday’s Herald or Brooklyn Eagle for full particulars, also World, B10 am xis Per Lu Bottle | \'T’S WORTH A QUARTER! wm Si erS Ga SA Saturday Bargains $4 Corduroy Costume Waist Exactly Matching Skirt . $7.98 Choose the color you like best his beautiful waist, then combine it with skirt below, you'll find they match perfectly, and you will have a beautiful corduroy costume. Superb quality, dainty lace yoke, silk trim- mings. Navy, brown and black. % gs Corduroy “3 Costume Skirts hen | $9.98 Reduced Original Prices, $18 to $25 570 Reduced . $25 ey Ulster Coats, . $10 $22.50 French Boucle Coats, . $10 $20 Double Faced Mixture Coats, $10 $18 Johnny Sport Coats, . . from | from 1 was away three days 1 demanded more. | $20 English Chinchilla Coats,. $10 $17.50 Brighton Zibeline Coats, $10 In a threatened, constitutes a charge of cru \ Oe Anna MeDermott, a nelahbor FREE Alterations testifted for the Senora and corroborated SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES SH NE#IYORE Gidl She Race nar Geerbe 14-16 West 14th Street hen will return to her native coun. | NEW YORK 4604462 Fulton Street BROOKLYN to651 Broad Street NEWARK Market cor 12th Street 4LARGE STORES PHILADELPHIA vA Ques NS ecm “A NATIONAL INSTITUTION ee soe Browning, King&Co SeorernG: FURNISHINGS AND H XS AND CHILD Remember the Boys The well-dressed Boy is our Best Advertisement. His favor once won makes him a Customer for life. Here are some special offerings for him for to-day and to-morrow: BOYS’ SUITS AND OVERCOATS. Double-Breasted Suits in Brown, Blue, Gray and Fancy Mixtures ...........$5.00 to $15.00 Double-Breasted Fancy Mixed Suits, with extra pair Bloomer Trousers ........ .$7.50 to $10.00 Double-Breasted Convertible-Collar Overcoats, 10 to 17 years ; $8.50 to $20.00 Juvenile Suits and Overcoats .... $5.00 to $25.00 BOYS’ FURNISHINGS AND HATS. Sweaters, in all sizes ..... . $2.00 to $12.00 Wool Union Suits........... ..... $1.00 and $1.50 Balamiaeic iets cnewnin .. .95¢ and $1.50 Boys’ and Children’s Hats . . $1.50 to $2.50 BROWNING, KING & CO., Broadway and Sixth Avenue, between 31st and 32nd Stree Cooper Square, opposite 5th Street, Brooklyn: Fulton at DeKalb Ave. ew lelelelelelelele) Purses are filled—-hearts made glad By the timely use of a World Want Ad vUR