The evening world. Newspaper, November 23, 1912, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1912. ' aeeeerecorooosere sonee: eceeee. ITO FLIRT OR NOT TO FLIRT? or ‘arcsec § SUHOONERSUNK Oh Aa ARPeROeSenetneeeeenereeeeeeee se COSSES ORES OS ESSN SORE SOS LO OSSS CES CESSES ERO E OSE ROR OCCCCO CCS LE+OESE BY I ANSFER TUG; It Is Demure Flirts Who Break Up Homes When a Mushy Man Buys Their Bouquets GREW IS RESCUED Vessels Tangled in Crash at Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). Hell Gate and One Goes Down. the rigging down to blanket part of the tug and one scow. The tug captain sounded hin whistle for ald and tried to back away from the wrecked schooner. But his boat and the tows were securely bound to the wre¢k by her cordage and sail and all four craft drifted in a bunch around into the Eastern Chan: hurried to the assistan: managed to extricate her and her tows Juat before the achooner lurched under. —_—. YOUNG MEN BEAT A MASHER. fee Him Nadge « Girl and Have Him Arrested, A nattily dressed young man who said he was Jacob Bium, twenty-five years ol, @ salesman, of No, 96 West One Hundred and Sixteenth street, wae found guilty of being @ “masher” by Magistrate Krotel in the Men's Night Court last night. He wil be sentenced to-night. Highteen-year-old Agnes Reid of No. Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co. Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street. 5 Paris-Preferred Fashions Adapted by Witeir erat Werten’ Whe ‘Famous American Dressmaker Indulge in Flirtations Should Be Held Up to Public Ridicule and in Some Cases Put on Ex- hibition and Flogged,” Writes “Constance R.”” On Monday $30 to $125, regularly $60 to $262 Callot, Paul Poiret, Drecoll, and the fameus couturier to mondaines Martial et Armand, speak very plainly in these new gowns for afternoon and evening. The two masted schooner W. & Spencer, from Northport, 1. 1, wae in collision with a transfer of the/98 Lawrence street, had gone to the New York, New Haven Hartford page ber flance, John T. Byrnes, at ‘0. 1525 Ameterdam avenue, and finding Rallroad off Hallet’s Point, at the north-) him not at nome was returning to; her em tp of Blackwell's Imand to-day.|own home when Blum walked by her and after tangling the tug and her two / side, nudged her and coughed. She took barges in tow in @ helpless drifting|% notice, but watked down Amsterdam (ech, tanh in Ge tenes 1, |2Yenue to One Hundred and Twenty- between the island and the Long Islead Their inspiration has come “The Unmarried Should just now. The rich velvets fifth street where, she said, Blum velvet recall the beauty of fudged her and coughed again. ‘At that Drecall, 4 Be Encouraged to Take Part in Respectable Flirtation and the Mar- ried Discouraged From Such Practices,’’ Says Diogenes’s Uncle.” “The unmarried shovld be encouraged to flirt in order that they may find the right mates, but the flirtations of the marricd should be vigor- ously discouraged.” Such is the substance of a communication from a masculine reader of The Evening World, and @ woman reader, pre sumably a wife, supplies a svathing denunciation of the young woman who exerts her fascinations upon married men. This type of filrt, she shore. The captain aimculty that East River. her own sail. Capt. loaded barge tandem. aboard the schooner were rescued by the railroad tug before the injured oraft sank and it was only with the greatest were extricated from the tangle of the schooners rigging before the schooner took the plunge to the bottom of the The W. 8. Spencer, fully laden, was coming down through Hell Gate under grip of a strong ebb tide and was tacking slowly back and forth across| Amal, Cé the narrow strip of water between | 4' Ward's Island and the Astoria shore) in order to keep steerageway in the strong current. Robbins, churrffig slowly up the west chan: between Blackwell's Island and t Manhattan shore. ‘The tug rounded Hallet’s Point Nght time (she notioed Byres and, another young man. Ghe epoke to them and eae wow of Sve mee told her to start back home and would follow. She reached Law- street when Blum nudged her again. Byrnes and his companion pounded Blum until the arrival of a policeman. Blum tried to place the biame on the girl, He said she had looked at him and amilied. the tug and her con Prices. ‘The following were the hitheet, loweet, and last prices of stocks for today and the net changes as Rompared ne Peace The boat was in the with yesterday's closi L Yast, Chats Lore % i, Ra, SN, S50! ay 41 Am: ans Transfer tug No. 22,/1 at the wheel, was The tug had a on either side, towing | ( mY ausce: and brocaded silks and chif- fons translate the Paris ideas in the hg r spirit. Because of our all New York exposition this foremost American dress- maker has out of the materials in the workroom prepared for us a collection of unduplicated gowns. Each one will be sold for half or less than half the price of earlier models of similar quality. A gown of chantilly lace with strass embroidery and a great flashing rhinestone rose, is a beautiful combination of soft creamy color and scintillating fire. Old Id embroidery on cblack chiffon makes a dis- tinguished dinner gown. This Watteau figured silk, that tilleul green satin have the perfect touch of Callot. _ Blue charmeuse opalescent in the shadows of its drapery recalls the dainty grace of Jeanne Lanvin. This gown embroidered with jet, that exquisite biscuit color- ed satin, the lavender chiffon with wide flowered a the debutante frocks—each one has the cachet of Paris. A drapery, an ornament, a sleeve, a train—the signs are easily read by the under- standing. It seems curiously appro- riate that for this week of hanksgiving Day _ holiday gatherings we should be able to secure the finest of the just as the schooner, more or less help- Q season’s SSeS. 5 declares, “breaks up homes or causes leas, drifted down from the lower end | } Way 1e Pale blue and ruby gown For among all the newnesses wives and little children to do with: oltre sequtepeter pearing teeny |S iis’ i. draped on simple artistic lines pouring into the Little Salons out necessities while some mushy estas hee vial: InM&GA (ha aes c8 ey 1B is a vivid reminder of Poiret. of Dress each day these are thing in trousers buys her a bou- Se 1 one of the barges struck the schooner } South, Afternoon dresses of chiffon the climax. quet, tales her to lunch,” &c. I do not believe that this most despicable of women flirts {s nearly so numer just abaft the bow, the overhang of! 1, the scows clipping off the foremast. The/U. 8. mast in falling brought the afl and| Second floor, New Stewart Building, 23= OF = zi BarehRre FFSEERE Fi if * l ous as wives delleve or fear. But she exists in considerable numbers We have all met her, and I confess that after a prolonged study of her meth- "ey ods and a bewildered perception of mee i her effects I am ready to epbscribe NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH any roasonable sum to a Society for the Protection and Preservation of Husbands if somebody else will have the enterprise to found it. For verily, the married man who hearkens to the tender cooings of the filrt or elren, appears, of all created beings, the most guileless and the moat easily beguiled. He may be bald, he may be fat, bis wife may have to use all the self-hypnotizing power of a great love to rec- ognize in his blunted and coarsene’d, think an will drop to his kni features the handsome sweetheart of; . Firtations have a her youth. But do these things pre-| of ie just a little further each vent him from revelling in the calcu- til the participants find them- lated flattery of the gink whom he met/ #elvea seriously involved. day before yesterday? Not at all. Com-| — The professional siren goes through piiments cannot be too crude or too| the world with a brand, and is the coarse for him—poses, intellectual and} most to be feared. otherwise, too studied or obvious, res (a Teele) and ‘aarp aire pee inoap the opportunity to practice her euntingaisning eoentiy eg. (2) tn the home, office, church, store, fice. And it is » queer thing that with every protection and safe- gu Yet, even though fhe most snocensful fire ta the | not go 90 far as to break a ‘Weman who rouses his worst emo- tions by appealing to what he con- Giders his better mature. For one man who yields his admiration and loosens his purse strings to bay Juncheons and bouquets—the frank “good-fellow”—there are ten who dow down before the professional fagenue, For to man’s perennially ungophistl- often breaks up homes or causes wives and Little children to do with- out necessities when some mushy thing in trousers buys her a bou- takes her to lunch, &c. t of thing ts carried on to xtent that men and women, 4 old, should be hel@ up to publio ridicule and in some cases put on exhibition and then flogged cated perception no woman can appear #0 thoroughly good ns the one who is utterly otherwise. No real ingenue ever talks Or acts like one. WOMEN WHO DISGUISE THEIR CHARACTE: ‘The more sweet and innocent she Is, the more she wishes to be taken for g@omething devilish and worldly wise, We meet lambs in wolves’ clothing Guite as aften as the wolves in aheeps’ clothing. But so far as masculine judge ment is concerned, only the disguised wolf can preva!l upon it that she ts the only original baby lamb, For this rea- @en highly intelligent men often de- ecribe as a sweet, wholesome girl, a when they indulge in such flirtations. CONSTANCE R. The following letters embody the views of young men on the question now un- der discusion—To Flirt or Not to Flirt? RESPECTABLE FLIRTATION 18 ADVOCATED. Dear Madam: It occus to me that the unmarried should be encouraged to indulge in respectable firtation and the married discouraged, with the view of getting those who are out into matrimony and keeping the ones who are in, Hoping the riht ones will get together, and “stay whited sepulchre that couldn't deceive sete ereice: meene es the average woman for more than one] that is tp ene cies Blt nnd sUlll be respectable, A flirtation n- Once upon a time a married man in-! troduced one of these plausible mau- : | marrying the real right girl. oleums to la wife, The husvand bad | "piogenes”™ whould not waste his womaniiness of the area, het presshe | NOFFY about ‘dollar firtations.”” Ev- Mnentt ant platitides: Par her vain ro | ervbody ire with dofars; they al- ‘ ‘i ways have and always will. 80, and before him was of a tender serl-| Wi Wury and get a pimple; bet- ousness. He did not know t he i laughed at his obvious infatuation be- | ef #mile and get a dimple. hind his back and that her comment on | his wife was this “Mo wonder he makes love to other women! Why, she actually wears cotton stockings!” In view of these and many other strange and obtuse p: ences, one is led to wonder {f too o! man’s favor- troduction would not keep me from DIOGHNIE8'S UNCLE, GIRLS WILL NOT LET HIM BE A “Boos.” Dear Madam; As @ young man, ; born and brought up in this city, to Indorse the remarks of " the Southern young lady, in regard to Airting with N. ite literature is not the book of Rabelals There sems to be an ingrained in the covers of the Bible lew Yorker Hut here js what a wife has to say of mental vision these demure Mlrts who practise thelr the possibility that for the pure joy or innocent amuse- ment she can derive from it, and it nel can flirt sordbi writes IT 18 THE DEMURE FLIRT THAT 18 DANGEROUS. Dear Madam: The silly, romantic arts upon married men, She 8 me to state that this pecullar by @ great many little Mirtations of the unsophisticated ere hardly worth conalderi When supposedly sensible m Women indulge in such practi very frequently ;esults in harm, ‘The single girl vey often finds her prey among the married men, but If | whe were accused ot doing wrong in “making herself charming" she Woull retort, “Only those with evil minds see harm in euch things." Yet some wives have found tt posi- tively dangerous to ask thelr hus- bancs to show the slightest courtesy to women who are near enough to in Good W Order. Be le BRADFORD'S Blood Puri‘ying Pills Purely Vegetable, und clear complent Hox 050 Pills, 2501 5 for At all drug stores or by For tree sample send 2 cent BRADFORD MEDICI 400 West esd Bt., N. CURES COLDS—FATHER JOHN'S » AARRRIC Sloe aes Ney ramen “THE DELIBERATE AND DEMURE FLIRT BREAKS UP THE MOME* Wares CR.” News Oddilics ———— Statistics on wheat production show that the Unig “gtates is still the bread- basket of the world. drastic dru; ‘There are 2.200 divorced women in Connecticut, but only 1,6% divorced men. Gov. Johnson of California, who was Vice-Bull Moose, tags along with his Thanksgiving proclamation, but it 1s the shortest on record in the State. Judge Cox said “dam—" clerk to say the rest of it. Company." it meant. in the Federal Court yesterday and then got the It was “Dampsticsacktisesselspubet vs, United Fruit There was some talk of sending to Mayor Gaynor to find out what A Georgetown University junior in a Greek examination recited the entire “Iited,"* 15,693 lines, from memory. Dr. Burrell will preach to-morrow in the Collegiate Church on “A Good Man Gone Wrong.” The church will be crowded tf the subject of the discourse BOT INDIGESTION? STOMAGH UPSET} BELCHING UP GAS OR SOUR FQOO' You don’t want a slow remedy when your stomach is bad—or an uncertain one —or a harmful one—your stomach is too valu: ‘ou musta’t injure it with 8. Pape's Bispepeta is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmlessness; its certain unfailing action in regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions of cures in indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach trouble have made it famous the world over. IAKES DISORDERED STOMACHS rt FINE IN_FIVE MINUTE: attends, Whether poker is work or pleasure It all depends. @ question before an Illinois court The man that broke the bank at Monte Cario, Charles Wells, has been sent to prison for swindling, After breaking the bank he tried to break the honest yeomanry of England in a bucket-shop game, of our New York «iris wanted to be a" but girls who whare “H, I. G,'s" viewpoint are , I ain afraid, or perhaps I have been unfortunate in my seléc- = tions when I attempted to play the ‘hoob" role, After reading her letter I wish my birthplace had been below the Mason and Dixon line, HORACE, —— Finds Servant De Mra, Howard Van Tassel found Kath- erine Nolan @ servant in the Van Tassel home, No, #9 Convent avenue, dead in @ ohnir early to-day when she and her husband returned home, Dr. MeNeill of J. Hood Wright Hospital ex: pressed no opinion as to the cause of | be avoided, a» the load that is” eaten contributes perties . The police notified the Coroner | {ts nourishing uroverties for the support of the dea! and the body was taken to the morgue. bos aa ry mail, % ov wat 2 'COn New York, James MeCreery & Co, ANNOUNCE have always Purely vegetable, Mild and reliable, Regulate the Liver and Digestive Or ‘The safest dest ‘medicine ip the Twortd for te lees CURE of all disonters of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidney, ladder, Nervous Diseasce, Loss of Avge: tite, Headache, ‘Constipation. Indigestion, ever, luffaummaton of the Bowes, Piles and’ ats BIMEOTION’ wit ber’ eecommished bo" taking RADWAY'S: Prue, By so doing = OYSPersia Bick Headache, Foul Stomach, Biliousness will FURNITURE SALE of Articles desirable for home furnishing and Holiday Gifts, at greatly reduced prices. Purchases will be held, upon request, for Holiday Deilvery. 23rd Street 34th Street ALL OF THESE! And Ever So Much More “Woman's Vigil’—Wives and Mothers of Condemned Men Who Wait in Sing Sing’s Shadows. Frederick T. Martin Propounds the Gospel of Daily Helpfulness. The Girl Who Broke a Record on Her Very First Flight in Cloud- Coupon good for large-size pho- « togravure of President-elect Wil- N son and family. N J. Pierpont Mor- gan’s Collection of Famous ‘¢ Pragonard’’” Paintings. “One of the Old ™ For the week commencing Monday, Nov. 25th, an Girls.” A Short Story by | ’ erg ¢ Unusually Interesting and I t Edna Ferber. N SPECIAL! “Lengthening Life.” The Ef- forts of Modern Science to Produce a Race of K Healthy Centenarians, , “From a Drawing Room to an Irish Bog.” The Romantic Story of an Earl's Daughter. “What Thanksgiving Means to America,’’ by Cardinal O'Connell of Boston. Sunday World To-Morrow ——— land. “The Clue of the Little Horseshoe.” First of a Series of Adventures by a Real Girl Detective, The Couple that R A) Eloped from XT Py Indiana to A 24-Page ~Magazine—fascinat- Michigan by ing articles and stories illustrated J in colors. Pleasant News You wish the finest of linens? You_say nothing else will do for Thanksgiving? Let us show you the finest damask of all Ireland—some are even hand-loom woven. Each cloth and napkin has the mark of Ireland—its sham- rock — shining white in one corner. Roses, ribbons, the lily, mar- guerite, clover and Scotch thistle are the patterns—many with plain centers. For all their fineness, the prices because of a once-in-two-years’ dis- posal of certain designs, are now. $5 to $25.50 for table cloths, usually 87.50 to $87.50. $4 to #14 dozen for napkins, usu- ally $6 to $21. Thanksgiving Table inens @x 2h yards, $5. 2x S yards, $6, Napkins to match. £5 x £5 inches, $6.50 dozen. Madeira Luncheon Napkins Now $2.65 dozen. Less than these dainty scal- loped and embroid: nap- kins have ever been marked. Each one worked by hand in lovely Madeira fashion. Every luncheon and tea table will be prettier for some. Cluny Trimmed Linens for Little Thirty-inch linen squares, for instance, have an edging and insertions of hand-made cluny lace and two rows of drawn work at $1.75. Other Linen Damasks from Ireland Just new, and while not quite so fine, much less ex- ose: ality of linen is extremely pensive, were contracted for Scarfs to match include these a year and a half ago before giro4, recent price increase of flax. Sunday World’s famous Weekly Joke Book, Words and Music of “The Board ff Walk Parade,” the Ziegfeld Fol- Nes’ Song Hit, EDITORIAL SECTION FEATURE: SOME PROMINENT FEATURES OF Patterns the prettiest we have seen yet. Table cloths, 2x 2 yards, $4.25. 18 x 7% inches, $2.50. 18 x 54 inches, $2.25, 18 x 45 inches, $2. 18 x 86 inches, $1.75. First floor, New Stewart Building Blankets and Bedding The blankets that keep you warm on winter nights are made of three things—wool, from the back of the sheep that grases green meadows; cotton, from of soft, velvety hair from the deserts of Africa. Wrapped the snowy plant of the South; camel that trudges across the in such romantic textures, no wonder the sleeper goes on strange, adventurous voyages iy his dreams! More of the Velvety Camel’s Hair Blankets have just come from Austria in the beautiful natural fawn color, plain, or with borders of brown, olive, blue or wine color, These border designs are quite different from any we have had. Plain and bordered, $22; 925. A new shipment of softest, finest Australian Joa blankets came over on the same boast. Entirely new designs in exquisite shades of blue, reseda, pink or gold, with white. 80 x 90 inches. $39 each. Fine French blankets of Australien wool, woven in figured and floral designs are $22.50 each, The best American blankets, in all-wool, wool and cotton or all-cotton, here at various prices between $1 and 626 pair. Quilts, comforters, bedspreads every accessory for dressing the ted daintily and comfortably, Bedding Store, Seventh Gallery, New Building i People Particular About China All such fastidious people will find a great many dinner sets to delight them in the Wanamaker China Store. One of the prettiest is a good copy of Dresden china—most people take it for the real. It is English porcelain, perfectly decorated in Dresden patterns and colors, and costs $84 the complete dinner set. Real Dresden china, from Meissen, is here at §175 the complete dinner set. New this year isa delightful chints border pattern in dinner stts, from Charles Field Haviland. In green and red with a little touch of gold, are perfect for a chintz-hung dining- room. $87.50 the set. Bavaria sends some of our prettiest dinner sets. A creamy white china with gold-encrusted border is $87.50 the set. Much the same decoration . on French china would be $185. A blue-flowered underglase Amer- ican porcelain set at $7.50, and a rich cobalt blue and gold encrusted bor- der set from Pouyat at @: the two price limits between which every dinner set needed for the Thankegiving feast will be found. The glassware display is beans ful and complete—delicately lov. atterns in Val. St. Lambert, St. uis and other French stale; »,Swedieh, French and English rock ery? and silver-encrusted Bohemian glasses, French colonial glase—patterns running through practically every piece of glass re- Rulted fet the ecrving of clasie: Second Gallery, New Building,

Other pages from this issue: