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WILSON FAMILY TO HAVE ESCORT OF 600 DSTUDENTS President-Elect Will Travel in| the Right Kind Is the Special Train With | Cause of Vulgarity on| Princeton Men | the Part of Many Girls| Bate, Not Naturally Inclined, | to Offend, Says Mi Bury-Palliser. | TRENTON, WN. J, Feb Was President-elect Wilson's last work- Ing day at the State House. By night- fall he expected to wind up his duties as Governdr of New Jersey. His Sec- retary, Joseph Tumulty, will leave to- No Nice Girl Ought to Dance the New Step Which Requires the Man to Throw His Final arrangements for the journey of the President-elect and his family to the capital were completed to~day when Paul F. Myers, 1913, Prenident of| Paptner Over His Head. the Woodrow Wilson Club of Prince. . ton University, rode with the Governor} Declares the Deport- to Trenton from Princeton. The Gov- érnor expressed himself an delightea| ment Authority. with the arrangements for an escort of Princeton students from his home to the portals of the White House. A student committee will call at the Wilson bungalow with two automobiles | at 10.9 next Monday morning and take | the Wilson family to the station, w residents of the town and the stugente will be on hand to cheer the new Presi- dent. Six hundred students will travel with him to Washington on the special train. ‘The remainder will go in a second asc- tion later In the day. The programme calls for the departure of Mr. Wilson Marguerite Movers Marshall. | Minn Kthet Bury-Palliser te an acknowledged authority on good manners for young girls both England and in the United States. Khe hae been instructor in deport- | ment and dancing for the families of the late Duchess of Rutland, the Dowager Count of Winchelara and Nottingha tecountess Tem- pletown and many other persons 4 title, She is in charge of annu courses at our meat aclect private achoole, and Mra. Gi parlor cars ha’ Wilson party, as will carry the Wilson baggage. A stop will be made at West “dbs | pia, where Mra. Annie W. J sister of Mr. Wilson, will board the train, On arrival in Washington about | 4 P.M. the atudents will form a Ine through which the new President will pase and a committee of the Prince- tonians will escort the Wilsons to @) oan girl, seek t pther, If moth hotel. | will only stop ‘1 ering” on her job, On the morning ¢f the Inauguration éf she will evolve a coherent system for Mr, Wilson will pass from his hotel to| Uringing up her daughter and insist on the White House through a lane of! @ conformance with the rules of th Princeton students extending from the | aysten, then and only then will the de- hotel to the White ‘House, ‘The Prenj-| sired tmirovement take place, aocont- dent-elect has expressed a wish that a| ing to Miss Ethel Bury-Palliser. Unitke space be renerved for the Princeton atu-| many instructors, this one has a firm | J. Gould | \ ' : daughtera ahe has giv interviews to The Evening World, in which she not only pointe ont the | defects (n the training of our pire | but eugocate the remedies. ' For the more obvious faults tn the! |eppearance and manners of the Ameri- Ant near the enat front of the Capitol | belle in the possibilities of maternal||y Pra “all immediately atart & weries of trouble ix simply a lack of personal in- so that they can witness the inaugura- | influence dt tion ceremonies. In the inaugural par- | exert iteclt. ade the boys will head the civic organ-| In the meantime, Miss Bury-Palliser iaations. foe thet the typical American girl is MARSHALL WILSON’ to combine a distremsingly ind Pendent attitude toward her mother 8 GUEST. | th an equally distressing tack of in- Kleet to Remain in| potanbeprte, in other directions, And | abt \- Sretisae Week. his unhealthy deference to the stand ards of others tn reeponsible for some INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb, 26.—Vice- | of her sont glaring faults. President elect Thomas R. Marshall to- “Z do not want to appear blind day was the guest of honor at « fare- Good qualities Amert- well banquet tendered by the) tg? ng bho ‘tm Indiana Democratic Civ, Mr, Mar.) that influence will only | i} hall loft this afternoon for Trenton,| “SB0 1@ more beastiful than the Nd, where he will confer with Prosi: | iris of Bagiana or of any other dent-elect Wilson. } Mer complexion ané her He will remain jn Trenton unt# he| rang to Washington for the inaugura- UES a 2 Ea COAL COMPANY OFFICER SUICIDE FROM OVERWORK. | Samuel S. Sneyd Found Dead, Re-| volver in Han, in the Cellar of His Home at Woodbury, N. J. “But surely Europeans have frequently | criticised the American girl for having | too much of @ mind of her own,” 1 pro- tested. “From Daisy Miller onward we have seemed to them too lacking in our WOODBURY erat ie: gamuer |Te¥erence for conventional standards. &. Bneyd, Assistant Secretary and As-|OUR GIRLS DON’T DO AS THEY | sistant Treasurer of the Lehigh Coal and | DO IN EUROPE. | Navigation Company of Philadelphia.) “The American girl may refuse to do killed himself early to-day ut his home, | as the European girl does,” replied Mise No. 137 Huclid atreet, jury: r, ‘but she seems Incapable | of refusing to do what the rest of her set—or the act a little above her—is cause of the suicide, He left a note ad- dresed to his wife aaying he could no! doing. Jonger stand the strain, | “From her schooldays she is a devotee Sneyd returned home last night late, | of the fashion of th afier extra work at the office. His wife for a moment bellevi ired early. At 6 o'clock this! who rouges or takes part in immodest morning her husband was not in the | dances doos so because she has a natu room. She became alarmed, as there! ral affinity for vulgarity. I believe that had been evidence for weeks that he had | he frequently tramples down fine and not been his normal self, She aroused |delicate natural inetincts. But her the servants and made a search of the! ‘crowd’ I# wotng in @ certalm diveation, peg will not be left behind her Sneyd was found in the cellar clad in| tn fan Fe - his pajamas, clutohing @ revolver. He yee whee pau mussle in hie mouth and| of hair ribbon, they will be copied by |three-quarters of the rest of the atu: News Oddities Bredford Cqunty (Pa.) hen has en the freak egg contest. James Ellis, of Sheshequin, has been experimenting with colors for Haster and succeeded not teletei-tei: { THE AMERICAN GIRL Mothers Urged to Coach Daughters ”, in Propriety and Genteel Manners THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1913. _ ny Seal febentetfentonfenbon defen fee! feet eofenfen feet on f work, he concluded to remain in the alimony as a d that it was! A Germicide, Healer of Gums and of a Series £! Policies of the new Ade case cw here ommparen mintntelaintelotelalotataiatateintatatatetatetataten slatete ars SLATE NOW HOLDS |: wennciee. ove with ergity ‘per erty of cut Adal, popale As to the WEL! Ovetery (iam iC —a 1 certo aod espenatey foeats [re ty tor department’ also had |CONe milk the 2 eh ANt a Paine tse allen #8 y FonLows se CROWD IN EVLA THING, y dents, Liter on, when social given an eccentric friends, inscead of letting thelr y pre mmediately start a depondence. social porition in necessarily de In ted, “‘Ian't it, dictates this ‘follow my leader’ AN EXPLANATION THAT AN EXCUSE. willing to admit that here mig! explanation, I could see that appeal to her as an excuse, ideals in your girls,” she onal standard of good eet by renegades. ve an Worthy submission to the will carry them may be present popularity of vulgar modest dances, the turkey who originally danced them, j innocent, carefully girls permit men whom the: for the first time elbows, in the fa ors, amd Indecent steps, 8 lo only and amile! bit until you disgusting?" M Bui off, real indignation her pleasant English votee, girl who likes that kind of dozen endure it t unding Bot only in inducing bis hens to lay plain red, blue and brown but has one which he saye can combine them in striped effects, He expects to have ‘flag marked” eggs before the Fourth. Cecil Williams, a Wilmington (Del) negro, had a “trance,” and when he woke up found himself laid out for embalming. He knocked the undertaker down, jumped through @ window and was last heard from three miles away aad going strong, That airship whose strange searchlight has given England « way scare ts new declared to be the planet Venus, which ts especially brilliant just now, J. B. Washington, aged eighty-neven and walking with a crutch and @ cane, Began serving a sentence of a year and a day in the Federal prison at Leaven- worth, Kan,, to-day. He was convicted of violating the excine laws in Texas, The fifth carload of the jeton of the Hzard, eigh: out of solid rock at Jensen, Utah, has started for the Carnegte Lyceum in Pitts burgh. ‘The other bones wil fil! ten r Burslars looted the Bherif'® oMfce in the Criminal Courts ! of cash, gold» handcuffs and bail bonds wed in front of @ car on Webster avenue at On A horse stage: Hundred and Ninety-etwhyh street, the Bronx, last night and the driver, James J. Mobar, in in Fordham Hospi The horse had just drunk at @ trough in which the police say soine LOYs had emptied whiskey bottler, Barney Quinn of Atlantic City met death in @ pecullar way » y washtub and slipped. Her head caught je herself, she was drowned rday nder Park Commissioner Stover has issued new rules for the Jumei Mansion, Washington's headquartesa on the Heights, eud prohibits smoking, “the mes of doushawe.” mene Ea | “four feet long, quarried Chances of matrimony.” “Which again puts it up to beer ved Yes, and reall sovereignty is at! women, if t! fact, If they sand thelr hus fances Would ha airl in New dancing party new steps.” int AN ANIMADVERSION AGAINST “CRUSHES, ¢ th es call If there thing 1 te ie ge is Given FREE with eee at Next Sunday’s World clally essential, really begun, if one member of a set entertainment, 11 standarés of what {s dignified and seer ‘t all this due to the fact that sured In a society without rank and tl- the fear of being left out of things that But although Miss Bury-Palliser w: “Fou must cultivate a crop of “Bach one should soquire a yer- breeding, and che should be tanght to cling ‘to it, mo matter what examples are ‘Then there will end of this weak and ua- tonal modes of the moment among neturally refined young women. “How far this slavishness to fashion | seen in the) all know where! trot and bunny hug con from; we all know the sort of w brought up nold them by the of drunken sull- nd the mothers and Did you ever hear of anythi -Palliver and com- through fortable. LAAT LLLLAAL ULLAL ALLA ELUATE “But for one thing, Try it, ause they haven't! itrength of mind to resist, “And instead of encouraging her to tolerate vulgarity, mother of the average girl remains weakly silent, in the fear that her @aughter will lose popularity | @mong young men if she partionlar, and so damage her you know, ne prevalence jive a sort of syllabus of the le dogs and 'jadynood which whe velleves to be espe «all the four ki gums may be by faithful tite t jon aud the teeth may be mined i disclosed m, Wine] a FOUR CERTAINTIES = eect a he | | " taste, etremg Lasalle mentioned in that conne: | | 4 thoroughly ‘ ng germs, will be found a compere for mage and sus bby addition fatx when Bryan, mendes, Daniels andl? ar that neicher | ‘ . he nor any other the pres: | Burleson Declared Selected jin, “anes “rom : hott | for Leading Seats. ppt WASHIIN [nel of the C ru nn MRS, W. GOULD gROKAN Jquarters, stood to-day practically un- changed, namety g Secretary of State=William J. Bryan |of Nebraska, Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo of New York. Secretary of the Navy—Josephus Dan- Jels of North Carolina, Postmaster-General — Albert Burleson of Texas. Some published reports, including the name of Chancellor BE. R. Walker of |New Jersey as Attorney-General, were not dames McGreery & Co th Street 23rd Street & us partially On Thursday and Friday aa William G. -_so ~- Court Decides She Needn’t Save Fee Out of $1,200 Monthly Alimony. Sale of Remnants at _/2 less than former prices | This season’s accumulation of Plain and Novel- Sidney confirmed. The Information on] Justice Blackmar, in the Suprem whioh the four portfolios weve definitely | (<4. ‘é founty, to-di y Si Sati , i | dealpnay Wan oe a hoattt a chernitely |court, Queens County, to-day ty Silks, Satins, Crepes, Chiffons, Black and $5,000 counsel fee to Mre W. Brokaw for the for divorcee, sel fee Mrs. Brokaw latest information | no income or other clone communication {except the $1,200 a month alimony patd ministration. Thetr to her by Mr. Brokaw by order of the en are to the effect that while Chan-|court pending the trial of the case, \¢ lor Walker was cons! Counse) for Mr. Brokow presented rai| jstances arose which are lk affidavit in whic Mr. Brokow contend- Thate him from the lists, ed that the $1,208) a month alimony was ; The eliminination of Rep | more than e zh to keep hia wife in JA, Mitchell Palmer of F he was informed and and Robert L. Henry of Tex b t she was living very sim- inet possibilities also became y| ply in retirement and that she was Jestablished during the conferences held) actually saving and investing the great- jat the Capitol early to-day, er part of the money he was paying it did not Include the name of Chan- jcellor Walker. The {nolusion of his Colored Dress Goods and Washable Fabrics. of a sult In her petition for that whe had| means of support prosecuthc coun | |name in some of the lists made public is based upon conjecture and {is not in the accord with CORSETS. In Both Stores, he “Bon Ton.” wm y to elimi. Excellent models for slender, medium and well-developed figures. Made of Batiste, Coutil and Broche. 3.00, 3.50, 4.00 to 6.00 “ ” Mr. Palmer was tendered a Cabinet] to her. Under these circumstances, ie Royal Worcester.”’ position, but declined it. He had been, thought, he sald ought to be made prominently named as Attorney-Gen- | to pay her | alimony, ‘ site " = 1 e-yopE eral, but as the tender did not cover} Justice Bi s Mr Many models for every type of figure...) this portfolio but another which he| Brokaw's appiivation, that 1.00, 1.50 and 2.00 oe Ste did not regard as in line with his nes! Brokaw had a right to dispose of he: life has WOMEN’S SUITS & DRESSES. 1 Both stores. Exclusive Tailored Suits and Dresses in two and three piece models, including copies of Foreign Styles. Materials,— Plain and Brocaded Silks, Charmeuse and Matelasse. personal werk perhaps, Afternoon Dresses in a variety of materials and dressy models. 19.75, 35.00 and 52.00 Tailored Suits of Serge and Whipcord..... 19.75 and 25.00 Demi-Tailored Suits of Novelty Check Fab- rics, Imported Serge and Bedford Cord. 23.50, 39.50 to 45,00 Showing of a selection of distinctive models in Lingerie, Cotton Voile, Embroidered Net, Fancy Crepe, Eponge and Linen Dresses, suitable for Southern wear. 7.95 to 35.00 policy?" 18 NOT nt be it didn't Comfort urged. When you travel, be comfortable. The tracks and trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad are built for comfort. The roadbed is rock-ballasted and evenly graded; and the rails are solid steel. The cars, both Pullmans and coaches, are all-steel, heavy and easy riding. The through express trains have parlor smoking or club cars with moveable easy chairs, and a la carte dining service that is unexcelled. All sleeping cars are the last word in appointments; the coaches are cheerful, commodious and restful. Limited trains, like the Broadway Limited between New York ‘and Chicago, the 24-Hour St. Louis, The Pennsylvania Limited, Congressional Limited, and Chicago Limited have Pullman observation cars on the rear with moveable arm- chairs and large windows, as well as an open plat- form, for viewing the passing scenery. Up-to-date libraries, current periodicals, daily papers, and cour- teous attendants are features of the Limited train service. and im: And y: RED-MAN 2 FOR 25 cts. 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