The evening world. Newspaper, March 13, 1913, Page 24

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| } sane THOMPSON LEFT $2,000,000 T0 PRINCETON BY WILL Half the Sum Available Now and the Rest on Death of Widow. Our Women Dress Better Than Any Others, but They Ought to See That Their Hats Fit Them With as Much Care as a Man Does When He Selects His Headgear. Phe will of the late Ferria S$. Thomp- #08, & banker who died in Paris on} Feb. 18 last. was fled to-day in the auto) s Court. It disposes of an le ned at $3,000,000, of which eton University will ultimate! 2,000,000, The immediate bequest of She thousand 5 Nilffonai 1 stock unlvérsity. The rest of the $2 | wif be given to the institution on the death of Mra. 1 Thompson, the widow. j Airs, Thompson receives 1440 shares of | shares of the C! WE Chase Bank stock in trust with | property to provide for her during | Hfetime. Two hundred sh * of thé #ame stock ie given to Saint Paul’ s| Achool, Concord, N. WM. ‘The 8: Awmy of New York and of San Fran- | lease get HNO each and $5,000 € is deft to Kaward hite of No. &| Broadway, James MH. Tallman of > ford, Mass, aml Mrs, Laura ‘T. ris of Brooklyn. Twenty thousand dollars each is left to Mme, Felice Flaguals of Paris and John W. Kayler of New York. Fifty thousand is left to the Ameri He Trinity Church in F and $125,004) in trum to Mrs, Jane De Witt, this mon- ey to go to Saint Luke's Hospital on her death. << LORIMER MISSING PAPER TRACED IN THE SENATE. WASHINGTON, March 14 —Charges that Carl A. Loeffler, Acting Assistant Doorkerper of the been responsible for Holstiaw ce during the Lorimer trial in the Senate \ ind which was never afterward located, were made in the Senate to-day by Senator Gore of Oklahoma, when Mr. Laeffler's re-election was proposed. The Senator said his informant was @page of the Senate, who had delivered tye certificate Mr. Loeffler after fecuring it from Senator Bailey, bode esac ® Duchees MUONDON, March Manchester, formerly Miss Helena Zim- She haa tume dance last night, but was too il to receive them, and the Duke did the honors alone. | BuildsYou Up ‘Cures Colds,Bronchitis Asthma, all throat eo lung troubles. No fol or dangerous s. Guaranteed. Rejuvenine (Poudre Blanche) The New French Remedy | Restores and Preserves Waman’s Health and Beauty Ask for Literature, | arr BLANCHE CHEMICAL CO., roadway, M. ¥. City. tid Lenox ar, st Since a, conn a by Sa ad a Giend et gene me. But When It Comes to Hosiery and Shoes New York Leads the World in Regard to the Partic- ulars That Go Toward Delighting All Behold- ers. BY MEG VILLARS. Aw 1 took tea at the Plaza to-day T suddenly reallzed, dear New York, that I haven't a thing to w That's a very feminine cry, it? I don't often Indulge in it, however, because Paris dressmakers are pretty kind to me and keep me well supplied, ‘This time 1 sald it most emphatically though, and I mean it! You see 1 find that we are near the Kerous (to the purse) season which nmands Kmart new clothes! When I CAMO ove 1 didn't expect to @tay so Jong and brought only winter frocks, but the chic women and girls at the Waza to-day showed me that 1 must ket busy. Spring sults are appearing, wayly Unted straw and tulle hata are already ousting the fur toques and vel- Vet shapes of the winter; light colored footgear, dainty shoes and pumps to match the frocks with which t worn, can be seen instead of leather boots; neckwear bout and soft ostrich feather and of tulle has replaced fur stoles, In fact the words “spring fashions” are print- ed in large letters on one and all, Yes, there was certainly a very smart looking crowd at the Plaza, in fact 1 don’t think T have seen such @ wel: ite! out bunch of charming ladies ¢ I have been over here. At the Waldort, too, they seem to have been furbishing up and some very striking creations were the result, but what worrles me is that I don't see anything really new that I can feel sure about. I haven't yet seen the frock or costume that I can point to and say “That com: from Parry's" or “This is a Paquin!" I experience the very distinct feeling that I have neon all these frocks be- for a. fan't THE APPEARANCE OF BEING COPIED. I don't mean to say they are old gowns ‘done up" or “freshened up," far from it, they are dainty and fresh and nice, but the lines are familiar somehow, just as if they were copies of winter frocks, only done in lighter ma- terials, One doesn't get the tnpreasion of the “something really new" that one would have in Paris just at present at any of the smart public places fre- quented by women. Now I don't mean by this that French women dress better than Americans, oh, no, for “crowds” at this time of the year In the Gay City are as coamo- politan as can be and smart American women are the brightest ornaments of such throngs, ®ut while the women are of ull nations the ¢rocks are all Paristant Of course T wout#m't quite dare to may that New York {s any way behind Paris in her fashions, and yet—and yet ~—well, I dunno! Americ women of the very smart Set dress better than any others on earth and show off Freneh frocks to perfection, but how long do such women live in New York? ‘Two month; out of every twelve, if that! And whe they e here 1 y much doubt if they are seen at “tea fights” or in Pea- cock alleys. Therefore 1 come to the conclusion (there's no doubt I may be wrong, dear New York) that the delightful people T saw this afternoon were jot the smartest members of New York soclety, and in the same way thelr clothes, though delightful, were not the sn est, or such 4s one Would expect to see ac the Ritz in Paris, let us say. Truly, really 1 worrled cks 1 shall soon in New York. They would be all right certainly if 1 remained here through the sume ° 9 © But would they be right to wear back to Paris? 1 doubt it, Tean't open a fashton supple h without reading mut a ity from Paris which ts as old as the ills, There is some talk of pute tins pockets tn skirts and having waist. coats for ladies with a real little buckle strap holding it in at the watst behind. Well, that's not new. Parry invented what he called the “trowser-skirt* eighteen months ago. Not only was it made with cute little pockets on elther side, but there Was the band and the buckle to hold the fulness in place at the back, and, what is more, four >ut- tons in front and two behind, so that you could wear suspenders with the skirt, ff you wanted to! "Can you beat Amy Gourauc customers of Parry's had these skirts FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Perfect-fitting Eyeglasses, with | this graceful Gold Shell Mount- | ing, on and off Only $1. 00 | with one hand ‘The peice includes @ way. ‘examination ty ratered. doctors Eatre change for cylioders, If jou hed glasses don't inim this opportanity Dr. J. W. Solomon| 150 EAST 23D ST. ' Diteen yom wp Md O., BY Guereaton THE THE EVENING WORLD, TH SUSPEN! sORT and wore them with suspenders that had Uttle gold clamps with thelr mono- srame in diamonds on them, and, as I sald before, that was eighteen months ‘ako. Do y before t canteed from t! ou wonder that I ponder a bit rashly expending many dollars— you are very expensive in the mat~ : of dress, dear New York—on Ameri- French fashions, Coming away he Plaza with my mind full of the welghty question I was ready to gi20 Io) ing and earnestly into every shop window. NEW 1 aid conclus\ practically given away here, YORK 18 A GREAT PLACE FOR HOSIERY. 0, and I have come to this jon; Footwear and hosiery are They are dainty and yet Inexpensive; so are tall- ored shirt waists, but everything else from costumes to hats and from “blouses” to gloves is ruinous, espe- claily when bearing the magic veracious) label, “From Paris!"* Paris models get considerably warped and tussied out of shape as they cross the herring pond. French firms hand you out the wrong stuff, which ts quite possible, or else it's that the right stuff has been copied | g badly when it gets here! As @ matter! of fact it's the same thing in London! ‘There they don't seem to havo the right stuff el are like well tn In Part As w wonder out an se Ww about dow tt buys it | her fat When ought to be made Coffee never ta places Hither it's that the ther! I suppose French fashions rench coffee—they don't travel e% ae good to York as it does London or Ne 8. ¢ are on the dreas question I it I might be allowed to point error that spoils so many other- ell dressed womer, that I see in They don't seem to bother the fit of thelr hate! When retty hat in a shop looks as If she goes right in and because it looks nice and sults rly well! a hat sults “falrly to do so well? tt ‘perfectly Well.” 1U8 all a question of fitting, A really smart woman sees that her hat Nits with as much precistorm as her hus band does. You nee men going about with hate « 1 sizes too big! With women, wearing milli tn the Kven y that {s much too large \ead seeins to be a common fault he dummies (mannequins, to use d) in the shop windows creations that come Shiner RIK THIS CE not! estate $9,078, net value $7,913, COT ves Sno Mave Bras Ey “OUGrt ras URSDAY, A CHORUS 3S MY 17 WE HATS MACE TO MARCH 13, that can be so enatly remedied too; «! AMBULANCE-CHASER aleswoman that knows her business ought always to build up the interior of the crown eo that it fits properly! You #ee that you get your hat to fit you perfectly, dear Miss New York, and you'll see how smart you look, not to mention how much more comfortable you will feel! I tell you one thing that 1s noticeable about New York girls, dear city, it's this (and it beats every kind of fashion and mode into splinters!!): Your girls are the tidiest I have ever seen. When they take off their coat at the theatre or at a@ restaurant they do mo hasty and anxious fumbling at the back of thelr bodice to see If everything is spick and span; Miss New York starts out tidy and knows it, so she doesn't have to worry, but between you, me and the ink pot, there are not many other places T've been to where = have noticed that virtue! So, after all, I don't think I shall bother about Parls fashions! It one wears neat “tailor mades” and spandy shirtwalsts a la Miss New York, I Guess one can't go far wrong! — APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Deputy State Comptroller, Wallace S, Fraser tranamitted the following appraisals of estates under the Inher- {tance Tax law to-day to the Tra ‘Tax Office of the Surrogato's Court: Isabella A, Osborn, died Dec, 1, 1912— Total estate $7,054, net value 96,24, Charles Pitsch, died July 4, 1910— ‘Total estate $51,158, net value $49,215, Frank Feldhausen, died Sept. 2%, 1912— Total estate $21,000, net value $19,855, Jessie Cahn, died Sept. 13, 1912— Total estate $18,085, net value $1 Kate Toumey, died April 6, 1 ‘Total Jackson W. Alward, died May 25, 1912 —Total estate $2,904, net value $1,847, Ellaabeth Koenig, died No 1. 1918 —Total estate $676, net value $6,118, Charles H. Stroutenburgh, died Jan, 2, 1913—Total estate $4,649, net value John B, Gebhard, died July 31, 1912— | Total estate $12,243, net value $10,617, ‘ay onn's peovantl Wee touts Philip Fouquet, died Sept, 30, 1911— Total estate $6,086, net value $4,980, Miles Slattery, died Jan. 13, 1912— Total estate 96,18, net value #4.94, Charlotte K estate $5, William PD —Total es net Du Bols, died April 25, 1911 | 58, net value $74,596. Six Minutes After Hit By a Wa One Hundred and crossing near the Post Squad A quart who was run over by an ing toward tie station attention to the fact that was not even signed b:; man, who was even then in the hands lof an ambulance surgeon. A moment later the lawyer's clerk # through the door. name of the lawyer he said was his “Ketoh- wilting boss sounded something am Quick.” Mr, Carroll jured, although brulses, was he not Tokio Professor Dr. Kotora Jimbo, professor of min» alogy in the University of Toko, ar- rived yesterday on the Kroonland, from to visit the Columb can Museum o: He said a visit to the History Antwerp, of Mines and the Ameri Natural History, Museum of Natural ‘The world's ground and ‘oulance-chasing record was smashed into minute bits in Park Row to-day. At 10.45 Robert Carroll of No, 287 Eas Sixty-first was felled by a delivery wagon while] Kelly had spotted the young man Next he spotted a retainer blank in the hands of the] A youth, Next he called the CLIPS T| TIME RECORD. On the Job “With Retainer Blank Man Is gon. lofty am street Mice, At 10.49 he had been carried to Trac ‘3 in City Hall, At 10.61 a snappy-looking youth, who e@aid he was a clerk ior a Park Row lawyer, dashed up to the desk at which | han C. Butts, took him to the Presby- Lieutenant Kelly sa¢ and announced he) had come for details abo put “the 1 n automoblle. young man’, the “retainer” y the Injure: Th like seriously <a Arrives. necessary part of one's education, ———— ‘Tread Boards Wilson Trod. WASHINGTON, | in July. Save the Babies. NFANT MORTALITY is somethi ] of all the children cent., or more than one- i are fifteen! majority of these of infantile hs are occasi more or less opium or morphine, deadly poisons, to congeaiiany, sickness o ust 807 ¢/ we 6 at pores of Genuine ph ie frightful. born, «8 OF ee Sountriat; Swoniy-two, Bvt or nearly one-quarter, before they reach one year ; i i4 third, before they are five, and one-hal: ‘We do not hesitate to say that a time! March 13,—Veterans of the civil war will tread the same boards as did Woodrow Wilson when taking the oath of office and during the review of tho big parade. used in the two stands will be shipped | to Gettysburg and utilized for tent floors and other purposes at the encampment The lumber We can hardly realize that per cent., reyeevers | be ore | use of Castoria would save a! ious lives, Neither do we hesitate to say that many by the use of narcotic preparations, tinctures and soothing syrups C for children’ somes ee They are, in conelderebie quantities, In al ety , retard circulation an hf deat beater ef ores es exactly the Toreree,, be ba LAH laints contain in- received painful School was a 1018. ‘Spring Styles in New York Worry Meg Villars ion iets, Paris Models Spoiled by the Voyage Here Gunman Tried for Murder Tells How the “Honorable Chinese Band Aims Only at Good. Gee Doy, the sleek, sauve On Leong | tong gunman who is standing trial for his life before Judge Foster in tho Court of General Sessions, perpetrated (a classic joke without batting a wink lof his black eye to-day, James W. Osborne, his counsel, had asked him | what the On Leong ‘Tong was. “It 44 an honorable assoclation of nese merchants throughout the United States," Gee Doy answered | smoothly What are the alms of the On Leong tong?” Mr. Osborne queried, “To protect its members,” the defend- ant replied, “Any other aims? to suppress gambling wherever jit exists," the man charged with the | murder of Wong Fong answered, with | perfect gravity, | “Order in the court!" roared the bail- iff, but even Judge Foster had to smooth out a smile on his face with a hasty, APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. State Comptroller Files Sched for Transfer Tax, Deputy State Comptrotier Fraser transmitted the following appraisals of Jeatates under the inheritance tax law | to-day to the Transfer Tax Offce of | the Surrogate'’s Court: or Katherina, Mangold, » Known as Katherine Esswein, Total estate $23,089 John Fi | John M. . also known as To. died July 12, e $4181, Net value §,- Francis B. Greene, Dartmouth, Mass., died April 8 1911 Assets taxable In |New York State #68228, Net value $61,- 502, { Amy Barnard of Boston, Mass, died in Paria, rane Nov ), 1908, As- s taxable in New York $140 Net ue $810, Frederick N. Ulr died Di 12, 1908. Total estate $28.40. 92 Bridget Conway, 3, 1912, Tos tal estate $2049. Net value $1611. Mrs, Martha L, Chilton, died July 24, estate $171, Net value | Mrs. Harriet 8, Hoffman, died Nov. 2, IM, Total estate $181 Net e $174,399, Pmily A, Conant, ated July %, 1911; | total estate, $5,049; net value, $4431, Rebecca Winter, died May 1911; total estate, $3,625; net value, $3,015. Florence EB. Wilken, died Ma: 1911; total estate, § net val 41. Elijah Humphreys, died June 14, 1912; total estate, $52,: net value, 70, | Felix L. Elsoffer, died July nN, @ supplemental report allows additional deductions and reduces the net value to $7,140, Alvert Baun estate, §% MOTHER AND BABY HURLED FROM AUTO. While driving his wife and baby in his automobile along the White Plains Road, Elmsford, yesterday afternoon, W. F. Fuller of No. 178 Warburton a nue, Yonkers, lost contro! of the ma chine. It dashed into a telegraph pole and Mrs. Fuller and the baby, who were . 1911; total | O34, i] n, died July on the rear seat, were thrown out. The baby waa unhurt, but Mrs. Fuller's arm t} and nose were broken and she was t knocked senseless. After medical treat- ment she was removed to her home. Lawrence Vosberg Lyons, twenty, a| student of No. #® East Sixty-third street, was knocked down about 1.90 at Madison avenue and Sixty-third street by a car belonging to Percy R. Pine of No. 680 Park avenue. The chauffeur, terian Hospital, but his Injuries were only slight and he was able to be taken home, | adve : with two man, but not al sternly inquired “Do you not ki th d young man, hen’ in Venice?” hon eggs must be very scare there, ready reto: that | str” GRAY HAIR Easy to Restore Natural Color of Your Hair by Simple Method fence has Just most amazin rt een finding out some things about the hair erturn many old Idi n r partment sto ne ana i ntry, | ‘The beat hatrdr ite It and getitt o The Thrilling Story of New York “THE DAY OF DAYS” —BY- LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE Begins Next Sunday IN THE MAGAZINE AND STORY SECTION OF The Sunday World James McGreery & Co, 34th Street * 28rd Street MEN’S WEAR. Extraordinary Values. On Friday and Saturda: 500 Dozen Shirts, made of Scotch Cheviot and Mercerized Fabrics. and sleeve lengths. Madras, Various models values 2.00 and 2.50, 1.50 100 Dozen Shirts, made of heavy Tussah Silk, neat stripes; plain bosoms and French cuffs. 3.50 value 5.00 150 Dozen Four-in-hand Scarfs,—pure silk knit, crochet and accordion weaves in plain colors and cross stripes. values 1.50 and 2.00, 95c 650 Rain and Storm Coats,—English models. Tan or Gray. value 18.00 to 22.00, 12.00 Blazer Coats in the latest models, college colors. 6.50 March Sale Continued. PRONOUNCED REDUCTIONS. DINNER SETS. Austrian China, English or American Porcelain, —floral border design with coin gold band. formerly 23.00, 15.00 set American Porcelain —floral border design with double gold edge. 101 pieces. 18.00 set formerly 24.00 Limoges China,—festoon border design, coin gold stippled handles. 101 pieces. 25.00 set formerly 38.00 Limoges China,—with pink rose border and coin gold stippled edge and border. 39.00 set formerly 55.50 Discontinued open stock patterns of fine Imported China, at 1 less than original prices. RICH CUT GLASS. The newest and most desirable desijjns. Boudoir Electroliers, Comports, Orange Bowls, Baskets, Vases, Fern Dishes, Nut Bowls and various other articles. 2.50 Each value 3.50 to 5.00 Electroliers, Ice Cream Trays, Water Sets Cabarets, Jugs, Vases, Sandwich- Trays, Footed Punch Bowls and numerous other pieces. 5.00 Each value 7.50 to 10.00 Table Tumblers, deep cutting strawberry and fan design. 2.50 per Dozen value 4.00 ELECTRIC & GAS LAMPS. Electric or Gas Table Lamps,-- Empire, Verde or Antique brass finish. 6.50, 12.00 and 19.50 formerly 10.00, 20.00 and 35.00 Wicker Desk or Boudoir Lamps with cretonne lined wicker shade. 3.75 and 5.00 formerly 5.00 and 7.50 Floor Lamps,—Solid Mahogany or White Enamel finish. 72 inches high. 2-light electric, formerly 30.00, 20, 23rd Street James MeCreery & Co. | 34th Street 23rd Street th Street Fur Storage (Dry Cold Air) | Vault on Premises Latest Scientific Construction Furs insured against loss or damage Moderate Rates 34th Street 23rd Street ii

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