The evening world. Newspaper, April 5, 1913, Page 3

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DR TO CLAMP 0 ON ALL-NIGHT prietors sof tase Halls See Ruin if! Order Is Enforced This Summer. ORE TANGOS STOPPED. Burns, Arrested in Test Case it Churchill’s, Discharged “for Lack of Evidence.” file the Manhattan restaurant men ready to-day to eat out of the or’s hand, the proprietors of dance js at Coney Island and other giddy er resorts inside the city limits tearing their hair at the prospect hutting down at 1 A. M. during the summer months, something never attempted. at is what will follow the adoption ‘8 bills forwarded to the however. ‘That there 1s belleve the measures will is Indicated by the fact that about hundred public dance hail Heenses ate now being held up pending action tn Albany. Mayor Gaynor recelved reports to- Gay on twenty-four places on Broad- way and side streets which hold dance hall licenses, ‘These places have been investigated by his order and he will decide Whether or not, from the reports submitted, he shall revoke the 1i- censes of all or some of them. The chances are, it is sald, that he will revoke all the licenses and await the passage of the dance hall bills he sent to Albany yesterday before issuing new licen Two Investigations are under way into conditions in dance establishments in the Greater City, one by order of Police Commissioner Waldo and the other by James G. Wallace, Chief of the License Bureau, The latter had forty inspectora out until early to-day looking over Places and getting data for a report to the Mayor. Three places were ordered closed for dances yesterday by the Mayor, and sev- eral others announced a discontinuance of “tea tangving’ for the present. There is no apparent desire on part of any of the dance hall or restaurant men to clash with the authorities, In many Places the festivities have been greatly curtailed in deference to the M views. MANCING FAD GREW BECAUSE (IT HELPS WOMEN REDUCE. A unique explanation of why danc Particularly that of the freak type, had become such a fa ~ York, was given to-day by o rant man. ‘I don't know what some of te Ie ‘Will do now," he sald. “Suppose y at home and gro Tat dancing has been the best thing that could happen to them, They are i nthe habit of eating ricn foods and pastry and drinking tea, and they «anced more to keep down their weight ‘than anything else. You have no how many women in this town have Deen dancing daily at this ‘tea t as it has been called, cise and to prevent getting too fat, or te reduce. That's why dipping and klo fing and doing other fancy stunts on the foor has been so popular.” Thus has the Mayor wrested from Many the opportunity to get graceful end slim! It was not until last night, however, that the full intent of the Mayor's at- titude toward cafe dancing was under- @tood alongs Broadway, At first the popular impression was that afternoon @ancing alone was tv be done away with, but gradually it dawned upon proprietor and patron alike that there could hardiy be any distinetion drawn between dancing in the afternoon and cing in the evening; that where the Mayor suid "No," it meant “No” at ali hours. With this realization some one be- ought himself of looking up the form of license used since April 1, when a considerable proportion of th 800 now in force were renewed, One lof the bill he has draw: the said public, open after 1 A. M,, and said pal Gance hall shrill be closed at that hour not be reopened before the follow- moon; and the said * * °, for and fm comsideration of receiving this li- conse, hereby stipulates and agrees not to Beep open or operate the said public dance hall after 1 A. M., and not to re- open the same before the following Boon.” PROPRIETORS WARNED THAT THEY HAVE NO LICENSES, This stipulation agrees exactly with the provisions of the Mayor's bill, ex- cept that the law would put upon the Proprietor the necessity of seeing that all persons had left by 1 o'clock, and the thet had by that time clo: doors and put out the lights. ‘The proprietors of the cafes dansants ete seriously perturbed over the Mayor's detion, Never in the history of New York, perhaps, has the dance tn any form attained the popularity that the fiting unprecedentedly, be afternoon or the evenin fes whet wever, Laugh by rk New Yea ANCES AT CONEY’ '.| George Rector’ jook brought to view the fact that the layor was anticipating the provisions for across the e of each Hcense was written the following atipulation, to which the had to agree or go without shall not permit the resent steps have gained. Men, 10 than women, are literally mad over jancing, and the cafe men have been Strictly speaking, there is no charge br daycing at these cates, whether {a At the Women’s Feet, and There Wasn’t a Single Thrill in the Whole Performance. About the Scene—Gray Haired Girls Among the Dancers. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. If too quickly you move, The police won't approve— can go. fact, it’s as large city limits. Chief Executive the dancing pe g NixOLA GREELEY SMT Bureau of Lic nses Vv must be permitted. So the negro band ceased its ragtime, the head waiter approached a few whirling guests with an air of apology and other waiters went from table to table where people were “guzzling"—it's the Mayor's own word— and told them that the room had to be cleared for a banquet, so they must leave a little earlier than usual. NO THRILL, NO ONE ARRESTED] tory. if not later. Maybe I don't know an orgy when I wee one, But 1 don't think I saw an orgy yesterday. Judge OR THROWN OUT. It was all very tame and disappoint- ing to everyone who had gone in the hope of being arrested or thrown out for yourself. haven't revived the stocks yet. Any-] Way to a has #o roused the moral indigna- von of New York's Mayor that he has prepared and gent apectal bills to Al- bany to pat a@ stop to them. Now, when you go to tee an org) read about such things in Homan hi pb pHs . for certain other drinks increased! tle card which says: prices are charged—10 cents, for ex-| dancing from 4 to 6,30." ample, is the price of a whiskey high-| hig didn't sound Hke the right be- are “lascivious orgy" to me. accompanying I\ Any way, @ waiter brings you chicken jsalad and salted almonds, buns and @ and afterward you have an The string band sitikes up some form je between drinks {t has)oe ragtime—they all sound alike to me ble to dance upon an excellent/_and @ Broadway damsel of perha summers begins to dance with la moggle-eyed youth, whose continued ball. The cost of tea—Including the te8] ginning for a itself and the bisc is as high as $2 in most places. Most of this has been velvet for the) te. and no one has com *| thirty at—superfictally— t can be. Gaynor's ruling the « at 1 o'c.ock in the morning—| rner Fire Captain M rested in Churchill's last T ing—resulted in the acquittal by Magistrate Levy in the te Court to-day, Burns was seated with John E. Dordan, one of the trustees of the restau and other friends, partaking | nd toast, according to Burns's | statement, when he was ordered to get out by Detective Wittenberg. He re- fused to go and was promptly arrested on the change of disorderly conduct, In rendering his decision freeing Burns, the Magistrate, who had received briefs both from = thi Assistant District-At- torney and Burns's lawyer, said his de- cision would not be taken aa @ precedent, were av.e to leave them money j dance, it CONTENTED. e Mayor's new orders, But he declared there was lack of ¢' dence of disorderly conduct on Burns’ The Most Astonishing Thing About the One Visited by an Evening World Writer Was the Size of the Nobody Was Arrested, No One Was Thrown Out and There Was Nothing of the Ballroom Glamour. dlack broadcloth hobble, She had big Come, cease that improper fandango, | geet, in fact, the most astonishing Be ét grizely or grape-vine or tango! aize of the women's feet av the f course, irl ts her best foot Better walk—that’s as fast as you Corembak Bie. Weare: cha y For New York is wearing the lid very well over her eyes this morn. ing. And notwithstanding all we've] heard about current fashions in mil- lnery, it's not a small lid either. In! jome aving tea and jam in the nurs a picture hat, though it is intended to shut out all) pictures of “vice and crime” and to put an end to “lascivious orgies” » such as Mayor Gaynor has discov- ered are daily occurrences within the bide or allver vanity boxes to help Yesterday by decree of New York's | which have been a feature of several Broadway restaurants this winter were ordered stopped. Men from the ited the Taverne Louis, the Follies Bergere and . and a still small voice said to be “from Headquarters” whispered to Reisenweber’s at about half-past five that no more dancing Pee achieve the scene of the danc- e atocks—bi ys the: tea you go up e narrow stair- or put in the stocks—but perhaps they ALY, aa how, 2 lot of persons were there in the] "S@el robber baron takes your coat of belng thrilled. And I was there] 884 Bat and@ anything else he can just what sort of “iascivious}| S@t Them you see a few couples in street attire sitting around eye- ing @ door where a head waiter stands holding @ cord which bars the way. This makes you think that you are watching the begin- you want to see an orgy. Even it youl ping of @ hurdle rxce—probably be- do live in @ peaceful suburb, you have oeuse everyhoay has to come 4 to get inside. When you have crossed and they have found a expensive drinks only are served, while| table your eye falls on « pretty lit- ‘Tea with lexistence you can't account for, unless MAN ARRESTED IN TEST CASE} money, like beauty, is its own excu DISSH/ ARGED. for belng. But then that is what mo: or lof the yourlg fellows you see about New look Mike As a tax- you observe them and think how it is for you that their fathers to keep you from having to take « of them. Soon other couples stroll to {the middle of the room and begin There is nothing of the ball- room glamour avout the scene be- cause the women have on street Cop: nt, 1913, © Dress t been pulled into a very fantastic coiffure, and she had very long, thin Jegs which showed plainly under a was the nger- ing daylight revealed tiem. At a ball, thi-g about the dancing foremost, She wears charming stock- inge and slippers, but I never knew how much the charm of the dance owes to the shoemaker till I saw the unattractive feet at that dancing tea There were some rather daring cos- tumes, Here and there were pretty young girls who should have been at ery instead of aitting in Relxenweber’ with silly pompous little pantolba yer Some of these little girls were very ‘much made up, and after each dance would frankly ' ravages to complexion and hair, taking out thelr he process, I didn't see any young woman brash her teeth, but doubtless we shall come to that. It's oll part of the engaging candor of our times and, quite seriously, a whole lot better than the solemn hypoc- risy of some other times. There were also of course a grout many persona who w not” fresh young sirl#, and an old-fashioned mind might have judged the erent) of youth and innocence to suc not especially desirable. But y | have to go toa dancing tea to seo that, | Moral exclusiveness is about the most dificult and the most expensive thing to get these days, and then so few per- sons who can really afford it want it. SOME OF THE DANCERS GRAY- HAIRED WOMEN, Half the couples on the floor at Rel- senweber’s yesterday aft women dancing with e: of these women wore sp had gray hair which had never iad its morals corrupted by a curling iron, Of course, this doesn’t sound « bit lke a “laselytous orgy,” and I'm just as sorry as you are, but it's what I saw, ‘There was a long time between dances | obviously so there wouldn't be a long time between drinks. Here ar Waiters acurried about with whiskey | glasees and soda siphons, but I «aw More persons eating ico cream than drinking highballs, At the table next to mine two young women waited, evidently in the hope that some friendly soul would come along and pay their check. They were not disappointed, Me came and he was just the sort that is borm to do that kind of thing. At his arrival he extended his right hand to one of tho sirens, his left to the other and held them for what he considered 4 compen- in riod. Then he paid the win took the obliging young ladies to another table whcre he had friends. I deseribe tails incide the liveliest 1 saw. Alto, dancing tea was not action may believe. It j group of silly your ladies and gentlemen in ++ their jowt youth, I was glad when the waiter came around and sald sing early on a nanquet. If all lascivious orgies are as stupid as wh. oom Was clothes and hate and the men are iz morning mostume. Yesterday afternoon one couple started soine- thing which I was told was the @rapevine and the head waiter promptly cautioned them to stop ‘o whirling allowed,” I think he ‘hoped, because it was the firet ren-|GIRL WITH THE BIG FEET DISs- The girl made a little face expres- sive of discontent, She wae a very -some of the Re creais sertalng part . and. he could. nat -hald the, prisoner. « slim girl with molasses hair which iat, 1 wonder taere are any left fui the Mayor to sup - o Stop for Commute The Puvi a tamu an order tot > ¥ ¥ liave and Hartford Railroad yes eday de handing that the « stop four commuters’ every day at Hunt's Point, Casanova and Por was Miss E on their honeymoon to-day on the Har burg of the Hamba ‘They go from here to Rome and from there to Naples, and the ho noon vroper will be spent beneath Neapolitan skies in a pretty villa owned by Mise Emily Carow, sister to the bride's mother, abo low decks, almost jaunty. ship newa reporter and not Dr, D When anothe aa he was, there | vel ani old] Morris in the Bronx, on the Harlem River branch of the company's Lies. a World Wants Work Wonders, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1918. he New York World), TRS NEW SONAN-LAW AND HIS BRIDE SAIL FOR MEDITERRANEAN Their Departure Was, Oh, Such a Secret, But Somehow They Were Noticed. Dp, Richard Derby and his bride, who Roosevelt, sailed away “American Ine. The young couple spent the night rd ship, in stateroom No, 21, be- helr departure was to have been a secret one. The bridegroom was abroad early, and when discovered on deck was looking over the rail contem- plat Hoboken, His bride had not yet made her appearance. The doctor carried a Httle cane and wore @ cap that wi When approached by a ng in allence the rolling hills of ked if he were he sald—er-r—he was not, reporter, a little later, him if he were Dr, Derby he said But that was all the doctor would say, for the trip was a secret, When Cousin Phil Roosevelt, a reporter, went on dQ the doctor begged him to save them from the reporters, It Was about 8 o'clock when the bride made her ap- nd wilt a great red trance, haters, yn her bosom. ‘Phe happy pair ed into the saloon and had coffes, \while the passengers and others on hoard took sly peeps at th couple, t secret. Dr. and Mrs. Derby expect to return n dune, when the doctor will go to St Luts Hospital, where @ position awaits aim, — GAYNOR VETOES TAX BILL DESPITE WOMEN’S PLEAS. Objects to Measure Relieving Them From Paying Assessments on Williamsburg Bridge Approach 1 plow of th ¢ Willtamsbura t Mayor Gaynor to approve a measure have not pre- toed lation affecting munb pal affairs wh nd control of ity authorities, The bil sought to velleve the prop. {day 1 the nelghvorhood of | who, !t is belleved, w Willamsbure, of alof an American, whose name has not but who ta said tobe} Everything new worth having him to uppvove the bill nounced his disp women supervision |Sianisiis de Castellani the proposed new approach and the two hundred jof the now proprietor must bediacloned © the Mayor and|within three days after the change of sure that] Count Stant un to Albany" for a ? /*BIGGATIM” BITES [HR HELD PRSIN HT FATHER'S DEMAND FOR ROBBING: MOTHE Edith Polacek nie im Court] net about a year ago youne Rinstele for Mercy, But Parent Refuses to Relent. FOUR IN DEFENSE OF HIS PUSHCART Mulberry Bend Dog Gives S.P.C. A. Men Fight of Their Lives to Gather Him. Frank Espanola conducts a pusheart Vegetable atand in front of No. 116 Mful- berry street and his Cog’s name is Big- gatlm—same being Mulberry street be “Big Tim" Sullivan. Biggatim ts ps wire-haired terrier. The rest of him a several kinds of dog. It is the duty of Biggatim to protect the stand In the ab. sence of his master, berry st this purpo days ago ax nts of the 8. P. C, Hoenses for thelr pushcarts? Ridiculous! , $250. and tons ti three dogs and was feeling peovis' Albertaon tucked Biggatim under his left arm. The amazed and insulted his front teeth into Albertson's etbow, son dropped the dox. Wallace, an expert dog grabber, gripped Biggatim behind the ears and lifted him. Biggatim squirmed loose and dit a piece out of Wallace's lex. @haughnemsy Jumped into the fray and grabbed Biggatim by the tall, Big- gatim bit his hand front feet. Biggatim, by that time pr couple of times, sailed into Wallace, his aid the §. PC. A. men tossed Bi into @ fight with al! the other dogs. Court, where Ma Marah fined vim $2, Esp jed with tears n his eyes for the life of hin dox, “Bikgatim,’ he told the Magistral rter than me Espanola cloned up hi started for a dog license o will be back on the Je business and dd Biggatim \HISTORIC FRENCH CHATEAU BOUGHT BY VANDERBILT? Boni Castellane, Said to Have Passed to American, PARIS, April 5 The hatorte chateau of Cheninceaus, jonging to Count! brother of Count Bont de Cestellane, was purchaned to- for 8, ade pub » K, Vanderbiit ar cording to the French law the ame ownership of @ property acquired ‘athalie he chateau through his wife, rry, who ellef when t of Estimate had | was the daughter of a Cuban milltonaire, full power, Ie assured the women, [It was constructed !n 1615 and w oon however, that thelr grievance would bo fiscated for debt by Franoois I.’ King heard by the Board of Estimate and France, It wae afterward passed through tellel aflordud—if warranted, the hands of severa) royal owners, A “Lascivious Orgy,”’ as Mayor Gaynor Imagines a Tea Dance to Be, SHE ASKS $150, Is Mostly a Group of Silly Old Folk in Search of Lost Youth FOR LOSS OF LOVE Edith Polacek of No. 253 Bast Seven- ty-necond street fa in Harlem Court] sult for a separation, prison charged by her father, a part- ner in the dry goods firm of Katz & Polacek, of Seventy-third street and/ daic. She obtained from Justice Menr, Firat avenue, with stealing $300 from| drick an order appointing Monroe Bin- her mother, The girl bexwed for mercy, but on the father's demand she was| Pers held for examination by M Butts. Nearly all the! Mins Polacek Dushcart peddlers along Mott and Mul-j married in three weeks to Juttua Pre: js have unsoclable dogs for| onda, a salesman, of No, atreet, ne of thone dogs 14 Heenaed. A tow! Barty was held at ‘Terrace Gaeden on The next day #he dt fled the pushcart men to get licenses! Peared from her home and her father for their dogs. ‘The pushcart men|feported to the police that ehe had laughed acornfully, Take out Heensos! stolen $300, @ diamond lavelliere worth for thelr dogs when already they had $300, and a diamond cluster ring worth Gallagher found her Therefore there awung into Mulberry | @&t mieht ut the home of the aunt of street to-day a big automobile dog-|* Mn with whom her parents waxon, driven by Joseph Shaughnessy | #!T! wan infatuated. and commanded by 8. P. C, A. Agents! “I found I could not marry Jullus Jamon Wallace and Benjamin Albert-|the girl explained to the magistrate, son, There three began to gather dogs “because I did not love him and did m into the wagon, The, !0Ve somebody . gathering was good until they reached | Mother's money, but the jewelry be- jatrate | wt She could not furniwh ball, was engaged to be ‘The engagement |. She alles A, noti-) March Butta refused to onter the Biggatim turned his head and sank all| Srl to take off the Jewelry which she wore in court, With @ yell audible for blocks, Albert- | Charge of stealing the mone: eb Del esl le CHILD WORKER FALLS. en-year-old Kitty worked to add to the family incon Eapanola grabbed his dog by the] sho was big enough to wipe a dish an | to-day she Kot a Job window cleaning | St. Murits Switserland, she cays, he , (infant and specified ty weil aggravated, bit Espanola ®&|on the second ‘Dhirty-ninth atreet Shaughnessy ond Albertson and bit} 54/ West Thirty-ninth atreet, them all over again. Everybody else] kitty w had fled but Policeman Bishop. With] ¢ront Kitty lives at No. on the fire escape in the @ house when playmates | y looked down | 1 called up to her, gatim into the wagon and Biggatim got) to answer, pitched through the ladder hole, bounced off the fire escape below ‘Her friends town clerk to issue @ marriage license reaming for & polceman and an on Sunday without invalidating a mar-:* ance took her to pital in @ critical condition, Bishop took Mspanola to Centre Btreet| and landed in the street, Hellevue Mos rt eon ew wm | Children’s Shoes Chenonceaux, Sold by Brother «| None better made We guarantee every pair we sell Our models are correct ure the Popular Prices Best & Co. | FIFTH AVE, At Thirty fifth St. ’ OF HER RANG HUBBY Mrs, arene ilk Sues Father-in- law for $100,000 and Brother. in-law for $50,000. 4 CHARGES ALIENATION, In Separation Suit She Alleges Husband's Friends Tried to Kiss and Hug Her. ——— « Mrs, Manuelie N, Binstein, whe oulng her millionaire husband, Aveipsy* vice-president of the Befnstein Manwd> facturing Company, for a separation, tés* day filed auit againet her father-in-Jaw * Jullua Binatein, for $160,000 damages, asl” against her husband's prother, for $60,000 damages for the allege’ ation of Arthurs affections, In sults Mra, Einstein charges father brother prevailed on Arthur to her because of social an@ racial ences. ‘The two complatnts atete-that! cret, ounning and artful ways" father and brother destroyed euch and marital affection oxigtea * time to time” between the young and her wealthy husband, @he Monroe Einstein asserted she was fit to be his brothers itfe = Se hy bd wer haa Finatet the ett * Head ¥ Mrs. Einstein eloped to ‘Weetchestani, July 10, 1907, and married the youngest of Jullous Etnstetn’s sons eecretiy. The father's leather business, at No, 308) bois igo: fe one of the Lowen ‘The Einsteins are weal CHILD FAIL® TO RECONCILE FATHER. kept his eecret, Then an effort wag: made to pave a way into his merry foes hia wife through three-year-old Hore tense Einstein. But the grandfather 7%. jected the chiki and his son's wife, and. shortly afterward Mrs. Einstein noticed, her husband had become indifferent ta) her cnd thelr child. Ghe then ine « ‘When the papers were to be eorve: Einstein learned her husband had. been placed in @ santtartum at Rivers stein his guardian. Then esparation San, were then served on the Srether,., when the case comes up for trial + Monroe will appear in her husbad’s,, place at the counsel table, ‘The wite asked the court for wa, weok alimony and a counsel fee of 81jr, od her husbend’s iacome is $15,000 a year, and that he has @ cog, siderable block of stock in hie father, company. She charged that since Agr: 1812, her husband hae retuse@ te reg;,, ognize her as his wife, seyteg be made a mintake in marrying hen, Be- cause she was his sootal inferton Ha, told her in an ineulting olatly SAYS HUSBAND'S FRIENOG'TRIEO - TO Kies +ER, Bhe further charges her hus@eandt Biggatim, which anima} had just licked longed to me, because It was given to| brought to their Riverside Drive aparts me by my mother and fiancee at the| ments “persons of the most viaious andi party.” Magistrat depraved character,” and that wemew put their feet on the tadle and men éried: to kiss her. Einstein ini & filrtatious John Doe, vicious brother, Rob, and these worthies sought to force their attentions on the young wife dy sending. candiew’ and flowers to her, all with her hus band's knowledge and permission, sie’ | alleges. Mrs. Minatetn recounted incidentaet:® trip abroad made with her husband aad ‘tes when he-hus- band brutally atruck her. At Gilon and i punched her on the nose, aad at Zurten jhe knocked her head against a wash stand, At the Hotel Knickerbocker and at the Hotel-Eadicott In New York y alleged further acts of cruelty, pentane iy Mi soe 0. MK. . ALBANY, April The right of a wan upheld in an opinion rendered ‘armody. to-day by Attorney-General » vy @ Parisian iawyer,! We offer the largest assortment

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