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‘RICH IMMIGRANT TO FIGHT AGAINST “HIS DEPORTATION Axel Foenss, Young Danish Engineer, Seeks Freedom by Writ of Habeas Corpus. SUES STEAMSHIP LINE. Asks $25,000 Damages for In- juries Received at Sea on Way Here. On Milis Teiand, detained for deport: tion to-day, is Axel Foenss, a young Danish engineer and inventor, who fight for entrance into this country, coupl@! with a tale of hard luck on the nigh seas and on the hospitable @hores of America has rarely been rivalled. A writ of habeas corpus {e being sucd out for him to prevent teamship company which brought here from deporting fim to Den- mark, An Evening World reporter came ac.oss him by chance. He did not look Uke: the ordinary immigrant. His clothes were new and of a fashionable cut. His face, intelligent, developed, and alert under a mass of neatly cut, wavy, biond hair, in the fashion of his Viking forefathers, compelled attention. Hie mieady, gry eyes and perfect, scholastic Wnglish bespoke a youth different from the ypes which surrounded him. The story he told was corroborated in the main easentinis by the immigration men. HAB SUED STEAMSHIP COM. PANY FOR $25,000. “They were going to sénd me bac! he began, with a smile, “but [ have taken an appeal and there will be a writ of habeas corpus issued for me some tim? to-day, according to the message waich I feceived from my counsel. I have beea im this country eight weeks, seven of them in @ hospital and one of liberty, when I took a room in the Twenty-third Gtrest Y. M. C. A, and set about my ‘business, which is designing automobiles ‘That one week has decided me in my fight to remain here. Also, the T have a $25,000 sult for damages the Scandinavian-American Steamship jpamy helps in the decision to remain fight. 1 cannot afford to te de- ported, after what has happened. “Early in March, r leaving the Polytechnic Loreanstalt, @ scientific @olege in Copenhagen, my mother, who fe wealthy, gave me half of my year's allowance and I set out for America, Socsocing to atudy the construction of American automoditer for the purpose Of establishing an agency and manu- factory in Denmark. { had designed feveral engines at hora “On the steamer Tietjen, March 2, While at sea, a wave came over the side and dashed me against a stanchion, Dreaking my right leg in threo plac, 1 was put in a bunk, wrapped in a Blanket and 1 suppose a doctor would ave set my leg in splints, If we had t encountered the steamer Texas in @etrees and iain vy four qays trans- ferring passengers. “By that time I had suffered greatly, and the jeg was knitting in bad shape. When we arrived at Hoboken I was taken from the ship without being ed at the Immigration Depa Ment and placed in>St. Mary's Hos. pital, Hoboken, where the doctors broke ty leg again and reset it. Seven weeke Yater, with my leg an inch shorter, I Wan discharged after paying the bill @AYS HE'LL RETURN IF HE I8 DEPORTED. “I had read in the papers of Joseph Bhea, a lawyer, and I wrote to him. He started sult against the steamship and T took @ room Twenty-third street, After the sult was entered, an official of the steamship asking me to return home at 1 cabled the situation to my mother and refus to return, “Yeaterday the same official called » Mttle before 10 o'clock and asked me ® ‘accompany him, 1 was assured it necessary for me to surrender my- peit to the Government, as I had not been passed, but was told I would prob- ably be released almost at once, There was a hearing at which it war decided I was likely to become a pubite charge, and I was ordered deported. Wei I can ansure thoi ary to prevent me from becoming a public charge and I will fight for entrance ICE VERSUS BEER. MeAnmeny for C i the Foam—Get Togeth:. “% stand. for municipal ice plants for aid Borough Pres ‘ the meeting of the Board of Estimate to-day, “Yes, and I stand for municipal brew- erles for the poor people too,” retorted President “Cy” Miller of the Bronx, “But your beer could not be cooled unless you had ice,” repiled }resident MecAngy, smniling, “True, and you couldn't cool your beer unless you had it," came back from the Borough head. ‘And, by the way,” he added, “I should like eyer so much to be superintendent of the new inunici- pal brewery.” ar ~— Improving Brooklyn's Water Front, By gradual process the city will carry out the plan of improving the South Brooklyn water front from the Brook-| lyn Bridge togay Ridge, ‘The frat Stop war taken to-day when the Board of Estimate authorized Dock Commis: | sioner HM. A.C. MMILN to AcAUIFe title | 7 Wuler front property In the Red Foot ‘nection for the building of a| ht’yard and @jation. The estimatud od thie propenty fo 81,2 | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY ) 1918. THE PERFECT SUMMER COSTUME | Ideas of Eminent American Artists As to Really Beautiful Garb for Women Harrison Fisher Says the American Girl Should Not Copy Designs Originally Worn by Women of an Entirely Different Temper and Environ- ment, and Tells What to Wear. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What ts the perfect summer costume far women? The Evening. World has obtained from several eminent American artists their ideas of really beautiful summer garb for women, and will pre- sent, from day to day, these exceedingly valuable suggestions. In Paris coterie of French painters has just arranged an exhibit of artistic dress designs, &s opposed to the weird products of the French costume establish- ments. All over this country cries of protest are rising against the summer | styles as Paris has dictated them. From the pulpit, from the bench, even from the American woman herself, have come indignant comments on the bizarre extremes to which the French costumers have gone in their search for new and sensational designs. Tie slit skirt, the split skirt, the diapha- nous waist and the Bulgarian blouse are a few of the eccentric modes which have inspired both wrath and disgust. “Shameless,” “indecent,” “immoral,” are all adjectives which have been applied to Dame Fashion this season. But constructive criticism is worth much more than the destructive sort. The woman who dislikes her dressmaker's slavish imitations of sen- sational French models, bit who does not know what to substitute for the modes that offend her taste, will find much to help her in The Evening World serles, Although the artist may | woman of the Orient. In Turkey @ not be so much concerned with the Woman's beauty im estimated accord- morality of current , he knows !ng to her avotrdupols, you know, If that the “freak” suits and dresses are|#"¥thing, we go to the other extreme downright ugly and therefore to be |! this country. bann.d, And he has notions of what “Im summer the American gir} is might desirably repiace them. Primarily an outdoor girl. There- fore she should wear outdoor HARRISON FISHER TELLS HOW) frocks. or every day nothing is OUR GIRLS SHOULD DRE! prettier than plainly out white lin- particularly Harrison Fisher is the first artist! on. There's o thing 3 with whom’ I discussed the perfect| Mee Wales = believe to called © summer costume. Mr. Fisher has prob- middy Blouse. It's open at the ably drawn and painted more beautiful pbb hy Mao dlaniaagh peggy girls than any other man in America.| {utust and shoulders of the Ameri- Me han famtilarized himself completely! gan girl, It's breesy, uaconven- wis be, and should} tional, but absolutely ‘nice,’ and ite surely know howsit may render itself most attractive, ‘wearer is a picture. “For summer dress-up clothes, noth- “The American girl should drees lke herself. Sh¢ should not copy Gesigue which were originally worn by women of an entirely different temper and environment. The gor- feous Bastern fabrics and drapery are well suited to the astern woman, the drooping, languorous, full-biown type, But the American girl would be as much out of place in » harem as she is in harem clothes,” That was Mr. Fisher's first contribu-| “There was another advantage about ton to the dress problem. I was not|those simplo tub frocks,” I observed, surprised, for, Ikke most Western Amer-|"They could be made at home, with fcaas, his patriotism Is in everyday use,| the ald of a paper pattern and & sew- the white, lacy, fluffy things that girls alwaya wore at picnics a few years ago, 1 can't go into the technique, but the general effect was daintiness per- sonified, The skirts were not too skimpy nor were they a mass of whapeless folds. The girl showed a nice, neat little waist, and her arma were bare below the elbow. If «#he {t outlined her walstiloe, not «tucked away in silver paper for|!n# machine, And they could be laun- parade occasions, dered at home, without using up too Then he laughed and moved his|™&8¥ hours of hot summer mornings.” broad shoulders a bit w Please] PRETTIER THAN THE ORIENTAL don’t ask me to go into too many de- EFFECTS WORN NOW. “I dare say,” assented Mr. Fisher, .|with the proper artistic vagueness as regards such practical considerations, “L know they looked ciarming, and I consider them infinitely prettier than these peculiar Oriental effects that are You think that the American woman/ discussed and worn to-day. tails,” he begged. “1 couldn't do that, tell you frankly I don't know the difference between @ hem and a bia and 1 couldn't tell a ruffie from a gore, But I draw and paint what I see, and I know when a girl or @ woman looks well {s a special variety und should haye| “Imagine trying to play tennis In a specie! costumes?" 1 asked dress with @ hobble skirt and a®sasiy “She la certainly in a clays by her-[sfound one's kneés! And the queer aclf,” returned Mr. Fisher. “Por one] drapery in xome of the dresses that th thing, she Is so healthy# She hax been| tel! me are the very latest from Paris) taken care of all her life, uot dnjudi-| Would be a mans of wilnklen after Its cloualy painpered but given just the| Wrarer bad spent an afternoon sitting sort of training which has turned her} Of (he rocks: young body into @ lithe, supple spring junbonuet is a delightful She hax eaten the right things, slept] and suitable frame for a pretty the requisite number of hours, never American face in the summer. & overworked, and lived In the open air, ‘Therefore she has uttatned the per- fectiy balanced physical development of a Greek athiete, although her strength guppene 1t would look a bit pecul- on Broadway, but why + women in town wear floppy straw hate—I be- may be less they're called Leghorns? “It's a crime for this girl to cramp! Trimmed with # gay soarf or herself up in tight, complicated gar-| ower wreath, t! ments which Also they weep off the enn— al swinging @ It's a crime for| rather ® necessity in a summer her to hide her beautiful young liné,, under bi @blouwy garments wale are sul enough for the ehap hat, one would think. “simplicity and an in:pression of light jem nese In color and textnve these are: to PATERSON POLICE BELIEVE STRIKE IS.NEARLY OVER Pickets Fail to Show Up and Workers Enter Mills With- *, out Trouble. First Article of a Series. GIRL SERVES SENTENCE. Strikers Ignore I. W. W. Lead- ers and Haledon Takes Steps to Bar Them. The Inst stand of the silk strikers, which it had been predicted would be made this morning in front of the Ar- thur Price Company mill, at Paterson, N. J., did not take place, BE work: er employed in the mill walked in to his work without molestation or even comment from the small group of men who stood about. Capt. MoBride and fifteen policemen were on hand, but they found no work to do, They sald that the persona near the mill were not atrikers or pickets, but merely curlous folk who had hoped to see a clash between the atrikera and police, The police believe the strike is nearly over. It had been reported that the leaders of the Industrial Workers of the World had ordered 2.000 pickets for the Price mill and had demanded that work there be stopped even if “heads tad to be broken and ribs caved in." If they {s- sued such orders the failure to obey them wan only another manifestation of the rapidity with which the I. W, W. # losing Its hold on the striking mill peratives, GIRL STRIKER WHO IS SERVING SIXTY-DAY SENTENCE AT PATERSON. pearing at afl meetings and showing unusual qualities of leadership. Ke, arr ball when Abram Klenert atrike when Trenca on the bail question. ined before day. leadors was In four indictment of 99,000, Mince the police Turn Halle the strike to hold no meetings ‘This afternoon they planned semble again in Haledon, whe Thomas Cappa, a law. of Turn Hall, went to to interview Vice remarding the closing the police an a disord strike leaders, Haywood, Tronc Flynn, Quinian and Lessig, were ft his pla tempt to addres have used this hi of the atrike as headquarters, ped ay LOST LIFE IN SUBWAY rlos Tresca, I, W. W. leader, who on a charge of using pro- was released on $2.50 Judge None of the the courtroom ume up for his hearing He is now under have attemptet in the city limits. to am efforts being made to forbid thelr meetings. r and owner ewark to-day ancellor Stevenson by ly house, The In Helvetia, Mail to-day, but did not at- since the beginning TRYING TO SAVE NICKEL. Fellow Toiler Tries to Save and He, Too, May Lose His Life, t Michael Feeney, twenty-five youre employed at the Williams Drop Works, at Richard and Bowne Brooklyn, was crushed to death morning when a steam hammer, Ing five tons, shot down on top of James Murra; fort to save him, was caught belting and may die from his ‘ ‘The hammers in the shop are raised elevated positions at the close of to prevent them from getting 6m re ‘dead centre.” The belt is thrown 6m the drivewheet as this is done, Murray © climbed a {adder this morning to gules the beiting onto the wheel, and Feesey, beneath the big hammer. Suddenly the masa of steel moved. Murray tried to throw off the by but got mixed up in it and f: aquee: The hammer shot down tike & piledriver, and Feeney was caught De- neath it and crushed to death ray's injuries are serious. eRe ARES, EXPLOSION KILLS FIVE ON FRENCH STEAMER. Six Others Injured When senegit. 4 Strikes Mine at Smyrna—Vee sel Is Beached. SMYRNA, Asia Minor, May 2.—The French liner Senegal, which struck ® mine as she was leaving foundering. killed by the plosion and six others severely | time. If she ‘8 clothes that Inter- fere with summér fun, she won't be any more attractive to hor friends than was the lady in the hobble skirt to the Adirondack guide when she upsét his canoe." Then to help in his argument for simple aummer clothes Mr. Fisher gave me the two charming sketches which are reproduced in The Evening World to-day. ‘To-morrow another well known artast will discuss the summer toilet of the American woman, my mind, the essentials to be consid- ered in making up the summer ward- robe. The girl wearing dresses and headgear such as I hy described will look well and will be ready for a good rosedecsooononocccooosooooooosooosessossoooesonirs back to English speaking weavers met in the this morning and de- There wa of the I. W. willingness by back the old jobs. 8 & greater crowd than evér about the relief station and every indi- cation pointed to the conclusion that the strikers were disgusted with the failure W. and were ready to re- turn to work at the slightest signal of the employers to give The weavers of tne Empire Silk ho want Labor Lyceum clded that ‘they would return their Company and the Doherty and Wada- worth Company this morning decided to ally themselves with other wea rw to return ‘to work and to go looma Plonday, work The Johnson, ‘Former Guard, Run watiee bod Down as He Crossed Tracks ented, id Non at Station, with, VAN’S NORUB James Johnson, forty-two, wool dyer and janitor of St. Luke’ Chureh, formerly @ Subway guard, tried to save a nickel early to-day and lont his life. Hu had been visiting friends and about 1 o'clock found himself at the One Hundred and Thirty-ftth street station on the Subway going north aw: from his home at No. @1 Bow wot off the train and started the tracks to get a south-bound train without having to pay another fa He was struck by « train from Brot in charge of Motorm Georg Kenny, Trafe was held up for an hour, sont Sor? or Pred Prat Pate Package. umm h aE ficbikem, ing is prettier to an artist's eye than} Harry B. Brown, NEW WOMAN WIFE AND OLD FASHIONED: HUBBY FEL Judge Tries in aa tc the Touseys When wood Heights, Staten Island, May 80, 81 or June 1, Monday morning. They further de- cided Saturday morning in the +4 ; peta Nall and give the foreign i The Evening World to Send Up 3 )'rreve’ tat: sui" sive ine “toraen . @ {in the return to work, The mpi 1,500 Balloons on Saturday? |i eeaset ina. so ertevence @ | when they quit. ‘The attitude of the # | weavers coems to Indicate trouble Sat- Five hundred balloons will be released next Saturday from) {| jniay at the Probst Hall meeting, and the Pulltzer Bullding in Park Row, 500 from the Brooklyn office # {if not then Monday. If the police of The World and 500 from the Harlem office. To each of the {| force i not larke hough to all balloons will be attached a coupon giving the finder, boy or girl, % ul Mes ho aad ad wislaes have! free admission to the Aeronautic Society Flying Carnival at Oak- , & ie FIFTEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL coes! TO SERVE SENTENCE. Arthur Lapham, Capt. Thomas Baldwin, @| Hannah Silverman, the fifteen-ye Aviator Kemmerle, the Johnson Brothers, Lieut. Rellly Scott, 3 ol leader of the girl pickets and idol Mile. Lager of Paris, and others will give marvellous exhibitions. ¢ of the eee Rbrasachothy was bear summarily disposed of by Recorder Car- One of the Kew York World balloons will acl Zl ron yesterday when ahe came befor ‘> ber, entitling the finder to # free ride at the aviation meet with him accused of standing around the Harry Bingham Brown. 3 Price mill with the strikers doing pie- Keep your eye on the sky. You may pick up one of the lucky : ket duty, She was given sixty days in New York Evening World balloons bearing free admission to the | !!, velng 4 second offender. Carnival. 3) Barly in ihe strike Miss Silver > @ | organized a company of fifty iris, all older than herself, and engaged them 4 POPOV OPOPSIAOOPOPELEVIELIOOOHD |, Sicaet duly, Sho was then arrested and twenty-two hours {n the po SuMctent finanees to acquire gowns | tice station celis without food or water, with varying lengths of slits, a8 |due to the overcrowding of the cells Dame Fashion exacts of her dev- | following the first arrests of hundreds 3 of strikers for unlawful assembly. She | The doctor, born and bred in the old] wan later sent to the County Jail and |school, adva years enough to se] released with a warning after five days, ry all woman’ Ww foibles and Inno-| since then she has been active, ap- vations, expects & wife to he a house wife, a mother of children, a help-mate and not too extravagant. Mrs, Tousey, he says, falled to meet these require- She says Tousey did not corres: nd with her ideals and hence Justice ‘* gallant but fruitless attempt. Now | the Touseys are going to thresh out the | affair In open court where the law will | have to pass on the respective merits of the new and old style husband and wite. ments ry WILL OCCUPY OUR NEW BUILDING » Placate They The Touseys Were married Sept. 7, fares 1909, have one child, Ralph jr, who Appear in Court. was born Aug. 4, 1910. After their marriage they lived at No. 43° West Fighty-third street, a house Dr, Tousey Supreme Court Justice Guy tried the | Tecently sold for $40,000. Impossible to-day, He sought to weld] SAYS ‘HE SPOILED HER WITH together the ideals of the new wife ATTENTION 424 and 426 and the old-fashioned husband. The}. Prom tim day of thelr marriage Dr. Tousey tinued an “inordinately af- kindly jurist philosophized, advised and) tectionate husband,” until Jan. 1, 1910. —yew, jollied the couple in an hour'’é!|Tnen Mrs. Touses complains be- effort to reconcile them, but would! ca 4s demonstrative as a marble Jolther of them nurrender one jot o| Statue, refusing to caress or fondle her| |] = | tittle OL thakawenk Haktas and at all, whereas Just previously he had again NO! So Dr. Ralph ‘Touseyor Ne | “fairly spoiled” her with attentions e 1300 West Seventesaeventh street, She endured his frigid treatment until ==Prior to ‘around forty-five years, and his young May 7, 191% when ahe went to her Wife, Clara Hriner ‘Tourey, lett the | ether's home at No, 262 P.tmrose ave-| f {justices coambers as far apart mari-|2¥& Mount Vernon, ‘hither the phy-|]] tally as the poles jsiclan, she says, pursued her and Mrs. Tousey is sulng the physician | b&&Ked On his knees that she return, for a separation, The doctor wants Which she : his wife back again, but he wants her) But Dr did not to shed the romance of the Ni dle refused to advise or talk to pan’ vod be just plain Mre, be} her, eieceul tO say BAS aha w pare rey Keared in luxycious surround nd ought to be in w sanitarium gs, Mrs, Tousey ineiste the me ¥ 30, 191, Tourer, she Baye, wite has inalienable rights that simply yj move tw Peay ea meet alter cannot b sacrif Wer tas worn-out, \eereiN Genataia ABA, apart pote his |musty and crusty tdeas of « domestic ma " ie H B is And she told His Honor ao, | Mit Perey iil aet er eA i Mey : ave been jtoo in aa many words, he told her to « | PLATFORM In a word, Mra. ‘Touse. the New Wife's platform Not too many an ample supply. cbiliren Hubby’s undivided time and’ giten- ton, reanrdlers of tire |MRS. TOUSEY LAID DOWN H which she urnink to her mother's home enunciated | Dr. Tousey has an income of #0, has fole| Year from an estate, Mra, Tousey vet Fant on the deathe of ints mother will Hl pi, tipherit property vauea at $100,000, Pu one | being Mrs, Tousey's shopping trips vost him |f| Prices $150 | stn LD CANNOT BE RETUANE! ON OR BEFORE JULY Ist, 1013 up the car to Punctured. from the axle, mander of the nty years, |whaling voyage, and after the Australian const, ‘* on board and York. —- Batialion will hold their r 3.20, held on Decoration Day. At 15 EAST S@ud STREET Yi Fifth Avenue To Effect an Absolute Clearance Removal= Remaining Stock of . Afternoon & Evening Gowns Tailor-made Suits & Blouses Reduced to $58—$75-—$95 $245 $450 JANGED OR GENT ON APPROVAL, while a wrecking crew waa jacking His right crushed, matey a collarbone were broken and his lungs Despite his injuries, Johnson directed the work of the men disentangling him told who he Was, and remained conscious until a few minutes an he died in Harlem Hospital at eatin aletty; CAPT. GEORGE ANTHONY DEAD He Rescued Fenian Prisoners tree Penal Colony, NPW BRDFORD, Mase, May 2.— Capt, George 8. Anthon, Fenlan prisoners from a_ British penal jony in Austrailia in sé, died to-day, ‘talpa sailed ostensibly for a cruising about for several months made a dash for took the pris- ried them to Review of Clason Point Cadets, The Clason Point Military Academ lew and dri on the grounds of the Academy, Clason- on-the-Hound, next Sunday afternoon at in case of rain the review will ve 0c TEA. All Kinds. Se Never Beshied Golden BlendCoffee. an ne Sogte | FRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIALS (This beats paying 20c for 4 lb, Pure Froserase Baking Powder. OC = VAN DYK_ aie my ma Cony MBU * Aye which © pREMonr, Av. angfovzr PROSPECT ym. [Jamaica 2c eure warhed © operate Butter Decurtmentas Van Dyk goods can only be ate bought at 2 Van Dyk store or Selling Agency. Look for the . NAME, Branches everywhere, BADQUARTERS: 207 Water ot., or. Rossa 6a, CLEANING Ket, 1678, 24 363 West Se & Spend Your Summer Where Nature Smiles Out in some country village where the plain folks live long and pros- per; Up in the mountains where iishing, hunting, riding, “otoring, ete, lend their cnchantment; Down by the sea where life ts @ veritable symphony of bal boating, reading, resting, d ete. For Cottages or Bi@gsiowg wi may be rented for the Surewnet, 3 son at the most popular places,