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er MAD RACE OF AUTO ENGINES Blaze thu Rag Rapidly Through a Block in Bronx Before Third Alarm, CHIEF KENLON’S SPRINT. Covers Six Miles From Head- quarters in Ten Minutes to Take Charge of Fight. frame dwelling houses on fire at Prompted three alarms of fire in th: Bronx to-day and caused Chief Ken- tom te make one of the fastest long Fume In the history of automobile equip- mgmt of the Fire Department. The at- tles and roofs of the two-story frame Awellings extending from No. 1362 to Ne. 1870 College avenue in the C mont Heights section were burned away before the firemen got the biaze under ‘TUS fire started on the top floor of No, 38, which is in the middie of a dlock of howses built by the Kingston Security Company, No. 1858 was unoccupied. The fire had spread through the upper part @i' the house before Poltceman Robinson vt the Tremont station, on post at | Webster avenue and One Hundred and S.venty-firet etrest, wae able to turn a an alarm. Automobile engine % was the firme plece of apparatus to respond. The tage in the meantime had spread to the houses on each side of No. 1358 and the captain in charge turned in a sec- om rm, Owing to the bad pave» Meats, diMculty was experienced by the fizemen who responded to the sec- end cal! in reaching the fire, and « (rind alarm was found nece ten houses were found to Chief Kenton, ri arm, made the run from Fire Head- warters in East Sixty-seventh street ten minutes. The blage was under comtrel when he arrived. All the houses damaged except No, 1385 were occupied. '@ @ne Was injured. The contents of dwejlings below the second floor ere soaked with “HONEST DANS” RAD LEADS CAPTAN TO HAND WALDO HS RESATON Gallagher Decides To Quit After a Conference With the Commissioner. & reid made yesterday on the! Windsor Club, an alleged poolroom and | Gambling house, in Bedford avenue near, street, Brooklyn, was directly | ble for the retirement from the! eg Department to-day of Capt. Bei-| Gallagher of the Grand avenue eftict, in which the club was located. maid was made by “Hones Dan" gan and a squad from Headquart- t the place was operating Bembling house and poolroom reached District-Attorney Cropsey. He forward- e@ the reports to Commissioner Waldo, men got evidence upon raid was based, He spent halt ‘am hour with Commissioner Waldo and Deputy Commissioner Dillon, At the conclusion of the conference he went to the office of the chief clerk and handed in tis resignation. He will draw a pemston of half a captain's pay. Capt. Gallagher {s fifty-five years old and had @ecretary of State Mitchell May ap- in Flatbush Police Court to-day *as counsel for seven prisoners taken in} raid on the Windsor Club, All were in 9600 ‘bail each for examination ‘on, June 12, “Mammy” Cohen of No, 81 Bainbridge | the Windsor Club. inj yesterday's raid. Lneut. Joseph Condpy of the Coney Toland precinct was uBpointed a captain peels Leslie, MATIENT FALLS TO DEATH. | William Shorrock Plunges fom | Window of Ho al. Wittiam E. Shorrock, » salesman, of No. 93 Cauldwell avenue, the Bronx, was killed to-day by a fall room on @re Sixty-elshth street side of the Hahnemann Hospital, on Park ave: nue. He fell among three orderlies. who were cleaning the flagging, Mr. Shorrock went to the hospital for treatment for a nervous Ww He wap regarded cured and was to have been allowed to @ home to-day, The nurse who had of his room and that of several preparing hall and ‘ted by f hin fall only wher cries of the orderiles in May W—Mile, Broquedis, mpic games woman tennis champion, jo ‘scored brilliantly at Stockholm lant ummer, this afternoon defeated Miss| ‘The match was| ‘thought to the task, Miss Susan Ricker Knox, Portrait Painter, Says That a Woman Selecting Her Summer Wardrobe Should Be Principally Concerned With Suiting Her Own Personality. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What is the perfect ewummer costume for women? American artists have not all agreed in their answers to this question, and I believe the reason for their differing may be found in the fact that persons seeking perfection naturally fall into two classes. On the one side are those who see nothing good in the present, and who are convinced that the only hope lies in reviving the past or anticipating the future. In their opinion whatever {s, is bad, whatever was or whatever may be, is good. They are earnest and sincere, but their forte lies in startling, rather than in suggesting. Artists with this type of mind have been well represented in the present series. But we have also heard from others who believe that the perfect costume may be obtained by the process of selection among cur- rent styles, rather than by their wholesale rejection and the substitution of something entirely different. I fancy that the artist who doesn't entirely disown the drétemaker makes the strgnger appeal to the average woman. And of course it ts true that not all presen? day fashions are exaggerated to the point of absurdity. The exaggerations attract attention simply because they are sartorial tall types. Many an up-to-date suit and gown is attractive and artistic—if it suits the personality of its wearer. Mies Susan Ricker Knox, the portrait painter, would put that last mgn- A type 0 jously dressed woman —— tioned stipulation in italics. Miss Knox is one of the very few American women to have achieved real distinction as a portrait artist. But women and children have been the subjects of her best work, and she has some exceedingly interesting Kicas on the art| them is centred the entire person- of feminine dress, . ality. Bverything else is built up “I see many modern costumes whici| to them. Of course the tints of re admirable,” Miss Knox told me.| skin and hair should also be consid- 1 ace others which are not, But the| ere@. As @ general rule it ts safe good effects or the bad effects usually | for a woman to select colors which depend on who wears them. matoh with her eyes or contrast ” “A women selecting her summer | With her hair, wardrobe should be primarily con- cerned with sulting her own per- sonality. I do not moan that she should go absolutely contrary to the prevailing styles, But she should modify them so that they may conform with her type, 80 that she may make a clear, well Gofined impfession as an individ- ual. There is a difference between a well dressed woman and & woman who dresses well. “The latter merely wears expen: carefully made garments. The former la an artistic success. Every detail of acy color hints for different types, “Take a person with dark brown hair, looks her best of red. She in all the vivid shad can Wear flame color or Chinese rea or coral, She can also wear @ pale sea- green and the lighter tints of yellow, In dark biue she looks dowdy and six 1s ineffective in unrelieved white. he fair blonde, the woman with flaxen hair, blue e: da rose-leat skin, probably looks best in black or dark shades, which throw into relief her daazling whiteness, For the woman costume is perfectly thought out, aj with brown eyes some gray in her hair symmetrical part of a harmonious whole, | and not too much color, orange ts the Gloves, boots, handkerchl ch is a’ ideal shade, The woman with red hair tiny expression of the wearer's perso ality. pipe “To procure such an effect one must Bhe also looks be oneself, not a copy of some one else. | well in brown or dark green, but should One of the picturesque features of Eu-|avold pink. ropean life is that oash Ns Swoman has her| “One's color scheme changes with own way of dressing. The peasant girl age. A blue-eyed, rather fir woman has her gay ative costume, the little| will find that she can \ghop giri in Paris her neat dlack frock, | taupe and smoky \the lady of wealth and leisure her more becomes white, but not pol elaborate wardrobe. Here the girl be- brunettes who cannot wear blue at all hind the counter tries to imitate as in their youth find it most becoming ving ite possible the costumes of the/@fter thelr hair has besun to turn gray | women she serves—with disastrous re- ‘After color comes drapery. sults, The young girl apes the dress of Sesehing ‘gesecaly, Z think the women years older than herself, That pecped skirt without extra t is a natural youthful impulse, but, Pieggevn a Seine wens is the rom the artistic standpoint, it should . lesign 7 ta, a there's restrained, A little girl should dress © conten = ttone rye like a little girl; she has the chance) wm te 2 ore 0 sen only once in her life, ne Legh res Ro dioed “put do you think every woman hi pede: Croning peo ly dastinctive nominees the modes #he’ stigy Knox offered evidence on this ould a . : Moe ieee nat every women: Siu Tibes| Many Nich A.portrelk: of lady who is much more Meve that most of us would be able tuloonet and mantle than in a hobble discover what we really ought to wear st skirt—although she does live in 1913. if we wave a little more tUme ‘This portrait is published in Tne Ev It ts only now and) jing World, together with other har-! then that a woman may express her) moniously dressed types, painted by feeling for the beautiful through paint- Mins Knox ing or music or literature. But in their!” “fate and jewelry and all the other dress all women may be real artists. | toilet cannot be judged por Of course, when possible, they should the artist. “It isn't the try to obtain the advice of experts in| :mouern costumer who makes his work sighing of frocks or hats or jew ‘ul oF ugly, but his’ women eu lovely in rather tomers. Another artist will contribute to the aivcursion of the ideal summer cos. tome to-morrow. “But suppose @ woman hag to wor} things out for herself, How is she + Ko gout it?" 1 queried. “Vemne Srat thing for you to deter- mine im choosing your clothes in > —— When you don't advertise nobody imuw's that you are doing business, and) Then Miss Knox gave some helpful; meee = Whe EVENING WORLD, ‘qTEURSDAY, “way a9, 1 |THE PERFECT SUMMER COSTUME | “A Well-Dressed Woman and a Woman Who Dresses Well Are Very Differen Seventh Article of a Series. « = BERNHARDT SAILS |GREAT GOAL CHUTE AFVER 7 HOURS OF | COLLAPSES; KILLS ‘ADULATION ON SHIP} ONE, INJURES FIVE Crowd Throngs Liner at 3}Man.Is Buried Under Debris A. M. to Bid Farewell to of Decayed Structure‘in Departing Actress. "Williamsburg. No woman of this generation ever had such « farewell of glory and adule- tlon from this port as did Sarah Bern- “hardt to-day when she sailed for Havre on the liner La Lorraine. An emotional crowd, mostly of French birth er ex- traction, was on the French line pier when she arrived there at 3 o'clock this morning, after the dinner tn her honor at th arte Antoinette and the noisy farewell performance she at the Palace Theatre. Perhaps the sixty- nine-year-old young lady got some sleep after the ship galled, She certainly hed {none between 3 o'clock and ¥ o'clock. Men, women and girls packed corridor near the door of her at room and fairly clawed each other in their rush to reach her presence dur- ing those mn hours. They wer waiting for when she reached the One man was killed and several per- sons injured this morning, one of the latter's woman, when the three-story coal pocket of the Frederick W. Teses Coal Company. et North First and Riv- er streets, Williamsburg, collapsed. ‘The struct has been out of com- mission for the last five years, and has deen slowly going to decay. It was of massive timbers and girders, bolted ‘with tong iron rods. Recently a con- tract was let to the Grester New York Construction Company for the dismant- lng of the structure. The company sublet the contract to Abraham and Inidor Cohen of Broome and Clinten streets, Manhattan. This morning the ‘ork of demolition was begun, Samuel Doroakoff, a workman, heard a nolse like the ripping of cloth above him. Hea shouted to th bel w look out. The next moment there was & groaning and creaking of the great timbers, then an awful crash, the split- ting and tearing of Jumber, and tons of timber and boarding went bulging out, then in, and with part of « high trestle went down like a house of cards. Great clouds of dirt and coal dust buried the wrecked structure from sight. When the dust. settled, Dores- koft was nowhere to be seen, He had been carried down into the big coal jpocket under the debris of the cok lapsed cribbing. He thirty-seven years off and lived at Bis V8 Mesex street. laughing anid tears the only 8 sometimes winced with pain and made ‘as though to slap those who caught in the effort to kiss her hand, into one of the baskets of roses were piled up about the stateroom La Tosca denouncing Scarpla was never more tragic or awe-inspiring than th divine o1 hen she told this man what; she thought of him for mussing those plossoms. He cried, Whereupon she re- pented and patted his cheek and laughed into his eyes and pinned one of the broken roses into his coat lapel. He was seen later going down the gang plank holding the rose in both hands and kissing it rapturously. Bernhardt eat regally on the eige of her berth in her atateroom and allowed each group of eight or ten adorers about fifteen minutes to burn the inoense of her praise before her. Many ‘nelt before her. Smiling through tears, she kept up futile chatter of protest that every- body ‘oved her more than she Ceserved and that next to her own dear France, America was the eweetest, most adorable and kindest country in the world. “This le my fifth fare ehe sald to an Evening World reporter, who ood in dine for an hour to reach her. “Each Jast final goodby te happier than the last. People ask how I keep youn) 1 know I am an ugly old woman. But e all so good and happy and they see in me their own nd do not eee Sarah Bern- hart at ell, Shall | have more farewells to America? Nowhere, except in France, could one find such gallantry as is behind that question, I thank you. I thank everybody, It is @ beautiful world to live In.’ —>-—__—_ 1 Te Take New Job June 7, ‘Aldermanic President John Purroy Mitehel will take his new office as Coi- Jector of the Port of New York on June! closet in his room at No, 727 7, according to his present plans as an-|ton avenue to-day. A letter im Bt nounced to This means what Mr. | tah af by A. E. Carlsen and « post- | Mitchel will not be present at the hear- card, alan In Mwedioh, egned by E. 0. | ling on the New York Central's plans for | Carl the firet mailed from Stock- the water front along Itiverside Drive, gholm from Perth Ai In fact, he is finiened oMcinily with that’ boy, N. gy were the only clues to the project, Hin place will be taken by, auicide's family connections, E 0. neighborhood of the actident, He heard the crash and telephéned for the re- serves of the Bedford svenue:police eta- tion, With them came Hook and Lad- der Company No. 6&4 and members’ ef Eberle of the former and Dr. Reib- stein of the latter responded. ~ Ignat Yorous, twenty-four years old, of No. 173 Essex street, cuts on heed, left ankle broken Andrew Polippea, twenty-one years old, Ne-% Forsyth street, contusions of face and body. Harry Silverman, twenty-eight years old, No, % Cook street, Willlameburs, jp wounds, lacerations, of face and ity-nine years itreet, Brooklyn; contusions of head, face and body. Mra, Sareh Morris, forty years old, Na, 1 North Fifth etree: Williame- bus, cuts on face, head and body. Mra, Morris was gathering firewood when the crash ca! She wes insen- sible when picked up. —_——»——. LZ Hanging in WI ‘The body of Carl Carleen, hanger, was found hanging | | ! ma Paper- fn the ing: eae ds DL 7 is Spe 913... ‘NEW THOUGHT” LEADER CONVICTED ¢?2) FOR TAKING FEES; SULZER ER DECLARES ASSETS ETS $5000 tide peed Wits -Fetownd cowernie Moves a0 Clergy. Broadway's Noted | Noted Restaurant . “ers When Miss Page Pays Fine Under ‘Protest. f * —— JUDGE DEFINES ‘LIMIT Draws the Line Between Teaching and Trying To Effect a Cure. ‘Villa Faulkner Page of No. ercy Park, lesder and teacher in the New Thought movement, was convicted of violating, the county medical law in Part'S of @pecial Seesione to-day. Juatices O'Keefe, Collins and Russel! impoeed a of $96 upon the defend- ant or the alternative of ten days in the City Prison. William Chilv counsel for Miss Page, paid the under protest. ix a Page wan arrested two monthe {information secured’ by Mra. Francie Benlory of the County Medica Geolyty “ind. Mrs, Isabella Goodwin, | Getective-sergeant. The two women were given New Thought treatment for which ‘they paid fees of % each. Both women told in Court that they were in good Health when they went to take the treatment. At the thne of Mise Page's trie! h dreds of-women, all interested in 3 ‘Thought, Ailed the court room As large & crowd wes present to-day. Many leaders in thre movement from Paris, London, Berlin and Chicago testified at the trial as to the teachings of New ‘Thought. Prior to. the imposition of sentence by Presiding Justice O'Keafe Justice Col- Uns made the following comments af- fecting New Thought and all other sim!- lar practices used in lieu of medical treatment: “1 am of the opinion that a school of philosophy, the instructors or professors of which, whether styling themselves metaphyaicians, psychologists, psyscho- therapeutiste or other synonymous or descriptive term, might instruct follow- ere, dévotecs, pupile er subscribers in mental. self-control an@d advance the theory or make the claim that in their Delief, proper control will in a measure offset physical disabitity, disease, ner- “FIGHTING UNDER . ~ BANNER OF LORD,” OES and Hotel Thrust Into Hands of Receiver. men in Audience to Cheer and Toss Hats in Air. Gov. Bulser started hie direst primary Prd wore nc Sues ioe menaee in District {campaign in New York City to-day by or Court +to-d j hurling at the heade of four hundred | Doratl ening ahd. teeing ih mintatera in the Metropolitan Butldin envembly room, No, 1 Madison avenue, | and Broadway, with Chartes E. Resto? his new crusading chant: as the manager and principal propricter. “When Tam fighting the cause cf] TH® proceeding marks the breaking suatioe fam’ aghtt nearly twenty-five years of Mr. ne Aahting under the banner continued success and te jo Hand ire eon T can't go wroni away of a fortune which bet @ meeting, under the auapices of ears oa the Federation of Churches, numbered ‘oa rs. pra: ; ite audience clergymen of almost * Fae eres sad al ‘The creators who filed petition every denomination, and within five oe are the Thompson-Starrett minutes the Governor had every one of | which built them shouting for him. Some in thetr Motel Nector, Company and the Hotel Rector enthuatasm threw their hate nthi begins They Aight now, Governor shouted with a i le Tt is alleged thet while Insolvent, made ments to Burne Bros, amount $1,296.43, and that the ‘total’ concern are not ever 950,000. Hott appointed Edwin C. ‘ware a cely | j of the cloth, Tam not going to ge the people or the bosses remember that. tf the bosses are allowed to rule, good dovernment | ¢ in this State will go back’ quarter of a century, “It is not humiliating to the citisens of New York to realite that the bumi- nese of thelr State is now entirely in the hand of two professional polltl- lana, Barnes and Murphy? Thess two Men hold the State, under the present political ayatem, in the hollows of thelr bande.” The Governor shook the Henry Clay | lock out of his eyes with » gesture and went on with his denunciation. “Bear this well in mind, you men of the churches adn moulders of public opihion—the power to nominate is tho | power to rule. “Get that fact In your minds and preach It to your people, who are al- Ned with you and with me in this fight for righteounnens.” After reviewing the fights he has had with the Legislature sinc be- wan to rule in Albany, thy Governor sald: “Let me way to te people whe make trowble for me that I can take !t, and it fe nothing In comparison with the trouble I'll make for them. Tie seat of power in this State has been and will continue to ‘be, all the time I am Governor, right beivind my desk in Albany. “The political future holde no ter- rors for me. I would rather be Gov- Hl vous affections or any ravages thereof | ernor two years and BE Governor than nd sehool' the subject to overcome the| be Governor for four years and NOT danger ef the imaginary ills or hysteria | be Governor, Police Sergt. Schilling vie im the! of —provided they do not attempt to diag- Rese or prescribe fer or treat directly @or Gisease ‘or physical ailment or mal Fepresentation that would effect or be expected to effect a cure of one suffer- ing therefrom and that they might sive lessons, have sessions or deliver lectures based on thelr theory and charge a fee therefor—without violation of the law, even though some followers might be- Weve that such @ method or course is Girectly effective of cure of physical all- ments or disebilities. If the present case came within this iption I would be prepared to vote for acquittal, “L find ae @ fact, however, that the defendant undertook to treat physical ailments from whieh two patients suf- fered—or rather were eupposed to suffer and undertook to, or promised to, effect a cure and recetved a fee from each patient by virtue of auch representation; that there was.no pretense In 80 the patients were concerned, that super- natural or divine intervention was sought or petitioned for, through prayer or religious interceasiion, or that that was the method of treatment relied upon to effect @ cure.” I as ‘BIG BILL’ GETS FOURTH FUND “Big Bill” Edwards has c ittee to DPromate a celebration of t! gre obscure but healthy fund he which the Board of iatimate authorized it by municipal funds. 90,000, but will try to got along with “Big Bill's" subscription and whatever can be dbtained from a patriotic public. peteodhie LU ts FINE TIME FOR M MACY GIRLS. To Have an Outing With Games at Sheepshead Bay Te-Morrow. ‘The junior female employees of R. H. Macy & Co. will have a fold day at the Bheepshea) track park to-mor- the girls and their road station, leaving Brooklyn Bridge at 9.90 A. M. There will be o Afty-yard and 10-yard dash, Indian club, sack, betacle and shoe races. CEYLON TEA color scheme, The eyes should = it a’) be lone before you pk | Aeerene Kune, vice-caairman of risen of Perth Amboy, delieved to fhe Meynote. of thin. becarse ip vouraale tos dirt awe ne @.dcchber, Wee Botiieh : : sy ht, 5 i ainnapene mentee teen stetmentetenee tennant tn nt e TT! | White Rose Coffea, Meas Better Rose —-__— tence Midnapper At- temed, ‘The Appellate Division of the Su- Dreme Court to-day affirmed the con- vietion of Vito Micelli, who wes indicted for kidnapping the tle won of Dr. Sctmeca of No, 2 Prince atreet and sen- tenced by Judge Foater of the Court of General Sessions to not Ides than twen- ty-four years and eleven monthe and not more than fifty years in State's Prison. The child was taken from near bis home on June 21, 1810, and the prie- oner was identified as the kidnapper by two eehool girls. —_—_—_— WHEN CONSUMPTION between amechanicalarch rt and an Anatomi-; . cal arch support — one hurts, the other Helps... Treat your feet to apair of Coward Arch Support Shoes, and Feel the Difference. @ diagnosing in. He discovers the very earliest signs of the disease te yet in tte e med foi pily weed br ail “spsctaitete ‘Anderson. tha’ prom: «Dr. Consul agthing to find office consultation, ven wi Bescipist, 2 Houre--Daily, 10 to cre. ney sven we tit | vy 2, Valuable bag on ¥ address. i 264-274 Greenwich &., N. ¥. Free for the Coupon Two Splendid Photogravure Repro- ductions of Famous Paintings from the Great Art Galleries 'With Next Sunday’s World Mounted on Art Paper and suitable for framing. Be sure to order the Sunday. World in advance from your Bibnatiess oa i Bi.