The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1913, Page 22

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~~ PUREMATS SIN . HELD FOR HOLDUP +N PROSPET PAR Magistrate in Auto Caught Him ‘When Fleeing From Girl , Victim. pn ooo ‘Arthur Dutfer, a flashily dressed, Ghort and stocky youth of twenty-one, ‘the son of Police Capt. John Dulfer of ‘the Richmond Hill station, was held in $80 ball to-day in the Flatbush Police Court on a technical oharse of va- Grancy. Before he could leave court, young man. ‘When Mies Anderson éafled to appear court and it was learned thet i bir fe i E & & e ul Pees Bi ; H tie fit ity [ : fr : | iE rE 2 il 2 f FA 1 Hi F : i il i : 8 i rH ¥ E s z 5 Z g 5 : i at } We il! i i i § New, Striking Designs in Bath ing Suits for. Lodewick Evening World Readers by Mlle. Decome most any one, particularly the more matured. The waist part is cut with an open front, showing a tatlored Be Made by Home Dressmak- ers at Little Cost. shirt effect of white silk which buttons down the front, and has a tiny collar Gnishing the rather low neck. This could be attached either to the at each side, or, with a better could be loose from the watst and attached to a lining which holds the bloomers or tights. A pretty color scheme would be bright blue satin for the suit, with black bands to finish the t and skirt opening, trin.med with white buttons and eyelets to correspond with the white silk shirt, A gay Roman gash could be draped on a girdle founda- tion, which will secure it at the desi.od ‘width while giving a slight stay to the figure. The tiny sleeves, in one with the waist, are open on the top and Graped into a bow of black satin, whose ends cross the arm and tle. A slight draping !@ also confined at the left opening of the skirt just below the belt. re | Delightfully out of the ordinary is t costume at the extreme right. It has no skirt part, but the voluminous bloomers are apparently finished with @ heading, which peeps above a wile crush belt of contrasting: col same belt material is used for i & 5 if inf itt 2? der yoke to which the blouse part !8/on the sitting figure. It has the ever wathered, A square yoke is formed in front, but in back it is made round ind finished with a flaring ci hich &@ novel idea for one havin, neck to conceal. T ii if back, which continues into revers in the front, but the stylish cutaway pep- lum fs used on the skirt, which stamps it as purely up to date. A rather wide, straight belt of the dress material end- ing in points on each side front, with @ button on each, gives the effect of the peplum, also the satin fief tit strapped across the top of the arm with a@ ribbon covered rubber band. This costume would be pretty developed in black satin or mohair, with yoke and sash of red silk polka dotted in white; ‘The design on the large figure will or this trimming material could be of some cublat allk pattern, “‘Nun’s Cap’’ Adopted by Paris | The Very Latest in Evening Wear, 22.2 13 ists tneve now laced at the front, is worn ted blouse, which the colored allk, red or plaited ‘onto the belt, and a suggestion for the This cual ich cross each to the opposite e akirt on this model may be plaited or plain. Brown silk, satin or mohair could be used to develop it, wit? red or dull blue satin collar and other trimmings, while brown stockings and shoes laced with red would combine well with @ cap of brown. As blue is ‘universally liked, many will like to Mt for is suit, with red collar, cuffs, &c., and @ front vest portion of white striped in blue, while a cap of bluc and white stripes could have In the front one of the new rubber flawers in red. rial, braided in some bright color. A youthful atyle for any age is shown Nine people out of ten should have their eyeglasses changed every two years .,, Sometimes the continued wearing of appropriate glasses will improve the vision until a different lens becomes a neces- sity, and again, the natural processes of time will cause your glasses to grow “too young” for you. If you wear glasses, it is a mistake to defer having your eyes re-examined by a competent eye doctor (an Oculist, NOT an optician) every second year. Only a skilled and experienced Oculist, such as I retain on the staff of each of my eight stores, can advise you correctly in regard to your eyes, he Harris oculists are all physicians, and their examination and advice will save you the ° customary fee of $5 or $10 charged by the private practitioner. » ofan Glasses, including this eye examination, cost from 2.00 up. OpXical Ttouse of Coullsts ondOticlane . € 54 Enat $3d St., near Fourth Ave, 27 W. 84th St,, bet. Sth and Oth Aves. 54 Went 125th St., near Lenox Ave. 442 Columbus Av 70 Nassau Bi A Willo'by, Bklyn. {20'Fulten Sy opp bs & 8s Bulge O07 Bread th., eer Hahae’a, Newark. ‘The very latest headdress for evening wear which hus appeared in Paris has & touch of the religious about it, not only in appearance but in name, The ‘Nun's Cap” is made of rare old lace and set with diamonds and precious stones. ft gives to che wearer that peaceful leok- which these who are devoutly religious have. fashionabdle sailor collar effect in the) RUSHED IN AUTO FROM MILLIONAIRE FATHER Found After Eight Years, but Spirited from Watched House —$25,000 Ransom Named. Just as detectives had telegraphed H. A. Kapit of No. 41 Park Row, attorney for Solomon Novak, a millionaire mer- chant of Argentine, formerly of this city, who has been searching the coun- try eight years for hie missing daughter, Lena, that they had located the girl in Syracuse, she was smuggled out of the house which they were watching and has again disappeared. Eight years ago, when Novak sepa- rated from his second wife, it was stipu- lated that Lena, then eight years old, ‘should remain in the custody of Mr. Novak's brother, Israel, of this city. The stepmother’s family, with whom the child lived at the time, did not surren- der her, but, it is alleged, kept her in hiding, and eluded detectives by trans- porting all over the country. The attorney for Mr. Novak saya that when the girl's stepmother and her relatives heard Novak had become rich in Ar- gentine they decided to hold the girl. In a recent conversation with a rela- tive of the girl's stepmother, Mr. Kapit says, he was offered information regard- ing the girl's whereabouts for $1,000, Mr. Kapit then obtained a clue which Mke eines come and I like to 1 while the de- | close pursuit, the girl as far as Weedsport, twenty-two miles from Syracuse. It is eaid that @ ransom of $35,000 ls demand- ed for the girl. Mr. Novak is eure that the girl been kept in ignorance of her pi age and has not the slightest idea @ wealthy father is trying to locate her in order that he may send her money. traced would institute habeas corpus proceed ings. a CONFESSED FIREBUG REPORTED TO BE INSANE. Holly Pialt, Who Set Houses Ablaze for Pastime, May Be Sent to Matteawan. Holly Plait, confeesed firebug who atarted fires for the eake “of seving the engines run” and who assisted in sev- eral rescues at fires he started, will probably never be tried. Judge Foster, in General Sessions, announced to-da: that he would appo! commission to examine into Plal A. McGuire, Tombs pi & report to Jue Foster in which he sald he was satisfied Pialt was incom- petent and unable to consult with coun- eel. ~ Pialt was arrested in the tenement at No. 1561 Third avenue on June 22. He was hiding after having etarted a blaze in the place. He told with no hesitancy how he had started five fires in the neighborhood of the Third avenue je. Pialt was indicted yesterday for ar- @on in the first degree and was ar able that ten No. Try ——_—_—____— Taught One School 48 Years, MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., June # After teaching echool for fifty-five consecutively, forty-two of which were passed in the same school house, Will- fam H. McElroy of the town of War- i, teaching Men’s and Young Men’s Clothes Valaes Without Equal I Am To-Day in My AUGUST Forty Beaches of Jersey | reduction Sale await your coming on “The Fourth” | A Friday Fourth means a week-end holiday. It is a welcome break in the working days of early Summer. the real vacation. It is 20 easy to get to the Shore. Afternoon trains of Thursday set you Asbury Park, Spring Lake, and all the inter- mediate points on the Upper Coast as far south as Point Pleasant and the Barnegats by supper The morning trains too start at con- venicnt hours and make quick delivery. It’s a Matter of Three Hours to Atlantic City by through trains. There are morning and afternoon trains. time. equaliy as convenient stayer at 8 o'clock Sunday night. Then there are good connections for Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Stone Harbor, Wildwood, and | Cape May. Every Jersey Beach honors the Fourth This train service is available from Pennsylvania Station, 7th Avenue and 82d Street, one block from Broadway, or Hudson Terminal in the heart of downtown New York, and close neighbor to Brooklyn. Ask a Ticket Agent for rates and time of trains. ‘elepbone Now York “Madison Brooklyn “Main 2310” “Prespect 3100” as . 4 +203 Fifth At esOUVER BOER: BUR LAMY SEREchy? TM Avene PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD 7 It’s a bracer that tides over until down at Long Branch, Return trains | with one for the late- | Square TOOO” A Collar of Exceptional Style Blackwood: nm prucewood: vei ue) | 720 Suits, Giving the greatest values in two and three suits ever offered in New York. Two factors have brought about these conditions. Plainly stated, I had in- tended opening 5 new stores this Spring and had pre- pared an EXCESS STOCK OF $321,000 for their equipment. Un- avoidable illness prevented | me CA out my plang, and as the season advan: I had but one alternative— MOVE MY BUSINESS CALENDAR 60 DAYS AHEAD in June. A comparison of values will | save you money. THE REDUCTIONS ee, ta bho s] 6* now $19 {ron $B bnew $94.0 bnew sory.9 {now s29-8 1122 Suits, $25 and $28 Grades, fi the new yj shoulder, itch Hogi suit and Norfolk to plain, Black and Blues in conservative models, No Charge for Alterations $30 Grades, 310 Suits, 7.50 Grades, d %3 Grades, 42 West 34th. Bet. B’way & Sth Ave.) A ALSO STORES AT |, TEE WERE Meo Ber 4 / | ‘and give August reductions == # j y f |

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