The evening world. Newspaper, July 2, 1914, Page 3

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a Sof SLAIN ARCHDUKE, | AND DUCHESS. Bodies Taken Ashore at Trieste From Warship and Carried Through the City. | GIVEN CHURCH BLESSING | Placed in Mortuary Chapel Car of Train Bound for Vienna —Mourners Attend. | TRIESTE, Austria, July 2—An im-, Fosing demonstration to-day accom. | panied the landing here from the Austrian battleship Viribua Unitis of | the bodies of the assassinated Arch- uke Francis Ferdinand and his con- sort, the Duchess of Hohenberg. The entire community thronged tho shore or took up positions on board the craft in the harbor at an early hour. On the San Carlo Wharf a largo space had been kept freé for the two catgfalques, which were draped in gold and black. On the left stood the generals and admirals and other officers of the army and navy with the commander-in-chief of the Austro- Hungarian navy, Rear-Admiral Oskar Hansa, at their head. On the right were the Governor of the Maritime Provinces, Prince Hohenlohe-Schill- ingsfuerst, and many other state and municipal officials tn brilliant uni- forms covered with decorations. An enormous gathering of members | of various societies and deputations representing shipping, commerce and different trades, all the Catholic clergy of Trieste and the clergy of other denominations had assembled, | and behind them was drawn up a naval guard of honor, while the whole | square was lined by students. The two coffins, shrouded with na- tional flags, were transferred from the battleship to a barge draped with black, which was towed by a tender | to shore amid artillery salutes and the tolling of church bells, which em- phasized the profound silence of the great multitude. ‘The guard of honor presented arms as the coffins were carried to the catafalque, followed by the members of the households of the late Arch- duke and Duchess The Right Rev. Andrew Karlin, Bishop of Trieste, assisted by a large number of clergy, blessed the bodies and a long procession was then formed, The coffins were placed on hearses, each drawn by six horses, + aches filled» with| two ‘ wreaths ed the procession, with | the priests following. Behind the rse marched the members of the households of the Archduke and Duchess, the Provin- | cial Governor and a long procession naval and military officers, etvil Nofficials and delegations of all kinds, | with two companies of soldiers in the rear. On its way to the Southern Rail- way Station, whence the bodies were to be conveyed to Vienna, the pro- | cession passed between dense masses THE New DESIGNS SHOULD “SPARKLE §=wWiTH COLOR * ™meE 4 “Set Piece errect Tey SHOULD SuG6EsT ENERGY No Straight Lines; All Cones, Triangles, Spirals Fe - SIDES and Circles — Shirt Collar, Coat and Trousers Must Be Pointed on One Side and Round on the Other. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. We're not going to have @ noiseless Fourth aftor all, dress has arrived in New York. As little Gertrude Stein would remark, way. Ralph Herz, and It will be sobbed Hiss M Herz's habiliments. I had a shuddering memory of that most famous Futurist m plece, “The Nude Descending @ Staircase’—otherwise known as Staircase Descending a Nude.” the subtle appropriatene: Futurist man's carlet tomatoes of a Broad- Hope in lightning, hope in bull-fights, hope in Sylvia Pankhurst, button sweetening into symphony. ordinary, not co-ordinating with chorus girl Which is merely the Futurist way of writing that Futurist man’s dress has arrived, Broadway will first see the costume draped about no hope in vanilla tcecream. A All this, and not Broadway will realize as never before of this comedian’s name. in echoing unison by strong, sane men 4 aonaus after they have cast one terrorstricken glance at Mr. ter. The Such being Futurist undress, I dreaded to! think of what Futurist dress must resemble. But it became necessary to learn the worst, And this is what the Futurist man's dress will be, according to Mr. Herz: “A comfortable, un- symmetrical suit made in one Piece with one button, twinkling with colors, brilliant, vivid colors, no straight lines, all cones, tri- angles, s is and circles. Shirt collar, coat and trousers must be pointed on one side and round on the other. There must be no so- called good taste and harmony of It seemed to me that that latest stipulation was supererogatory, in view of the preceding requirements, but I didn't dare interrupt the ecstatic Mr. Herz, ONE-BUTTON BOOTS AND PATCHED HATS THE THING. “Boots,” he went on, “may be white or black, with white spats, but they must have only one button, ‘The hat should be gray in color. Perhaps a straw hat soft, and black, white or| hadow lace c mes, with chif- ruffles. An dmirable desi A pressing energy would termed all over with little T. R. jac well dressed Futurist man wou! For his impetuous suit the naturally choosc a “militan' sprinkled with hatche' hammers and bricks and fringed with bombs. With the Futurist wardrobe will come the Futurist shave, an individ- ual whisker; likewise the Futurist hair-cut, a pyramid on one side and a tonsure on the other, Really, the possibilities are uniimited, And they're all as 1and merr: the wonder- ful bi fast ordered by one of W. Locke's heroes—poa: eggs, rasp. berry shrub and absinthe frappe. Si eatin J. DUNBAR WRIGHT'S $1,100 CUFFLINKS FOUND Artist Makes Light of Losses of people, All the men stood with| May be worn, Every Futurist hat Not Wishing to Send Valet, uncovered heads and most of the ahovit be AERA with Sea Confessed Thief, to Prison. women wore mourning. Lines of in- | M4nts’—patches or decorations o! fantry and bluejackets alded by mu- | UFlizht colored material in place of the! Detective Bernard Dietsch of the nicipal guards and firemen were | drawn up along the whole route. ‘The buildings were mostly draped | with black and all the business | houses had been closed during the time of the passage of the The coffins reached the railway sta- | tion at 9,80 and military honors were there rendered by a detachment of a} composite regiment of Bosnians and Herzegovinians, A number of naval petty officers placed the coffins on a railway eur which had been arranged a8 a mo tuary chapel. Bishop Tryphon Pt derzolli then gave another blessing and the doors of the car were scaled, The members of the suites of the dead Archduke and Duchess entered other cars and the train departed for v where it is expected to arrive | lock this evening, VIENNA, Austria, July 2~ the | solemn ceremony of blessing the | bodies of the murdered Archduke and | Duc hess is to be performed at 4/ jock to-morrow afternoon in the| parish church of the Hofburg in the presence of Emperor Francis Joseph, the members of the imperial family, Prince Henry of Prussia and other royal personages. The children of the dead Archduke | and Duchess aro to arrive In Vienna, en Baturday. eeeeeneieieenden ROBBED LETTER BOXES. Prisoner Who F Checks Telln How He Worked, Aage Christianson waa held tn $2,500 bail by Magistrate Levy In Harlem Court to-day on his confession of robbing | apartment house letterboxes and forg- ing indorsements on checks he found in the letters, He was arrested by De- teotives Horan and Donat One Hundred and Pitt station last night on a ‘ocession. | atl wed and Cashed | who had canted a j for $66 for stiunson after the signa- fihevot Limus F Worden ir, ‘had been forged on the back. | ns, post-office inapectors and ave been hunting for Chris- plainta whose Of Washington. Helghita. peo did not arrive. The prisoner con- d that he followed letter carriers and fished mail out of the boxes with | 1 wire hook. | ful | Puturist conventional ribbon, “The shirt ought to be of white silk or batiste, down collar pointed on one side and round on the other, as I have said. We want to abolish the heavy black | dress suit that has the appearance of mourning, and with it must go all neutral, pale and ‘pretty-pretty’ | tint But color we certainly want. Man's dress should be twinkling with bright hues, and the dress it- self may be gray so long as there are vivid colors with it, “There must be no symmetry, no stripes and straight lines. The designs must suggest en- ergy, impetuousn and move- ment. No dress should be too durable, for it should be our aim both to encourage industry and to give animation and pleasure to our bodies by renew: ing our clothes constantly. “The Futurist man’s dress must be easy to put on and easy to throw off. A man’s costume should be use- to him in moving about; not something that irritates his nerves and enchains his muscles, Also by- giene must be studied, as well as simplicity and comfort.” AS MANY VARIATIONS AS IN A GAME OF CHESS. Isn't it an enticing vision? And \there are so many possible variations, For the despised evening clothes the may substitute a “White Light” suit, all sewed over with bril- ants and repeating in its patterns the illuminated signs along Broad- way. Our approaching national holiday suggests an “Independence” suit, This would show most effectively the “twinkling colors” of which Mr. Herz so strongly approves. The trousers would be developed in a pattern of skyrockets, the coat would have pin- wheela on one side and flower pota on the other, while the sleeves would display a tasty set of Roman candles, | fr, tt To avoid the curse of ty gentlemen might durabil- pear in with a soft turned! East Fifty-first street station re- covered to-day a set of diamond cuff links stolen more than a month ago | from the home of J. Dunbar Wright artist, philanthropist and lecturer o No, 41 East Fifty-tirst str Mr. Wright, overjoyed by the ery of the links, which he says are worth $1,100 but which Dietsch appratses much higher, has asked the police to drop the matter, saying that he does not want to send the confessed thief, his former valet negro, to prison, Still the police are looking for Scotland. not trouble himself at all with the management of the house, devoting himself almost altogether to k in conjunction with Mrs, Helen Gould Shepard for the education of orphan children, Detective Dietsch yesterday at No. 9 Columbus avenue Scotland had pawned them for $11, or about one cent on the dollar, An or- der compelling the pawnbroker to give them up wa. obtained, Mr. Wright placed the sum of his losses at $3,000, but Dietsch said that if all the stolen articles were under- found the links ——— GETS TRIAL SEPARATION. Daughter of Madison C. Peters Given Decree for One Year. Mrs. Dorothy P. Stevens, daughter of the Rey. Madison ©, Peters, who re- cently sued her husband, Harry A Stevens for a, separation, had treated her cruelly, won a trial sep- aration to-day when Supreme Court Justice Kelly gave her a decree for one year, After that the couple are to try to patch up their diMculties, ra, Stevens, who Is living with her aD Yo, 1822 Glenwood road, | her gon, Harry A charging he dry, is ng ht iirevens ives et No: 844 Azgyle road. James Scotland, a} Mr. Wright, who is a bachelor, did | valued as the cuff links had heen, | the sum was moro Ikely $5,000 or $6,000, m | F. Tehnefone_ RE. EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1914, FUNERAL HONORS TO Futurist Man’s Dress to Be a One-Piece Suit |INER FROM INDIES HIRED FOR “MOVIES,” TRS SORT STOW * With One Button and ig Penk in Colors THE FuTURIsT MANS DRESS DRUG USER IS SENT TO ASYLUM FOR CURE; ' FIRST UNDER NEW LAW. He Fell on Knees and Begged for Morphine, Magistrate Herbert Street Police Court sentence In the Centre to-day or the first time imposed under the new Boylan law giving Magistrates the right to commit drug users to hos- pitals for treatment, He sent Mic Flaherty to the asylum at Central Islip, L. 1, for treatment in a new ward established there for habitual users of drugs, Flaherty is thir graduate of Holy Cross Academy in| North Adams, Mass. and a lawyer] and magazine writer, He was an ath-| \lete, though the constant use of mor- phine has almost destroyed his fine physique He told the Magistrat’ taken morphine first when he broke his arm and neade a drug to the 4 him to ale He shu to abandon its use Jot his arm. Policeman Lowe found him in the gutter at Chureh and bey werk ago and when he him then before Magistrate Flaherty fell on his knees four yeurs old, a| that Iwo years n and not been after the healing streets a arraigned Herbert, nd begged | for morphine — Probation Officer Weeks investigated his case while the man wail in the Tombs and reported to-day that Fluherty had | told the truth Many friends were but they that it would be to a hospita!, and Islip declaring he w and hoped he wy in court to-day, did) Flaherty, rhim to go left for Central sald try his best ald be agreed st cured. SHOT UP WIFE'S PICTURE AND THEN SHOT HIMSELF | She Finds Her Husband Dead When She Breaks In After They Quarrelled, | Joseph Garbarino shot a hole in al pleture of his wife, showing her in| her wedding dress and then put al| bullet through his own mouth about 10 ofelock last night, His wife, Anna, | found him dead on the floor of their | home, No. 288 Hust One Hundred und | Twenty-first street, this morning, — | They had quarrelled on Sunday, and taking the children, a boy, seven, and a girl, four, shé went to live with her sister in the flat above, She couldn't get in when she went to her own flat for some clothes and called | & policeman, who broke down the door, | leaving ‘GOT CAUGHT IN MOB OF LONDON “FURIES” AND TELLS OFT HERE When Victim Was ihty Wen dralines| Mite clemto tsps site oto Arrived To-Day, Says She Had to Do Some Dodging On the White Star steamer 0: ante, arriving this morning from Soeuth- fast, ampton, was Miss Jessie loyd, Ex-4 There are few old men left in Sar aminer of National Society of Domingo. It is pathetic. The old men valeal E don. Miss Cannot run as fast as the young ones Phyaical F and slowly but surely are being wiped Lioyd Is str culture and {8 strong for woman's suffrage, but abhors militanc which she didn’t enjoy shortly before London, has increased the intensity of her feeling against mili- taney She went to a militant meeting Hyde Park to dissuade a friend fr attending the gathering, kne the danger of it. A mob ch militants and the poll mob, Then the gale arrests of them from the ra Bricks were flying and Miss Woy | had to dodge them, raed the police and sho had to douxe ti An experience pollee 1 “furl of the peopl. mob, “E tell you I did some dodging,” she sald this morning, "It was an awful fix to be in Nobody knew whether | was a militant or not, ‘The police didn’t care and the mob was past all reasoning, fF wrigeted through the crowd and finally hid in a doorway until the danger and the crowd had passed. ‘The militants have lost all the sympathy they had won and without publie opinion nothing ean be accomplished.” Miss Lioyd will remain in New York a short while and will then go to Portland, O., whe has relatives GIRL. GRADUATES WEAR THEIR OWN COMPLEXION” s Is an Institution of Le Not a Paint: Factory ey Were Told. Paint and powder wera not to be non the faces of the girl gradu. ates of the Bayonne, J, High School. ecently Mist Maude Oldham, a member of tha faculty, took her fair pupils to task for resorting to beauty aids. “This is an institution of learning neéonet a paint factory of portrait gallery," Miss Oluham told the youns ladies, adding, "we do not desire to. wae ( fashion plate models in this ard the young ladies will refrain from spotting their ylextons with rouges Interesting {nnovations at this year's commencement exercises wero typewriting and hat trimming con- teats. Miss Dorothy Van Winkle won the hat trimming contest. ‘The types writing contest was won by Edward Jacobsen, who wrote elghty-five words a minute PPPERED BY SHO ~ IN LATEST WAR Navy Came Out in Tug Boats} and Told Algonquin to | | Go Away. 16 ADMIRALS, 6 SAILORS. Land s Killed Brindle Bull. | Battle Fierce In One With fearsome tales of black—oh, very black—war, the Clyde line steamship Algonquin arrived from Puerto Plata, San Domingo, and points south, ‘The Algonquin was in the harbor of Puerto Plata when the U.| 8. gunboat Machias dropped a few the camp of El Presidente esteging the city by way of} hinting that he must not violate the rules of civilized warfare by firing explosive shells into an inhabited city without giving non-combatants a chance to escape. Tho sides of the Algonquin show the dents of bullets which were not| moant for her, but merely spattered over from the constant battling ashore. | “Here are ne of the thimges that i Chief Enginer George | , Who has been going to! tho West Indies for years, “When we were trying to get into Puerto Plata three tugboats came out and told us to Ko away, They were manned by sixteen admirals (at least they wore full uniforms of admirals) and six plain sailors. We asked why | we must go and th id th | the navy of the revolution. gh away. “A bunch of y were So we! Declare | called up the city’s employment agen- jof the agency says, offered | Brooklyn, where the pictures were to 200 HUNGRY MEN SAY,| TNL SUE C08 ; AND NOT PAD OR Fe HANGS SELF IN el tiny We ey Were to | Second Death in Pa in Passaic Prison in Week, as Result of Come | pact of Prisoners. Taken to Ulmer Park to Pose, About two hundred hungry men to.| When Arthur Masker was found day are hanging about the Municipal hanging in his cell in the Passaip Einployment Agency at No. 27 Lafay nty Jail at Paterson, N. J., last otto street or in the enlghborhood Of night Sherif! Amos Radcliffe selg/ in Deepa, Ne. as Wut sive that this explained why the prisoners, fifth street, demanding that they be | When assembled at the supper table, bald 75 cents each for services ren- | drew strawa. dered, “Masker drew the short straw and M. M. Feel it was therefore his turn to die," sald Motion [the Sheriff, “This satisfies me that {there is truth tn the reports IT have ey on Tuesday and sald he wanted | heard that @ suicide club existe In between 150 and 200 men to pose in a! the jail, Masker had no other reason moving picture yesterday afternoon, | to kill himself than that he bad taken He agreed to pay them 75 cents ala secret pledge to do so as a memuer day, Mathew Dobbins, the manager | of the suicide club. He was serving to pay|only ten days for disorderly condwet their fare to and from Ulmer Park,|and would have been released t@> day.” Another prisoner, Rudolph Straus- berg, killed himself in a similar mam. ner Inst Saturday night. The report | then reached the Sheriff and the ers that he was a member of a club that had been formed in the and that he had killed himself cause he drew the short straw at the supper table that night. When the prisoners were observed drawing straws at supper lest the Sheriff was notified and a was kept on the prisoners. A making his rounds at 10 looked Into every cell as an precaution. It was then that he Masker's body. Masker was a young negro of char acteristically happy dispositiet. Strausberg was awaiting trial fer bigamy and his troubles might have weighed heavily on him, » Who represented the Picture Players’: be taken, and guaranteed meals. It was explained to the men who began to pour into the agency bright and early yesterday that they were to resent a mob scene in a strike and that they were to be attacked by litia, Feeley told Dobbin he would be on hand at 3 o'clock, He didn’t appear, At half past six last evening a young man, who said he represented the moving pleture concern, entered the agency and tried to explain that the trip to Ulmer Park was to be postponed indefinitely, “But we've been here all day; we're hungry and broke, You have kept us from looking for work and fo Isewhere,” declared of the lead- ers of the angry two bundr License Commissior is up the r Hell has nge its mind afte Judge Ben Cohen formed an Agtt- rc h the municipal em-| Suicide Club In Paterson some ple ney to secure u stated months ago and already there are number of men, us went to visit a| >—-- several hundred sa hiee oot of endo ary 01 : a sulci [stavoris "on our way tuck 1 aquad |CITY HALL WILL BE GAY persnded by hm Fae to sbandan of revo! jor e vol » tte te in 5 Vint we. hatter they came town] UN BUNTING ON FOURTH) Conn ‘win visi the sat to-day ana |with « lot of old Springfteld rifles land snapped them at our tummies and kK their fists at us a told us to stick to the ship, ‘They were all generals, so we hurried right | They had a battle on the beach were lying off San fought all day and fire rounds of ammunition and killed a old brindle bull who came out to seo what was going on. | “Phere was a more serious battle the next day. It did not last so long, but four spectators were killed up on. the bluff back of the beach, They their muskets from the hip. They sights off Amerie: Di they caught in th and kept the soldiers from run out “It is bene army are genera jevery one of them has a little boy to | trot alone of him and tote) his third officer, Louls J, H ashore one day when d out and found dle of a feld betw ints and the ¢ lay down in hin fists arinies ceased try to enlist every prisoner there club. Ablaze With Electric Lights at Night | === and Skyscrapers Will Be Li the City Hall @ grandstand has be eb erected. ‘There will be music (aa Up, Too. apechmaking on Saturday, The City Hall ts being primped, ieee ae Borough President Bes painted and decorated wit o| ing pal eu igi Aten ieee ital ene Week ue chy Hal wit $ or oO! oe strung about eo City jal Striven in honor of Independence Day. | Tirned on and the structure illumi dex, the electricians are stringing thousand electric light bult ated from basement to cupola. This acks are paintin WIS and | wit be a signal for the skyscrapers Te tadae. ATbOrt Cota ea teat? |in the neighborhood to Hght up in ee cgiik tahi aalaeee the it thirteon- | ibnor of the day. Uptown tall buitds Heenan Norkin of Non 226. fect: | tage will take the cue from the Woot: sed LA Raat One| worth, the Singer and the Mintelpal Hundred Got! Fitern witaet: Tulldings and add to the general ef- A fect a m1 Macorias sald they battle on his plantation. in roecane, and he had to stop) and tell them to go down te al pasture about two miles from. the ranch house, Huta stray shot hit his k and he had to order them off altogether In Sanches we were a steam Ipled to squirt carried peace pine with it WHAT A CHANGE TO SPOON) ON THIS SHIP'S VOYAGE! Is With ands Bachelor he Patria S: 355 Unmar- ' 1 Girl on Board, Patria of day for The steamship Line riled terrancan ports, gives being the spooniest ship departed trom New York the abe Meat promise of that ever Of the 267 two whieh ra only venty men only two And two of th WOMEN passe ried and of the re morried unny red men are tmluisters! A group ¢ pretty school teachers on their sun mer vacation, sehen they found) how many bachelors there would be on hoard, that the unmarried nave thelr arms ried have been ay Pothiers of F and to christen a new ship of th bre line. This ship which will hat being 0 the line, lon, Fra The delegates took with them some old flags that had been used at ship launchings 100 years ayo in New Eng- jland, named the Pre of the ports of nder construction at Tou ‘ A reai | Ron 10 cent Cigar | f at the | ‘ “800 Store Price.” Media Perfecto Size, 4-for-25 cts. Box of 25. $1.50. TODAY, TOMORROW and SATURDAY With Every Purchase—no matter what— amounting to $1.00 or over a beautiful Silk American Flag. UNITED ..., | CIGAR ili i BcicAns NI STORES Alexander's ‘| Shoe Sale Women’s Low Shoes The Ostend shoe--one of the season's pronounced successes—in patent leather with white kid back, gunmetal with gray buck back; also all patent leather or gunmetal, Formerly sold at $5, $3.65 Big cartety of pumps and Colonials in all leathers at same reduction,

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