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ot AMERICA'S. CUP DUE HERE TO-MORROW nian Shamrock IV. Will Get Few ‘Mals Before Being Hauled Out for Year. — Gtr Thomas Lipton’s cup challenger @hamrock IV. is due here from Ber- @ien Rernate Sg of August 11 re- @sived pro penis § Postponement until 1916, mit which we entirely ones the more grave conditions which have arisen since sen: you Accept Brobably be sailed next July. T. R’S REST CURE ENDS. ‘Wl Speak to the Progressives at Hartford To-night. OYSTER BAY. Aug. 15.—Theodore Roosevelt broke hia rest cure to-day and left Sagamore Hill by motor pre- baretory to plunging into the campaign ia New England. bel the Pr tion'ae ‘Harton: Fortune to In PHILADELPHIA, Aug. three-quarters of a million dollars will be added to the Merchants’ Fund for the Care and Rellef of Indigent and Aged Wholesale Merchants of this city 15.—Nearly Catherine ntle Cit through the death of Mrs. Richardson, recently at At 93 ye Her father, George Oliver, a cotton and woolen mercl a Ned thirty-two years jeaving @ for- fine ‘ot $100.000 which fi Will specified ahould revert to the fund upon the Geath of his daughter. Teste Money 0 jm Naval Ships. WASHINGTON, Aug. 15—The postal money order system is to be extended to naval vessels, as the result of an tanding reached between Secre- ty ot the Nav Daniels and eye] General Burleson. Enlist and hus will be enabled to ma o ® the a Check In-each caso which navy regular ton heretofore have required. ells Boy Smashed by Motorcycle. Max Drenstein, thirteen years old, cf No, 1521 St. Mark's place, Brooklyn, was atruck by a motorcycle ridden by Arthur Zimmerman of No. 70 Stuyvesant atreet, ar his home. ull tured and he was taken to the Hospital by Dr. Levin. fy doubtful. by Detective Owens seville station. His re- Zimmerman was are the cov rest Semeucrry’? i | Reapectable Girls Must Paint and Powder to Hold Their Own with Contestants in the Matri- monial Stakes, Declares “Mrs. A. T.” By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Where'ts the naturally pretty New York girl? And why has she been succeeded by the painted, powdered, sugg tively dressed young person whom we meet everywhere? Are the meretricious charms of this mafden another illustration of the law of supply and demand? Does the modern man really prefer the society of the girl whose complexion {s kept on her dressing table, whose curls are daily extracted from the top bureau drawer, and whose costumes crudely imitate the stage wardrobe of a burlesque belle? How do the men read- ers of The Evening World feel toward this wouldbe siren? Do they approve of her or do they regret her? I should like to hear from them on the subject, and also from the young women who refuse to resort to the make-up box. “What is the mother of the new swers have presented themselves. girlhood. Two women, ebviously mother and daughter, stood at ¢ trance of a certain popular garden, examining carefully the big framed photograph ef the latest tango steps..And each of the twe h halkily powdered skin, each hi improbably pink cheek-bones and impossibly scar- let lips, each displayed a gener- ous length of lean threat and ankle. One couldn’t help ir mother had copied effect or daughter had followed mother’s sartorial lead. We all know that the modern \daughter considers herself wiser than her mother. the latter now concurs in that opinion. Where EEMAINITS texnenteces WORST FORM “I had eczema in the worst form all | over my face, It started with a rash | like hives, and itched and burned so that | T could not keep my hands off of it. I could hardly sleep. The more'I rubbed hoe the worse it itched, and the more it read. Blisters formed, and when had pus in them. I looked ter- I would not let myself be sen. This ‘lasted for about three months, and | £¢ during that time I tried prescriptions, cold creams, camphor, etc. But it still kept getting worse, until at last I tried Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soop: THE FIRST APPLICATION RE- LIEVED THE ITCHING AND BU! ING. I purchased a jar of Resinol Oint- ment and a cake of Resinol Soap, and by the time they were gone my face was ntirel; li—my skin is as smooth and | ¢' joes Bape Y (Signed) Mrs. Phebe fed 1009 N, Walnut St, West Bay ” Mich. ol Ointment and Resinol Soap ara by all ruggits. Trial free, oes to Dept. 29-R, Resinol, Baltimore, saw in the subway the other after- wixte unusual to find a white-haired grand- ma with rouged cheeks and risque dancing frock. When both the older and the Bate rd generation set {mother such an example, who can wonder if ehe succumbs? EXCUSE THAT 18 OFFERED FOR THE MOTHER. ao the other hand there is the ex- for mother offered below by rt A. T." Mrs. Annie Nathan Mey founder of Barnard College and well known as a playwright, once suggested to me the same de- nse, “The modern mother,” observed Mra. Meyer, “doesn’t dare op: press the powder putf and the rouge pot in the case of her daughter for fear that the poor little thing will mise a fi je other girl with a Ides ious mother will capture © p sible husband from her.” on i the explanation, the mod- ee seemingly consults nothin, r own taste in the matter of Re personal appearance, taste is often incredibly There wan the Tittle. girl “whom I and her noon. Apparently she was fifteen or judging from the pretty red Marooned The New 20,000 Americans ested. The World's Guide to York World’s list of don owing to the European war f chas been prepared in convenient } form for those who may be inter- It will be sent by mail upon receipt of two cents to cover post- age, or may be had at any of The World’s branch offices. oD ZZ ZZ ZZ Americans CLALLALL ELIA RL PMLA held up in Lon- New York girl thinking of?” Already two an. One is offered in a letter from a mother printed in The Evening World to-day. The other declared itself when the artist and I were questing about New York in our search for unspoiled curls which were tied just back of But she wore a en silk profusely trimmed id with the high-waisted, 1g bodice which belongs to no one except the woman with a ma- i either shoulder. frock of with la closely turely rounded figure and is ridicu: the was a Anot over New adopting is the square blouse for street wear, sible person would a: wear a high linen collar on summer day. ‘een velvet bracelet. ‘ow no son least a inches below the line of the throat. And the favorite liquid whitewash was of course extended from the chin to the corsere, Even in her walk tne New York girl i aping sordid. | watched a4 tide street, through ‘whiel ie disappeared. She drooped heavily forward, with a regul » ewayin motion of her hips, ‘whl vwtide Sey 0 lied debutante slouch, but i Beaca ne in unpleasant resemblance to the it of thi fessionally Oriental in front of the ow. ‘Daugurer '8 CHANCE, Here are two letters which I have received. Jear Madam: You ask what t! New York mother js thinking of, that she lets her daughter put powder on her face and go out on the street. I believe that many & mother thinks only of her daughter's chance in life, of her future iness. When afl the other girls wear way clothes and do up thelr hair, and even make up a bit, the girl who holds back, or whose mother holds her back, is laughed at as Queer and old-fashioned. SI left out of the good time has to sit around at home or g out by herself, The boys .and young men to-day don’t care for tho quietly dressed, domestic girls, who are unacquainted with the latest tango steps, and who don't look stylish. Every good mother wants to see ‘ag daughter married and happy in home of her own. So she the girl do like the rest, in is age of sham and glitter and artificiality. The mother doesn’t really approve, but she finds it dimcult to object sternly when such objection means making her girl @ wall-flower, Girls and women dress to please men; they are responsible for the present styles. MRB, A, T. DOESN'T ADMIRE THE HALF- DRESSED PAINTED GIRLS. But In the same mail with this let- ter comes one from a man doesn't at all agree with it, He says: Dear Madam: I believe that I for many men when I say that I should never choose for a wife a girl not possessed of such modesty as my mother had. I like to see a girl who is well- dressed, but not half-dressed and patnted into the bargain. A girl goes out on the street fixed up like the wornan who Iives on her looks, and then she ge! sore if a man takes her for what she resembles. Girls wouldn't be bothered with attentions from the corner masher if they didn't in- vite those attentions by their @ress and actions, Me for the old-fashioned girl! DISGUBTED, iked yesterday. “Why does she permit her daughter to cultivate the appearance of evil by sensational dressing and the use of rouge?” rt fashion which girls all) York are precociously put evening any girl to hot But in an afternoon stroll up Riverside Drive I noted at dozen young women whoxo blouses were cut squarely acroas the front to the depth of tnree or four TO SPOIL HER When Mr. Field's in its vulgarity. lively, a bit. ailly differences. flat. A temperamental In the early morning hours the tenor went from bad to worse, in other words from the bed into the laundry box, when the young war- lord of the apartment returned, and an Irish servant displayed remark- able industry in carrying off suits of clothes left on a chair, Her activities grew somewhat monotonous, lacking the same variety that waa missing in the earlier sleeping scenes. But the play brightened up again and ended in much the same way as “Baby Mine.” Throughout the performance Miss Madge Kennedy, as the girlish wife who fairly invited trouble, was de- lightful. In her simple, unaffected way she not only won her audience completely but kept it interested when there was nothing really tn- teresting going on. Her April-like changes of countenance, a whimper giving way to a smile in a flash, were nothing short of surprises, She gave @ performance unusual for its com- edy and charm, As the dominant female intent upon training the tenor in the way he should go, Miss Ray Cox scored a hit that was straight from the shoul- der. Her sledge-hammer blows told every time. She had some of the best and some of the worst lines and she made the best and the worst of them, Personally, she was never at fault, but more than once the authors com- who! pelled her to be unnecessartly vul- war. No one expects farce to have the delicate humor of comedy, but in this instance the bludgeon was used repeatedly to pound out laugh, Charles Judels made the tenor a laughable compound of sentimentality and enthusiasm, and was particularly amusing in his attempts to burst into “Pagiaccl.” John Westley put too | great strain on himself as the young husband at first, but played a larize part In the fun as he went along. In the role uf a timorous bridegroor John Cumberland did a capital bit of work that even Grant Mitchell him- self could not have improved upon, The one colorless character, that of the suspicious bride, fell to the lot of Mies ‘Mabel Acker, who couldpake UPTO CHLLENGR Mother’ 's Excuse fi nie" 8 W iekecs Is: * story came out everybody's doing it—wald it would make a good play. Not having read | book, I don't know about that, but the result is a bright farce, more French than American in its technical cleverness, yet often painfully New Yorkish At the same time it 1s irresistibly funny and refreshing— | and that is a great deal to say of a play in this weather. almost cinematographic, view of some of thi apartment house life, with all but one of the characters as real asx that un- real existence itself. With an economy of material that in achievement, the authors have squeezed an immense amount of fun out of their story and displayed considerable originality and ingenuity, the plot in filmay to a degree, every conceivable twist and turn ts given it with a dexterity that leaves no doubt of the skill employed. mistaking the fact that “Twin Beds,” This ie largely due to repetition in the second and third acts. this respect the piece suffers by comparison with “Baby Mine.” humorous characterization it easily holds its own. As in “Baby Mine,” a childish wife and a boyish husband have their She tangoes and has everybody in the building into her Ho couldn't stand the phonograph as the curtain went up last night, but after the racket made by actor-folk in the lobby—it broke all records, Phonographic and otherwise—the noise on the stage sounded like a lullaby, or caused so much discord in the apartment that the sensitive young husband decided to move, and then, by the sort of coinci- | z= dence permissible in farce, the tenor’s determined wife moved him to the same house, and of course all the other tenants tagged along. tenor broke out of the bathroom, into which his wife had locked him, and after taking a drop too much dropped into his neighbor's flat and went to sleep in, one of the twin beds in the absence of the amateur husband, who was giving some one a loving cup at his club. oy Zp BY CHARLES DARNTON. N putting up “Twin Beda” at the Fulton Theatre: mat \ Mayo, without the ald of mosquito netting but with the Wri ing arm of, Salisbury Field to give her a lift, again proved herself the happy mis- lous “on & Mat-chested child., The| tress of the light-housekeeping drama. sleeves of thin frock stopped above Ibow, and on one knobby wrist Mersarat | nance ration ty everybody writing plays—and he It furnshes a ye and terrors of Itself is an While But there's no after a capital first act, “lets down” In But tn Then the nothing of It, ie Georgia Lawrence won a great Wany laughs as. the haughty Irish servant who thought no more of catching a burglar than a mouse. Altogether it was a jolly cast in a Jolly play, for undeniably, vulgar as it Ia in places, “Twin Beda” will make you laugh till you're tired. ——— BALL-PLAYING BOY KILLED. Ronning to Catch a He Is Crushed by Auto Truck. A high “fy” came sailing over the head of twelve-year-old Jacob Stein- berg. of No. 35 Market street, one of a crowd of youngsters playing “cat” in the open space at Market street and Kast Brondway, beneath the Manhattan Bridge, this noon, and the boy sped back to wet it, With eyes raised toward the hall, he did not see a United States mail automobile, driven by David Cohen, of No, 42 South Muin street, Portchester. in Street, Cohen blew his horn ‘and the other | igure boys screamed a warning, but young | 4% Steinberg seemed deaf. He backed | i directly In front of the automobile and was crushed benenth the wheels. Cohen picked him up and Dr. Phillips came from Gouverneur Hospital, but the boy was dend. — Kill Team of Hi + LANCASTER, Pa. Aug. 15.—While Benjamin Garber, a farmer of Lampeter Township, was unloading stone near a beech! veral bees stung hie horses, The horses retaliated by Mpesttinn. the hive, The entire swarm of bees then swooped down on the horses and stung uel so badly that they died soon after- What Would You Pay to be able 10 eat & good dinner without Distress? Buy « case of 12 halfaaiion bottles of MAN-A-CEAWATER ‘The Neturel Mineral Spring Water (Not @ Laxative.) and SIP a glass or two with your meals and in Detween meal whenever Distress avpears, If after using the whole case you have not dered soy Denefit from ite use send us dealer's bill and we will refund your money, Bend for Booklet, JANACEA WATER CO., 13 Stone St. H.F. ‘Phone 5180 Boon, 210, 1916 WARSHIP MINNESOTA, “It Is a Bait Would-Be Husbands Like’’ 1 FRESH FROM MEXICO, ANCHORS IN HUDSON Sailors in Constant Service Since Last January Get Shore Leave Here. ‘The battleship Minnesota arrived to-day from a long stay in Mexican waters, and steamed up the Hudson River to anchorage at the foot of Higbty-second atreet. More than 900 | {ectives, were unabl members of the crew made ready to! jonn divide up the two weeks the ship will | who is new in sing Sing, get | the rounded hin up wy Jersey City a few the Minnesota probably will go to ore nee Ifthe escapes ‘conviction on remain here. Everybody will seven days shore leave, after which Philadeiphia, her home port. Simpson down, everybody was anxious to hear something about the war. They kept their ara open, via wire- less, during the eight days’ trip from Tampico to New York, but heard Uttle or nothing about the European: turmoil. ‘The Minnesota left Philadelphia Jan. 2, Since the Mextoan’ disturb- ance began she has been dividing her time between Vera Crus and Tampico. She arrived at Vera Crus the day after the occupation last April and sent a battalion of 200 bluejackets ashore and alxty marines. Ensign P. A. Atevens and five sail- ors were wounded. For the last 11¢ days the Minnesota has been at Tam- pico, recently as Rear-Admiral Mayo’s flagship. Forty-three officers, sixty marines and 850 sailora share in the first real whore leave since last December. fome of the officers arriving are | Commander R. C, Moody, Lieut.-Com- | pane E. B, Fenner, ae 4 RG R. R. Chaplain J. M. F. McGinty. marines are in charge of First Lieut. J, A. Rosmell and Second Lieut. A. R. Sutherland. Mayor Mi Gees Heating. Mayor Mitchel started on his vacation yesterday. He will be gone four weeks on a hunting fishing trip in New Brunswick. During his absence George McAneny, President of the Board of Aldermen, {is Acting Mayor, Before leaving the Mayor signed the ordinance the Board of Alder- ren mane, Prandatory for al of intersecting streets, ‘The ovale Ba kes effect hep) L fe, Aus. yay of the unsettied ‘condition of the cotton market and fear of the results of » CHARLOTTE, N. C¢., 15.—Be- the war on the price of th Cannon cor i Highland Pi Charl some of the Gastonia mills, in all repre senting about 330,000 spindie, ere ran- ning only three reek. Dantch Liner falls from Copen- hagen Crowded with Ameries COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Aug. 15, —The Scandinavian-American liner Oscar I. has sailed crowded with Americans. Among the passengei are several millionaires who a! to travel in the stee we Yankee Diplo: Cuban. HAVANA, Aug. 15.—Francis T. Coxe, Second Secretary of the Amorican Le- gatton. and Miss Mercedes Mederos were arried here last night. SPECIAL OFFER FOR ONE WEEK poe ee Gee Plien Wae {eatoon ging iohnge rom, Te sentetat fare DaNGing. FREE 7 oun P eoeddal offer ia pert Se sit aie ce a Set a euaiae = fal DANCING CARNIVAL 201-203 East 86th St., N.Y. FLATS 4a APARTMENTS TO LET. ed— res Laas vented, tation soos: a ean ta ee HELP WANTED—FEMALE. FANCY FEATHERS, & Go, require experienced aot feathery baatery work. branchers, WAR MAP 0: EUROPE ins. Deep by 20 Ins. Wide 13 A SPECIAL PBATURSD OF TO-MORROW'S Sunday World work on LT wocuted ys a burglar, fourth offense, Contrary to the customary habit of | and may be itenced returning sbips, not a single person t Hunt Tobued @ grocery in Third on board the Minnesota heard “heavy | cvenua Brooklyn, ant March, getting firing” at sea. From Capt. Edward | (400, Z DANCING. ACADEMIES. ra Magazine SUSPECTED OF MURDER|3 “Pal” Says “Deafy” Hunt Killed Watchman Who Caught Him at Work. ‘Deaty” Hunt, sixty, years old, a peeaoenteni burgiar, is locked up at Police Headquarters, Brooklyn, hae cifically accused of burglary, but, of more importance from a police etand- point, reaily held on @ suspicion of| «= ard Detectives believe Hunt waa jeated in the murder of August watchman of @ coal yard ee, street and Pitkin avenue Feb. 18 last. Lehman was killed yes whom he ‘surprised at Tunt was suspected, but the de- to find him. information furnished by , @ former pal of Hunt, they got on crook and char, will be pro- seni to prison for has told the detectives TEAMBOATS, x Clear Skil aCe belt . Lis ReG PI ee For este at D STEAMBOATS. SUNDAY SAIL NEWBURGH, 10.00 A. Bas W. sega Boas Losap donb HUDSON ON NAVIGATION ON COMPANY Hudson River by Daylight on ty River Ds Dey Line \ wan eemmaoatti CONEY ISLAND go es tre bite a hate Inter-State Landings ALONG tam wee TO ALBANY 50c 48, North River; 5.30 2, CABITAL CITY LINE Phone Spring 6677, = (SHDGEPORT SUNDAY EXCURSIONS VIA MONTAUK STEAMBOAT O stawes MONTAUK” A Delightful Sail--120 Mil LONG ISLAND SOUND [SUNDAY EXCURSI ! FALL RIVER LINE MANAGEMENT STEAMER CITY OF LOWELL, Direct Service-to ROCKAWAY BEACH From Uptown N.Y. 3 " i ne Ne Pe pees, 4 % Ae f REESE OR m4