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* tint fe also at work on play for Mise Ne Ferguson Dianche Hates wilt have a new play by Michael Morton. The manuscript & comedy on the order of the earlier Jones pieces ond ts as yot unnamed, Kista Vorquscn, through an anno- Clation between the Charlies Frohman Corporation and Kiew & Erlanger, tn now on it y to America. Marie Doro will be seen in & new play by Wudolt Homier, beat known as the au- thor of “Lady Patriots.” Marie Tempest, Wrancla Wilson, Ann Murdock and Graham Mrowne will appear at the Lyceum, beginning IN OF 1915-16 BUSY ONE FOR OD ~ FORMAN STIRS New Concern Keeps Nearly : Mept. 6 in @ double bill made up of 1 Adds New Ones. Duke of Killicrantie.” After a single + teanon in theme plays, the mtare will each have @ play, expertally written sy —pa Contrast Ie the Effective Thing in Feminine Dress, and in These and Awning Stripes an Artfully Simple Frock Ia Alluring — How One ' — wil write hie own play; Ann| Of Taffeta Silk. rock will new Porter Kimerson Hrowne play end Graham New York Theatricals to Be Hrowne will appear in one by Henry Kept Up to the Usual Artie Jowen High Standard. dete Cn ph sontinue in pinytng « brief seagon at the Koick have a Counrigys, W818 ym jem Yorn To appear suddenly in an entirely different atyle of costume is one of the mont effective things a woman can do in the way of gowning. The heroine nderson- Donald Brian- Cawthorn combination will "The Girl From Utah,” Whe Fecentiy formed Chartew Fron.|erhocker and then visiting vitien [Of efinollne days usually precipitated whioh the organisation did not reach |the tragedy of the love story when MAD Corporation te planning © buAy | juni year, Th she appeared io the ellnging, reveal. will return lo New 1 eddy. frohman Corporation wo projectn with Dm | Season. Thin Announcing an unuMUAlly ine promramme for the 1916-16 Theatrical term. Maude Adame will) The frat will be a pro ‘The Girl,” by George tn & repertory of J. M. Marrie including “The Little Min. | 4 The other will be an Her,” and a new one, Mhe will come tion of @ well kn produced as was Kmpire Theatre Christin Bthel Harrymore to appear ing lines of the riding habit, In & neanon, therefore, of bouffant skirta, tight bodices, awning stripes and fimy nots, an artfully almple and Unpretentious little frock like the one 1 am showing ives opportunity for a niraat, ‘The design choowen © ao humble an origin am the apron, but of course dindains the use of the same eort of material ie where distinction ts Taffeta wilk, which ts al- ways honored by the mont elaborate and expensive of creations, revels in this opportunity to assume the role of chief benefactor to this frock, It raines It to the ponaibilitiea of srhoon wear, to faunt its unaa suming Individuality at garden par- tles, toan and outdoor entertalnmenta. Moat of the (affetan are made ao yl eoft and supple that one can ge ly William Gillette | tell them: fr the #ilk-fAnished y the house and then! jarde which gather so prettily for rew will apponr there until y full wkirts, Hutt por quality Maude Adama begina her enna nt he prettier for this dean, Though Otie Bkinner will follow Minw Adama, ! there la a nh weave being multe NEW YORK BOY HERO OF |i," MONT BLANC ASCENSION)’ =a DESCRIPTION OF FROCK. Anthony Hill, Seventeen Years Old, 7 First This Year to Climb A plain little Empire bodice of the Great Peak, oheck ailk which ja out to a low aquare yoke abandons its prerogative fan alcoves, ao that more straps of the milk trim the shoulders, They aro GENEVA, July 26.—Tho frat aaoon-| emph od by a piping of colored silk sion of Mont Blano this year waa to match the check, which continues made yesterday by Anthony Hill, a/from the edge of the yoke, In de- neventoon-year-old boy of New York, accompanied by @ Swine professor! and a guide, Excellent weather con- ditions prevailed. The climb was a Hobart, This attraction will be oun, John Drew will w play by Arthur Pinero, Gillette i to carry out the > Promise he mado Charles Frohman ia for & brief period early in at the Empire in “Kherlock and “Heoret Hervios.” A tour noIpAl cities will follow and » Gillette will devote himncit Purmuite totally removed from the theatre. Otis Mkinner will star ino : ry Arthur Jones, Itt» t on at will appear in a new play Hubert Monry Davies, author of Amother Wngliah drama- fonry Arthur Jones na,” a comedy au nennon; a Mich> by “Kings and Qu nin ael Morton come: Alfred Bute man,’ by F lone Wokhart New municat comedt written for the Ch rn poration ok a hold W Won Kern, Ma Victor Jac bave been Including Drew hocks, and even a M@htful contrast are the ruffed elbow sleeves of shoorest white organdy, A ny Ineid io of the organdy, which allows the neck still to be low, aup- diffiou ne the snow boing knoe] plies a refreshing daintiness, deep e summit, ir Mu ° Peace atbeal i Geneve. is) Tho effective outline of color ts utll- ised axain on either aide of the nar- Mont Blanc, or White Mountain, in TOW belt, which at the side seams celebrated ‘peak of the Alps, of (eraakos its dignified intentions and 4 of Piedmont, Italy, The “rope carelosaly in stream tying low down in back, The skirt of this model depends as much on the apron tunic with its patch pockets as it does on the white organdy ruffles for its charm, The tunio Is but medium full, as is also the foundation skirt which holda the three ruffles, That the patch pockets in assuming the tunic material may . | not nh thet tural trimming been made so ¥ outlining of mM around all but the open top edge The ruffles sk nothing but a narrow hem. The . ae wenerally accepted, ts 2 foot, TON, July or motoroyeles tn the rural de- rvice te prohibited by an "way,at John St, 0 Av., 18th St. h Av., 28d St ty | needed ot tection for (i the parcel post The order * cy r) sin bad weather, 000 carrion Fulton St., cor, Bond St Days of Bouffant Shirta} : Arrest ee eas PEPE T SRC Se ee ow Interpretation at the right combines flowered chiffon cloth with net in a very admirable way. The apron effect, being of chiffon cloth, takes no rinks with its frivolous nature and guards all ite edges with a narrow taffota band. ‘This should be of a color seen in the flowered p: rm, The tiny inside yoke, " skirt ruffles are mip- plied from Apple green taffeta matching the leaves of a flowered design would be @ pretty color to use imming ban di repeat In a to narrow width In front by having to pass through nar- row atraps, but In the back it ties ina large bow, adding an effective trim- ming touch. ——————_— LIEUT. ARMSTRONG DEAD. Detective Dies tn After Long Mines, Lieut, Edward J, Armstrong, long @ noted detective In the Police Department, died in Bellevue Hospital this morning after ma f operated po pital, Baltim: Armstrong was appoin man May 9, 1885, and f or Byrnes's He made many important On April 11, 1895, he saved y lives at a fire in the apartment house No. 80 West Ninety-fourt For these rescues Armatrong re alice Departme’ dal, an well apectal medal from World. —— WILLIAM M. IVINS BURIED. Mark the Obse- Coremon| quies of Former Chambe Simplicity marked the funeral services of William M. Ivins at his home, No 145 West Fifty-elghth Street, this morn- Tho services were conducted by Rey, W. Montague Geer of St, Trinity Parish, mediate family and a fow vent. The burtal William Price Ellis J in the pressroom of The Evening W when it was first fasued and for many years afterward, died yesterday after a long fines at the home of his parents, Willam Price and Clara Jolly Bills 1 be held at his parents’ —_—— OBITUARY NOTES. Henry Remington Curtis, eighty wars old, and until his retirement fen Dusinosa, fifteen years ago, a well-known shoe manufacturer and merchant In New York, dead of heart disease at the home of his son- y, Gardner Colby, in East home. Charles L, Lambert, Clerk of the Seventh District Municipal Court in Harlem, ts dead at the age of sixty- elght years at his summer home in Red Bank, N. J. He had held this court clerkship for more than thirty years. \ Carl Rosenfeld, one time Now York theatrical manager, is dead tn Berlin, muel Walker, lawye! ‘ormer ton, N. J. Police Commissioner, er member ¢ Trenton School ard, and former member of the New Jersey State Domooratic Com. mittee, is dead at the age of sixty years at his home, Highlands Pines, Tituaville, N. J. He bad been il five years. , Flavell W, Sullivan, Civil War vet- former Newark Street Commis. sioner and for years Seoretary of the Newark Board of FYre Commissioners, is dead of a complication of diseases at his home in Newark Sherwood de LL. Tillotson, proof- reader on the Sun and formerly a prootreader ‘on The World, ts dead at is home, No, 1362 Seventy-ninth Street, Brooklyn. DODBED4E ADDED DDD DE DEDEDE DOD IEA DEE IDIDOD IDG AAAI ADIDD EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 26, 191 Original Home Dressmaking Designs . By The Evening World’s Fashion Expert TO WILSON’S NOTE eee e ee -OOSS U.$. HAS NO WARRANT TO CONCEIVE WAR WITH GERMANY, SAYS BRYAN “To Fight Now Would Be Like Challenging a Lunatic Asy- lum”—Hits at Roosevelt. SAN FRANCISCO, July 26.—Will- jam Jennings Bryan, former Secretary of State, 1s of the opinion that those who are looking for “the big stick in the Scriptures would think the writers of Holy Writ were mollycoddies.” He thus expressed himself in an address last night at tho First Congregational Church, He did not mention Col. Theodore Roosevelt by namé, but bis address was full of obvious references to him. The keynote of Mr. Bryan's address was that the United States has no warrant to concelve war against Ger- many or any other European power. “To go to war with Germany now,” he said, “would be like challenging an insano asylun “There 1s a phrase about speaking softly but carrying a big stick,” Mr, Bryan continued. “The man respon- sible for that phrase never found it in the Bible, and his reputation as a wiske man could never depend on that alone, The trouble is you can't find a soft voice with a big stick. If a man has a soft voice he doesn't want a big astick. Lf he gets a big stick he loses his soft voice.’ Mrs, Jane MoNeill Kerby, mission- ary worker and Probibition leader, is dead at her home, No, 683 St, Mark's . Brooklyn, Mrs, Bettie J, Hill, wife of the Rey, Bugene Hil lor of the First Re- serene Of a of Garfield, N. J, dead after a lingering illness at Dome ln GarfelQ, ia! ‘ee Pattern No. 2.7§e—Sfert Coat, 94 to 44 Inch Bust Measure, | | OOSS6-03 ENGLAND'S REY S MADE PUBL British Uphold Policy of Plac- ing Restrictions on All Neutral Shipping. WASHINGTON, July 26. —-Great Britain's reply to the American note| of March 30 protesting against en-! forcement of the orders in council received here to-day. It holds that orders are within international law, although they may involve a new application of principies, and argues that it is proper to await a judicial interpretation. The new note, in the most cour- teous language, holds that Great Brit- ain’s aotion ta justified by decisions of the United States Supreme Court fn cases arising during the Civil War, Any differences with the United States over what is termed the new application of principles are held to be proper for submission to Judicial settlement. Secretary Lansing to-day an- nounced receipt of the note, but made no announcement of its con- tents, It will be forwarded to Prea- ident Wilson, at the Bummer White House at Cornish, N. H., and will be given out in Washington for publica- tion In the morning papers Wednes- day. The British note is @ long, exhaus- tive legal discussion of each point made in the American correspondence. Its keynote is a declaration that the British Government haa steadfastly held to the broad principles of inter- national law in all that has been done under the order in council, and that if & neutral government feels aggrieved at the application of the order there is a remedy in the courts or, even- tually, in arbitration, Generally, it is held, that when a neutral country or port ia made a base of operations against a belliger- ent, the other belligerent is justified in blockading such country or port. Tho action of the United States dur- ing the Civil War in blockading the British island of Bermuda is cited as ® warrant for the action of the British Government in_ preventing goods from reaching Germany from the United States through Denmark, Holland or Sweden. ‘The original American blockade on the west.side of Bermuda proved de- ficient, the American warships w stationed on the west side and throughout the remainder of the war no goods were permitted to reach Bermuda that might be transhipped to the Confederate States. That ac- tion was sustained by the United States Supreme Court. The new note makes the point that the only way to ascertain the real destination of supplies from America consigned to those neutral countries is to consider the amount of goods consuined In their normal trade, for it is contended that the smaller north: ern European countries are so mucl in fear of Germany that they fafl te prevent, through actual embargoes, the reshipment of such goods Into Germany, On July 17 the United States gave notice that it did mot accept the or- der in council as a substitute for in- ternational law so far as It affected American commerce. It was in effect a reiteration of the statement made in ithe American note of March 30 and Oct. 22 that the United States Gov- ernment “will insist that the rights land duties of the TWnited States and {ts citizens In the present war shall be defined by the existing rul ternational law and the trea’ the United States, trrespective of the a ation of London.” fonable features of Cen and wraps make fash- “i silk or of wool, as occasion re- Quires, 19 one of the real necesst: ties. Here is a model that is ab- solutely plain and simple, yet which takes the very newest and smartest lines. In the picture it is made of striped taffeta, with the sash of plain colored silk, and that mater! ie being greatly used for sports coats, but it can pf course be copted In glove alll or can be copied @ilk and cotton eponge, for this last material makes exceedingly smart coats and is greatly liked for many oc- canton: at n be had in a yer: ety of si ‘and consequently it contributes to the picturesque ef fect that makes such a_ notable feature of the season. The coat ig a perfectly loose one, with the sleeves sewed to it at the long shoulder line, The patch pockets are arranged over the fronts. The sash confines the fulness at the waist line and the fronts are underfaced. fronts can be rolled over to any depth or but- toned up as the special oceasion requires. For metorhng, Eaperdine an rge are much liked made this way. White is a favorite and white has the t advan- tage of being wearable over any costume, but blues also are and indeed a variety of colors. Corduroy and fine too are lo materials for coats of e , #0 that there is a very wide range of choice offered. For the medium size will be the still simpler ai ches wide, 3! with 2% sash. for the 8730, is cut in sizes inches bust measure which restrict neutral commerce was | PV | Stern Brothers | t2nd and! 43rd Streets, West of Fiith Avenue Further large reductions have been made to effect a clearance of Women’s Summer Shoes providing remarkable values for to-morrow: #4.00 and 5.00 Pumps and Oxfords, at $2.95 Plain or fancy models, in a variety of styles, in patent leather, dull and colored kidskin leathers; sizes incom- plete. $6.00 and $8.00 Novelty Pumps, at $3.65 Plain and fancy effects, offering a wide choice of models for selection; sizes are not complete in every style. $5.00 Sport Oxfords, - - + = at $3.85 of white nu-buck, plain or with trimmings and foxings of atent leather or tan calfskin; also gray nu-buck with Binck calfskin trimmings; incomplete sizes. Mid-Summer Rug Clearance now in active progress, on the Fifth Floor, offer- ing the best grades and weaves of Eastern Rugs and Carpets in all sizes, At unprecedented price concessions. The Annual August Sale of Household Furniture begins Monday, August 2d, and will continue throughout the month, including our entire stock of The best standard grades of Furniture from the foremost American and European manufacturers Offering unquestionable economies at 10 to 60% reductions. Selections can be made at sale prices To-day and the remainder of the week and deliveries will be made later to suit purchasers FULTON STREET. BROOKLY Raising Cash--- Sacrificing Stocks In These: Wonderful Store-Wide RECEIVER’S SALE The creditors must be paid a large amount of cash quickly for the gel teegreg of this business, so the Receiver in Bank- ruptcy is selling the goods on our shelves and in our warehouses At Tremendous Reductions! Now in Progress: Receiver’s Furniture Sale at Big Reductions from Usual Prices Remarkable Sale of Rugs, Carpets and Linoleums Women’s Tailored Suits & Dresses Reduced Housefurnishings Sacrificed And in Fact, Savings All Through the Store 50 JW Stamps Free With Purchases of $1 or More Tuesday, All Day And, in Addition, Cut Out This Coupon. DOUBLE a, Bi Ceupon ie good for 60 (PLPTY aoc STAMPS with purchase og Cesare FRE) In Morning. f $1 x a ely or more to-morrow, These 50 FREE Stamps are of the Single Stamps in ind as those which ordinarily obtain witn doer varekene A. D, ATTHEWS' SONS, INC, Eve, World, 7—26—15, To appreciate the con- venience and great value of the Sunday World's . Want Directory--- READ IT. ‘