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t . + eran sear ane ge THE EVENING WORLD, JULY 4TH | Coorge C.Tilyou’ 8 STEEPLECHASE JOHN J. HUBMAN BATHING SUIT CENSOR DELETING \ Lore r CONEY ISLAND \\\ yerrecr The Funny Place Where It Never Rains The World’s Largest Amuse- ment Building— America’s Finest Pleasure Grounds— The Home of the Great Combination TICKET That Gives So Much for So Little Money $5 Worth for C Those New Official City Censors Insist That Fair Beach Mer- maids Shall Wear Skirts That | Come Down to the Stockings | and Stockings That Reach Up | | to the Skirts—One of Censors | Is Married and One Unmar. ried, and It’s the Unmarried | One Who Counts. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. HAT are the wild waves saying—somewhere—near Coney Island? They are saying (deleted by the censor), “Steady, Not quite so wild!” |investigate the censorship of Coney bathers, established the day before, I discovered very soon that there 1s W Coney Island bathing sult and that is a Coney Island policeman. At the station house, where I sought information first, the Lieu- jtenant in charge didn't want to tell | ine his name, though he was perfectly willing to acquaint me with all the censorship rules—a censorship insti- he said, by the complaints of d citizens who came to Coney For since Sunday Coney Island has had two official | censors, willing and able to tell you right off the reel just what sort of bathing sult is righteous and what is otherwise, and how long a skirt should be to be long enough. Now, a few years ago, charges of favoritism might have been entertained with some show of reason against Coney's police force But to-day, luet it be perfectly understood, at the drop of the flag, that Patrolmen ONeill and Hubraan, Coney's TEES pew official censors, attained their jobs through sheer merit—sheerer merit than the bathing suits they allow, by far. POLICEMAN O'NEILL ty married. oa Policeman Hubman js NOT. 80/or stockings either," the censor of will be ecen the newly created | Coney Isiand replied easily. too much for their money. On ex- cellent authority I was informed that, this Lieutenant's name was Thurston, but I had to wring it out of some these bathing suit terms keep com- ing into my mind? “The censorship wa: the request of eitizen: —— (deleted by censor). d What the Wonderful Badge Entitles You To: 1, Bteeplechase Horses stigated sald Lieut. We've had it 2. Beento Hallrond Coney censorship is calculated to ad-[ “Why? 1 asked, “Is it because | hundreds steed the ye nasal B. Carousel (Finest In the Worl mit all shad of opinion—as well they are more beautiful than women, ||. ten ONeill bie Hubman, 4. Ocean Koller Coaster . : i Sovtne Peters all shades of bathing suit or more modest or proper? What 1s| patrol the beach on Sundays ata 4, Miniature Railroad “Sure, we don't mind what color a itt I asked, For the mysteries of} holidays in plain clothes and warn 19, Crystal Maze 20, Roulette Wheel bathers, Who appear in immoral cos- | . Barrel of Fun bathing sult 1» “provided there's| morality always fascinate me, and eee POI AAA Patrounan Hub. “1 wear enough of it.” Patrolman John J.| here at last was a chance to solve|man on duty, Patrolman O'Neill is $0, eons peat Hubman informed me when 1 found| them, At least I thought so. out hunting up the parents of a lost ae oe ae ‘. * child. One censor is enough on Mon- | 11, Mysto Stairs him enduring with Spartan fortitule ‘Say, I agree with you on that,” re-| OO ew a leht day,” he added. 32. Kassie tle e o' "7 i} oO >, v 4 sd ae ees noes 4 paar ea) st beet lady - a! plied Patreinien daribie atte My YY HAT do you do when you fina pf gt renng] sont bathing sult standing oa her/such @ rallet not te have him say, ai iatebral Goalnnnn aaa we 1 Homan Ebel tome Haas head in the spin ut, take it from ‘you eu ied one . re ate TO lis an immoral costume, anyhow 16, School Dare (Free Festal Ca me, no one-piece bathing sults are) getten!"); “but we take the rules 48laskeq Officer Hubman, a sturdy | +4 La rset OO allowed on this beach, no matter who! they are given to us here, and the| young policeman with a Tommy At-| a arene | Wears ‘em, ‘Tho censors make thelr /rules {eno socks for women and no | own rules, and my rule is this: Skirts v socks for men. at's fair, jen't It? /arbiters of e and priety. 21, Bleyele Runabout must reach the stocking and stock-|On the other hand, we allow ladies toll her to get 22, Mix \ saat Aue e ukicta, Ne ete i ta, ned an't tell you what io an ng munt redch the skirts, No cute] to wear white bathing suits, provided [07 \mmoral costume iss added” the Za. hous towi little socks will be allowed at Coney | they don't pull any Gertrude Hoffman | gailant patrolman, blushing violently 25, Chanticleer Carousel Island while I'm around |Spring Song effects, but no white| and swinging his stick with a veloc- 26, Venetian Gondolas “Wha I exclaimed in astonish. | bathing suite on men are allowed,” ' wale h nothing else on Sart Ave 2%. Alrehive ‘are you not going to WANTED sk why, but c Ti heen D rival rc wer 28, Human Phonograph Slide Tesi Ake tpn pce SPins- 10) PAAR ELT fos y bul I didn’t! i) become m: lady, But I'n ak ‘Sased of Lave men bathers to w socks?" dare. You see, when I struek| tel) him,” he added, and forthwith he "Oh, they don't have to wear socks Surf Avenue yesterday afternoon to dtew The I ning World artist to one | Banana Sauté Creole. This New Orleans dainty depends a great deal on the delicacy of 1 the sauté medium HE quart tin of Mazola fits snugly into hs kitchenette of even the tini- est apartment. And since Mazola keeps perfectly under all conditions, there is every reason BR, New Swimming Pool BD, Elegant Bench 40, Aerial Slide 41, Free Plente Pavilion Sunken Gardens U. 8, Post Of BB. Band Concerts 54, Complaint Bureag BG, Gindys Chimes 56. Kose Garden o Staxe Sauté Bananas Cut four or five bananas length- wise and then across Brown in Magoia in sauté pan, sautéing the flat side first, ¢ out of fod feos mone and placein When all are browned add a tablespoon of butier and 4 Water Founts 2. Grand Arende a Gymaasium three of sugar to the pan, brown, 4: Water forte aan | for buying this larger quantity, with its | Sum? fm ia (he pee, Mews make a sauce, about a cup and ® half, Place the sautéd ba- hanas in this muce and let simmer 8 few minytes, then serve. De- licious with roast lamb, veal eutlet, or broiled fish filet saving in cost. Mazola is the golden oil pressed fram the heart of corn—a cooking medium as pure, sweet and wholesome as the most delicate food cooked in it. 25,000 Carnival Suits vided for this great event. We hope you will enjoy your visit to STEEPLECHASE, for we want you to come again. SPECIAL RATES TO CLUBS AND PARTIES Get the Blue Combination Finest and Greatest Bathing Plant in America. Beautiful Beach and 3 Great Pools. Day and Night Bathing. 5,000 Bath Houses 25,000 Suits Sightseeing Cars Take You There from the Depots FREE Iron Steamboats Go There Direct - { i pro- | For sautéing, for deep fryin, ing, for shortening, for delicious salad dressings and savory sauces— you find a dozen uses every day for Mazola. Mazola comes in pint ‘and quart cans and bottles. Ask your grocer and delicatessen dealer for the Mazola Book of Recipes—or write us direct. Corn Products Refining Co. New York jone thing that shrinks more than a), hat they could see, and saw | 9 | bachelor censor. king face, who is one of Coney’s two} rs TU ESDAY, sULY 8, 1917. 3 parr CARNIVAL Coney Bathers ‘May Stand on Their Heads, BEATEN KIDNAPPED But No One-Piece Suits for the pene AND PIT IN CAST, Bry Sunday SmOULO wave STAYED FoR, THe SWIMMING SERSOn” Passed ty Te Censor, side and conversed with him in low tones, What the two men said to |each other they appeared to relish, if grins and giggles are any sign of en- \jJoyment. But no part of the conver- |sation got to me, So, if you want to know What an immoral costume ts, |according to the Coney censor, it 1s in the picture to-day, if anywhere. I don't know. Apparently, e |man Hubman thinks I am too young |to know or that he is too young to | tell me. |Po you permit dancing among the bathers?” I asked by way of introducing a nitie topte, “Ot course I do. I've danced on the beach myself in a dry bathing sult,” the censor of Coney replied, y. It was left to me to infer there ls some subtle impropriety in dancing In a wet bathing suit, but by this time the blushes and v nt club swinging of Patrolman Hubman had made me wary, so I dropped the subject. “Do they have one married and one unmarried ce r to strike an javerage of opinion?” I asked, curl- ously. “It looks that way,” answered the “But when it comes to deciding the proper length of a bathing sult, they let me hold the |tape measure,” he added. “O" you see, is a married man, and might get him in wrong at home |He's a tine fellow, O'Neill, but we a) think differently on the subject of ©| married life. Why get married when you can have a job like mine?” the | censor added, refiectively. WAS unable to answer him #o 1 strolled along the beach till I | came to two young ladies fn bathing | sults standing on their heads in the nd for the amusement and delight of two young men who had with them, Patrolman Hubman told me at this point that if Annette Kellermann herself should visit the beach and attempt to swim or dive in a one-piece sult he would feel it |his moral duty to warn her away }from the | be but these young jadies—and v handsome creatures |they were too—stood on thelr heads with impunity, | The gingham girl of 1917 was every- | where at the beaches yesterday, She strolled along Brighton Be in a silk suit of gingham pattern with a pleture hat to match; she jthe surf in a gingham ba The gingham girl is c he is slender, and horrid wh is fat. The only real Lorelei 1 saw on ithe Coney sands weighed about 135 or 140 pounds. She had gorgeous tawny hair and a wonderful figure and might have been club bearer to Jupiter. Jupiter had no use for X-ray | Venuses you know, Summarized, the Coney censorship 1as established that your bathing suit must not be too short (they're wear- ing ‘em very short this year, Censor Hubman said); that your stoc inust not you're a eedn't wear uny) re a man or Wo must be in twe | Annette Kellerman, please notlee, | — “ASSERTS FEW MINUTES WOULD HAVE SAVED BANK | Partner in Graham & Sons Testi- fies He Has but $4 in the World. CHICAGO, Ju a Ralph f. Graham of Graham & Sons, bankbrs here wao failed, sitting before Frank K. Wean, referee in bankruptcy, to-day shoved a hand into his pocket. He drew it out, counted $4 and sworo that it was all the money he possessed in the world, Near! him sat his mother, widow of Andy Graham. | Mrs. Graham, a smiling and composed witness, had preceded him upon the} stand and there she nad taken oath that she had stripped herself of the en tire Graham fortune — thrown dollar of it into the common signing a binding agreement takes her all from her to bank's obligations every fund which moet the bank's was mine," she sald simply “And now all that is mine Is tre bank's."* Frank, who gave the word that closed the bank, told in graphic detail the story of those last hours. He made clear his belief that If he had been Given Just a fow hours, perhaps min utes, the bank » Opun to-day We owed 000 to differ ent banks ™ thought we were getting rid n the Continen surprised us 4 asin toon. The ntimental and ¢ nercial held about $900,000 of our collateral ia we were closed. bathed | “T have believed that all that was the | on my legs. 1 opened @ window, |@ave excise, motor vehicles, dropped to a roof below, made my ag secured debt tax receipts, way over to two other buildings and peld the | sep emoui thence to the street “I hurried to the office of the Waterman Fountain Pen Company in New York, where I fell into the arms of @ relative, still half daged, to find that several days had passed.” "In all my experience on the bench,” the court declared, “I have never heard a more mysterious story.” utah conderashie ‘GAIN OF $6,352,676 IN STATE'S REVENUES wreat e compared ‘with $1 The organization ee Votaited 91,9; 436 against $1,064, from the inheritan: st 791,960, or $1, 250 00 ae @,611, the largest since, “the became effective, exceeding last by $1,241,244 and the budget esti by $286,611. PLAYGROUNDS OPEN. Yarés ~ HERTELS COURT ss Case helene Swears May Go to Scho | H + i 5 Five Afternoons a Week, | ee serge age Total Collected From Indirect} ‘The 194 vacation playgrounds in te ter to Prevent Escape. nwa tt public schools throughout Greater New | Sources Is $53,489,999 aS | York were thrown open to-day to the . Agai 7,137,323 i . ehildren for the summer. ‘The groun@s | An Investigation 1s under way to- Against $47,137,323 in 1916, | ohiiaten tor ron 1 10, 5.20 o'clock » ‘ ‘ ALBANY, July 3.—Revenues re-/ afternoons a week during July |day of charges made at a hearing be- ine ae keate trom indirect | August. There will be physical train for boys and girls, kindergarten wor reading of books in and playing of games. Fourth of July will ‘be observed fn playground between the hours ef | fore Vice Chancellor Vivian M. Low!s sources during the fiscal year ending June $0 showed a gain of $6,352,676 over the previous twelve months, ac- cording to a statement of Comptroller | very | the schoolrooms in Pateraon yesterday by Emil Haber- man of West Hoboken, defendant in hie fy will be a sane \~ an action involving the estate of his Kucene M. ‘Travis, made public té-day of ising. patriotic. Kian cilia oui sania 7 total amount collected was! dances and the salute mother, Mrs. Pauline WMaberman. ¢:4 s59999 against $47,197,923 for interapersed with instru- Haberman testified that he had been 1916. Increases were shown In all music slugged on a ferryboat, spirited to a Bowery tenemgnt and mado helpless. ypespguy sisnejabedaiaii by the application of plaster casts to | his legs. Vice Chancellor Lewis adjourned the [hearing until July 23 and Instructed | Albert Leuly and Louls Massano, at- |torneys for Haberman, to enlist the |New York and West Hoboken police j!n Investigating the charges. ‘Girls! Juice of Lemons Clears and Whitens: Skin | Haberman is being sued by his | brother, Albert F., who was cut off Binnie oura seu iraie elt Prepare a quarter pint of lemon beauty lotion at the Will directed the division of $15,000 cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream worth of property among three chil- dren, Theodore and Carl Haberman — Sueenenenenene-enenentnenguanent ee ne and Mra. E abeth Nash, The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a , whole quarter pint of the most re- markable temon skin beautifier at about the cust one must pay for a as freckles, sallawness and tan and ft the ideal skin softener and beautifier, Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any pharmacy or toilet counter and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter due of tho estate was left to Albert F, Haberman swore on the stand yesterday that there had be an agreement that he was to re his share later Emil Haber man m sensa- small jar of the ordinary cold creains. pint of this sweetly frayrant lemon tional charges under cross-examina- Care should be taken to strain the| lotion and massage it daily into the tion by William Perlls of Hoboken, lemon juice through a fine tloth so no| face, neck, arms, and hands, It n@ counsel for the plaintiff, aw to why he JMR Pulp gets in, then this lotion | urally should help to soften, freshe had failed to file-an inventory of the will keep fresh for months. avery | bleach, and bring out the roses ant woman knows that lemon juice {s used beauty of any skin, It is marvellous to bleach and remove such blemishes to smoothen rough, red hands.—Advt. e within a year, Just prior to the time the Orphans’ Court issued citations demanding that the Inven- tory be filed he had disappeared for several weeks. For the Big Feast at “E was standing on a ferryboat, | the Picnic Party ve crossing to Christopher Stre New York,” Emil testified, “whe T was struck over the head from behind. dys When I regained consciousness I was in a small, din, room, with thick or how hard it blows. plaster casts on my legs. £ alice tne The Patent Swivel Clamp) was a negro woman, The place later bation. babaschinsl proved to be a tenement on the Me ery. The woman declared that she >a uce to was sent there to watch me, nd Tin. quired how I got in the » place hot and cold meats, You were hurt in an accident.’ alads, baked beans sho said. I tried to escape, but there (s iu iled d infringement. was no way out. Finally T heard a hard boiled eggs an " HOWES, Boston voice in the next room, which I rE alta bowl sandwiches. Grocers and Deli: teasen Stores Sell It. Made in U.S. A. at of my brother ash, who is a pollc »boke For Sale in New York by Gimbel Brothers R.H.N Annin & Co. A asonraerabe lett Lolo} American Flag Co. chair and smashed the plas’ Allied Flag Co. Bevo is a great favorite in the Army Canteens, where none but pure, soft drinks may be sold. After drill or march, you are sure to see a long line of hot and dusty-throated soldier boys making a bee-line for Bevo. They know that there lies complete satisfaction, full refreshment and pure | wholesomeness, At home or abroad —~at work or play — between meals or with meals, you wiil appreciate what we have done for | you in making this triumph in soft drinks, i You will find Bevo at inns, restaurants, groceries, depart- ment and drug stores, picnic grounds, baseball parks, soda | fountains, dining cars, in the navy, at canteens, at mobili- zation camps and other places where refreshing beverages are sold. Bevo—the all-year-'round soft drink Guard against substitutes. Have the bottle opened in front of you, first seeing that the seal is unbroken and that the crown top bears the Fox, Sold in bottles only, and bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER -BUSCH—ST. LOUIS Anhagset Basel Agency, New York € . Busch Bottling Co., Brooklyn, N pepe Busch Newark Agency, Newark, } GENERAL DISTRIBUTORS Families supplied by ‘dale