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CUT OFF FROM SEA BY "TAX’ AT CONEY Private’ Bathhouse Owners Boost Prices Beyond Reach of the Crowd. TIME FOR CITY TO ACT. Show Urgent Need for In- creased Facilities, Hard times have come upon the Coney Island bathhouse barons, ac- cording to the stories they themselves tell, but the average man who carries his bathing suit to the beach ond is forced to separate himself from $1 'o $2 for the privilege of hanging his garments on a peg in a stuffy little compartment while be takes a slunge among the claims with a very large grain of salt. There was a big crowd in the water and on the beach on Saturda fact to a cagual visitor to “the tsland’ it looked as if everybody who couid get away from the sweltering city had a dip, In spite of all tppearauces, how- ever, there apparently was no sesreity of accommodations for all wao winted to go into the water. An Evening World reporter and a photographer reached the seashore resort after 2 o'clock in the afternoon and made a canvass of. the bathing resorts for the purpose of discover- ing just how much justification ex- sted for the complaints which have come lately from those who claimed to have been “stung.” The Evening World men found that no combination existed apparently to fix prices at a certain figure. In the walk they found that every bath house on Saturday Sunday charged an increased over the preceding days of the and in a few ihstances the \mount demanded for accommoda- ions on Sunday was in excess of urged the day before. The price of a dip ranged from 50 cents na “locker” to $1.50 for a room. Usually there was an extra charge or the use of a bathing suit, 35 cents ‘or a woollen one, 25 cents for a suit made of cotton. A few places tacked on an extra nickel for the use of a towel PRICES POSTED, BUT NOT AL- WAYS CONSPICUOUS. It is only fair to state that at every place visited a scale of prices was posted conveniently near, or just in- side the cashier's window, which was temized down to the last detail, It is true that in many places the scale was typewritten, and might escape the notice of an individual who was bent on getting into the water in a hurry, but it was there, nevertheless, and if he thought the price too high, he could go further along the shore front and perhaps sind better luck, Leaving the Culver depot, the re- porter struck over 10 the sho At the Atlantic Baths, foot of West 9th Street, there was a big crowd in the water. At the cashier's window ‘here were just four persons in line, This was one of the cheaper places, the card calling for 75 cents for the usc of a room’ without a bathing suit ind $1 if the bather used one sup- lied by the house. This rate was based on “one or two in a room.” At Taunton's, next door, the rite was 0 cents each, without suits, one or wo in 4 room. Tae Giant West 10th ourse of the nearly ond week at ch ter Baths, foot of t, announced its St wil hout suit $1 each; extra, for use wool suits 35 cents, cotton suit 25 ents. Loeker_ accommodations could be had for cents, Suits were charged extra Just below West 19th Street, Peter- sen’s Pavilion announced its charges as $1 for room for one or two, with- out suits; children in room with par- nis 25 cents; suits cents each, One of the biggest crowds wos on the beach and in the water eff Ward's Baths. Here all comers were being iken care of without much delay, A 50 Long Lines at Municipal Baths waves will swallow their gone straight to the seasiore to take | charges for adults or children, room | Sal gree one en en serene nk PEN \ \ egy tions,” continued the cashier, ignor- ing the girl's remark, “and yet they kick. Stay here a few minutes and just listen to ‘em,” he said. STEEPLECHASE PARK FENCE STILL CUTS OFF BEACH. | Steeplechase ark is fenced in clear down to the ter, in spite of all efforts made by city authorities to cpen up the beach its entire length. To pass beyond it, a long detour is necessary. At the entrances signs ar posted announcing it as “the only strictly private bathing beach on the! i nd." For one or two in a room the charge is $1 each, Nothing addi- tional is demanded for the use of a bathing suit. While there were a considerable number of persons in the | water and on the beach, the crowd was nowhere nearly as ‘great as at some of the other places which charged higher prices, Ravenhall’s, which has always catered to the patronage of | who are well-to-do financially its rates as follow Sunday, two in room, $1 each, lockers $1. On other days two in room, 50 cents each, children half pri suits 25 cents extra every day, towels 10 cents, The locker rooms, it is said, contain forty to fifty lockers, “In spite of what some people may Say, we are not trying to grab every | cent we can get from the public,” said the clerk. “People come here quite often and ask for individual rooms. We suggest that they take a room together and save the differ- | ence. | | At the Washington Baths the big- | pest difference Was seen in the Sun- day rate and that charged on Monday and the four days following, On Sun- days and holidays there is a minimum charge of $2 for a room whether oc- cupied by one or two persons, On Saturdays one person may get a room for 75 cents, and on other days there is a charge of only 50 cents LONG LINES WAIT AT THE | MUNICIPAL BAHS. |_ The onty ' Coney Isia bathing esctablishment at nd where there were many persons on jine was the Municipal Baths, which was built by the city largely at the instance of The ning World and which is now in i cleventh year of operation, There were two lines, one of men and ane of women, Four times’ as many women and children were in line as men, but the lines kept moving alons with steady regularity, as fast as the attendants inside the building could take in the money and pass out the Ls ‘aturdays, Sundays and holidays there is an initial charge of 25 cents. The patron receives a card stamped the hour he or she enters and th receive a rebate of 15 cents if they leave the building within three hours, On other days only 10 cents is col- lected, and the bather may use the accommodations us Jong as he may desire, No tow or bathing suits are furnished by the city, but valuables re checked free of charge, The pre ent building will take care of about 9,000 persons at one An appro- priation has been made for an exten- sion to accommodate 3,000 more wom- en, and work on its construction wil} begin soon of the prices cha r ed down nm, with or without suit, could Some ; TOR AL; Uwe or more te rear Rotate are pretty steep compared each. Lach ore yee i with our schedule,” said an attache ne lackers were 50. conts we | ni there was an extra charge of 6{0f the Municipal Baths, “but they nts for a towel could hardly be expected to meet our price $150 FOR CHANCE AT SEA, suit)! “In days gone by some of the EXTRA. Coney Island pare neue » ke pare pes wther along, at n lieved in getting all they could, anc RENE RAE TS CHa ati A is no doubt the public’ was . , Mieht ‘done’ good. and proper, ney. no Lhe rea aoe ymieiiee Cte achkod their patrona unreason= ee ene ee come ween St Thaw, ble prices, sometimes as high as $3 Pied CCST OR ere BL) Are ay ‘out frequently crowded three or in extra charge of 25 vents tor « Tore into a room. ‘The week-d.\ mUling suit Dut No charge tor towels. crowd pald all actual expenses; the Martino’, the aext place visited! Saturday, Sunday and holiday crowds chatsed $1.00, with an extra enange Sthded pure velvet fo zo cents for a sui. Lockers > re)” ssinee those day's many additional 31. No charge for tow bathing pavilions have been erectes At Staueh’s the rate for saturday and this Municipal Bath has been { Sunday was $1.50 for one int guilt, We frequently aecommodat mm, or $1 for a locker. Wor cine 11,000, oF 12,000 and more in a sing ice The se Of a suit was ineluded day and on Sunday last our number wihod It tan to almost 16,000. ‘This establish ecking Up on the price list” ment has cut into the patronage o! i the alert cashier, “Be sure you the privately owned bathhouses 10 a yy Mistakes In the figures. We very great extent, With the city and + living Up tO our schedule,” he so many new biuthing establishments ed in the field as competitors, toset her Pie Siena Bathing accord: with the big increase in rents, hire Vr to its posted x charged of Jubor, increased cost of bathing ya poom 73 cents for Sanita, they have gut to change more nis for a ¢ suit than we do to make it worth con- ‘nd 60 Cells extra, according 10 tinnting business hether customers chose cotton or| “Added to this they ave required to . On other days the rates for take out a city license and to obey all ‘i are 50, 75 cents and $1 regulations that have been issued, one difference in price, aveording of which requires them to post their day one Wished to go bathing, seale of prices. And they have to Cy noted at Buschman's. With your live up to them, If they violate them vn sult the rate was 50 cents on sumebody 4 likely to make a com- Week days, 73 cents on Saturday and) plaint which might result in thelr ii i125 on Sun Lockers ure Nd, 60/cenaa being revoked. ‘Then the po- ‘nd 7a cents, A quarter additional is lice are kepeing an eye open for vio harged for the use of a suit lators, so taking it all in ail the p We don't believe In robbing the |le ls getting a better break than people,” the cashier sald the old days when the sky was ths Iietter not try," Said 4 pretty bru- limit and ‘bathers at Coney Island n che was one of # couple who. we wked for all the trafic would u cased @ some He plaves are no "We give ‘em good acoommoda- wo bigh, ete iL Aegean es BEACH AND BATHERS - mt tem weruntnmenee ny Ry CONEY )S.4npD ~ BUILDINGS CONFIRMED BY EDUCATION BOARD EXPERTS —— on Survey Made by Own Inspectors. CRITICS ARE UPHELD. and Relieve Hylan Ad- ministration of Blame. The to Hylan the charges of schools is out, from Anning S. Prall, neglect In the form of a letter President of of {President Prall Issues Report | Effort Made to Belittle Charges | Administration's reply the the Board of Education, to Mrs, Rog- ers H. and Programme group of civic orgauix made ut random, t cuse, a Inbe: ministration present regime of Hylan. Committee of ions. which reply is at once Bacon, Chairman of the Plan the 1 survey of forty schools picked an ex- denial of the charges, a de- ate attack upon the Mitchel Ad- nd a glorification of the As forecast in The Evening World a week ago, the nies or belittles th the civic surv for the Hylan the of But officials survey into the report jected t. In all fairness to President Pratl it! that, as he Bacon, he had no over the com- rts turned | must be admitted in his reply to Mrs special investigators to go ground in the survey, but pelled to rely upon the re} was sport in general de- charges made in unfortunately who first polities, an shows vir- rge made in the sur- in- stated n by the regular inspectors and other employ perintendents of Schoo! Buildings But Mr sible for the last four thirty-six page letter ouoted certain fig which |} sof the various Deputy Su- all is absolutely respon- pages of h is ne s and, instead ot sticking close to school subjects, threw the entire into thi th accountable matter politics, For thes must be held others the blame res Mayor Hylan’s Board Apportionment of fi Mr. for entirely BULK OF CHARGES. There original survey, in the reply. to the fact there wer pointed out by the civic were forty but only schools eld Pp. th in th 1 Me on Estimate REPORTS TO PRALL CONFIRMS thirty-eight This is apparently ne due defect investigntors n the two schools in Staten Island These schools are missing from Mr Prall’s letter. Here is a tabulation of the report of the Board of F cation inspec us related to the survey, "Yes" means approval of th: vharges; °No," disapp. oval, and “Pro visional® means a partial or hesita ng approval Yes. No. Provis Sanitation ional Manhattan 9 1 3 Bronx it 1 @& Brooklyn... a ee) Queens 1 1 tal 14 8 §—35 Repairs: Manhattan .... a ¢ 2 Bronx .. a 0 0 3 Hrooklyn af 4 8 Queens CLOG 9 0 Tot 6 423 Fire prevention Manhattan , Las Bronx ... A 0 1 Brook ‘ 1 if Queens ...., 9 2 oO Total R13 1 Bf ianhatt ne) Bronx vyssesees 1 9 0 ’ 1 ag 5 Brooklyn . 1 0 Queens...) en) Total one 10 2 o—12 ‘Teachers’ room: Manhattan .....005 8 0 0 Bronx vosesv ves ar Brooklyn ssse.se 1 0 oO J Queens... o 0 0 Total ...... M0 (Od Light and ventilation: | Manhattan ........ 0 2 Bronx sees oe 0 1 | Brooklyn 1 4 Queens ...... 0 0 "otal 1 4—19 Thus it will be seen that out of a total of ninety-five charges. consid- ered, fifty-seven were fully. con- firmed, fourteen partially confirmed and only twenty-four were abso- lutely denied. In compiling the fore- going tables several schogls ¥ e left out where the inspecto. dismissed all charges by saying a mew school was being built or was authorized, and a few were left out as being so abso sutely untrue to fact they could not be considered. But those schools upon which there were no reports from Inspectors more than make up for the two or three ieft out for the other reason, CONFUSION AIDS IN A DISHON- EST ANSWER HERE. It will be noticed that with the exception of teachers’ room and light and ventilation—a total of — two charges—the Brooklyn report shows more denials than Verifications. Tt must be said that the Brooklyn re- ports are downright dishonest—cither in absolute contradiction of feet or in the statement of partial truths, A striking example of the itude of the Brooklyn persons responsible is seen in the consideration of Public | School No. When the survey was made the or ganizations confused new PLS. No. n Driges Aventte and South Third Street with the old B.S. No. 50, now called P. S. No, 166, at Street, South Third Street Havemeyer ind Grand CHARGES OF UNFIT SCHOOL Street xtension They meant this | —E— fate is re port tor Me. Prail, must | VETERAN SCHOOL TEACHER ‘When “The Evéning World jnyesti-| ADMITS SHE'S SHOPLIFTER. gator went to the present PB. 8. No, 60 tinal ie found reed of ported—bi ion and for the I Upon in World nu Schlockow, paint FWYORK MILLIONS Urgent Need of More Municipal Bathing Houses | At Coney Island Showed by Big Crowd at Beach YOUTH AND GIRL the old annex greatly as, the inspector nt otherwise in fair used chiefly for sho district Attendance vestigation ‘The learned from principal of the a official Oswalt school, that the women who made the surve had conf neant tbe The deti Was corre Not oni who madi have four Evening must have known it, for le delibe xcnoo survey t 50 on Dr oonfirmat “New the Bus: or Th cifically. ¢ place P at Haver nsed—if pure 70,00¢ 21 yp used the other one in the two schools and a half mile away ile survey show he ct y could the schol je his report to nd this out World iny inspectot Mr. Pral but in His repor prately confused the In denying charges in annex to the new P. > iggs Avenue was used fol ion, ‘Then he added a note amme provided foi hase of the Long Islanc College at an estimated cos » to relieve this school 1 building programme spe valled for the $70,000 to re 8. No, 166, the old No, neyer Street. It is to the $70,000 is ever author etigator, twe the THE EVENING WORLD, MOWDAY, JULY 11, in ree cond\= H ning A r H Just as did The he t) No. r . d i 50 be jized and the owner consents to sell— now public school. trap and sights in n opportunity school, such a is, und not as ano} P. 8. No, 166 is a fire one of the most disgraceful the entire City of New York, It surely is no) monumi to the Hylan. Administration that the old BP. 8. No. 50—now 1 Is still in use and that the $70,000 was never voted to obtain the Long Island Bust. ness College Building. EVADING DIRECT REPLY DOES NOT MEET ISSUE. POS. N ported | Where ch have beer pector re to the De Gas and can be i amps if allowed" by that d However 6, 10, Manhattan, is not re von by the school inspector arges of insuflicient lighting n made in the survey the ins sports by 1g the buck’ nt of Water Supply city, ed by neres use of larg partment the bad lighting ¢ ing “lighting mplained ] Weather To-Day, | With the temperature in the sev. enties and cool weather for a spell Ft REN ate oe ee ‘ 1921, HATS, ARE OVERCONE Vitality Sapped, They cumb Despite Cooler Suc-} predicted, there was one death from hat and (wo prostrations to-day. They were of persons whose vitality had been sapped by the heat of the p vious week St. George Howard, seventy-three, a resident of the Mills Hotel, was overcome in Central Park and died while being taken to Bellevue. ‘Theodore Brown, vighteen, a loborer of No. 148 Kast 177th Street, and Mise Agnes McCormick, twenty-three, of] No. 119 S4th Street, Corona, were overcome in the Grand Central Sub- way Station and taken to tell vue It is estimated that more than a! million persons went lo (ne beaches about the city yesterday, ‘There were several drownings, she most unvsuni! being that of Mrs. Murgeret Hazleton, | sixty-eight, of Palisa . a guest | at the Hotel Shelburne, Brighton Beach, Overcome, she lay on the beach and was submerged by the in- coming tide Pleads for Mercy on Ground She May Lowe Pen Rose Guinan, day in Spectal Sesalons of a beaded bag from store on May 25, was Officer, Mary M in Public School No. 4, Park | Avenue, Hoboken, who recently ‘sold n| house she owned ‘at No. 710 Bloomfield #t, Hoboken, and bas been lving ‘then in New York hotels She had In her possession a number of ts written to. prominent W Street. men, asking for ald for a sick Hoboken tacher. said she had such Jetters, but had re- wers, ‘Bho probation had arrested be- na, gullty. to- the theft MoCreery Proba- ben who pleated to the said by in to 4, | tion teacher sine bee clemency pleaded for hare | would mean hool and loss of a p twenty years’ mer ice to which would become eligible noxt year Was remanded for Investigation story | ‘The |xaying from soner sonvietor of her —_————— SEEK THREE YOUNG WOMEN SHOPLIFTERS DE LUXE. ‘Travel in Fine | Touring Car. Detectives of the Parkville Station in Brooklyn to-day were looking for thre well dressed you who hay women en shoplifting in Brooklyn stores, Yelling about in an expensive touring car "The three entered the women's drews olomon at 1th Avenue . Brooklyn, Saturday af- proprivtor’s wife, Mra wanted on them. One as while the two wandered around the store. wore long coats. When they left pinon's attention was called to their strange actions by a customer and she discovered fourteen dresses had been xtol store of Morris and 54th Str ternoon, ‘The May Solomon, bought a leht summer dr othe ed « for tong contemp! the abandonment} of this build and therefore no made to rehubllitat school p attempt h in” Or, “A new of 8 lly was due to dark rooms {school building .is included in the) whi 1 insufficient natural iMumi- | programme ntly approved and ta Gas frequently was the only {adopted by the Boards of Education ttifiela! Hihting, for which larger |end Estimate tric lamps would have been of| In both cases the facts remain the Little use. schools are being used. And the tur- As to teachers’ rooms the inevitable ;ther fact remains, has n| reply, which was substantiation of the |pointed out frequently in ‘The Evee | charges that teachers’ needs were dis. [ning World, that the authorization of regarded, was “provision for teachers’ |the general building — programme | rooms can only be made by giving lmeans absolutely nothing, Schools} rooms f But t where awer any themselve ws: TM class ream purposes.” finest bit of sophistry cotors have refused to an the charges, contenti Ss with Some remark suc © Board of Education hi ERE, in parattet coluy spectors, under date Wortd found actually to exist | INSPECTORS’ REPORTS: | & 15, Manhattan —Just reac vated from top to bottom and is | in good condition i} Blames Department f Wate | Supply, Gas and pee ty for | charge of “insufficient ght.” a a nx—No complaint whatever received from principa and teachers that the fata are | not adequate and vanitary, | | Unobstrueted daylisht re | ceived upon three sides | | P. 28, Queens—No reply to general statement sarilery condi tion very bad, This failure to and ose *sureoy wes nat weverely critical + HOW BOARD OF EDUCATION INSPECTORS MINIMIZED BAD CONDITIONS IN SOME SCHOOLS what the of July 5, report to be some of the 40 schools condemned in the EVEN Ih aid M ind t painted, we mu tinnally June Lelind, no toil The y repaire modern hited ontrid Board of Education's in the recent survey of civic conditions 1 associations, and the conditions which an onvestigator for The Evening ING WORLD REPORT: isa Inox (the We mange te “ uinount cat urt burn th con Miss Knox, |* ee | Mibey Porter Principal, sent out report ignatinr There are et facilities for women. d toilets, though recent 4, not factory toilet ia needed." report Miss Toland Miss I ‘ from luck of painting tof ye Vounin i 4 a ae h 8 Contrast Between Their Reports and Proofs Gathered by an Evening World Investigator. athorized”™ in. 1918 still. waiting | |to be built, and of thi | in the “1 | programme” only a few have be put under way, The inspectors knew this, and so did Mr. Prall MAYOR CHARGES CRITICS SEEK TO HALT NEW SCHOOLS | In a letter commending Anning 8, Afghan Princess Likes Us; Neither Shocked Nor Bored By America’s Strange Ways {Our Unveiled Women, Styles and Short Skirts, FATIMA, SULTANA | Dancing in Restaurants and Public Places. rn BUL, Equality and Freedom in Association of | Young Men and Women. THESE New York Gayety and Confusion and THINGS Hustle. | INTERESTING | 1.3 She Enjoys and Likes Them All, By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Your short skirts, your unveiled women, the dancing in public places of your young men and maidens, their freedom in working and associating together, your gayety and confusion and hustle—nothing of it all either shocks or tires me, I have found nothing in American customs that does notMiterest me and that I do not like!” Her tall, handsome son turbaned, | terested J acting ax her Interpreter, but her] terested in the education of women. | college, the first of its kind, is about : as shini happy ex- q black eyes shining with happy to be opened in my country for the r plump face wreathed Princess Fatima, Sul- Afghanistan, who has citement and hi in smiles, the tana of Kabu women there, and Lam very much in favor of it.” ‘A woman"—Mohammed Hashim ! - y way of| Nan explained the viewpoint of him- just arrived in New York by way Of) Joi and his mother—"naturally wante San Francisco, thus expressed in| one man, all hia interest and atten- words and looks her complete satis-| tion.” It Is not fair that she should ange WO o share him. The Mohamme- faction with the strange Western] lave to & dan law permits a man to World she has invaded for the first Foclalo oom) bere Sues wives, but does not compel him to do time, She and the three sons are en and the tendency among those of route for England, where the boys | 'y faith as our nations progress and stil be educated ne into closer touch with the RL eeu eenn | world is all toward the one wife for Nothing has shocked the Princess—j one man." hot even the things which so appal] “Isn't that partly a matter of \economy?” 1 suggested. “I've been our local crusaders, She is as splen- told so.” didly tolerant of new impressions as denied the young man. “Here any New Yorker whoxe motto in life] It wotild be due to economy; no man op nie in New York could afford four wives, ies DU ep anyening on Tam sure, But in Afghanistan, COSTUME 1S MIXTURE OF| where one can live on 10 cents a day, AND FRENCH. even a poor man can keep forty re peli cpeneen ity. ever] Wives. ‘That is one of the differences No more picturesque royalty ever) Kerween our country and yours, An- visited us that this great lady, wholother i that, though there is Prohi- be. the name of Mohammed's fa-| bition there and here, in Afghanistan. vorite wife, and who looks—half of ; YOU cannot get wine—in America you her, anyhow—as if she might have] Ctr Ret It stepped out of the pages of the Ara-|NO OLD MAIOS WHO HAVE TO bian Nights, ‘The other half is as ey OWN sled Appa la » aeeenn «| “Phere are no old maids in At- Parivian ag the French maid in the] gichittan. he replidd toy another drawing room comedy query. "Most of the women marry The Princess's skin Is a pale olive, | early—at about and if they her eyes black and sparkling, her] do not their f brothers or teat white, ahd. aie: f& Ho plumper Stuer relatives take, Gass. of therm and ee ee een ious] Work. Personally, I think all women eee ee ene ater ons ate a (onould have the chance to stay in carefully corcted, | ter ener: their| (Holr homes, where they are hap- Dit browner n their pleat.” complexions sug: guards at the beaches st the popular lites A woman,” Princess Fatima an- All three are ed the question suggested by the slim and straight, wearing conven-| fret that. she gas made this. long tional lounge suits and skillfully | journey across Mulf the world to ac- twisted turbans of dark stuff, witt| (iinpany her three sons, "is always & touch of color somewhere In the} happiest when she is a happy wife folds. pe oldest gon is ut least $1 and a mother. Mother love is the feet in height and has a fine profile” most beautiful thing in the world. and splendid brown eyes, Toe second, | ut Tam sure that women in America Mohammed Azim Kh is seventeet feel that, as much as women in Af- and the third, twelve-year-old Me | ghanistan, hammed Akbar Khan, is a charming, “we treat our women with more sober-faced, brown-eyed youngster, deference,” the gon explained again, When 1 saw her, the Princess Fa-| than women receive in the West. tima wore a Bort of tunic of rose. “But you don't give them a chance pink stuf, brightly figured, with el-/to marry the men they love," I sug- bow sleeve und cut to show her gested, Are not all your marriages plump throat and the necklace of per- arranged by the parents?” fectly matched pearls about it, The es, and I think that is responsi- tunic was trimmed with heavy gold ble for n oh un ppiness and many embroidery, and, besides the pearls, troubles," gravely replied the young the Princess tima wore six orna Prine “LT belleve in your Western ments of beaten gold, like tiny shal- jy rriage for low boxes about two inches square, Are you going to make that kind?” containing sacred writings of the 7 asked audaciously. “You are @ Mohammedan religion, fh had three Prince, and you should set the ex- or four magnificent rings, 01 ample ‘to your subjects.” them set with a pearl as big as a peas | NP tie ne aamitied, in an une and in the side of her right nostril) qertone, And, really, girls, he's ex- she wore a diamond, On one plump ngly good-looking! wrist was a dainty modern gold) “stoesn't all this bustie and con- bracelet watch, Her black hair. rusion in New York tire you?” I unded abou is hey fopeead.. waa turned to the visitor from behind the atuc Ms _ ee the big di monde in veil for oe final word. “You couldn't she hae ings of bis diamonds In) tive here for very long, could you?" Pendant Fol ee ey er oner | _ she says sho could,” translated her ov E her Keats ae can tami Hor son with another broad smile. “She face, wan h Vell or ghos were painted | iy8 sho isn’t tired, and she likes it Gehan ta nd there was a black dot) “ll #0. much. She doesn't mind the Of it just over the bridge of her nose, | rush! BROUGHT GREAT DIAMOND FOR SETTING HERE. This, with the exception of the wrist watch, was the Arwbian Nights half of the costur But it was fin- | Alexander the Great believed Lat ERAS ecgaiene a ilutet! that onions increased a man’s wore a skirt of black lace, which came| yirality and warlike spirit; just below her knees. Beneath the! skirt, as she leaned back in a deep! irmehair with her fect crossed, were a pair of dainty transparent black lace ckings and patent leather slippers, which suggested the Rue de la Paix FULL OF VIM So he brought a quantity of them from Egypt to Greece and fed them to his soldiers; Mt ita smartest | Prati, President of the Board of Edu The short skirt. acéording to these! | cation, for bis defense of the public] royal visitors, is no novelty in At-| After which, he conquered Nehools under the management of the }ahamistan, There the native women) che whole world and. cried prevent administration, Mayor Hylan] Ti yciow the knees. Also they wear! for more worlds to conquer. Attacks thoue who have called atten- | stockings vore| on to the lack of school repairs Lam going shopping in New York."] . = Wee stayor's fetter, in part follows: {the Princess admitted sinilingly, when Such is the vim imparted by by ayors & v = i} yut the question to her through O- e ‘ UMGne of Vnese old schools: baye| | Sub the question ta ner tnhioug MO.) char anappy litte vegetable }been in existence for from fifty to} fluent English, ‘The Princess speaks! go popular at CHILDS. jsoventy years, (and in ae eoay dresses —like these,” and. she | playrooms were provide Nudl’s) vanced pleasantly at the light frocks Jreport complains principally about] orn by the women who were callin this lack There are many € ren n her Lad A American cloth lve uch, and Lb shall buy some, A n part time and we need more class. | TOT Thay’ same jewels in New York rooms, Why take away chassro¢ Aah are Shy eenpett TES in th old buildings and worth of jowelry in the Princess » | , arent yaa na” ath " yoda rought » be set in New York ne Hoe aus eee lithe Koh-in-oor and with an equally whole ir fo th Gu romant history It called the Da-| « ‘ wd i te op the cor rya, which mean River of Gloriow Traction of new schools, to close up| Lught,” and, with the Kol-in-oor and old sehools and Miituce the present | the Kol-it-00r, Was once OWNCd bY, [ouans, anid deve int all arts ot Te erm Kabul then the Darva,| Notice to Advertisers school accommodations ner [eyes of the peacock in: the famous) & Teceted after 4B. Me the di |tlomentary training, all |neacock throne of Persia, Now, after | ¢ bubiieatian, ean be. inserted” only | ae Bae we cella tart ia fall the eenturieg, the peacock throne, |& Pernt at {Yorke of ecty at The | entory, the programme of the Hocke. [9F @ part of it, has come to Peacock | Oe ise world mu rie ae | oller-Gary educational propagandists | AHey Tisplay advert ype copy for the Supples phe people know tat during the| IN INTERESTED IN EDUCATION m0!) Snsiins wins Wo mate be J first year ot this administeatvon, ch OF WOMEN. f ceived by 8 PM to war conditions, elon ccusteretton) 1 am going to the theaire too," | bh werld mit be rewind ty MWiPday. seve schoo! program osting $75,000.00 Penge ROREUDS: PEGE ite Main Sueet cops, type copy which hi ind over, whieh, by ng y iD rneiseo wn onjayed it, though I ie whith has not Deen. reoelved In Glan for tho noplect of past’ alininice| 4 Me eee must munication office by 1? Mi Fria, "and poutine tration there w dined aw ~ omitted as conditions: be rigidly te There i now t Honew ore was dan tier of latem receipt. and jusitive release eae rere naditions in ro ' nk Ame Display cope or orders released eter than se und seven m0 ' A women are bewat(fu table yrartded al when om ‘will oct oerve to | 1 ‘ or| they ave free to work with men out vise, 40,000 addiuona! chidrea,” in the world, and 1 am very much in- THE WORLD j ' t