The evening world. Newspaper, September 11, 1902, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

$25,000 FOR HUSBAND'S LOVE Mrs. Delars M. Rafferty Names Rich Young Man in Her Aliena- tion Suit. FAMILY SCHEME, SHE SAYS John Harold Hayden Agent in Bringing About Separa- tion, Wife Declares,and Adds She Was Tricked by Him. ALEXANDRIA BAY, N. ¥., Sept. 11.— John Harold Hayden, well known New York, is under $10,000 having been arrested on the petition of Mrs. Delars M. Rafferty, who has sued him for $25,000 on a charge of allenating the affections of her husband, George B. Rafferty. Back of the suit lies a sensational Btory in which the accusation {s made that the family of George B, Rafferty, wealthy and of undoubted social posi- tion, employed Hayden, for a money consideration, to cause a separation be- tween Mr. and Mrs. Rafferty. George B. Rafferty is a son of Gilbert ™. Rafferty, the “coke king’ of Pitts- burg. The family has two magnificent places in the Thousand Islands and a twinter residence in New York City Mrs. Rafferty was Miss Delars M. Mc- Intyre, the daughter of a photographer. Rafferty met her in her mother's photo- graph gallery here and it was a case of love at first sight. They ran away and were married at Clayton, N. Oct. 28, 1900. Went to a Tavera. In the following February Hayden is ald to have appeared on the scene. In her petition she says that he was os- tesibly a friend of her husband and one day, when she was starting to the vil- age on @ shopping tour he asked to ac- company her. When they got into the town she Jeges that he told her he had a p sonal message to give her and desired to find a quiet plave in which to impart _ it, Under that impression she says she entered a tavern with him and after the wine had been served she states in her petition that he said to her: “Tf I can influence your husband te leave you It means $15,000 to me. If you AM me I will divide the amount ith you.” | She ays she spurned the offer and at on his assurance he meant no of- nse she permitted him to accompany from the tavern. After leaving the where she says she had only two ses of wihe she fell in a faint fle unconecious, she asserts, in her position he maltreated her. Later he took her home, she states, and showed her husband that she was drunk and made a report of thelr con- duct, Following this she states that her husband left her, and for this desertion and alleged allenation she demands $25,000. ° er on Hin Bond. Hayden was found in the Thousand Islands and arrested. He was brought here, and on the order of Justice Pardon . Williams, of the Supreme Court, sit- ting In Watertown, his ball wan fixed at $10,000. This was promptly furnished by his \Yather, whose home, ‘Fatryland,” 1s considered one of the finest on the _ river. His uncle, yalso on the bond. Mr. Hayden refused to discuss ease further than to say: “I am being blackmailed, that’s all.” Charles Hayden, 18 the S ~ WORLD WANTS The Magnet for Success. Paid Help Wants in this morning's World. 145 643 Paid Help Wants in the thirteen other New York pagers comtined, JEWELLERS ....... 4 KITCHENWORK ... 17 LAUNDRESSES ..., 4 BONNAZ .... cece 12] LUNCHMEN 3 AOOKBINDERS *.... 17 | MACHINISTS 4 BOOKKEEPERS . y Boye . BRAIDERS MEN vie MILLINERS . | BUSHELMED 7 BUTOHERS .... 4 " | GANVASSERS 6 8 CARPENTERS + 6) PACKERS . 4 DARRIAGE HANDS. 4) PAINTERS se CASHIERS ... . 9) PAPERHANGERS .. 4 CHAMBERMAIDS .. 29| PAPER BAGS ...... 3 CHOCOLATR DIP- | PHOTOGRAPHERS. 3 PERS OF b. | PIANO HANDS .... @ OLERKS PLUMBERS: 6 COMPOSITORS 9) PLASTEHERS .. COOKS ..... jPorTens . CORNICE MAKERS. CUTTERS DENTISTS ... ; DISHWASHERS . SEAMSTRESSES DRESSMAKERS . SHOEMAKERS ,DRIVERS : SIGN PAINTERS ... DRUG CLERKS . ELEVATOR SPINNERS ye STENOGRAPHERS.. TAILORS . TINSMITHS UMBRELLA HANDS UPHOLSTERERS .. USEFUL MEN VARNISHERS WAIST HANDS . WAITERS .... WAITRESSES WINDERS .. ins WOODWORKERS .. 6 MISCELLANEOUS. ..284 RUN- BMBROIDPRERS ... EMP. AGENCIES .. RBNGRAVERS . . FANCY FEATHERS Sawnee snoanee Boaee TOTAL croeen vers DABS. ebaSe in| ball here. | An Instructive Dialogue B a cea For a Woman in Average Circumstances There at Least Should Be Four Gowns for Show Besides the Neat Little Dresses for Housewear. The Best of These Should Be the Tailor-Made Dress for Effective General Dis- play, Cost Not More Than $50 and Should Last Three Seasons. By Harriet Hubhard Ayer. Miss Elizabeth White is a petti- coated Daniel come to judgment, and, to quote one of the lady dressmakers from up the State, “I give her | credit.” | Talk about executive ability! Talk |about magnetism! | Miss White, President of the Dress- |makers’ ‘Get-Together Club,” or whatever the name of the crowd now in the throes of organization at the Dressmakers’ Conventiou {s called, can give cards and spades to Tam- many Hall or the Beef Trust, so far as my opinion goes. Embodiment of Honesty. Miss White is a handsome, clever and masterful woman of about thirty, with glorious dark red hair and a most attractive face and figure. I |don’t know anything about dress- | making, but if Miss Elizabeth White announces that she {is an expert blacksmith I am willing to indorse her, for this really remarkable woman has honesty and straight- forwardness stamped not only on her fine broad brow but shining out of her eyes—speaking its own language jin her erect, shapely form, and her | clear, trenchant voice rings true as | steel. Dressmaker and Philosopher. Miss White says she ts a practical dressmaker and I believe her. She does not say, but I do, that he Is likewlse a philosopher, and her philosophy {s wholesome and helpful. I sought this Deborah who is to lead the legion of American dressmakers to victory, and I | found her surrounded by an eager mob of heterogeneous make-up. | Lite women, big women, country bred. and with city-hardened manners— disapproving ladles with firm jaws and large stomachs. Nervous, flat-chested delegates from Weehawken way, clutch- ing bead bags and evidently on the look- ‘HE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENI} G, SEPTEMBER 11, 1 + MRS. HARRIET HUBBARD AYER out for swindlers In skirts. Vallant| dressmaking ladies from the Far West who havo breezy manners and money io burn, Little derelict sisters from heaven knows where, slim and hungry-eyed Miss White was good enough to In- form me—"“Jest talkin’ in answerin’ questions"—when I got within hearing distance of her, and Miss White's tal ing was well worth listening to, partic! larly when she dwelt on that dangerous aubject, “How Much Should a Woman Spend to Be Well Dressed.” Here is some of the dialogue just as {t occurred: Cont of Sume Gowna. Mrs, Ayer—Tell_ me, as a practical dressmaker, how many gowns should a woman In average circumstances have to look well dressed? I mean, for ex- ample, the wife of a man on a fair salary. And what should they cost? Misa White—First of all, a trimmed tailor-made suit for general afternoon wear, church or matinee, cost not more than $50, to be worn at, least three sea- sons, one year gs best and afterward as second best. ‘Then arainy day dr Mrs. Ayer—How much for that? Miss Wittte—Sixteen dotlars for a good little suit. Two house Mrs. Ayer—What sort of dresses do you suggest for the house? Miss White—-A woman should look her prettiest at home for her husband and family. Simple little dresses of light colors are lovely. A white house dress fs prettiest of all and can be made very inexpensively. Toese dresses should be dresses, made at home. They should be simp! not over trimmed. T belleve In a wom: an’s keeping her individuality. Don't —__—__—— MISS ELIZABETH WHITE. let your clothes submerge you. Don't get lost In your furbelows Mra, Ayer—Excellent advice. 1 still belleve you have missed You should be o2 a le or even {n a pulplt v for Miss White—Not a bit of it, Tam in love with the dressmaking business Now, those house dresses should c about $15 each, Then a woman ne three fancy walsts, half a dozen plainer shirt waists and one evening gown with two waists, a low bodice for extraor- dirary oceasions and a pretty high bod- ice for theatres and little evening af- fairs, Cost, about $30, Mrs r—How much should she pay tor her corsets and how long should they last? Miss White—Three dollars will buy an excellent corset that should wear six months. Mrs views it doesn't Ayer—Why, according to your cost a fortune to be prettily turned out Miss White— Of course, not. It Isn't the trimmings In the clothes, nor the cost of the fabrics. It's the woman Inside the clothes. A woman who stands properly, wears the right corset and insists on simplicity and harmonious nes in her draperies will be a pleasant object for a tired man’s eyes Instead of an untranslatable discord, as is often the ase. Lots of men rently suffer don't understand the language of the poor men, but they would give a lot to have a well-dressed wife. Isn't that 80? Mrs. Ayer—Miss White you may think MILLIONS CO 10 A PYROMANIAC. Young Bell, Son of the Famous New York Physician, Falls Heir to His Wealth. FATHER DIED OF GRIEF. Victim of an insane delusion, Den- niston M. Bell, a pyromaniac, con- fined in Bloomingdale Asylum for the Insane, is one of the heirs to the millions of his father, Dr. Christo- jpher M. Bell, a former noted New York physician, who died at Baden Baden, Germany, last week. Young Bell created a great sensa- tion two years ago at Newport, when he confessed that he was the cause of many fires that had entertained while they alarmed the fashionable cot- tagers. The manner of his admission of guilt indicated his mental disabil- ity, and on the report of experts he was not prosecuted but committed to Bloomingdale. The son's misfortune crushed Dr. Bell. and the Cliffs, Newport, and his resi- dence at No, 320 Fifth avenue, this city, and went abroad, He never returned here, and his affliction weighed on him so heavily that his health failed stead- ily. . Dr. Bell was a noted physician In this clty and Newport. He graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1865, and was a member of the Metro. lub, (he American Fine Aft politan |Soclety and the Musem of Natural History, For twenty years previous to the discovery of his son's misfortune, he had spent half of the year in this elty and the other half in Newport. ————_— STEPHEN M'CORMICK DIES. Aged Veteran the City’s Service Passes Away. Stephen MoCormick, Superintendent of the Bureau of Lamps and Gas, died this morning. He was appointed Clerk Superintendant in 1876, : He was a veteran.of the Mexican war, ‘and was seventy-five years of age. e * He closed his villa at Bellevue avenue | % WANTS ACTRESS TO POSE IN CORSETS Manufacturer Seeks a Shapely and Beautiful Model—She Must Also Be Prominent— Very Prominent. An offer of $1,600 for a prominent ac- tress to exhibit herself as a corset model at the women’s exhibition set Mrs, Edwin Knowles in a flurry yesterday. A man and a woman representing a New York corset company called upon Mrs, Knowles and unfolded thelr propo- sition “We want an actress to pose in our corset,” said the man. “A prominent actréss,” added the wo- man, flatteringly. “Yes, a very prominent actress,” pur- sued the man. “One whose name !s known far and wide and would be a credit to our corset. You know the kind 1 mean.” Biting her lip with impatience, Mrs. Knowles managed to say she did not know just the kind the corset exploiters had in mind. She suggested, by way of compromise, that the corset company might be able to engage for the exhibi- tion a shapely soubrette, but ‘a promi- nent actress"—never! The corset company press agents couldn't see It that way. ‘They jnalsted {t would be an honor and a comfort for any actress to wear thelr corset, and endeavo: to impress upon " Mrs. Knowles valuable advertising the not only during the jo in time to come her picture would be run by) y contract In the magazines, and mile busts, adorned by the corset, | would claim attention in dry goods stores all over the country Mrs, Knowles contained herself as long | as possible, then rid herself of the im- portunate visitors by Intimating that no | one would stop them if they siarted to | &0 out the door, When they had gone Mrs. Knowles | called up W. A. Brady by telephone and , the actreas would gal exhibition but when told him of what she termed “a ore- posterous’ proposition.” Mr. Brady | thought so, too, but didn't take It quite 0 seriously . BOY GONE AFTER A VISIT. | Sou of Long Branch Man May Have | Met with an Accident, (3pectal to The Evening World.) LONG BRANCH, N. J., Sept. 1 in the Bureau tn 1867.and was made ri Frederick Reynolds, fifteen years old, son of Steven Reynolds, of this place, | 1s missing from his home. Young Re nolds went to Point Pleasant a w ago to visit friends and was seen get- tng off the train at Long Branoh sta- tion on Tuesday on his way home. BS, hai not returned home, ‘and notii- er has been seen of him. The was of quiet disposition and a home Tt in feared something serious ppened him, RICH MAN TAKEN FOR A BURGLAR, Mr. Brower’s Kindly Aid to a Friend Gets Him Into a Cell for the Night. CAPTORS DIDN’T HEED HIM. Rulos V. Brower, one of the wealthi- est men on Long Island, and Demo- cratic leader of Nassau County, who refused the Senatorial nomination for that district and who lives in a hand- some residence at Woodmere, occupled cell in the Long Island City police station the greater part of the night under a charge of burglary. As Mr. Brower owned the property on which the station is built before he sold it to the city and as he still holds the bonds of nearly every indebted town on Long Island, his arrest, when it was made known, created a sensation —then a laugh. Chief Clerk Noble, of the Long Island City Police Court, has been preparing his annual report, and as he was late with it he asked his personal friend, Mr. Brower, to assist him. Mr. Brower sald he could only work at nights on the books, as he was busy during the day Mr. Nobie sald that would be all right; he would leave the door of the palice court, in St, Mary's Lyceum, open for him, Mr. Brower found his way {nto the bullding and was lghting matches In an effort to find a lamp, when the Rey. Father John McGuire, of St. Mar Church, owner of the building, inter- rupted him. Father McGuire hud seen the match-flashea from without and called a half-dozen policem ‘They rushed upon Mr. Brower and be- fore he could say Jack Robinson they had him on the floor and completely subdued, He tried to tell them who he was and what his mission was, but they would not belleve him, and he was locked up in the station, a Magistrate Smith heard of it early this morning and ordered his release on an indefinite parole. Before the charge of burglary can be dismissed, however, it will be necessary for him to appear in police court for arraignment. —_$————— DPRELICT SCHOONER TOWED IN. Abandoned in a sinking condition on Feb, % the American schooner B. B. Woodside, which has been sighted as a derolict eight times recently, wag towed Into Abaco, New Providence. She had drifted about the Atlantic for more thai eight hundred miles, Thrice she w set on fire by passing ships. cause their wives dress so abominably, | HOW A WOMAN MAY DRESS IN STYLE AND BE ECONOMICAL. ROBBER BAND. | | etween Miss ELIZABETH WHITE, the Noted Fashionable Modiste, and HARRIET Acts as Decoy for the) HUBBARD AYER, The Evening World’s Expert. ——— In the House the Woman Should Look Her Prettiest Family—Men Love to See) Their Wives Well Dressed) —It Rests Their Eyes. It Doesn't Cost a Fortune) for a Woman to Clothe) Herself Stylishly, but It Is) Not the Clothes All the) iss White Gaughing and show!ng Uo ws of very white teeth)=Oh, no; I'm nothing but a dressm: ren A I began dressmaker all my Ufe > make | my own dresses when 1 was tweive| years old. I just love it, I love to see the pretty things grow under my hands. | 1 love to take & Woman, no matter how old she ts, and dress her nake her over Ul she's as pretty as @ peach, Mrs Ayer—Yes, but all women don't) turn out pretty as peaches, do they? Miss White—Certainly they do, Bring me the plainest woman you know. Never mind how old she is, Just let me have a chance to do my best with her and I'll turn her out as I promise, as pretty as a peach One Horrt Mrs. Ayer—What ar ert [take you at your word, Consider that 1 now present you with a subject, and you will admit from my description she is pretty tough proposition; for she {s| forty two years old, but she might be sixty. She has a large and irrepressible stomach. She caveth in at the chest, «is curved forward, She tures, which she can take no credit for, and she wears the most hideous garments that the mind of mor- tal woman e’er conceived. These gar- ments drop where they should keep stralght, are long where they should be short and draw where they should be loose, Moreover, she has lost her in-| terest In life. She droops at the mouth and constantly wears an expression which says she Is looking for the worst. She {is that mos exasperating of females, a prematurely old woman, who in determined never to give up being! miserable. Miss White—Ridiculous! She is just the woman for me to make over. First of all, she has got to have the right corset Mrs, Ayer—What sort of a corset Js that? One made to fit her—made to or- ‘der, I suppose. Mirs Wiite—> I will take a corset of the right shape and fit it to any] woman, ao matter what her figure ts, nd make her a iovely shape. | Mrs, Ayer—But my — supposititinus woman's stomach protrudes, Miss White—It won't after I put a| proper corset on her. | Corsets Worn Correctly. | r—A straight front? but the right Mra, Miss White—Of course, sort of a straight front. Some of the [straight fronts are terrible, I will be- igin with the woman's corsets, I'll show her how to put her corset on. I found | out, twelvo years ago the way to put| | a corset on so as not to have a stomach —by raising up, picking up the abdomen with the hands after the corset 1s un. Mrs, Ayer—Yes, I know. But my woman caves In at the chest. She's terror! No, she Isn't. She's just She must be made Then | Don't} Miss White— a nice sweet woman. to walk on the balls of her feet. ehé's got to hold herself correctly. yousworry. As soon as she finds out how she's Improving she'll get Interested and help the good work along, Mrs, Ayer -But suppose I agree that you ¢an abolish her too conspicuous stomach and stop her walking on her heels, what ever will you do with her unregenerate taste for biack alpaca trimmed with jet beads—her determina- tlon, as she is short and stout, to go through Hfe with skirts that escape the ground and are trimmed round and round? Can't Be Frightened. Miss White-You are making out a desperate case, but you can't frighten me. Owr lady has on a straight-front She is walking on the b You can’t take these from me. Now I shall tell her she ts in the very prime of life and that she must wear skirts with long lines to make her look taller and slighter. | Mrs. Ayer—What is the prime of ilfe, White? corset her feet ‘rom fifteen to one hun- oman should be in her It's a woman's spirit I try to| ‘That is never old. | Ayer—Why, you are a philoso- r. And are yoll also as practical as usiness woman should be to finan- | a clally succeed? Wiles White—I am first of all practical, | J know this business from the begin ning. [ can cut, St, design. On, yes, AN “EXPANSIVE” GIRL. Not Necessarily an Expensive On*, A little Kansas girl is called an ‘expansionist’ because her clothes require “letting out" so often. She! lives mostly on Grape-Nuts since re- covering from a sick spell caused by | too much greasy food. Almost all ailments of children} (and grown folks as well) are trace- able to the wrong kind of food, and} the surest cure is to quit the old sort, the gteusy, pasty, undercooked or overdone things, that’ ruln the stomach and bowels, Put the children and adults on the} perfectly cooked food Grape-Nuts, It is digested by the weakest | stomach, Has the delicate sweet| flavor of the grape sugar and surely | and quickly rebuilds the body, nat WOMAN LEADS for Her Husband and Her SELECTS PLACES TO ROB. Time It's the Woman) Within the Clothes. — | you are just a dressmaker. T think you | 4 are a stump speaker in disguis D BOARD Masked Burglars Who Raid the Sound Resorts. THE SIGN OF THE PERFECT FOOD PmrcTiog SERViN Oo Frank Van Hosen, of Scars-' dale, Latest Victim of the! Band, Is Recovering—Big, Rewards Offered, (Rpeciat to The Even WHITE PLAI a Detectives re 6 i Va rlem Rat n| & fe, is led by a 3 a nin. She acts ana if hown aa “yeses »| i operating for months iA summer resorts along the Sou :| B in Wentohester County \ “ Mombers of the band invari wear Ps : 53 tasks cin t ta , THE PERFECT FOOD Wa Re a at, MALTA-VITA is good board for all mankind, © Relished by old and young, sick or well. 4 MALTA-VITA is the original and only perfectly cooked, thoroughly malted, flaked, and toasted whole wheat food. MALTA-VITA is the perfect food : perfect in taste, perfectly cooked rd for t is will be offered by PELL RIDA ESL Aga and malted ; perfect because MALTA-VITA contains all of the elements Wigey was 9 ALY oe pialy along necessary to sustain life and invigorate mind and body Perfect health, Bae cna FERAL Rit rade. was. YORU sound, restful sleep, clear complexion, bright eyes, clean, white teeth, sweet breath are the blessings that follow a regular diet of MALTA- | VITA. A week's trial of MALTA-VITA as a diet for breakfast and supper will convince the most skeptical of the superior merits of MALTA-VITA, Beware of imitations. Insist on getting MALTA-VITA, “The Per FUNERAL OF M. J. POWER. Grace, C. F. Murphy, John », Col, Daffy, Pallbearers, we nh Jerol The funeral of Maurice J. Power, for- gect F Requires no cooking, always ready to cat mer leader of the County Democracy and ex-Aqueduct Commissioner, who for sale by eracers. died at his hom ce t Nine- teenth street, Monday night, was held MALTA-VITA PURE FOOD CO. to-day from the Church of the Epiph- any, Twenty-first street and Second Battie Creek, Mich. Toronto, Canada The service was conducted by | MeMahon and Lavelle, The x were Col, Duffy, former of the Hoard of ‘Aldermen former Mayor William R. arler F. Murphy vse present were Senator Sullivan, President Louts Haffen. of the Bronx, and Daniel F, Me- Findon of the Boma, and Daniel The Road to Success Is Through ————___- ne eee, ae SUNDAY WORLD WANTS. Francis Wemn years old. of avenue. Fathers pallbear Pri nt Jerolor Grac Among th Timothy D. and C| No. 30 West T street, was found dead tn bed this morning. 4 ff EVERYWHERE. NN RETAIL BRANCHES CHOICE, CHOICE GROCERIES GROCERIES, e Special Potato Sale. | In preparation for this sale we have secured thousands of barrels of the finest Long. Island Potatoes, and, in fact, the finest potatoes grown in this country. The sale will last for three days, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and at the price we name it will pay you © to lay in a good supply. Finest Long Island Potatoes, 7 c Flour. A Large Basket, Flour. Flour. The famous Pride of St. Louis Brand, the most perfect flour milled in America, is to be sold during the next three days at a price that you should not overlook. You will do well to stock up on flour while ~ Pride of St. Louis Flour, dit, 49¢ ’ Both 23c in. { A Can Blue Ribbon Baking Powder, A Bargain: | 7 Pounds Pride of St. Louis Flour, 5 per bag 2444 Ibs.), Binck Pepper, per %-pount Be Mastard Sard ines, best q an $c TOMATOES, } Benaahllh Gen LS {ull size, choice packed, Cliler “Vor White" Wine 7¢ F Matchen, Triumph Brand, Be 3 cans for 25c. Heer Batract, Pearls Scouring Sop, 4 Je Ball Blue, very ben, Be ereke c : PRUNES, Fancy California choice fruit, averaging §5 to pound, 3 pounds for 22c. BAKED BEANS, good quality, 2-Ib, can, Per can, 5c. SALMON, Hatchery Brand, f ed Alaska, t-1b. tall can, 2 cans for 25c. . YELLOW MEAL, very best granulated, 3 pounds for 9c. CEREALS, A package Force, A package Blue Ribbon Breakfast Food. Both 23c. Sardines, in 0 can sed quality, © ge of Lime, aoae better, Be jeus, Fancy Petits Pols 6 t,All Kinds, a Golden Santos COFFEE, a pound, 10c. Best Mocha and Java, A POUND,

Other pages from this issue: