The evening world. Newspaper, April 8, 1905, Page 3

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APMP RN TEL NTE PEP LRP NTT RENE NI TE a RE TT TT “One Will (sok in Vain for Any Exhibition of Self-Consciousness Girl So Suddenly parative Obscurity,”’ Observer from This Young Lifted from Com- Writes of People. HER FACE, THOUGH v NOT PRETTY, REFLECTS THE BEAUTY OF HER MIND. Series of Articles Which She Will Write for The Even- ing World Beginning Next Monday Will Describe Her Trials Among the Poor of London and of @ the Great ui To the Editor of The Evening World, DEAR SIR—I thank suggestion to write six sketches for your paper on subjects of interest in the so-called Ghetto—the lower east side. . the series for Monday, April 10, aad BY WILLIAM A. WILLIS, Tt 49 a long jump tn the Ufe of a Ghetto girl from the heart-breaking struggle of keeping the bodtes and souls of @ large family together, and at thn same time devoting time and energy to the uplifting of herself and of the less fortunate of the sisters of her race from the equator of their environment, to that » of soife of @ man who beara the name of one of New York’s oldest and best fam- Ques, and mistress of the millions of his dmheritance, Rose Harriet Pastor {8 a name that a few days ago was unknown in New York outaide of that little group Thousands. | of sociologists who \ Object of Interest to devote their time end whet means they have to spreading « Httle sunshine among the congested homes of the great east aide, To-day it is a name in every- body'a mouth, and the bearor of it has become an object of interest to thou- \ wands who as yet heve only a superficial @cquaintance with her and her remark- able life. Only Miss Pastor herself can tell the mory of those early and apparently : hopeless struggles to rise above the mieory of the surroundings in which he was born, and she is going to tell them to Evening World readers in all thelr wealth of pathos, In six sketches, the frat of which will’ appear on Mon- day, Miss Pastor, a Jewess, is going to marry Mr. J. G, Phelps Stokes, a . young man who Inherited $10,000,000 from his grandfather, and whose birth and position place him in the first ranks of ‘American soolety, He {s a young man who has voluntarily relinquished sootal position with all ts attractions to work ‘@mong the poor, and in the Ghetto he hes reared an imperishable monument to himeett, Tt was a curious whim of fate to take & young aristocrat from the brillant cinte to which he belonged and place im among the most miserable of all New York's voor, to meet and love a irl as far removed from him in the social scale as she could be. Mr, Stokes ’ Goes not call it fai He regards \t ae the work of a Divine direction, an ideal- fatic view fully shared by Miss Pastor, ‘This young couple have but a singte {dea for the fu: ture. It te to con- tinue together the} Both Have a work to wore Single Idea emoh bas devoted! for the Future, neo life, They have ‘no ambition be- { yond this. Mr, Btokes's social posl- tion counts as naught to the girl he Is going to marry, hie wealth counts only @s | means of extending hor work. One would expect some emotion, some exhibition of self-consclousneas, from a young girl #o suddénly lifted from ¢om- parative obscurity, One will look in ‘main for it in Miss Pastor. if there is @me thing that impresses ut her on fret scquaintance ft is her extremo @elf possession, her utter unvonscious- meas of the change that has taken place fm her posttion, Viewed from a worldly standpoim, i i a great change; to Mies Pastor it ts a great happiness did @ hard life and an oxtension tles of har mind, and thers ls a magnetism about her which make GHETTO GENIUS’S PROMISE TO WRITE FOR THE EVENING WORLD. I accept your offer and will furnish the first of East Side. you very much for your rather thin, and bears lines which are cloquent of the early strugsies, ‘There ig magnetism about this gtr! which je felt at once, @he has the softest of voices and the softest of eyes, whtch have a way of lighting up when si compelling: Ja interested, and admiration, Her hands are rather large, but well formed, and there is @ grace In her every movement, Misa Pastor talke of hereekt will- ingly, almost eagerly, She is inter ested in everything, and eepectelty in politics, Naturally the fleld of her work hes made her a trifle of a @ocials, but whe te tremendously broad-cinded, }Next to her work among the poor her Jove te greatest for Htereture, Bie has had little time to develop the literary gentue of which she t¢ undoubtedly possemeed, but she will have more time after whe in married, end the wortd will hear of her work. Yours ago, when Mims Pastor wee atrugeiing in a cigar factory to support herself ana| Sacrifices Fame for her tamity, and at the aame time! Fellow-Tollere. teaching classes of sits at night, she Weed the hours get aside for steep to write tn, Some of the poema which she did ‘then have appeared in The Evening World, and have attracted a great deal of attention. Naturally frat, her ‘health broke down from the strain, and a point was reached where It was, give up the girls’ claones or give up the writing. This crisis m her life came at a time when she was move er tess devendent on the faw dollars she got out of Uterary work; but she did not heat 6 up the writin couldn't give up the girls,” ehe ald to-day, ‘They needed me more than I needed the writing, or the little money it brought me,’ ‘There ‘was no affectation about this. It was sala with composure and entire sincerity, This young girl is tremen- dously sincere about everything, and has a quiet determination which sweeps aside all obstacles, It was this one little incident in a lite of self-nacrifice that brought Miss Pas- tor to New York. Her little efforts had appeared in a Jewish publication in this city from time to Gradu- ally the readers of that paper came to look for them, and when they atopped these distant friends wanted to know why. In the end, it became cesential to tho owner of that paper to have Mies Pastor's work In his paper regularly, He could only do It in one way, and that was by bringing her hege and giv- ing her a position. He did it, and be- fore very long the Univerelty Settle- ment workers, realising her great value to the work they were devoting them- selves to, took her from him, The Hyening World has already told how Miss Pastor first met Mr, The Idol of Stokes while doing Hundreds ‘work for the Jew- of Homes, |!sh paper, how her genius and her devotion to the tracted him and how that atti gradually déveloped into a lov the girl herself reciprocated Only the University Settlement work: ers know what Miss Pastot has accom: plished on the east side, Of them all she has the greatest personal following, Bhe ts the idol of hundreds of homes. Her temper {8 always sunny, and, she in always yeady to respond to the call of the distressed, Nothing ever rut: fles her, and doesn’t AKhow the meaning of fatigue when in needed, Yesterday afternoon when an Rvening World reporter saw Misa Pastor ‘she ‘had jot, poet since ong pea in the hind time, bec B araes mame work he himself was doing at- Binge MISS ROS! | Fiancee of Millionaire J. G. Phelps Stoke ove a tween Mise Pastor ani Mr. Btokea| has caused ao} Hor Career much comment es; Like Zangwill thelr difference in religion, Miss Paator'n views on nunar Follgiont,” Whelta lata te: 3 ‘hel Te- chim miedo tune! dot wino Sgnoaption of Retiious duty, and. not re comnior oF Beane one to Search for Her. re ‘1 reer, owever, tO the careers of i ike Zanewill wid Gor) She has on We) mee Aine seek at hy Mandloups, ou, as blazed sixth street, on Thuraday last, and has Sha eutterinee wil be told by ch Rvening World exclusively, a une Hots are al) of her own, chonsing, and will cover every phase of her career and not finding her mother, and the ray girl's b Nervous state on the moth- rows, accompanied by Mer t some time y searching ‘The Magnetic Club, composed of om.| the horpitals for the “misaling woman, gors and emphoyees of the telegraph, ana are. Andry telephone, electric Jight and other ecttic manufacturing wompanies of je ‘of the missing woma: mt | city. will hota thelr annual Spring oe "Headquarters sent qu §. Bsn se she ray Hota Astor on Thursday |f Sl aa W'member of the Atv ‘oria: +" Sostgar eh Tat y / HARRIE T PA » Who Will Write tor The | vening World a Series Describing Her Experiences as a Worker Among the Voor of the Hast Side. (Shetched from life for The BKvenutug World by MORGAN SMITH KNOWS STERN Admits Acquaintance with the Pawnbroker, but Declares He Didn’t Buy Pistol—Gov. Her- rick Expected Home To-Day. CINCINNATI, April 8.—"T have known Pawnbroker Stern for ten or sala J. Morgan Smith when seen in jail and asked regarding the statement made by W, E. Burgess, of the Montreal Star. I have known Stern that long in a hecontinued, "and years," nean way solely, Unton, whitch Mayor-Blect Dunne, of “Perhaps no phase of the romance be- he knows me, I presume, of course, identify me as J, Morgan Smith, but as to identitying me as the AND is MISSING man who bought the pistol with which You . ni i sible, and Gorm —_-— I did not. would be impos for I did not buy It, and he knows “Rurgess's statement, In so far wpe mater "agree entirely with wr./Mrs. Johanna Tobin, Sixty) acknowleaxing Years Old, Left Her Home, esr things he save which are Kross Tt Is true, tor Iny college davs I frequertiy hu On prwibrakers fo 18 Sralth seemed fairl istrensed because hia wife Is compelled in the same jall rooms with on worshipped jin aey wy, Tere and Police Have Been Asked | °*2excrntions. cheprtad, althougii women outcasts. who, eh to call Mins to stay 83 Pas- or kes, euch complime ood na-| Mra. Johanna Tobin, aixtvsix years] ‘The appearance In police court of the There te & Surloue Mkeness In | old, of No, 769 Columbus avenue, went |Smthe to unsiver the ehirs gitives. from. Justice “has fo church services at the Holy Name | fugitives from, duates han Church, Ampterdam avenue and Ninety- | of counsel. COLUMBUS, O., April &—Gov, Will be eatled upon nade Col, enty t of | the extradition case o! organ smith So eee oe ang [and wife, Who OFo under arrest at Cin; ‘Telephone inquiries ved rom. Cinciunat le young | not since been seen, a Hert nh remuckea he reve ‘A daughter of Mrs, Tobin, Cathering, | Noxag"to-dus, eater Py at Neate we Ht Of lis employed as nurse in the home of | ie Bs of nelf-saorince No, 985 West Elgbty-fifth street, Owing | {nat to, the gitl’a anxlety on reaching home] at the Governor's offlce ire taken to mean that counsel for the Smiths will ght the recognition of the If this Is done It extradition warrant, a hearing before EDISON GUEST OF HONOR. iat being absent for two days, Mra. An-| will nocoss!tate Oker Stern Refuses to Din- J, Morgan Smith, the pawnbroker, when ‘No, 19, Weat Bigh- street, to-day declared to an Ming World reporter that he could not dipguas the subject of is Lm Janae aria 3 h, iven i ‘about this cit, ‘ond mot a, ha snared STOR. CAR PIERCED Loaded on Big Truck. As the resu owe trolley to-day suffering severo Injuries, Ing mast was not counted upon, slanting about April 23," ‘The Ing his father’s shes bee: STUDY IN PEN AND PENCIL OF ROSE HARRIET PAS STOR, THE GENIUS OF THE ‘GHETTO of Articl.s Was Transfixed by Mast |auest of her mother, Mra, Mary Greon-|-when Polfoemen Ernst Car No, 676, bound from Jersey City to Newark, was behind a vehicle whtch was transporting a derrick mast, one| matron, Miss Mary Shafer, to let me end of which projected twenty-five feetjout of the Refuge as my eighteen behind the rear wheels, ‘There was no| months had expired. I had been think- lantern at the end of the spar, and the| ing of this for some time and had de- road wax poorly Hghted. The driver,| cided I was entitled to get out. Blanche William WKomap, of No. 185 Tichenor| and I talked about it at recess Mme street, Newark, had turned out to per-| and we planned to set our cell on, fire mit the car to pass him, but the ewing-|and when it was going good give the Tt entered the left side of the car and | lease all of the seventy-five girls and in tore its way among. the passengers, | tha excitement we could oscnpe, ‘ shivering glass and light woodwork, The| “No, T did not think of whether the motorman, Emerson Braugue, of Elghth others might) burn T thowpht more SHAH GOING ON ; ON PILGRIMAGE. MHHDRA! ‘April 8—a*he Shan | 4a going on a pigrimage to Meshed (cap- {tal of the Province of Khorassan, Tiles nonihwest of Hert, Atwhanietan) | te announces that ithe helr apparent, Mo- at Hpk A) FOR 185 | Anilo'a howitty Is ty “T Could Not Give Up ie Girls,”* She Says, When Telling the Pathetic Story of Her © Failing Health at One Period of Her Bat- tle for Existence—*They Needed Me | More than I Needed the the Money.” [ALWAYS READY TO RESPOND TO THE “CALL OF THOSE WHO ARE IN DISTRESS, She Has Left a Retarkatlh Career ser Behind Her, but Her Field of Usefulness to Humanity Will Be Broadened with Her Entry Into the New Sphere That Her Marriage to Wealthy Mr. Stokes Will Create. + Some of the Siriking Epigrams in Miss Rose Pastor’s “Dustpan Ethics, No woman shouid forget that a| Lucky heart! It may later have good man's love does not grow be-| Won a homely g§)'s heart and made wean the cracks of every paving| the owner happy. stone. 5 eee When a man's love is unbounded “what is your fortune, my pretty] and his passion bound in chains he ‘neta’? {9 a god among men. “My faith ts my fortune, pir,” shoe paid. Men have died from time to time ela @ and the worms have eaten them, but§*’ jot for love, What could the worm never Ie. the dif-| net bats Some women never learn have eaten them for? ference between a bully and a mas m for? ser <8 If "God tempers the wind to the shorn lamb," I wonder why so many Ae- A filrt te w creature all men de) a1. boating In the cold. aera) splse, some men amuse themeelves with, a few men fall in love with, and no man, worthy of the name, marries, A copper coin given with a kind heart turns golden, ee 4 If there Is nothing in life worth ‘The hand that rock@ the cradle !8| jiving for there Js nothing worth the deareat hand in the world to at! dying for. least one man, ‘The owner of that os 8 handis not a woman if this does not} = =No man stands higher by stepping content her, om the neck of his fellow. a eee The greatest progres for a soul! For rest. give mo sleep; for obity pegine the day it meets another soul] don, death, But while I live and wake nobler, better, grander than itaelf, give mo unforgotfulness and the ceareless striving of the soul, Cen) Let your right hand know when your left hand uses the dustpan, oe e Ge eG: 0 i Faint heart ne'er won falr Indy, To take is human—to give divine, , REFUGE GIRL CHARGE MAN AND TELLS WHY SHE WIFEWITHARSON eo STARTED FIRE Joseph Lapin and his wife, Alles, of | Nos, 88-4 Stuyvesant atreet, were ar- | raigned in Yorkville Court to-day on a» charge of attempted araon and held ia than Lives of Other In- [ors sirstory tenement, two, temithes mates She Admits. on each floor, According to the owen (| of Annie Becker, a maid in the empley, | of Imac Brieberg, who lives eorose tis, drom her fat carrying her elgtrt-<nontiee] “T more of my freedom than Oe Bt the other mile,” said [Old chill’ Charlotte and soreasntag Ot the lhe oF oreld, the seventeen {"'Fire!” ‘The door closed behind tweet! vonrolt aitiin the House of Refuge, |with « spring Jock and the Becker gt yeay, tm explaining to an Hvening | edd ehe shouted tor Mrs. Lepin ‘mand World reporter why she hag set fire to |lock the door #o thet she could her mattrega Thursday night hoping to|the fire. he women, she suya, paid escapes trom the Institution if the in- attention, but fan to the street, ’ mates were released huntiedly, Her | ‘The Becker girl ran to the flaw statement thet she cared mong for free-|low the Lapin fiat and olimbing eee A broken heart is better than & whole one where love hes never crept tn. dem than @ mrobaible sacrifice of life in| fire escape, broke in the window, the fire thet might have destroyed the | says what ehe discovered two old home was in answer to a query of | nen stripe leading f) ve whether of not ehe had thought of the | the Mite toi eeet ets oonsequences, bedrooms, Around these, she Several Passengers on Jersey|,,A0m? Greenteld, who is oretty, |were intd off-soaked papers and in td / though not intelligent looking girl, was|dining room, she wald, was a mattress! Trolley Were Hurt When Car sent to the House of Refuge on June! ripped open, oll-soaked and blaring, | 14, 1008, for elmhteeen montha at the re-| The girl was stamping out the ant feld, who lives with her married daugh-| the Bast Fifth Street Sati rush ter, Mrs, Tillle Title, at No, 8 Avenue|up and helped her, ‘The ity B, Annie was not @ wicked «irl, but beyen the place had been insured foe she was truant from school and would of n Hackensack Mena. [not obey her varenta, ~ In the same FO, Lapin eald that he 40 pot eee” running at full speed, {room with her was nlaced another being plerced by a long spar carried on|truant girl, Blanche Savage, colored, a large truck a number of persona are | sed sixteen, of No, 26 West Twonty- w the fire started it hap rtly after Lapin went to work, sixth street. lav I had been suffering from aid Annfe, ‘and I asked the A Body | Builder, alarm. The keepers would have to re- GAINED 15 POUNDS. street and Sixteenth avenue, N _|of my freedom than of the lives of the I gained 15 pounds taking apod injury, although the vestibule | other girls, I lighted a plece of paper Father John’s Medicine— n which he stood was wrecked and set It to our mittress, Then Alexander Kilmer, Police Of- James Manning, twenty five years old,| Blanche told me to stamp out the fiver, Johnstown, N. Y. % Ferry street wark, had a) five on the paper and hide tt, T hid _— his left eye, and was! |r jn the bosom of my dress, but they | ' picked up unconscious. He was sent tol round {t there when they scarched GAINED 6 POUNDS. the City Hospite aie. : I aerate 7S pounds ne The wounds were caused by flying Father John’s Modicine.—~ s\ ers, of the House of Refuse, glass, Mrs, Mary Peffer, forty-th cata) Rear tGn Bag ne Jas. McKenna, of the Dollar vears old, of No, 184 Rolfe street, Belle- | complained’ to i sy \ ’ i Vanee gid of Nes od wevers contuslons: vsted the two gts and anraigned Savings Bank, Pittaburg, Pa, Minnte Havbish, of No. 175 Lexington | then t in York- lor Jefferson, of part in attempted arson and Nor Oo Chapel atrest, Newark, brulsed | wore hold in $60) ball for trial Wear’ t | | ear and out: on Nees, | When asked why the girl hat not Bost Dressers been released the authorities said. that eae ! Ime expired they had noti- | | hy atives. Dut none came for and they Ww biged to hold her [is Greenteld is to-day attempting to ve the airl released, aa she ays thay “Lion BRAND” COLLAR — aia east se Se

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