The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1907, 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)

«a AGAIN THE HUMAN PINCUSHION EATS MEAL OF NEEDLES Mollie Dressler Tells Bellevue Doctors She’s Full of Small Ones This Time. THE MEDICOS. She Doesn’t Know Why She Swallows the Sharp-Point- ed Slivers of Steel. Miss Mollie Dressler, the human pin jushion, haa broken out again. and in Fordham Hospital, where she lies in a eot to-day occasionally ploking a needle frem her elbow or her knee, the doc tors and nurses stand round het, eyeing her like the folks from Hobokus gaze on the on the museum. For Mollie ts the nal and only needle woman is la her third sajourn ree-year-old wom eties as a steady needips after a t of popping out at unexpected 4 ts and places, and causing Mollie angujsh, mental ahd otherwise whe Is getting over folks have what t one of her “needle jags” remains in the seclusion of the hos- she bas worked ail the 1 loments out of her syst had been working for the last two weeks for Mrs. John Mount, of No. M1 Third avenue, Bronx, and Mrs. Mount has been wonde why a Needles were disappearing. She di know Moilie was the needie-woman until yestentay s Dressler compliant ed of pains in her stomach and heart ang a stitch in her side The datter wuggested need! nd Mollie owned up she wus the magnet for the missing Reodies Bic! aupt. hustled to the Fordham Hospital in an ambu hance “It's th old trouble, Doctor,” aid Mollie, with just a tinge of apology and then rubbing a red spot on her cheek, “I do declare there's one coming out now." “One what?’ queried the doctor, who 4@i4 not recognize his visitor. “Why, @ needle, of course, I ate some three weeks aco and they oughtn’t to have worked out for a week yet, but I guess the warm weather has brought hem out ahead of time” ‘The news quickly spread through the hospital and they hustjed Mollie to her eld cot in Ward v4. (he declared | it seemed quite Mke hofie. ‘ Smaller Ones This Time. “How many this time, Mollie? asked the white-coated doctor. “Not many, doctor,” responded the patient; “maybe my appetites fallen off. I think it's a pafket of number and then there may be a few 12s & packet or so. Ten have come ready.’ Yo mixes this time, eh?” asked the @urgeon. recollecting the huge sewing needles they bad extracted to the num ber of forty from Mollie the last tim: she was in Hellevue. The patient shook her these are the small kind, turning over ke a ni & moment, howey miical number 1s s bad referred to stole #lently out of f. eft forearm. The girl's sister, Dr. her hgad. Mrs. Max Dressier, of No i Third ue, explains Mc lie'p kpenness wing need by ‘saying that when she was a girl twelve ta she had the scarlet fever and in her torment would stick hersel{ h needies. Later ahe waa discovered lowing needles with the aharp ends imbedded In ple or pear Finally she jess of send. i them down ntary canal wilhour the ald o - me START FOR EUROPE TO-DAY. On the Potsdam will satl to-day Prof. and Mra. R. EB. N. Dodge, Chari B. Russell, Clarence Stetson, Prof. B. Thompson, Mr. and dra. VY. Travers, A. F. Travers, J, van ‘Toor, La Vigue and Mra. A. M. Welling- P. Swami ‘omvenor 1D. ‘On the Teutonic are to depa Abhedananda, William. and family, J W. H. Paimer, Prot. Andrew W. Phillips, Ju cell, Mr, and Mra. James ‘Ton yle and family, Capt rray F. Taflor, Ivan G. Whytiaw, jr. and Roger Sher man White. SS, BODY AT SUNKEN MEADOWS, ‘The body of an Unidentified man was found to-day in the Bunken Meadows near the mpot Where the @looum went down by Pilot James Brady, of th George B. Gibbs. The body bo: marks which would indicate violence. It was taken to Heriem Morgue. It is hat of @ inan bout sixty years old, ve feet seven Inches In height and Weighing 1% pounds, The hair ls gray Hie is slightly bald. It had on a dark bi nd white shirt, white up y socks, black shoes. it the water four or five | Told Ambulance The World has not ALWAYS been ¢ greatest newspaper and The World R be the greatest a AS FOR THE PRESENT-—READ "107,216 yarious persons have advertised The World so tar this year 132,766 MORE THAN IN THE HERALD. in LAST WEEK! -~as compared with the same perio’ last year— a Wat art THE EVENING°WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1907. | Progressive Matrimony, With Three Wives to Date, Has Cost Dan Hanna, Aside From Household Expenses and Lawyers’ Fees, the Sam of $631,000 ——_—+ + Although Inconstant Has Been Constant Three of His Wives Are Tall and Wilowy Brunettes. “NO BLONDES NEED\ APPLY,” SEEMS TO BE HIS DICTUM.| First Wife Got $150,000 in Cash and| $9,000 Annuity With Her Divorce, and Second Received $400,000 in a Lump Sum With Her Decree. By Nixola Greeley-S mith. The second Mrs. Hanna obtained ink had dried on her decree Dan Hanna had wedded Marie Stuart, divorced wife of Frank Skelly, once a Waldorf-Astoria clerk The third Mrs. Hanna is so much the type of the two former wives that she might be mistaken for their younger sister. brown-haired, with the same willowy to the Individual, He\ to a Type, for All AN R. HANNA, a youth fn h D teens, slipped away from lake party In Cleveland in 1887 and married May Harrington, the| schoolgirl daughter of a travelling salesman who had inherited half a million dollars. In 1898 Mrs. Hanna brought suit for divorce, obtaining as alimony a Jump sum of $160,000 and an annuity of $9,000. The first Mrs. Hanna is a tall, dashing, slender brunette with dark eyes and hair. In May, 1900, Dan Hanna married Mrs. Daisy Gordon Maud, who had jost obtained a divorce from her first busband. Persons in Cleveland, where all the Dan Hanna families have in turn made their home, com- inented on the striking resemblance between the first and the second Mrs. Hanna, No. 2 being tall, dark and as dashing as No. 1. @ divorce last week, and before the Tall, slender and figure that had attracted him to the earlier wives, she represents Dan Hanna's last effort—or, perhaps, I had Wetter say, merely his latest—to find his tdeal. All Three Wives of Same Type. Evidently this ideal ts physically the type of woman to which all three who haye won his name belong. For not/ only are the ‘three women alike in ap-| pearance, but they have the same tastes for outdoor sports, for horses and mo- tors, for costly and perhaps slightly conspicuous dressing. Whatever we may say of the progress- lve matrimony of a man who at forty} has three living wives to support, we) must admit that Dan Hanna, though tn- onatant to Individuala has displayed | a remarkable fidelity to the type of wo-| manhood he prefers. Ordinarily the man of multiple mar-| rlages if # @ thin brunette for his i wife takes a partly blonde for his) nd and would ultimately ) the whole gamut of feminine 1>] taking In hair of every shade and of every hue, were not life too} ort and divorces too expensive | Constant to His Fixed Ideal. But though Dan Hanna has had three | wives, he igs maintained throughout his | varied marital adventures @ fixed ideal, and in @ larger sense has been a3 con~ venture, stant to wen t¥pe as the most mbde of one beloved wife is to her. | Dan Hanna has known this type at all ages. He met it in hie first youth- ful bloom in May Harrington, who was in her early teens when their wedding took pili It was his immature perfec- tion when Daisy Gordon Maud, a dash- ing divorcee of thirty, became his bride. 4 . | tell, and meantime all tall, dark, slender Marie Stuart, his newly-made third) pr snettes may feel that ‘out In Cleve. wife, is twenty-aix ri) Bp WOMAN FISHED FROM VER I HELO PRISON dently Mr, Hanna has found some R e Surgeon That} Weather Was Too Hot, and She Took to Water, Cries of distress trom the river were heard ay taedey, by |deebhands on | the Anchor Idne steamship Columbia, | at the foot of West Twenty-fourth | stro Several ran to the end of the pier and found a woman clinging to the wood work. She was hauled out jmeonsel and half dead, revived, and, after she had been was turned over to a police ryan from the Wert TweAtieth street station, who calle New York Hospital ‘The woman gave the name of EB © from genie, Hérnheimer, of No. 40 Wes Fifty-elgbth street, and said she was a weaver, The police entered the case in the blotter as one of accidentally falling overboard, and, Dr, Hornbeak started with her for the jiospital |mund K. Btallo, | admired type in its perfection has cost one thing attractive in these three wo- men who .@o greatiy resemble each other, Evidently there was some one thing In the first two wives that pre- vented the enjayment of that perfect diiee the expectation of which had, of course, lured him to the altar steps. But though the lack may be in the type, it is more Ukely to be in the man who, with @ tremendous fortune af bis command and epparently very few restraints, femained so amaxing! Conmeant tonite “4 4 Progressive Polygamy. The term “progressive polygamy” been applied by stern moralists to Varied matrimony as young Mr. %. To me the phrase seems un- re. Moreover, Mr. Hanna's can scarcely be called pro- gressive since it has all centered in the same type of woman—the tall, dark, slender beauty that, whatever his wan- derings from the individual woman, has held his unswerving allegiance. Why should man marry the same type of woman three times? Why should he not have remained the loy- ing and faithful husband of the Srst, May Harrington Hanna, now Mrs, Ed- of Cincinnati? Only Dan Hanna knows. His search for the r t auch Hann duly him $480,000 and an annuity of $9,000 to his first wife, and a lump sum of $400,000 to his second wife. Has he found his ideal in the third wife and brought his matrimonial pil- @rimages to an end? Time alone will fs the champion admirer of F type. ‘ pened yesterday except that ehe didn't 50 lo Work. Guddenly she exclaimed. I'll tell you the truth, It wee eo hot Chat I jumped into the river.” Dr, Hornbeck reported ber confession Hoe, and she was arrested at jun son HIS COOLNESS IN DANGER SAVES CONDUCTOR’S LIFE, Pole of a Heavy Truck Crushes Man's Leg Into the Side ‘ote Car, William Jordy, « nine years. of age, of No, 182 Second avenue, was painfully injured to-day while standing on the runboerd of a! nerth-bound Third avenue car opposite Stanton street on the Bowery of eavily-laden truck in’ ¢ Robert Higgins, of No. irty-elgath street, ‘penned hy torr the side of the ly lacerated bis right leg below knee conductor, thirty- det Thg pole a as hi b What the Model Wife Should Be: A Helpmeet, Bat Not a Running Mate By Alice Rohe. stomach. none, then have nore either, Be neat, and above all how to please « husband These are a few precepte by Mrs. Sally Morris Cory, prominent | club- woman, ember of over half « dozen organizations, and most active in the Society for Political @tudy and the Equal Guffrage League Out tn Chicago the model husband hae been discovered in the person ef Dr. Albert E. Palmer, the blue ribbon winner at the Husband Show in the Windy City. The characteristics of the model husband comprise the gentle arts of buttoning up lingerie waists, dis- Unguishing between peck-a-two and point esprit insertion, sewing en but- tons, rivaling Ramee in devotion, Ches- terfield in poitten: and George Wesh- ington in truthfulness. Whether the model wife exists in New York may be ascertained after Mrs. Cory’ require- | eak ments are made known. “When I give the requirements for « model whte I give those qualities the lack of which I realise is the cause of much domestic trouble. Shouldn't Intellectual Equal. “It is all very well to talk of wom- fan's intellectual equality with man, but I know from experience and observation that man does not want an intellectual equa! in his wife. A husband ts jealqus of his wife baving views or e# strong & perscnallty as his own.” ; “But, don't you think that the ad- vancement of woman in the past fifty years has changed all this subsecvient position of the wife?’ Mrs. Cory was asked “Wet at all. The fact that dlvorces are #0 frequent shows that my rules for the model wife are correct. Modern woman has learned to think for herself; whe has views of her own; she loves in- de noe, and for that reasen she finds inorriage @ failure. The wy way for a women Ww be a model wife, | re- peat, ls to Lave no ideas but tue aand's, To agree with him in all thigs, nd to look upon bis Judgmoat in a, Ualngs as correct.” “Then you do aot think woman makes a model w ot @ model wife—no.” nd society, with lis changes, has tered the standard of the inode) used to be before tp, atatiootual fe?” can this ar siving I do not mean to say that I Vise women lo follow Wwem why know they have intellects of th: I merely advise those who look ward to perfect domestic harmo: the desire to be & model wife to " ‘A wom: not marry way In whi in- ws 1 have stated justrated our. Jordy's presence of mind and courage for while the both car probably saved his life, ‘e was crushing him, and truck in matio held de: to the railing with one hand, wi t er he reached for the with nd y e injured m | pease a nd | KAISER’S THIRD SON TO WED \Rumer ‘That Adelbert and the rincess of Denmark Will Mari | COPBNHAGEN, June 3. rumor in court cireles that | ‘Thyra. a Machine made— packed where grown—securely sealed White Rose Ceylon Tea Untouched from the Gardeng ble in the that her i 1 jay particular for if a woman interest interest the home, “whe model wite model wife should never forget ‘ingdom is her home and that realm. emphasis upon cooki: How to Be a Plodel Wife---Preeepts | Set Forth by Pirs. Sally Plorris Cory Never have an optnion contrary to your husbands Be adle to aook everything. for the way to a mam's heart is through his Have the same religion. I his is different, change your own, If he has things be = model housekeeper who knows Just end it i more jo circle. ¢ the Hmits of her wants to hold a easiest think that personal band jealous never cAhuse her husband « m: cnet" ness. She must. though always | @s attractive as possible be neat and “round home. “And as fo! model wife must be ‘For an ad put @ rather on the mode: ed. “Not at all t ca@nstitutes a model beauty of f the model ‘witor™ Th F childre) perfect mo: vanced thinker, don oid fashioned stai 1 witet Mra. Cory I put up the standard of | he subjected me to furess and indig- wife because I realise how the absence of these makes married happiness impossi.|@nything owt of me, because 1 know "By | peien Dut good of Inspector Me- ut do you think {t necessary for «| Laughlin, Haneon took off his coat herself off from her fam. | and pluffed apout, using hie fists, bat woman to out tyr” Must G) Iva Up Her Family, “Tf ehe will make her husband fect!: ha, her ed ly. find her husban to regard herself tami}: Much domestic happine: lost through the wite in sting upon ree felniag family ties wh: islikes it. do not say this but ft te obviously true by “Do joint o} ou Th model wife can favor by not take rather « oynt, view of the model wite?’ Mr Dory was asked. “Par from anhi “A mode! wife is t model wife? ‘Oh, @ Woman can have as many other virtues and still not be overdoing It. T o have only mentioned @ few of the es-| porter, Peabody said a | ‘And you believe that utter subservt- | cor firet principle | York. ence in all px for the idea! “Not SHOE it," she replied. one who pl ne cannot the requtst Are enough to constitute « ints ts the JAMES McGREERY & GO. DEPARTME On Thursday and Friday. comprising Button and Lace Boots and Oxford Ties, Glazed Kid and “Health Calf,” Sizes $4% to 11..+++++4++1,85 per pair Sizes 1114 to3..+4+++4++225 per pair 23rd Street, of course, will have to give up & member of his | the husband “What I aay ts my earnest conviction, even in| mad our present day advancement of wom- torct- | Littleton and Daniel O'Reilly to begin PEABODY WARNS POLICE NOT 10 BE TOO ACTIVE Former Central Office Detec- tive Says that Dismissal is , Reward for Suocess, Frenk Peabody, the Central Office de- Gould divorce case, announced to-day that, just to vindicate himself, he will bring suit in the Gupreme Court for retnstatement. He has engaged Martin action, Commissioner Bingham's branding of Peabody as “a lar and traitor to the citizens of New York” has caused the ischarged policeman to make this rw ply, “In addition to calling me vile names man she must be al he. must be always ready to is thro! excell C7 iciciol | ow eellent cooking charm, ae anything to do with Not enough beauty to make the hus- | e model th ther.” | t you ndard was quali. | er- oniy' | right, jeases please tes I corrected Mrs. | cinot detective duty if Sale of 1,200 pairs of: Misses’ and Children’s Sorosis Shoes, Ma | Mi TS. at the Yale Clud on the night Bingham tried te force @ confession from me to Gisoredit Inspector McLaughiin, Deputy Commissioner Hanson deliberately |i to me and broke his solemn promi that I would mot be worked out of the 0 partmeat.” Not Helped by the Goulds. That the Goulds and thelr lnwyers failed to furnish him with counsel when the was placed on charges at Poltce Headquarters is an assertion made by the former Central Office man. “It Commiméoner Bingham will ac cept charges from me against his Third Deputy I will be ready to prove my assertion that Hanson je a lar and that ea. “Hanson's ‘third degree’ did not got had Policemen England and Ayres with him to back him up in case lost my temper and did figm When I bring charges againat Hanson I)! call Eng land and Ayres to corroborate my story.” Anonymous Letters. Peabody has recetved one hundred and fourteen anonymous. letters, most of them” thre trouble ‘unless he he says, were Sergeant” and they were written “In my seven have made 3,20 arrests, ity “of Convictions.” and in stolen property whion I was dismiss varges on wabody will start a on upper Broadway versation with an Evening My treatment is my reward for te tive ti ng & muCcemsful det New I advise young men on t to avold the Detective Bureau they Tn Both’ Stores, de of Patent Leather, 84th Street. . oll, by a vote, LIVING STATUTES BARRED. being ul ne wed. LONDON, June %.—The County Coun- has condemned exhibi- ving statuary in music halls | undesirable, The means that unle: decision io music halle cease hibttions their Mcenses will not HER DREAM TRUE HUSBAND WAS DEAD Sick and Out of Work, He Took His Life By Gas. Mra. Paul Weintraub, of No, T Gerry street, Williamsburg, left her husband, & salesman, home alone yesterday when she took her two ohfldren for a walk Later she decided that she would spend the night with her mother, who lives in Willow street. fhe went to her mother’s home without notifying her husband. During the night she awoge scream- tng. Bhe dreamed that her husband was dying in their home. Arousing the family, she told her mother and, taking her two children, returned to her home, The door was locked. Call n, who occupies the Bat abore, ‘open the doer. to her dream, her aa. fully dreased bed. dead. He ‘lay fully on The flat was filled with gas, the funses even reaching the rooms of the man family. Weintraub had planned death. Plugging every bale crevice In his room, he removed from the three. burners, turneé the gaa on full and Iay down to die. He was thirty-five years of age ané had been without work for some time and had been sick and despendent _ $6,200 FOR 1787 DOUBLOON. for Single Cotn—Only Five Extant. PHILADELPHIA, June 26.—~The, Stat thew A. Stickney esllection of coins wae sold yesterday. The Ephraim Brasher doubloon, one | gato of lot five extant, of the 1781, Shine largest price ever | erid “tor ‘a alngie coin, The coin wae Atruck in New Stern Brothers Classique Corsets In the Latest Paris Models including the round tapering waist and long close fitting back effects for Princess Gowns, $1.75, ALSO LARGE ASSORTMENTS OF FRENCH HAND-MADE CORSETS OF BATISTE, TULLE, LINON AND COUTIL, 2.50, 3.25, 4.50 sma 5.75 English Russet Leather Traveling Bags, inches, Leather Goods TRAVELLING BAGS AND SUIT CASES WITH AND WITHOUT TOILET FITTINGS, TOURIST AND JEWEL CASES, NECESSAIRES, PORTFOLIOS, FLASKS, THERMOS BOTTLES AND CUSHIONS. Special Values To-morrow leather lined, sewed seams, 15 to 18 Black Russia Goat Hand Bags, German silver frames, gold plated, silk lined, fitted with purse, Calf Alligator Strap Books, with inside frame fitted with mirron Glove Kid Belts, new fasbicnable models, black, white and tan, $5.00 3.35 1,95 50c, 95¢ Sm TEA AND LUNCHEON HAMPERS IN A LARGE VARIETY. Men’s Summer Underwear _ Exceptional Offerings " Bulbriggs Gauze Weight, Shirts or Drawers, fine quality, with reinforced seats, Sea Island Cotton Shirts or Drawers, also Sleeveless Shirts or Knee Drawers, Imported Lisle Mesh, Plain Lisle Thread o: English Balbriggan Shirts or Drawern, Extra Fine Light Weight Natural Grey Wool Shins or Drawers, 45¢ 59¢ 98¢ 87 Complete assortments of Men’s, Boys’, Misses’ and Children’s Bathing and Swimming Suits ve:y much Below Prevailing Prices. West Twenty-third Street Lord & Taylor‘ Shoe Department Women's Low Cut Shoes in all the smart styles; light welt or turn soles, Value $5.00, at $3.25 Misses’ €¢ Children's Shoes for School, Dress or Outing Wear, in Black, Tan or White, 6 to 8, $1.50, 8% toll, $1.75, 2% tos% $2.50 11% to 2, $2.00, Broadway &-20th St.; 5th Ave.; 19th St

Other pages from this issue: