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HOW TO HOLD HIM YOU'VE GOT HM AND YOU WANT HM Nine Prize-Winning Letters} Tell as Many Ways to Keep a Husband. LOVE AND MEALS COUNT ‘A Useful Round of Advice on the Subject of Con- jugal Management. The Evening World offered nine cash Prizes for as many best letters from its readers on “How to Keep a Husband.” New Spring Ot They Are the Very Latest and Most Foolish Contrivance of Fashion. DESIGNED TO SAVE WOMEN BOTHER OF HAIRDRESSING. Novelty in Millinery Is the Capulet Hat With a High Crown and a Narrow Brim. 4 | Beveral thousands of letters ceived, offering a variety of advice and showing that the extensively studied up this art, tracking were re x had carefully and the elusive man to his lair and placing & more or less w his neck, The competing communic: tlons, as a general thir however, clreled around the ideas contained in the nine letters here selected as prize-win- ners, and t! be ta a sum: mary of the The Eve- ning World readers offered on the sub- ject of holding on to a husband's love. | The prize-winers are as follows: | tcome halter around FIR First an To the Different m ods, If there is a rule for two-be fi cannot succeed alone, but her dut she will at tatisfaction of knowing ful if ; E ceeded study | his meth- it isa person fy wife does have tl dou east that it should s moods and simply ce fers it curl see it somet take an int content to as she has tions to very very way to ‘keep last. las To the Editoy With arried life, I writ this in wedding, just twenty-four years ago to-day (March 1). In the first place, a wife should | love her husband sincer pleasure h r him te Mor him according ition. Of course, It ts the am- Ditious wife to keep the home attrac- tive, the table tempting and the ward- robe in order, The wife should be neat and winning In appearance, precluding @ntirely the use of paint and powder for personal adornt she should also develop the art of economy for the Denefit and encouragemen each one, @nd look forward for greater love, hap- piness and success, both in this ‘world Qnd the world to come. MRS, JAMES VAN BRAM No, 1113 Putnam avenue, Broo! THIRD PRIZE—$3, think of no ronventent t and hu- ait Upon Him, Sick or Well. ‘To the Falltor of The Evening World My husband earns less than $* per | month, and [ accept what he gives me to rim the house with plain about what gives me money ¢ can afford it, and when h a little work to help. Jook nice in his presen id also to | keep the house clean. I never hound him about taking me out when [ know He also | when he! cannot I do | s try to that he cannot spare the money. E never Quarrel with him or accuse hin. 1 am | always ready to wait upon him wheth tick or wel We have been married ve years and Lam very happy TH F. VAL (colored), No, % Clark street, Brooklyn, FOURTH PRIZE—$2. Best The Wife Should Be His Club, fo the Editor of The Evening World dd never com | his |.a husband? To my mind the only things | By Nicola Greeley-Smith. | This is a warning to husbands. Of course, no mere man was ever known to traverse the mazes of an artl- cle on spring fashions, But, at least, he should take pains to remember this: M% If his wife comes down to breakfast wearing what Seems a quarter section of a feather bed around her shoulders and the rest of the downy structure fash: | foned into a hood over her head, he need not decide to| take the first train to Muldoon’s, | =A) The things will really be there, They are the very aMITH, latest and most foolish contrivance of fashion—the breakfast stole and hood, These things have appeared at the afternoon session of the Dres: makers’ Protective Association, which has {te closing session to-day tn Masonic Temple, and have been duly expounded by the President, Miss| | | | BIKA, Elizabeth A. C. White. = SSS == I Saw them worn by a very pretty which hold him— her, Leave him/ Model. The breakfast stole was s imply free to make friends of men, women |® wide unshaped piece of white china or ¢ n, The nothing from | #k, about P yards long, to whict hb Gap what you | Narrow bands elf draw. o > your own Ine dividualtty, Cultivate your own powers and be your best self. Be your bes self for your own sake, Incidenta he will like you the better for so bi uy are Worth liking. Be his sw and comrade, you have arabout feath- had been sewed about Inches apart, four The Breakfast Hood, H The break fast ina silk a ng ood was also of white rips of marabout down Do not be | It complete ed ead and was A of the gen size pe of little} interf in. yours, Red Riding Hood's headgear, or that! nd leave him f seen | ‘aphs of Mrs. | North Pole. gulng to wear those Pea ngs to breakfast?” I gasped. replied Mrs, White, “The as you see her now, is com- pletely dressed formal breakti what dea of the break. fast hood? Surely it isn't with the idea ot The Evening World ° ing women to breakfast with: es patience, | out combing their hair “T wouldn't say thet,’’ was the oracle's he should be neat | answer, “But it's to save the trouble in appearance and her home clean and, 0f dressing it and putting on all their comfortable, And her motto should be) puffs and curls so early in the day. “§ man who is worth winning is worth | Those that wouldn't wear the marabout trying t A Rey erry 5, [esd ean adorn themselves with dainty and Elizabeth atreets, Fort | V7! \ ps that completely cover for breakfast—even a the Worth Winning—Worth Trying to Weep. To the itt To keep a husband requl love, sympathy, energy the part of the wife Corner Ann Lee, N. J. | the colffure ies “One thing that hasn't been mentioned : i inued Miss White, “is the } HTH PRIZE—$1. , 80 far," continued » “Is the : EIG ) : | Merovingian dress, which is several! a : |centuries earlier than the Mo: Show Him You Trust Him, | Besides having the dropped wa ‘to the Editor of The ig World: the Merovingian has a sash or There are so many ways to hold reaching almost to the bottom of husband and so many different types | skirt on one side, of husbands that you can’t apply the) A Pretty Evening Model. same rue to any two men, The thing Atvery aid to do 1s to study your husband and|, “A very pretty evening model we have} treat him accordingly, It he isn't what |!8 of satin of the new shade of Salome he ought to be assert your rights and) Pink. The corselet waist and the scart! bring him to hi ns oviding he are of gray tulle, studded with steel| is kind Ui cle 1 ; mo, Bln you and trimmed with silver lace, A beau- appreciate It. Have his trust and con- | 4 u : . fiience, Don't “butt in” to his aftaire | ffl Moyen age effect Is of green voile, a yoke of gold lace outlined with col- YoU) ored embroidery. The au montere, or] Aiege | aims bag, is an indispensable accessory | n age, | —business or otherwise—show him you trust. him good Let him see and feel true wife to him. nd welfare in mind, your he as happy ane comfortable | of the ce ie, a Have good, wholesome! “pre jatest novel Nnary, nicely, Let the whole at- la elty In millinery {8 the Ot hame be cheerful and) Capulet hat. This has an extremely Be neat and cheerful your-| high crown and a rather narrow brim.! mutual love and’ qt is a lingerie hat, made of alternating EY. | strips of English eyelet embroidery and Valenciennes insertion over pink. It has mosphere homelike self. Whore there understanding {t's e: MRS, LAWRE atbush, Brooklyn, 9 Cedar Place, FI PPR iteuaiiceeankntae a wreath of tiny pink rosebuds about 1 NINTH PRIZE—$1. | the crown and long pink satin stream: rs ere.” | gS Ri Saas ra aureerniae a | So much for womankind, And now! The Two Things Necessary Are} tor the much heralded sock darner, Tove and Mutual Respect. ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: Does it really seem necessary to make any set rules or regulations for keeping | which we were told was to work tle) }emancipation of the husband by en- abling him to darn his own socks. It Js merely an attachment to a sewing ma- chine whereby any one who can sew} on a machine can darn on it, Though} requisite are a certain amount of love PIEROVINGIAY’ COWW OF SALOME HTH, eB, ozal FVE MEN HE ON CHARGES OF §LITLE GS Children Declare They Were Lured to Cellar on Prom- ise of Candy, Eight little girls appeared tn the Har- lem Court to-day as witnesses on varlous charges against five men. The girls range In age from s. According to their stories, they | were lured to a cellar on promise of lemonade and candy, Mary Murphy, fourteen, of No, 300 East Ninety-ninth street, was seen to go {nto a cellar where Antonio Lan- neotta, thirty-five, keeps coal and wood, at No, 54 East Ninety-ninth street, Po- liceman Flannigan, who followed, ar- rested them. Because of what the girl told them, policemen from the East One Hundred and Fourth street station last night ar- rested men giving their names as Fran- cisco do Marino, fifty-five, No, 10 East One Hundred and Seventeenth street; Carmine Canciaellier!, twenty-nine, No, 2 East One Hundred and Seventeenth street; Francisco Frutullano, twenty- six, No, st Ninety-seventh street; Guiseppt sione, forty-fite, No, 134 | East One Hundred and Eighteenth street. All five were held tn $3,600 ball each _.THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAROH 20, 1903, Style Breaktast Stole and Hood Look Like a Quarter Section ot Feather Bed ABIACK EYE IN CHRISTENS BOAT PRISONER GET SOME GIL - POLICE STATION. WITH PURE WA — Magistrate Corrigan Aroused by the Story of Charles W. | Johnson, Johnson, a young car-| jpenter of No, 0 West 2 | street, watched a pollceman talking |with @ young woman at Forty-secont street and Elghth avenue early to-day, and for thus occupying bis time while wating for a car, he asserts, he was Charles W, nety-ninth | to fifteen jc! AN OL ER AIOVEN A. DEE CT TO WRG A SALOON Windows Broken, Mirrors Are Smashed and Seven Ar rests Made, James Callahan, a laborer, twentye nine year 1, of No. 1it East One Hundred and Nineteenth street, didn't approve of James I 8 closing the saloon at and On Hundred hird avenu and Seventh where he ts slay. Callahan Is, according to ed celebrating. preparations nwiiling patrons empty bottles to began Windows Were broken, te big mirtor behind the bar smashed, and feveral heads were visibly affected by the fusilade, ly Lyons arose fron. behind the the police say, and fired three shots, One str illalian in the right hip and another in the groin, and che was taken to the Harlem Fospltal. Poe liceman Johnson, attracted by the up. roar, shut the front door and mada prisoners of everyboly. Six men were held as witnesses and Lyons is charged with assault. SHOT MAN WHO TRED. to! beaten with a club, sworn at, arrested on charges or disomterly conduct, and “intertering with an officer.” Atte: spending several hours In a cell In th West Thirty-sevnth street station, he | declares he was again attacked while ‘he watted arralgument before Magis- trate Corrigan {n the West Side Court The policeman who figures tn the case ts John T. Shanley, of the West Thirty-seventh street station, a six footer, Shanley, {n court. recited with con- siderable vigor the numerous charges he had brou,... agalnst his pris- | to | | ‘ Then Johnson was allowed each 1 went to a party $n Brooklyn last night," he sald, “and came back to Manhattan shortly after I felt hungry so T got off the subway at Times square and went over to « restaurant In Forty-first street. IT lett the restaurant about two o'clock walk- ing to Fighth avenue, where at Forty- second street I walted for one o'clock. Vn uptown ar I saw the polleeman (Shanley) talking to a gitl and aparently he hought 1 watching him for he ime across the street and told me to was Joheat it! He sald TI was drunk and hat he would arrest mo if T didn't move on 1 told him f was waiting whereupon he calle mon y name, swore at me and struck me over the arm with his club. T setaad his club arm to prevent him from hit for ng me again and then he shook lim: loose, saying he would arrest me. Phen he w away with the girl went to nth avenue, 1 was ry at the unwarranted attack and ad to get his him, At § approached me, ared | was following him and wat number so I could wt t 1 aga dec arr t black eye? prison pen this n, “Shanley from the wagon, ji p Rot » struck ne it got me into the pen, The Jean corroborate me if they afrald of getting hurt themselves trate Corrigan ordered t the | pol en should be sent for, but they could not be found, He did find Larry Shanley had pushed Johnson olently Into t not seen ht Edward Reardon, of No. 5 Eleventh avenue, Who had’ been arrested on a | charge of disorderly conduct, somewhat timidly testified that he had seen John- son slapped in the face by a policeman, ut he didn’t gem sure that it was Shanley who did tt ly aroused Magistrate Corri- harged Jolingon, saying to Commissioner Bing- ham and report th If | hud auf- | ficlent testimony shorate your ‘ory I would send him where ho be Then turning sharply: “You had no rig urrest this man. Le to| Ad nothing to war. | rant It. It is n follow a po- liceman to get and you ought to know tt Is entirely too 1 of this beating of citizens, You | policemen seem to think you can do fust | ag you Hke and st aud beat when you please. out of here!” Once out of Ul ‘ourt Shanley in the hearing of an Evening World re porter abused Jolingon, and in the cor. mue | promenade and observation ¢ y ANIA dE RLE (rece GSM CTRL Miss Merle-Smith Dashes a Dip | From Sparkling Spring on Prow of the Robert Fulton, PHILADELPHTA, Christened by March 20, the granddaughtor of the founder of the line, the new pas- Robert ot the Hudson River Day Line, operating senger steamship Fulton, CHURCH ABLAZE, FT FLAMES. T REACH ALTAR |Priests of St. Francis de Chan. | tal Parish Save Sacred Articles, At the risk of their Ives early tov Jay, Father William J, McAdem, pas: tor of the Church of St. Francis dq Chantal, Thirteenth avenue and Fiftye |seventh street, Borough Park, and his | assistants, Fathers Patrick J, McCam jren and Patrick J. O'Laughiin herales jally dashed through flame and smoke and saved the host, the sacred vousela, challces, vestments and most of the ak tar fixtures, The church was of frame, and coat $75,000 when it was built in 189% Christopher Lorsch discovered the tire as he was going to his home, at |Twelfth avenue and Fifty-seventh jStreet, shortly after midnight. He saw flames blazing in the rear windows and he rushed around to the rectory and are the priests. ‘Their “firat thought was for the sacred articles on the altar, and hastily putting on a few clothes they ran with all speed to the church, the entire tne fy “this the almost terior of the frame edifice wa: but that didn’t stop the riety by Father McAdam, they tirough the dense smoke and the fire that Was devouring the pews and the pillars, and with a good deal of AMowts rouched tho aitar, where they resoued the « 8 of their quest and then fought their way out of the church, ‘The fire started near the altars, ang was hottest there, so the risk the priests took Was great. The altare and the rear of the church were ene trely destroyed, but Chief Lally and his ‘men, responding to two alarms, saved the front of the structure. ‘The origin of the fire is not known. There jhad been no fire in the furnace fos two weeks, #0 {tt could not have rted there, The loss was about $5,000. from New York City to Albany, was | launched to-day at the Camden yards | of the w York Shipbuilding Co, Miss Anita Merle-Smith, the daugh- ter of the Rey, and Mrs. Wilton Merle- Sinith, gave the name to the new vos- sel. Her grandfather was Commodore Alfred Van Bantvoord. She was anc- companted this city by a party including many officers of the line, but there will be no formal exercises 1 the christening. An innovation at the christening was} the use of spring water, the pratty spon sor dashing a bottle of sparkling aqua} pura against the prow of the steamer, | was in a quart bottle of quaint design and decked with gay rib- bons. The Robert Fulton ts being built in} record time. [ts keel was laid Jan. 11, | and it 1s expected to put the boat In| fasion on the Mudson not later} than May 2, ‘This haste is due to the desire to have the boat tn operation during the tercentary celebration of the discovery of the river by Hudson The water GURES ECZEMA QUICKLY Mew Discovery Has Revolutioninedthe Treatment of Skin Diseases, Nothing tn the history of medicine hae ever approached the success of the mar- vellous skin remedy known as poslam, which, it is safe to say, bas cured more cases of eczema and skin diseases than any remedy ever offered ror these ills, The success of posiam {# not at all suse prising when it is considered that even @ very small quantity applied to the skio stops Itehing immediately and cures chronié cases in two weeks, The very worat cases of eczema, as well as acne, lerpes, tetter, piles, salt rheum, rash, crusted humors, Sealy scalp and every form of itch, yield tu it readily, Blomishes such as pimples, «| noses, muddy and tnflamed skin dis- Appear almost immediately when poslam is applied, the complexion being cleared over night. Every druggist keeps both the 50-cent size (for minor troubles) and the $2 jar, and oither of these may be obtained in New York and Brooklyn at Hegeman’ Riker's, Kalish's, Kinsman's and Juni mann’s, as well’ as other reliable drug stores everywhere But no one {8 even asked to purchase a without first obtaining an éxperi- P 1 consol or ental package, which will be sent by Built as a consort for the Hendrick | Meniet de of charge, Upon request, by the Hudson, another steamboat recently! Emergency Laboratories, 32 Weet 26th st, placed in service by the Hndson Day Line, the Robert Fulton 1s 348 feet long, and 76 feet In whith over the guards, Its engine has 9,850-horsepower, which will ed of abont twenty-five mil an hour, ‘The hull ts of steel, as are many of the partitions, Wherever possi- ble, steel and fireproof compositions haye give ae 1 been used Jn the construction, i} The vessel will carry 4,000 passengers, | There are four decks, the main, Plate-glass is used extensively throughout the boat, loon, ridor near the exit to the building told him that if he said a word to him he vt his head off." | minus a valuable fountain] book which he had with as arrested—Waited for anley to get away be police headquarters to Jot it pen and a not him when he the enraged © start report his New York City, Good For $1.0 Sign and matl this coupon to Magle Foot Dratt Co, Dept, KD12, Jadeson, Sich, NQMe san scenaseeroresesecanstoenseormn {| AGIOS oe ee sree ee eeecwmmaetes of mall you, rafts to turn ie Ds plained IF YOU HAVE RHEUMATISM write your name and address plainly on the above coupon and mailto us. Return post will bring you, prepaid, a regular $1 pair of Magic Foot Drafts, the great Michigan External Cure for Rheumas tism of every kind—chronic or acute muscular, sciatic, lumbago or gout, Then after you try them, If you are fully satisfied with the benefit received, send us One Dollar, If not, they cost you | nothing, You decide and we take. yout word. Eve solved the problem of how to keep! and respect for each other, With these @ husband at home, beacuse In Eden! two qualities in a home, would ft be there were no boys to go out with. But) hard for a wite to make her home a later and ince then patented by one special company, It fits) by Magistrate House, The police say any machine of the lookstitch variety,| they have the names of a dozen or and can be bought for 76 cents. The! more men who were implicated in the fhe doys came later and rince then piace of comfort for her husband rather| diegest hole Is darned smoothly and| case, and expect to round them up to- Dre er rertine the auestion, aten | than a bore? A wife with @ cheerful | beautifully In about q minute an : fe, and Jf a husoand desires disposition, ready to understand and : eee eae are the towmered metas appreciate’ the many little. Inconven- Soa oe ‘The Murphy girl accused all the men pborically, of course), the wife ought to ut on her best bib and tucker and isle im do the crimson decorating. A wife jhould be companionable and a mother touch with all her son's Interests. In the home wilre the husband Is taught that his wit best club, or| Where the son considers his mother the| t boy, the problem is solved, Best tO TST Me TAY LOT, ‘est Seventy-fourth street, N. Y, C, FIFTH PRIZE—$1. To Keep a Hushand—Don't Marry Him. Po the Faitor of The Evening World: Why bother? I agree with the woman who said: "Feed the brute,” satisfy his Qppetite, flatter well his vanity, make| him think he's always right, never tell} him the truth (about himself), and he will consider you an enlightened woman, If wives would keep secret the modus @perand! {t would necessitate rising while husbands snored—to “make-up.” oy d's objectio ‘oused tc | mitted suicide by carbolic acid. on fates aE en i Doauty ike WASHINGTON, March %.—Presilent | He was Uletyiave vee old and i a finitely to hold bald, sloppy men with | Taft arrived in Washington from New| @ widow and one child. No cause ds Ruvtoudues avela nes AIRE hin 8 | York at 712 A. M. to-day, He BL oda eV epeth nile eat mee? = == ostrlls | a ec aTeoto | The police know very little of the with “lotions,"* but, stale wh y and |accompanted only by Capt. Butt, his}, i0e. leading up to the dealt Me 3 cco, removing her facial emolients with: his two days’ stubble? A devoted husband {s usually some other woman’ To keep a husband, don't marry him! ROBERTA RIPD, No, 605 West One Hundred and Thirty- seventh street, N. Y, Cit giesesseees SIXTH PRIZE—$1, ‘ Leave Him Free to Be His True Self! } fo the Faltor of The Evening World: fences a man has to undergo during the day for her sake, does far more toward keeping a husband than many of the ao-called “wives'’ who have the much mistaken idea that a wife's duty con- sists in merely seeing that he gets enough to eat. MRS, J. DOHM. 40 St. Paul ave, Jersey City. ——$< TAFT BACK INTIME. FOR BREAKFAST pees President Reaches Washington Early and Is Whisked Away to While House IMPORTER'S DEATH BY POISON PROBED Dellere’s Physician Denies Carbolic Acid Was Taken With Suicidal Intent. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., March 2.— Coroner Squire came here to-day from Ossining to fnvestigate the death of Charles A, Dellere, a New York silk importer, whe died at his home, | Sterling avenue, Last night. ‘The police say that Mr. Dellera com- military alde, and Assistant Secretary | Dellere, They have ascertained that! Hischler, Mrs. Taft and Miss Mabel | Dr Biack, (tis, family physician, was . . C1 9 | summoned to the house last night at Boardman, who accompanied the party | summoned to the House last night, at from this city, having gone to BostoM. | the arrival of the }It is sald, to look at some summer | died. homes in that neighborhood, Dr. Black sald death aa caused by The private car, Constitution, In| catbolic acld poisoning, but he workin't which the President made the wie w a say that the poison was taken with gul- attached to the regular New York ex- | cidal Intent, Press on the Pennsylvania Rafiroad Mr, Dellere and his family lived hore The party was immediately dri Mise galeuy (and Urvel is Known of them ’ c ‘ itomo- | in the ne hood, Some of the neigh PR enlte: Bessey te ee Tatra bors aald he was in the silk business ip physiclan Mr, Dellere |? and five of them accused De Marrano, ‘The other girls taken last night to the | Children's Soclety gave thelr names: Sadie Feldman, thirteen, No, 200 Hop- kinson avenue, Brooklyn; Mary Taturl, twelve, No. 193 Second avenue; Manga. ret Cody, fifteen, No. 191 Second ave- nue, and Loretta and Margaret Burns, fourteen and twelve, sisters, of No, 181 After these six girls had been turned | over to the Children’s Society, Detec- tives Flynn and Costuma, of the Ea: One Hundred and Fourth street sta- tion, brought In two other girls who | gave their names as Annie Reilly, four- | teen, of No. 7 | ast One Hundred and | Ninth street, and Mamie Hursey, twelve, of No. 1291 Second avenue, oe FIRE SCARES TENANTS. Flames from a burning stable in the rear of No, 36 Marion street, East New York, were so threatening for a time} that tenants in a row of flat-houses in Sumpter street, near the stable, hurried to the street for safety, The stable was owned by Phillip Ochs, a grocer. Ochs's two horses recently fell on the street and both broke their legs, ‘They were killed, and the stable has not been occupled How the fire started {s not The loss wes | about $1,000, —.———_. MME. MODJESKA WORSE, LOS ANGELES, Ma tion of Mme. Helena Modjeska is re- known, Do not tie him. It is in the nature of the humen animal to strain at all bonds Peer srae “ens ane, | New York, while others claimed he had van (Tetired from business, They lived tn Grown, at an yee et 100 [red jsome house, but wese ues promi: areca, “et cd ems eocialin garded as very critical to-day. Heart *.—The condl- | trouble, the worst feature of ber con- Aition, bas grown worse, , + Drafts an sO and 40. ye else had fall; i For Headaches © Caused by sick stomach, ill~ regulated bile, sluggish bowels, | nervous strain or overwork, tne safest and surest remedy is BEECHAM'S PILLS Sold Everywhere, In boace 10¢, and 28a \ Se