Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
RTT rm mae _.1910. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, lcaiawet's eyes twinkied-—"because you] children and flee to another State, has | never can tell! The woman ty question} been revived by District-Attorney Purchases MANY TRAP Old Id Maids Who Want to Marry | may be going to marry @ millionatre to-| Clarke {n Brooklyn, The Kings County Money Cheerfully Refunded on All Unsatisfactory morrow. Such t# Ife in « great cfty;| Grand Jur rday handed up to dhere’s no end to chances County Ju weett an indictment | Keeley, who up to last | Highth street, Brooklyn, He went to Har leaving his wife and children al destitute, If Keeley is convicted may be sentenced to # term of two years and a fine of $1,000, JOHN MINDER & SON HUDSON TERMINAL MARKET Hudson Terminal Buil . Fulton Street Entrance Phone 4843-4848 Cortlandt ‘ We Cook Your Order Free of Charge “Why, there are mon in New York a pi in existerce who couldn't At least one of them! “But.” ahe added, more seriously, * attitude of the individual New ¥ | woman is no longer old-matdish. almost invariably has her work, BY SWIFT BLAZE IN ANN STREET Need Only Come to New York So Many Freak Men Here There Isn’t a the that gives her the grip on reality Woman in Existence | Ue old mald of the amall village lacks f, All Saved From Flames in} Whe Couldn't Wed One | Spe aces ae cs its Something for Nothing 4g of Them Sa 2 Mises hea a . peautitel, broadening friend- | fr Old Headquarters of the ’ iy [shipe with men. Indeed, it ts out of te liven things up a at a time when the mest of Caldwell i: rau ean", 6th Ave. cor. 18mm st.| 4 AUN Seastyatirase tnt str nea are goodies at our expense. “Red-Shirt” Volunteers. baa <u eener aad ‘Some people say that if women °. ‘ould propose there wouldn't be any There Are Bachelor Girls mote old inaids. I think that arrange- OSTRICH PLUMES| Entire Wholesale Stock |) to be Sold Out at Retail]! Regardless of Cost. | Fire that started shortly before & o’elock to-day in the rear wing of the loft bullding at No, 61 Ann atrest spread #0 rapidly that many occupants escaped with diMeulty. ‘Three girls going to | work were almost overcome by smoke in the hallway, but managed to get to the street. Fireman Albert Minch of Engine Company No, & was overcome | ment is coming some day. But T assure those who can't get up the pluck for it that they will win out just as read- ‘iy by going to live in New York," con- cluded Miss Caldwell, oo Wife Deserter Inat An old jaw, which make: felony for a husband to avendon } hin wife and , FRE A 4&%c Bottle of Gordon & Dillworth’s Puncheezy (Choice Fruits in Brandy for making Punch), with every $3.00 irchase in our rtment. "e Jelly Tablets with FREE tery fail pound of Lipton’s You at 30e. FREE 1 Bottle of Van Duszer's Lemon,Orange or Vanilla Extract with every 3 inde of our Fancy Creamery Butter in Prints for 100. in This City Who Are} Single From Choice,| but Few Old Maids, Asserts Author of “The, Nest Egg.” by the smoke and was carried to the street by his comrades. The fire was discovered on the first fioor, which is occupied by the J. H. Stanger Paint Company. Henry Dubois, proprietor of the Dubois Electrical Company, on the fourth floor, and four of his workmen were driven to the roof and escaped through the scuttle next door. There was a rumor that Charles Hermen, an employee of the Eill Rule Company, on the fifth floor, had died in the @re, but the firemen found him on the roof calmly awatting their arrival. He scrambled down a ladder unassisted. | + Deputy Chief Binns had considerable GiMoulty in fighting the fire, which are its way through the junk shop of the D. Theodore Rag Company in the front Part of the building before it was put Ey Marguerite Movers Marshall Go to the city, old malés, go to the| elty! ‘That Is the advice of Miss Anna Cald- well, who has known you, loved you, and now, in her first play, hes given you collective immortality through the person of Hetty Gandy, dressmaker- heroine of “Ihe Nest Bag.” ‘Ja there anything personal in this?” laughed Miss Caldwell, when I asked yesterday to disc’ he past, pres- nd future of the genus old maid. | ause you know I've been married for @ good many years, and have a daughter who is a nice young maid. But,” she added quickly, “I think per- haps I understand the olf maid better than a great many people. Because to ChE” in touch with real life somewhere— another's, if not their own. “Think how good they are to children! The most adorable aunts “You think, then, that old maids are victims, not volunteers?" I questioned. “There never was an old maid yet who difn’t, in her heart of I" There is No Oplum Wor anything injurious In Hale’s Honey Of Horehound and Ter FREE FRE FREE ‘Acan of Sunbeam Brand Peas with every 8 pounde of Chase & Sanborn's Blend Coffes for $1.00. Ham, Roasted Virginia Style, for 18¢ Ib. Eecueant Oolong Tea with every joods in our ee There is nothing better for coughs, colds and sore throat. All "Druggists. When you buy plumes from Steinberg’s, you are buying them from the largest store in New York City devoted exclu- sively to millinery—we guaran- A — size package of Quaker Corn Flakes with FREE For a Lifetime Under control. : me she Isa tragedy and not a comedy.| i tnn navare mad qatde, Fney | mearte, adore men,” declared Miss tee every plume and cheerfully A piano is bought for a lifetime. For this fe building was originally the head- The Old Maid’s Curse. pour ont all thete otesved. mother Caldwell. refund money on unsatisfac- reason the piano you select should be a quarters of the volunteer firemen known «7 ynow," she sald frankly, “that in] love om their nephews and nieces, “It 1s 80 foolish to represent the typl- as the “Red Shirts” of which old Com- tory purchases. % my play I have shown Hetty in rather! and perhaps get nothing at all in | cal old shald as @ suffragette. It's the modore Vanderbilt and John Jacob As-| q comic light But I have tried hard-| return bat e careless, more or less | last thing on earth she'd be She'd FROM TRAPPER TO WEARER Willow Plumes cams 1s e8-| est of all to show the pathos under| good natured mockery.” think ét apolled every chance she had Buy the “FAMOUS Length Bale Price see le apa hs the surface humor—the pathos of a| “What do you think makes women old | left.” KRAMER FURS’ | $8 Plumes...i6inches.... 3,98 GIRLS DINE IN COWSHED. perpetual romance. That is the old “But surely there are unmarried wom- Eee from America’s i ni j= | maid's curse. Miss Caldwell} en who are 80 from choice?” I pro- leading manufacturers | $10 Plumes . . .18 inches. ... 4.98 ee “People say that she is hard is self-sacrifice. | tented. at our wholesale tied 5.98 Warmer Gives Dairy Students «| gna cold and practical and pro- | Two sisters are perhaps left alone, or| ‘Yes, but they aren't old maids,” she Salesroom and save|f siz Plumes...19inches.... 9, The factthat thed Stor ; Surprise in Cleanliness. eaic. The truth ts that she is the | the mother dies and the older sister has| returned. “It sounde paradoxical, you the middieman’s|1 $14 Plumes...20inches.... 6, 98 p thet used Steinway Pianos » LOUISVILLE, Dec. &—Just to whow! most romantic being on earth, |to fill her place with the children, or| think? I remember hearing of an un enormous profit. . a in exctes of the . peaks for the permanent value eR TAL neg RowJust to show | gnd the eruelest fate in the world [one parent lives mucl longer than the| married old lady who always insteted KRAMER FURS _ |{]$20 Plumes...23inches.... 9.98 of the from « musical end commes- ally send beige *| is @ Ufetime of romance, other and a daughter stays at home to|on being called a spinster ‘because a y cial tandpomt. + Re bac) ‘ept in an abso-| «1 gon't condemn romance. It's a| take care of things. spinster, my dear, is a woman who has Py KNOWN $25 Plumes ...26 inches... 12.98 lutely sanitary condition a dairyman & distorted idea of cleanliness of his place, As he had everything prepared they had to accept. When the dinner was over the guests not only told their host but others that they enjoyed the ex- perience, and that they were a little surprised how pleasant a cowshed could De meade for such an occasion. widely. established: Potash. in the food. married beatitude that first came to them when they were sixteen. And that’s all they have. Make Adorable Aunts, “People laugh at them for their love of gossip, their ever-ready desire to meddie with other people's business. But it's onty thetr blind, feeble effort to get @ay who are not and never will be happy wives and mothers because they have been simply powerless show their liking for the society of ‘the man,’ They have shown coldness, almost dis- Uke, that they did not feel, and in do. ing eo they have worked against in- atead of for their desires.” her friends, but she is dependent on their opinions, Like my poor Hetty, she cannot take a young man boarder without wondering what the neighbors will aay. “There are hardly any old maids in New York. Of course one should never call @ woman here by that term”—Mise Complete Assortment trom $6.60 te 86,700, KRAMER FUR CO. $7 Plumes seve. Inches,...3,98 $3 Aigrettes ....very tull....1.29 $5 Paradise... large sprays. ,.1.98 Choose a Steinway once and for all. wheven pr a a beautiful, lovely preparation and a Seif-Repression. had a chance to change her condition, p A frees wate in hie served dinner be-| pleasant thing for a few years in one's| eermne other ai ia self-repression. 1/474 an old maid has had no such THE WORLD OVER the since: a prance, | The v4 See AD Lis shed where cows! ite, But reality ts eo much finer, #0] am a New England woman, And I have | “hance.” mi saa NE 1873' ebenized dairy for a trip of inspection, and | Muck more wonderful—yes, even when| watched that crime of self-rapression Definition of Old Mald. Gnacane FONT, COATS (not when the host proposed that. they eat |!t hurts being taught to little children, I be-| “T define an old maid as a depend- sehen anit nea. $30. ef cB che then lo cockenge. in the cowshed they thought him a bit] “Down in their hearts the poor old! ijeve there are hundreds of women in/ent unmarried woman. She may not Bre’ wh ie sd cg 3 ‘Alco pisace fer vant. too hospitable, or that he might have | maids all have that wonderful dream of| tne country towns of New England to-| be dependent on the pocketbooks of Mssepenntn. tee What About Brain Food? This Question Came Up in the Recent Trial for Libel Further on he says: ‘‘The beginning and end of the The following facts, however, were quite clearly Analysis of brain by an unquestionable authority, Geoghegan, shows of Mineral Salts, Phosphoric Acid and Potash combined (Phosphate of Potash), 2.91 per cent. of the total, 5.33 of all Mineral Salts. This is over one-half. Beaunis, another authority, shows ‘‘Phosphoric Acid combined” and Potash 73.44 per cent. from a total of 101.07. Considerable more than one-half of Phosphate of Analysis of Grape-Nuts shows. Potassium and Phos- phorus, (which join and make Phosphate of Potash,) is considerable more than one-half of all the mineral salts A ‘*Weekly’’ pear some criticiems of the claims oom for our foods. It evidently did not fancy our reply printed in various newspapers, and brought suit for libel. At the trial some interesting facts came out. matter is to supply the lacking principle, and in molecular form, exactly as nature furnishes it in vegetable fruits and grain. To supply deficiencles—this is the only law of cure.” Some of the chemical and medical experts differed The natural conclusion is that if Phosphate of Potash is the needed mineral element in brain and you use food which does not contain it, you have brain fag because its daily loss is not supplied, On the contrary, if you eat food known to be rich in this element, you place before the life forces that which nature demands for brain building. Dr. Geo. W. Carey, an authority on the constituent elements of the body, says: ‘‘The gray matter of the brain is controlled entirely by the inorganic cell-salt, Potassium Phosphate, (Phosphate of Potash.) This salt unites with albumen and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve fluid or the gray matter of the brain. Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve fluid, but Potassium Phosphate is the chief factor, and has the power within itself to attract, by its own law of affinity, all things needed to manufacture the elixir of life."’ “Worry, anxiety, fear, with or stops the flow of Ptyalin, the digestive juice of the mouth, and also interferes with the flow of the digestive juices of stomach and pancreas. In the trial a sneer was uttered because Mr. Post announced that he had made years of research in this country and some clinics of Europe regarding the effect of the mind on digestion of food. But we must be patient with those who sneer at facts they know nothing about. Mind does not work well on a brain that is broken down by lack of nourishment. A peaceful and evenly poised mind is necessary to good digestion. ate, c., &c., directly interferes Therefore, the mental state of the individual has much to do (more than suspected) with digestion. This trial has demonstrated That Brain is made of Phosphate of Potash as the principal Mineral Salt, added to albumen and water. That Grape-Nuts contains that element as more than one-half of all its mineral salts, A healthy brain is important, if one would ‘‘do things" in this world, A man who sneers at ‘‘Mind’’ eneers at the best and least understood part of himself. That part which some folks believe links us to the Infinite. Mind asks for a healthy brain upon which to act, and Nature has defined a way to make a healthy brain and renew it day by day as it is used up from the work of the previous day, Nature's way to rebuild is by the use of food which supplied the things required. There’s a Reason Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. A Bottle of Re Umberto Olive Oil with every Smoked A }4 pound package of Bleacher & Simone Royal Chop Leg of Spring Lamb (Roasted if desired) at 18c. Ib.