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| | —— =<" THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MARCH Women Who Drink Risk Their Own Good Looks, CORONER HIRED Morals and Health, and Their Children’s Also KM UNDERTAKER, Intemperate Use of Alcohol Costs the Gentler Sex More Than It Does Man, Because She Has More to Lose, Says Dr. Henry Author of “The Science of Current Beneath the Wine Bubbles, and Dees Not | Measure Its Price to Women in Dollars and Cents. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. | What is the price a woman | pays for alcohol? Fifth avenue will tell you it is # al quart. Second ave- | nve will tell you it | Is five cents | “schooner.” ! Henry Smit eg Wiltams, B MD iL, will give you an altogether different Dr, Williams does not attempt answer, to measure the cost of alcohol to women in dollars and cents. Maybe the author of “Every-Day Science" and “The ence of Happiness" dors not see any thing particular!, ominous in phe fact that a gold-linked purse swing# lighter on leaving a restaurant, Dr. Williams is 4 scholar and a acientist. As such the women of New York must pardon | him if he does not look at a glass of | wine from exactly their point of view. They must even parden him if he sees @ sinister current beneath the foam of their foibles. If tt were not that the eminent B. Sc, M. D., L. L. D., fs @ scholar and a scientist he would doubt- lees understand {t is the current and not the foam which makes the folbles worth cultivating, Women Pays More Than But, !n any case, whatev Dr Williams's attitude toward the New York woman's point of view, he Is at} least unafraid of expressing his ov mly and to some a trifle trritatingiy | because persons who are able to back | rguments with statistics are ri “A woman pays more for alcohol than does a man. “A woman loses her good looks * through drinking more readily than does @ man, because her looks are | ily because she has more morals to @ull. “She ruins her health more quickly because she is more highly pon the sentence promising for our oman has man?” 1 mentally a than a man,” While | and then added in the spirit of at children call “the Indian giver:” ‘Of course in superfictal things women have less morals than men. What I mean to say is this: ' Are Setter by Nature. | re actually and in- moral than men from the sex point of view. They are by nature, and they have been made #o through all the years they were practically property and guarded ) such, lestionably dr of anybody more than a ian, because she has 1 to lose. Another point is that our mor- ais are less firmly rooted than many of our other qualities, because they are practically the latest development of civilization, The latest development of civilization, the youngest, js always the most easily undermined, If we think of ft that way, we can understand another | reason why the morals of women are more easily affected by drink than are | the morals of men. Far more recently | than man developed !s code of morals, | woman developed hers. Indeed, it Is only within the last few years that women have developed any individual code of any kind. But, remember that now I am speaking of fundamentals, niot the light, superficial code of which woman seems to have little or no con- | ception, “But—" I began. “Oh, I think I can make what T mean | quite plain to you,” interrupted Dr. | Williams. “Take the matter of sa | nore smiled Dr mora falsehoods, for example. Lying Comes Easy. “& woman lies as naturally and ae easily as duck takes to water. ‘The most casual observation will vince you of that. “Watch a man trying to Ne himself out of an appointment over the tele- phone. Nine men out of ten will flow der and blurt out the truth, A woma tells her little fabrications ds simply as a child tells a fairy story, She will lie to a half dozen people in a half an hour | concerning her soclal engagements or | some other subject of almilar im-| portance.” | “And how does alcohol affect & wom: | an's health?” I asked. “Perhaps the sliaplest way to an-| swer that will be to quote some sta- tisticn to yo replied Dr, Williums. “Take the books of one of our | Mife insurance companies, founded 1864, Here are the questions and an-) sewers: | “Does the excessive use of alcoho! | tend te shorten life?’ The answer to| this from the universal experience of | all life insurance companies is that the excessive use of alcohol undoubtedly shortens life. “Does alcohol taken in moderation | affect the probabilities of a lengthy | life? The answor to this query ts that | an increasing number of statistics over an increasing number of year that even @ amount of alco- hol b sbitui ends to shortes life, Abstainers Live Longest. “Third, do total alcohol show a tinetly grea evity ©! munity?” The answer to this question must now be in the affirmative, “Remember, after reading these facts, abstainers | Woman's he: | should not drink is the deepest of all,” Williams tells us: |g | { Smith Williams. Happiness” Sees a Sinister that a woman's health is undeniably more fragile than » man's and you have @ pretty definite answer to the question of whether alcohol affects a th at all, pr more than it ‘ does a man's, “And as for the e@ect of alcohol on & woman's good looks," continued Dr. Williams, “It does not need a actentiat to know that a woman's physical at- tractiveness 1s of arfar more delicate order than a man's, Her skin fe finer than a look of freshnese and youth more easily Impaired. “A woman may drink @ little oh day for 78 and not show it for years, but sooner or later alco- hol is bound to destroy any olaims to beauty a woman may have. “But the main reagon why a woman reason | Dr. Williams went on. Affects “‘heir Children. “If additional evidence of the all- pervading influence of alcohol ts re- quired, it may be found in the thought- compelling fact thatthe effects are not limited to the individual who imbibes the alcohol, but may be passed on to her descendants, “The offspring of an alcouolis woman show impaired vitality of the most deep-seated character. “In examining into th history of] Idotic, epileptic, hysterical, or | weak-minded children in the institution at Bicetre, France, Bourneville found | that over 41 per cent. had alcoholic | ——-— —— parents. The matter is presented in a nm H, Welch when ifflcient quanti- ng organisms, To by Dr. Wilt : ‘Aleohol in tone alcohol time that in exer afte inxiy 1 doses might be harmless.| tion was left at 10 o'clo Ss i The ouvious answer is that the same) iio. hysteria developed + thing ts true of any and every poison) ica whatsoever. Arsenic and strychnine, in| ‘in proceeded, and at the Grand Cen- appropriate doses, are recognized by all] {tal St@tion @he was entirely beyond one physicians as admirable tonics; but no| felf-control and {t was though! best of one argues In consequ that they | remove her from the car, are not virulent polsons. Sue Was turned over to Policeman; orehound and Tar “So then,” I sald, “what ts the price) iratz of the East Fitts @ woman pays for alcohol? station, who called an ambulance f “The price a woman pays for al- | | cohol," replied Dr. Williams, grave- Hosea her health and the hi als of her children.” vather high price even as pr in New 3 ori. HENRY il a ELIAMS HAS SEIZURE IN “SUBWAY, a oe G & Co. display of Clothes for Spring range of style and fabric tincUive models being shown ready-lor-service clothes, the ct it S begoit oice of tt and conditions, Here is a synopsis of the assortment and Smith Gray & Co. ready-for-service clothes in models designed exclusively for the discrimin- ating New Yorker and in models designed for the Smith Gray & Co. wholesale trade, are to be had in over 400 fabrics and upwards of 30 distinctive models in Spring Suits at A to 45.00 and Spring Overcoats at 18.0) to 50.00 with extra special values in suits and Overcoatsat 15,50 and 18.50 SPECIAL TAILORING Smith Gray & Co, .tailored-to-measure Suits and Overcoatscan be had tailored to your me: ure, specially cut, and delivered whenever 5 say, from 500 styles in upwards of 40 distinctive models, at prices ranging from 20, to aS i, 55.00 with some very special valucs at 20.00, 22.50 ans 25.00. 22.50 BLUE SERGE SUITS 16,00 Here are several hundred high grade blue serge suits, which from any standpoint you will, are excellent values at 22.50. ‘he fabricis from one of America's foremost serge weavers secured well under price—the tailoring was done at odd moments when work was slack and figured as keep-busy work, and profit is walved a6 a means of immediate disposal. There are six die tinctive etylea for men and young men--the saving to you 4s 6.50, HATS KNOX HATS— Knox-Beacon Derbies and Soft Hats Knox-Roxford Derbies and Soft Hats 4.00 Knox-Smith Gray extra quality spe- cial derbies and soft hats............ 5.00 Knos-Smith Gray silk hats.. .. 7.00 Stetson Derbies.. 3.50 and 5.00 3.50 to 12.00 3.00 Stetson Soft Hats,......... Mossant, Vallon et Argod French soft hats..... 4.00 and 5.00 Joseph Ward's English Wool Hats 2.00 3,00 to 5.00 Soft and Stiff ifats, samples no and seconds 1% Fulton St. at Flatbush Ay, || Two Brooklyn Stores: | Broadway at Bedford Av. than any of its precede years and six—Smith Gray & Co, tailored-io-measure clothes, for those who s individual expression or the working out of their own ideas in their clothes also the complete and varied assortment of the Smith Gray & Co, wholesale depart- ment comprehending in its scope style ranges suitable for all services, purposes Smith Gray QCo...5.. ee ———EE Foremost Clothiers Since 1845. The progress of an industry was never more clearly shown than in the present Smith and Summer, More compr eh ale in ors, some 700 fabric 70 dis- rol th es "& Co. 2 hore critica ew Yorker for three ser nd The values are educational—they make for a new high standard. values:— SEVERAL HUNDRED SPRING AND SUMMER SUITS UNDERPRICE tailored in the custom shops of Smith Gr: Co., from the discontinued staple numbe short ends from the wholesale tailoring de; ment-—call cut on the new 1911 es all sizes and fabrics —hundreds of styles in all, but only n few ina lot yours at savings from 4.59 to 12.59. ae ry i a vi eguly y 20.00 15.50 fo suits that would regularly be 20. and 22.50, 18.50 for suits that would regularly be 22.50, 22. 25.00 and 27.50. & 22.50 for suits that would regularly be 27,50, 30.00 and 32.50, Spring Coats in black, Oxford and many smart styles of gray, brown and correct tan and olive shades, including regular lines priced and broken sizes reduced —regular 18.00, 20.00 and 22.50 values are most ac- tractive at 15.50 Silk lined to edge Oxford and black vicuna fin- ished Thibet Spring Overcoats, New 7 York's most wonderful valuc 20.00 In the past the demand for these garments has kept the »s broken most of the time, but now all si re to be had, and we urge that if you would participate, you make your selection now. 125 dozen Neglige Madras, Oxfords and Percales—in all sizes and sleeve lengths = values regularly 1.59, 2.09 and 2.59 95c 199 dozen A0c, 75¢ and 1,00 Neckwear—clearance r wench folded » four-in-hands, + Values up to 1.00 3 for 1.00 200 dozen silk-stitched, genuin® Kassan Gloves, in dark, medium and light shades. Reg- 1.0) ular 1.50 values Ot CHILDREN’S DEPT. Russian Suits in blue serge and fancy mixed cheviots, 6.50 values 4.75 Sailor Suits in blue serge and fancy 4 75 mixed cheviots, 6.50 vatues rr a3) Double Breasced Suits, blue serge and taney mixed cheviots, some with extra Knick- 4 74 ers, 6.39 value eid Confirmation b ind dout ‘ * alu tv) oth AY. ‘het, PY i & 28th Sts, Ii] een ; Colds che Drops “Minute. 16, 1911. Big Price Cuts This Week at All the 200 ‘‘James Butler’’ Stores Very Best Creamery Butter, ». 25° Essie Tomatoes 12° Essie Sugar Corn " 10° 29° |TableButter,|b.23° -We are mile these specially selected, delic iously sweet and = 22° Largest 1dc cav of choicest selected ripe, red fruit reduced to. CHOICE GROCERIES iciously sweet and ve Finest trom Maine Prints of highest quality; fresh NEW LAID emus at ue rate of ten thousand dozen a § 25| with all le aq oes bag : the cream; sd arent and best Gay leBrookBuitter!”\:: prokeatnns eoih East View EGGS (ee tea b Cheese peut toy a lb e CondensedMilk 7 322 c Butler and Shawfiee Brands, from rich whole milk, in sanitary cans; ent to, a can...... Fat, can.... Cant, 5 f. K ippered Herring a Sardines j Maconce nie’S SiivOcea, the Koyal Blue Ribbon gm Choicost fresh frait jo \ Choice Selections at Sharply Cut Pe Seotch, plain or in tomato sauce, 12% Vorwe V glass jar 15 Sarainee tay Gti : _ e large 7c. can... Marmalade , rom Kras ortugal preserved in fine oil; very “tasty nutritious; can 6 soee Dupoi.t Brand, choice Sardines, pack- ed in finest olive oil; can reduced to. 25c¢ Boneless Sardines, delicious dainties in best olive oil; large can.......... Marshali’s world famous Aberd cainties; plain or in tomato sauce; 1 large 17% can 12° © Liaconochte’s Silvocca, the Royal ge Blue Ribbon, choicest; jarge No.) glass jar 15¢, Triumph Rice Choicest whole head gra large No. 3 cloth bag. . Scotch, with or without tomato sauce; ein CAD» sesesvesectarecvacens ess Big, fat fish Large Holland Mack- Mackerel from Nor- 4 3 for 20¢ Noto 99, erel in No. Be ee Jet 2 9 kit.. 9 pails, each... Pure Fish Tablets Appetizing and wourishine. large pkge Pure Fish Threads | PureCodtishThreads 5 Easier’ Rabbits Fluted Cocoanuts rig Newtons 10° 4 Peertoss Brana iw shreds; pkge.. ut bo, MLCK rand: splendid value, pige.... Clean and good, as nourish- Pure Lard, « 13°; 2 ws. 35° Rice, ing as the highest priced. , 3 u ibs. Tr Smoked Shoulders, ". 12°|Rolled Oats, tmnir’ 3m. 9° Bacon, Finest sugar-cured, every slice It steed with kan and fay Be 19° Navel Oranges, '""2!:"".25¢ streaked with lean and fat; |b. 1 “Liberty Jams | __Liberty Preserves | Corn Meal babbitt’s Cleanser All kinds home-grown fruits; * 10°; | Home made from ripe‘fruits 29° | White or Yellow—Very 10¢ 5 th Be “S$. & H.” Stamps “S.& HL" St F lurge No. 1 glass jar...... bin liege atone crocks, each | best; large No, 8 cloth bag amps FREE with with 30° 1 Ib. COFFEE P large ean for 160 J-A” Stamps FREE i«:||20 “S. & TH’ Bamps | FREE with (50° FREE 4 ib. BEST 50c TEA, 25c Both BQe , ib. BEST COFFEE, ¢ 35¢ { tor 1 lb. BEST TEA.. aK 60 This Week's Specials at All the 116 James Butler, Inc., Licensed Stores: Medicinal Malt Whiskey, 63: Butler's, Spring tonic and appetizer regular 75c. bottle, cut to..., Special Reserve Rye, $1.25 a bottle t this to ional wee 89° | California Claret, ir juni, 95 noe AT gallon, BD Gallon, GY" J. B. Choice Caltfornia Port & Sherry, jvc! 24; 40° i Bass Ale, . hin ‘$1.15 | Guinness’s Stout, votes, Me srt ‘1.00 | Wl f »rineeiow Cocktails, 63° ‘Amporied Claret, sot. Julien; ve full b ied dinner wine, bottle ....., s Lager Beer Buppart's, Eichler’s 8@ or bi ieee Brand, 7 years old, regular 50c. bottle, tampsFREE with c Coroner's offce ae a “death from nat-] that Coroner Winterbottom had ponses | Gt ir au M aute fearing the | sion ¢ all the avaliable information. , 1 f pith hm ae |The house was sealed up. | eon caer disgrace of a ny his son-in-law, | a jdied last night at his home tn Brot hanged himself. Undertaker James Es | Coroner Admits Suicide. liyn. At one time Mr. Remsen served o* Winterbottom buried the body, | It was not until to-day, after the cane | various, feamers ot the New York ane had received some publicity, that Cor-| Cuba Mail Steamal Lompany, plyit Buried Cornelius Vanderbilt, | had received some publicity, that Core) Havent, ‘Nastau and Moxicen port Mr. Winter nas 1 extensive | © ¥ rottom br me communtens | r he w with tne New York A~ Sixth avenwe eatablisnme We varied | Ife said that four notes were! » Press for eleven years, thee G « Vanderbilt nar rther | found in the re with the dead girl. | with United Press, and in :8 joinse angen panded hs dh she tly Mae 1) Was a general explanation | the staff of The Associated Press. Yow At the time of the La mms for killing herselt—p the last thirteen years he had been & he sald he could amploy of the New York sun. kness and world weariness. at Ad nd for criticism if his dutles as| \. feiny fe netving the poll Coronet brought him into contact with hi ca eg Ah elle ee Undeatatte Exterminetes ustomers of hh vain t med t ie wi CASS ve Urecr eaee sae there had Goaranteed to Kill I interbottom Learns of Girl's) Nim to We 4 Weattimat: caune £08 ek" | There was @ policeman there when 1 RATS & MICE i wie ef bi Mise ee ho. wae thiity * he said, “And there war no | Death Officially Then Takes | ois, wed with her w pe reason why he should not have made! ‘I prompt report of the facts. | | on the seventh ff of the One 1 e was ol 0 . Job to Bury Her. red and ‘Thirteenth street apart seni tha pie | Rf Bed Bugs ouse, A amell of gas filtered out tn'o stika howed’ that’ « potiees| Ue ennsad e SOON TS the main hall yesterday afternoor and | DAN did visit the Green apartment dur KILLS INSTANTL® For a second time wit! nw the tenants ¢ her floors complained es Not Stele ne to light an ance of Hi han Meyerm, the . my of t hae oat Liquid, spout cons, t8e, S80. 1 ful harmony w h exis building, traced door 1 Dreggiots’, Grovere’, Delicatecoens, ; r _— ———————— the Green apartn was no James KE. Winterbattom's off estigation was ordered i} || cial position of Coroner and hie private | srewer whe : eee out came back and reported | Rough on Roac nae susiness as an undertak: This time) Miss Green was found dead in’ her roner Winte a eel Liquid, Guaranteed, n gation by gas of hung a rubber tube through which gas arr | Mis y Wet earl Rowing, Dee Hees Caves ne} MINIGTER KNOWLES'S SON | Med aiapedbonrbaersed Al : bil IS KILLED IN BOLIVIA. | Delictennens onstdlar ! | oan Med ee Rough on Fisas ‘elruary to Coroner Winter: M h 16 Mat 1 a" Galveston, (Powder or Soap) esd Pine the. black | Texas March 16.—Malcolm Knowles, son t man. | wagon of Undertaker Winterbottom was| %f, Horace G. Knowles, the American | ee ee i% t le Emanuel at the doo The police reported tn an. safe ooh cha | 1 nd the r th notified until late, andl at o . . iebmann’s, for :