The evening world. Newspaper, April 26, 1911, 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)

MRS. BELMONT’S ARDENT WOOER SAYS HE'LL STOP Suffragist Dr. Jakola Tells Court He Thought Atten- tions Were Welcome. WROTE WARM LETTERS. “Silly Nuisance,” Comment of | Society Woman He Dubbed “Juno of America.” Dr. John Was extre Jakola, the he-suifragtst, nely contrite when he was ‘rraigned in West Side Court to-day ma charge of annoying Mrs. O. H. P. Relmont with attentions, would refrain Belmont in 1 would soon sf his feet, was present, did unwelcome that he addvessing Mrs that New York from nt, Who not ward when the case was alle bert Reeves, ler lawyer, talked for her, “Mrs, Belmont,” said Mr, Reeves, “has NO desire to press the case if this man will agree to quit following her and otherwise annoying her. dition she will w “I admit I and I promise to be! Dr. Jakola On that eon- hdraw the complain’ follow Mrs. ave in future, te t him with a warning. “He was just making too much of a nutsance of was the state- ment of given out through James Mo- . today, ‘He assumed that his ridiculous personality 1 made an impression. Mrs, Belmont has no Kea that there was any sincerity in his foolish attentions. She believes he was seeking to take advantage tion which extst his own silly though: he woul influence by havi celated with Mrs. Impres: According to Mr Jakola fi ed nowhere except in mind, and at he gain notoriety and g his name asso- Belmont. MeMahon, D himseif'to Mrs, Bel mont’s attention early last winter. He wrote that he was going to Finland to a! condition of women vould be pleased if Mrs, Bel- mont would allow him to lecture to the suffragists of New York on his return. Mr. McMahon a Belmont's i- rection thanks and sald ¢ would be very glad to hear him Two months later another note an- nounced the profess He was invited to address a Hari pting one Friday night in January. The audience reported at headquarters the next day that Dr. Jakola was going to be a tower of strength for the Cause. He was forceful, persuasive and had a charming personality, AS’ many speaking engage- ments as he could accept were offered to him. At one of his early meetings he met Mrs. Belmont. She was cordial to him and thanked him on her own behalf for the good work she said he was doing. Mr. McMahon said that she had been very much Impressed with the doctor's pleasant manners and that she was especially pleased to have men recrults in the suffragists’ campaign. Her enthusiasm went all wrong. The doctor te it for sentime nh Th became rather notice- able the next time he met Mrs. Bel- inont and she was obliged to be the least bit cold. But her change of man- ner did not teach Dr. Jakola anything. Wept at Her Absence. A week later he spoke at Hempstead, where Mrs. Belmont lives, He appar- ently had a notion that Mrs. had made the arrangement for him to speak there but was coyly keeping in the background. When he took the platform and saw that Mrs, Belmont | was not present he showed his disap: | ¥ pointment plainly. He stopped and | stammered and looked over tho faces before him again and agalo. “Why,” one of his audience told Mrs. blotted out almo. Be his notes with his te The next day a great box of ros arrived at Mrs. Belmont’s town Attached to them was a card t her that in Finland, in rose time to a friend betokene he hoped sh ments w accept from him. Mahon wrote t of the Every few flowers arr Belmont | a formal ac- ywers for Mrs. days after that more Mrs. Mr, McMa ted a note which saying that she » would con: flowers, and that she at @ person of the doctor's nt well save e flowe would be plea tinue sen yught tha limited than nothing, Pursued Her, Proclaiming Love. The doctor wrote letters, implo Mrs mont not to harden her against him, He called her dese of Peace,” also the Modern Womanhood." and ‘Juno of America.” Mr, McMahon did not acknowled three, but the fourth glowed with such h that, without ¢ Mrs. Belmont, he note to Dr, Jakola, orous wa wrote a telling Dr, Jal and Jo axicab ud to eo M Was not at r the Rarny #-hool. He dropped who he was ised, and on com sterday told Mr summons whi Was served on him last night of a situa- | ic Belmont THE 4VENING WUKLD, THE GAY Sour THE INTENSE — 's Costume May Be Becoming! MLLe. to Her Physically and Yet) Not Suit Her Personality, | | Asserts Miss Groth. | Dp. Py Ethel Lloyd Patterson. Here ts a new way to dress, A fascinating young | person named Miss Catharine D, Groth, who ai on the} Oceante to-day, lec- | tured about it at Teachers’ College. Sho has given sim- Nar lectures at the Sorbonne, in Paris, | the Theatre Semina | and the Theatre Femina de ta Ren- , in short, discovered sion in dress and re- the fourth | t toa simple e | ‘A woman must 4 | ) the kind of soul she possessec,” | exylas- od Miss Groth. “A hat ora | Costume might be t-rfectly becom- | ing ton woman physteaily and yet | not be in keeping with her soul. | anation according If she ts not clothed in just the garments thr: wilt her real person- ality sho canot be at her best. “But how know when one's clothes do suit one’s soul?” I queried, a trifle Puzzled. A soul costume somehow su Last, there is the Ethereal gested @ rather chilly affair of cobwebs Might think a woman with buttoned down the back with dew drops, S#0uld always dress tn white, but I b lieve certain shades of very pale b Should Feel Comfortable. | are even more spiritual than absolute! — THE SAD SOUL \ THE SPIRITUAL JOUVE “How know?" repeated Misa Groth. | lack of color," Does aot every woman know when! _“Do you think most of the women in) he does not feel quite comfortable in; America do dress according to th some ono particular dress? Cannot a | S0Uls?” T asked woman tell immediately when there ts| Amazed by American Dressing. | something wrong th what she ts/ ‘Well, 1 hope not! protested Sits Wearing? Usually the wrong is that Groth. have been in America fo % her aoul is being hampered. fi ks after an absence of a year, chu CAbaed GANA Beliah anes 102 Twas very much struck by on on righ, sad woul and expect tt to feel cay more than you could put | ® gay dress on « gay soul and | expect tt to romain gay.” i “Ah! then there are certain colors for) certain kinds of souls?” I exclaimed. {| | thing in the way the American women dress “The most respectasle women, thers, seem to strt ves look as much | women of an ob- You simply can- a a clase hero in | Certainly," agreed Miss Groth, and | from her dre | Have sii, has Iam afraid I was wondering whether | be accounted for by! ' e it slavish manne woman ac. in which the the models her own black satin suit meant that she herself had a naughty little soul, a plain Deaths From Poison et doy, saying he was Philip b am- ft seems ft didn’t, She explained big Parisi Akers. © | ef - ra * | son ». 165 Sackville street, Brook- tha | thease: mov pu for the. Women That Was Placed in Beer. urch tn ‘Cotowa, N. J., @ email | yn a that he had lack," she said, “ts becoming to any | Of. the stage and the dem!-mondaines of | awn miles out of Paterson's re rhe seal Said, ‘ls becoming to any! paris, but women of Irreproachal) ‘ aw | twenty 8 woman who ns Personaltty. | utation wear these extreme cost knsuacnascunial Jerty of the New A woman w soul uses black a8| here, It is roally amazing, SHIA, Abril aivateceliy ea, and | Company of No, & sort of frame for the picture. She,|considers what an in ie + | sey City, by whom h s Jeath at their home here | th “Lock me up end notify the Jerse: herself, stands out away from 1t. It {s/ America ts, that her women \ br Lock me up end notify the J y 6 originality in drass 8 wife, | br City police, so that T can see my fa hot a question of coloring at all with | Play so little originality in to New York raotia(cien, Tie waa ake black, T think, It is merely whether | ally they al! look exact! work this morning as usual ae vue's personality is ao weak that it will | ye it is f "It la all nonsense to make & mystery be submerged; or so strong that the ai tare aut at and sensation alp black will leave It Mrs. Coe to an An Attractive Picture. But that couldn't be!’ concluded Miss oo Groth with a shrug. nphant. lou | cilbeiphed aise eth Wit STE E sc in shel tear to co material one that 1 am, 1) 0f "foul # woman wou a the house i reste Soohned’ to. believe: te [Sat i |otnarcat th Was clear, pale skin and masse cits pact, and the of stoning back ale guint na | EX-MILLIONAIRE BOOTH ented that bt brim of a 1 t. o0 shouk! die together ‘when ‘she camo Inte the re-| OUT OF LEGAL 1 TROUBLES) | shou aie tpgsines wat | Hotel B tj 5. | Indictments “Agi inst st Former He at of Big Fish Concern Dismisse on Payment of $2,000, his wife forty-six years old, | PUBLICITY, SAYS 5 ELIOT, | ‘ WILL § STAMP OUT VICE. ' m absurdly WEUVNKSDAY, APhRil 26 AMERICAN WOMEN ALL DEESS ALICE STARRETT ONLY 46, \No Mystery in His Marriage Theories to Ex- | ACCUSES EX-WIFE Psychic Fashion Has a Fourth Dimension (OF TRYING TO LURE ¢ ~ THERBOYS AWAY Charles B. : dae of East | Orange Reports Case to the Police. Marien with Taekeon, who ts the Pittenure ¢ an nested Nase lives at Steuben street and Ninth t Orange, N the Bast Orange police t betleved at hy reported to lay what he to be an hey Atvorced wife The b Shelton, a thetr way and we Norman, aged 1 eleht—were guarded on and from tod. not allowed to go out of steht of thely home in play. Mra. Jackson lett her Months ago. He did Hts until papers that she was tn Re had entered suit for a divorce ie Was J differentiy last nigh Woman Questions Boy: The boys were playing t their home | when @ richly dressed woman ap- proached them and asked If they knew where a ce n resident of their nelgh. borhood lived. The hove know the per- son tnaquired for tved tn ‘Tam a stranger here, man, “Would stil fn Reno until his | ery. you boys 190." ‘The youngsters wore oniy Jto accommodate the stranger [wuked up Ninth avenue to Grove Street, where the sharp eyed Shelton | [faw hie mother standing on the corner | ngside a big automobile, | “There's mamma," called Shelton to | hig brother, stopping tn his tracks. you come over and se your nee asked the strange woman rind they | too | “We'd Uke to," ‘answered Norman, | + ‘sout papa tok us not to unless | mamma comes home.” | Boys Hurry Home. | Mrs, Jackson did not leave the aide | of the automobile, but waved song to approagh, —natend, turned around and started (or his jon @ run, and after a moment Norman | followed hit. | Mr, Jackson was at home when the | boys burst In with the news that they had seen their mother. Upon hearing | | the story Mr. Jackson went to the telephone to call up the polico, but was President | unable to Ket a connection. He investt- Yesterday to His Confiden- tial Secretary, Miss Ayres, ieodore Starrett, former of the Thompaon-Satrett Company ana {&ited and found the telephone wires balldaeiotuiee, Ben ‘| ad been cut in his back yard. pullder of skyscrapers, was married im-| “phe father of the boys ix convinced mediately after he obtain enae in! that the mother Intended to get them Paterson, N. J. ye | Ayres, for [secretary and stenogr of the marriage was I Mes, Ayr w sterdny to Mise yerrs his sie| into the automobile and run away with ae es n, Ho told the p that if his The fact] many gisbalibes! MN Sah "| CONFESSES THEFT so HE ed at No. ond street Cater) teak oSttroBR$¥$ re Si To-: Morrow, Thursday, April 27th *25 Spring Suits ; Now Reduced to 13%, An after Easter rounding «(ei > at all broken sizes collected ain CAN SEE WIFE AND BABY. japesen’ sch ected | ROCHE N.Y. April 28, “"‘Lcan't | when he bride and | OAt OF sleep decnure I have deserted my wife | plo surrendered and baby and robved my em- robbed a young man who had | himseif to the police to- | her a City Clerk with n ad arranged Star and T married ward Starrett when t with them y afte six AS sone his age. The biti ing and ho ‘GULDEN'S MUSTARD Makes Hot & “AG . Ww, ‘ Cold Megts Tasty CHICAGO, April 2%. —W. | lookir he worked at h, President of the bankru ‘tarre aitice at 3 aA orporation of Booth & Co, »| Harvard's tent ‘Eme itus Says until btu ree elp it; With Frederick A its | .C Shc 1 th ere cory Ntores, | a table fancy what @ help It/ No and ‘Treasurer, was under Society Sh pou Wae ye War on jw th each bottle jon't think I Id, there are so|“ictment for conspiracy to defraud the the Social Evil. | don't thin Ha, there are 60 al National Dank out of $300,-| my TAVEN, Cont man orens 000, has Kot out of his legal troubles py at evil be | i MBit lin a peculiar way. Bodth wae a big t State conference he wom- 1 , the wor aKo and was rated 0 Honaire W. F 4 us of Harvard, | Meee AOE AE | og e's Attorney Wayman asked the ulun of publictty to stamp | Pad > Aine ‘ rey i , at arent * » indietr a nd > education of | loating dre: of 4 soth and fe ‘ ildven u or certain shades ¢ with obtain x Mt ‘| THURSDAY, APRIL 27th 1 ne Soul; that | t Pa EXTI DINARY SALE OF i ee ‘awalty. Aba Pu y ° 5 rume velvet and’ ‘ ) Pi : ’ " all the crude color! is ‘ . ‘ ‘ ’ ‘ ’ » ies satin all Persian and Oriental Dress Nets The Intense Soul. be 4 , fietmioa in so foul. ‘The i 1 One.half and Less Than Former Prices i” financial ie & nsest reorgan w W cna AP Yr she w dd, ac ‘ i 36, 40 and 45 inches wide, ce dotted and small figured Oriental aol per 1 0 , Sad Soul Imitation Is the Price ot Popularity LY Py, Ys eenk SLD CEYLON tee Nets, Black and White Striped ‘ond Figured Nets, Valenciennes Allovers, White and Ecru Cotton Net with embroidered pin spots in fashionable colors, also delicate and attractive colorings in Persian effect VALUES yard, .35 to .60 4 75 to LIS to 1.35 i] 2.25 to 3.25 Colored: Dress Fabrics SRYEBAL TINGS OF NOVEM Ta WOOL BUITINGS TO 65 95 & Dcadwany & Ig i" Stucel, | > from our $25 assortments A of Spring costumes. Every model \ freshly new and a-sparkle with latest | style thoughts, yet compelled to sub- 4 mit to this ruthless price cut. . Shepherd Checks | aK Novelties, Men's Serges ~ Favorite models, choice materials, \@ loveliest shades, all answer “here’ ) “SM? to meet the need of every woman's figure, style and complexion, in both novelties of the well bred class richly t trimmed or jaunty trotteur suits 4 of tailored simplicity. Unrestricted s choice to-morrow, $13.75. > Alterations FREE LE AT ALL THREE STORES " Ss 14-16 West idth Street — New York \ 4 2 } 460 and 462 Fuiton Street-—Brooklyn % y ° 3 oo) Gamat Street—Newark, N. J. . eked ar all for their Suits’ th Ave. ‘th Corner Street The reproduction at popular prices of height-of-fashion models selling at $40.00 to $50.00 is the { pronounced specialty of this Fa- mous Suit House. To-morrow Comprising the grandest collec. tion of dashing, stunning models ever seen in. New York, Pre-eminent are the latest sailor ' collar effects in navy, blue, black and white serges; also handsome novelty suitings. As Always Free Alterations A Simple Test Take two slices of bread—one of Shults’, one from any other loaf—~taste each, That will convince you more quickly than volumes of “reasons why” is the best bread baked. Shults’ bread is made from the finest hard wheat flour. It is scientifically baked in an absolutely untlorm manner. he best bread baked— For Everybody, Everywhere, Always ¢ IT MAKES LITTLE DIE RENCE WHAT YOU N A SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” WILL GO GET jr.

Other pages from this issue: