The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 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)

er nnn Te ienenemeemnmeein THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JUNE TWOPRETTY GIRLS ‘Man I Must “Step Lively” to Merit the Love ot Modern Woman, Based on Intellectuality ee nnnaAnAAAAAAAAAAnAAnnn AARAAA: | Her Emancipation Does Not Mean An End to Romantic SAVED FROM DEATH | BY DRUG AND GAS Dibitiuty. Cees Dressed “Cla Lynch” Hires Room for | Suicide. Love, But It Wiil Not Dr. Julia Seton Sears. Men and Women in the Pasi OTHER WASTED LEGACY. BY ETHEL LLO ' : mantic love? Ursula Ross, Her Spent on Fine Clothing, Takes Poison on Street. $20,000 will be none in Tre inpted auictde perfect economi: eariy y Pots: clfeutne before romantic stances Py 1 by proinpe Towlay Dr. One } ’ ty and TET Thought movem: aM ¢ act. san : #8, sald to ha $2. ing questions of the present. " Led istl “Romantic love is in the world \ omptete hidden in! now. It has Divate ' ad ew mpt of a toe in a furs ‘Too many of us think of love as oe 8 ’. j an essentially physical emotion. “True love it really a fair ex- was e ‘ | od Wris Hospitu wonseions | fom gas, until late this afternoon, she ajar vefu any information oncernlng Peimari id t0 ‘ could not appeal intellectually. She doctors and ve ean was 4, BA@ none of that coin with which to yok Mer lvess and genera attention. sPoerrance do not agree with the stor “The more we grow in heart aad Nor clot ainit Whe or toe hws: weate ung, ™ind the more capable esl A wa with the Initials “G roma: ‘te lovi “ do the only sic Dr Seton Sears's n few photographs m, which 1s Upon a subject “hich one teas Jeads tad been cut. Sie sald briefly as ve. d the Woman's h ent.’ 4. Seurs, who has jus ee diiah probe ; ned from England, is at the head of The New Thought School, and is a Bavet devo ries of con Che y 1 ng Kit! | gotous eug ty waa ational |g do hot agree with Mr. Etits | garb, They were ap that there e n no worlds 1 suggested. Pivot ON WHICH THE WORLD eal love in pher in Third av winth street. He tans cers tare cose aes en} MOVES IS LOVE. came ther J. ‘T. Mattson, proprietor The pive upon which the word of the room ine, ducluren they {Moves is love,” replied wr. Seara Ms not. Ot the pictures there | "There always has been love and there | Wibtate (0 bea ets always will be} ‘ve could none of Balisaniah ihblnted: that girl took |S e@xl@e withor: it, In anne degree the foom at No. 10 West Eighty-firat Waoat varies is the expression of love. street yesterday afternoon for the pur- | A% We oble. of heart ani finer Sake ui sommuttion wuirtda. | intelle. are able t understand When Assistant Superintendent Mar- PASE iy Ona): > Drene eats iota reely, Mankina he discovers it not create love; tine he J. Hood Wright Hospital, aa se r As soon as our hearts tried to get the girl to tell something An are | ~ enough ‘> take it in it is there awit herself she refuse he | fiat Is what Mr. Ellis means to a great Te T do it will get to the papers,” Bhe | oxcent, when he says that there as rauld. Insists She Is “Clara Lynch” ited that her name was and (hat sh aA COOK, She was suffering serious! m gas In | underste halation wh ght to the| press it? hospital and it was long before she be- ‘ame conse been go romantic lov in the past. Hi neans we did not know it well enoug. understand !t or to express it.” “Do you mean that women have not n she was bro’ “1 asked. | “L mean netther men nor women | lous and gave the name the | ast have properly understood real| police believe is fictitious jlove" replied Dr, Sears, “We are all @ house where she attempted sul us apt to think of love usually as a 8 a rooming house, run by J. Ts} physical emotion. physteal attrace Mattson. According to the story he tol the police, the young woman came there yesterday and asked to look at the va cant rooms, She selected the best {n the tlon that a woman has for a man has ayed a very large part in his| dea of love for her. In the always house, and said she had just to| attract men physically and call the the city to spend her vacation. i wer they thus exercised love. She was dressed in the best of taste ern woman of intelligence has too ach respect for herself as an tndivid- to care to appeal to the man she| loves in much the same way as @ good) dinner might appeal to him, or a log | fire on a cold day But it Is not that love has changed fn @ handsome long suit of brown ma- black low cut Oxford shoes and black silk stockings. When Mattson did manage to ask her something about herself she said: “Oh, I'm @ cook,” but the way she sald it impreseed 3 with the idea that lope great fundamental love has heen he was trying to repel personal ques: | , , vere all the time, But the tions. So he asked no more. | woman has grown tine enough to under- About 4 o'clock Matson smelled gas ; velled #48. | stand it He traced the odor to the young) J ustion of buying and selling, nor of woman's room ster and ala She Know , Policeman Early of the West sixty.| master and slave, She Knows that love eighth street station died. ang | between @ true man and a true woman the two men put their shoulders to the | '* the joining of forces equally strong, ‘nor and burst it in, While the police. | Yet #omehow incomplete without each man threw the window. open and | ner. i turned off the gas, Mattson ran for!) WOMAN WHO LOVES DOESN'T was milk, | LOSE PERSONALITY. They forced the emetic into the wo: | man and woman who love one an- man’s throat, but being unable to bring + do not surrender, they merge. her around, hurried her off to the hos-| ‘The old idea was that the woman dis- pital, All her effects were packed in two suit cases which the police have|name, The modern idea, the true ideal taken charge of. jof marriage, ts that netther man nor SQUANDERED HER HERITAGE,, woman discards anythinr; they simply TOOK POISON ON STREET. «ain each other, A pretty, well dressed giri stood »ob-| “But whether or not love has ever b ing at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth | been adequately expressed except by sireet and Lexington avenue at the chosen few," said Dr. Sears, this morning as Policeman B least the fate of romantic love 1s quite the East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth | safe in the hands of the woman of the street station approached, future, Nothing can stop the mental the took @ small box from he: hand- development of the modern woman, and bag, removed sometidng from tie vox jore nothing can stop nore carded her personality with her maiden 4nd ewallowed tt, | complete and finer appreciation of all ‘I've taken these,” he gasped, as sie | that love can mean, Men were content held out a box marked noride of | With the old fashioned woman, the ami- » simpleton, as Mr, Ellis calls her. § developed in spite of the man and not because of tiem modern woman may appear to meroury. The policeman c ras she toppled over and ran with her into aurant nearby. ling for three or four raw eggs ug he broke them and forced them down | giving too little thought to love, Pert her throat, They relieved her to some s giving it too iittle thought from extent, but her condition was so crit-|the physical aspect. But then in the foal when Dr, Martin arrived and took past sie gave it far too much thought her to Harlem Hospital, {t was believed | from just that point of view, For the she would die. present she {8 occupled with other “If she gets over it it will be due to | things, Mating and romance for one the quick and Intelligent work of the | prief generation may appear to be sec- policeman,” said the doctor, ondary considerations. But how she “My yr will tell it all," the giri sald 41 emerge from her temporary ab when pressed for an explanation, She | straction! The modern woman, when she said she was Ursula Ross, years old, | once more turns her thovgh to love, and that she lived with her sister, Mrs. il] be fit mate for gods, onoluded Adele Getteys, at Avenue O and East pr, Sears. “Man cannot afford to rest upon any laurels he may ever have Sth street, Matbush. She wore a prin- By If he is to be the equal of the cess dress with a large picture hat 08: brother-in-law at his of the future anc learn to ex- pinta Te ene tering together with her, the perfect $70,000 a year ago at the death of b parents, and had since spent 1! all, most all of it in speculation and for fine clothes Boom in Steel Trade, st e PITTSBURG, Pa, June 6.-A nimbe She lived at the cos of the Carnegie 36 said, and they had quite | he C er recently, He admitted » any and the a St cag ugh mirers, but was of the opinion that her “ompany whi a neta al mission for some time were j attempt to die was due to the squan- joer i day. A large force « dering of her inheritance rather than were given employment to @ love affair, although he Was UN- the steel trade here, it 1 t cau the | ter now than for mont! stood Love; Women Now Understand It, Asserts New Thought Head. Mow will the modern woman move: Havelock Ellis, the English author, says there has} been no real romantic shackles of mental servitude to man Mrs. Lena Morrow Lewis, the American lecturer, agrees with Mr. pe int of view toward a discussion which involves one of the most interest- d love nor known how to ex-) past women were content to! modern | She knows that love is not a| “at| Be Based on Sex, Says ¢ Have Not Properly Under-| YD PATTERSON. t affect ro- | love in the past and that there the future until woman has shed the Ellis and adds that there must be c equality between man and woman love can exist. Julla Seton Sears, head of the New ent, contributes a third and different | WOMEN TO HUNT BIG GAME ON TRAIL OF BWANA TUMBO Mrs, Royal Carrol! Off for South Africa to Rival Roose- velt Explcits. IS NOTED SLLION SLARL FIRE DRIVES FOUR DUTCH SAVANT HUNTRESS. | Husband and Daughter With | Her on Present Expeaition— May Meet Rainey, | It behooves one Theodore Roosevelt, | who ft will be remembered sprang into fame & few years ago under | preudonym “Terrible Teddy, Sh. of Uganda,” to look well te his | laure! ' fhe reputation he ther marksmanship, and which wen for him the plaudits of quite a crowd of inter- ested persons who met him down the bay when his ship arrived, and escorted him up Broadway, bids fair to med. And to make matters worse, e /aurel-stripping and reputation-dim- ming !s to be done by a woman, | Mrs. Royal Phelps Carroll is dater- mined to descend on South Africa, mag- | azine rifle in hand, and to follow the course blazed by Mr, Roosevelt. Fhe! has closed her Newport end New York| homes and 1s on her for the happy hunting grounds, accompanied by her daughter, orothea, and tbat awkward) addition to the modecn Diania’s en- |tourage, her husband. | This will not be Mrs, Carroll's first hunting trip. She has shot antmals all through the West, and her daughter ts no slouch of a shot, either. She can put | up @ tent like a circus hand, Both wo- | men are excellent yachtswomen, and| Mrs, Carroll's handling of the tiller made her husband's yacht, Navahos, | famous ax a winner on both sides of | the Atlantic, Whether they belleve in ‘otes for Women" is not recorded, Ever since the return of Roosevelt with his extraordinary bag of South American game Mrs. Carroll has peen anxious to go and do likewlae, and ene has finally persuaded her husband ang | daughter to Join her on this expedition | ‘The party, which includes servants of the household, and to which will be added natives, will penetrate to the very heart of the African wilderness looking for bls game, ‘The exact route of the party has not yet been determined upon, but it is ex- pected that it will fall in with Poul Rainey's party of American millionaires, started off again. But ths hope 1# @ general one, not at all shared \by Mrs. Carroll, who would rather do her hunting all by her little lonesome, | except for the help that she must accept from native hunters and guides, ‘That Mrs, Carroll expects that ner magazine rifle will bring down quite a few dik-diks and oks and whang- doodles and tse-t ies and ordinary tigers and lions and some white rhi- | nocereses is evidenced by her having Jalready arranged for the tranyporta- |tlon back from the jungle of the skins of the animals who get in the way of) her bullets, and she haa even mark out the places in her Newport and New | York nomes where the sk will draped, so that they will show off at | their best. the | | which hi FIRES SHOT AT BURGLAR. | fase.” Woman Hears In nd wenty policemen went to the of George Brown, No. 36 We: Hundred and Eleventh street, early to day tn response to a burglar alarm. Mrs, Brown heard some one trying ket in the front wintow, & her husband, who fired a shot at the vurglar. ‘The intruder went away escape. Shortly before the Brown call Mart Alberts of No, 820 West One Hundred and Eleventh street, found a man peep: roused by the fire said, are be:- ing through the keyhole of her front doug She screamed and the man ran, the Sure! | achieved for TO WATER FROM COMES TO LIVE BURNING LAUNCH AMONG INDIANS aval: Mapa Centre Pakder Hon Henline of Buf- | falo Club and Companions | Prof. | His Wife for Monta it to Have Thrilling Escape. a Tribe. |, RURPALO, w Y., June &.—Noan H The steamer Nieuw Amsterdam of |g pair. The regular price of most of these has been line soutranaldes of the Hufato base: the Llolisndeamerica n tra 8 41.50, but some have been $1.75 and $2.00 per pair. Goalay CHAU MOBRIAY “Sllll Ba fon eave lands walteatinaie yg nt \ All are made with superior re-enforced tops, spliced bral Gaye as ding ‘ax foot Indians nertentiy. fie fa Peet. ¢ IB heels and toes and hand-finished seam, We guar- perience on Niagara Rive ne]. Vhlenbieck, who holds the chalr of ela antee these as we do all of our Silk Hosiery. launch in which he and « par of theese | languages in the Unive t f Leyden, ' others were returning to Buffalo late and's gr He admit J Sat eae 8 atte ahs ae i er ua ee | James McCutcheon & Co spread to the gasoline and within | » the for he neve fury 9 @ few minutes the little craft wa Ne OPS UES VES aR 4 5 Opposite aflame from stern to Seca tlane n th Ave. & 34th St, Waldort-Astoria, Henline and the others w preed Ati nud wife are soln ‘ to drop over the windward side of the| out to the. Hiackfoo lal yf well " oraft where ghey clung to life lines un-| | SEGA abeRI Ava WiGNiNe. (ieee (ae a wayn aind | til help reached them from shore. Hen-| op... tease REC haces ACTA hii acahie dallas line was burned about the face 4nd! than a yea and atuyed long enough hands, Harry Eldring and his wife.|io‘tuarn the lanmuage. Ile atte and Miss Bradetroet, th MOF), cveral hodka an the iMcKChee ANAihes of the party also burned on face and hands, The launch, which | ANelate FTE ee RRA SY was valued at $2,500, 1s @ total loss, gt (ap bg re ea ap eres uid, “my wite and Land 1 will make a DRUGGIST ENDS LIFE Jetudy of thelr customs, religion, and Linces, ‘Thin is the WITH HYDROCYANIC ACID. \;""")")) customs and they revert to the as fa primal Broken Engagement to Marry May! they Explain Suicide of Well- yl sd eave ware s for t tito gow em, When E vis for the firs to-Do Man. (ime T found them slow to xive thelr Max Schulte, a druggtat, aged thirty Bence 0. Ac White many They are fone, committed suicide at this home, No, |*specitlly suspicious of Americans, fear ike atreet, early to-day by taking |!0# tat they are to be used fo hydrocyanic acid. He was found dead | mercial purposes. But T convinced them in bed by hie father, Meyer. Beside tho {tat 1 was there solely in the interests body was found # phial that had.con- | of science, and several of the chiefs are |my good friends tained the poison | The suicide owned the drug » gt | Ree WERE SO pte. willl: Andee: Livin Pike and Madison streets, where he had |Amons the Indians It is no more than been in business for the past fittecn | Sous k to th and that years. His family sald that he had been | 800d for any smn engaged to a young woman, but tha BAR AUTOS FOR SICK GIRL the engagement Schultz appeared broken off. | 00d spirit es that ssed the nthe QUENTIN ROOSEVELT SCORNS SCHOLARSHIP CAMBRIDGE, Maass., June 5.—Quentin | Mant Kill her Roosevelt, son of (Co! Roose a M mene told the 6 the al won a pri being t d high-| ton and +4 a ap est scholar in standing 198 eutoiata rine the Groton school howev the welght “That is nothing,’ ne sald. i study hard; I don't believe 1 want to be good at baseba much more #9 than at m BOY HURLED TO TRACK BY ARM AT CAR Window. f Ten Days On t s k by the protudl rin of a pa vorth, and h { thi tor mt hold lo be their pro. : Senger in the Pear af @ Brcaaway el POS [UM CASTER Legycll & Compa id to be their proud ig Vated train at the Kosciusko streot »nutatior 1} ! vee aan AMOS ALAR 9 rey wall n. All f are oles ae Myre in place of coffee HDA: OF reat irled from the platform t ‘ tailed to e eu tor i , In boy was walk. ff hasproventothousandsthat Movi, see and hear them _———— Aodn ine plaicorm ay he hati 5 Io aH EAE SNe TAGE caffeine, the drug in coffee, sostal for catalogue og arm of a passeng rin the last 2 vad ihe ws \ i r J NE oieifictans ontattater nea ene hurts head, heart and nerves, WISSNER WAREROOM ii DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— track bed. He was slightly ked b “There's a Reason” the third rail and te | dition. @ serious cor Uhlenbeck Also Brings Passing | yesterday and played cards with by Keep Them tr friends at his nome. 5 Wiese the Child’ Diba, Dr, Kleba, who lives tn the same ; house, and who had been a member « Florence, the five-year-old the card purty, pronounced tie man {daughter of Henry Ro an been | dead. with diphtherta at her home, Bergen and Sohultz was well to do. He left ne Iside avenues nalea, for a fort word explaining his suicide plaint has been of Nite, MUNICIPAL BUILDING | ‘ ACCIDENT CONCEALED. | + ne | Hospital Surgeon Treats Victim of} Fall, Superintendent Denies | i Anybody Was Injured, | + | AM ambulance from the Hudson Street | the had attended the Murphy of No, 2i8 Bight ho suffered from contusions and an ine | jured back, the reauit of a fall. ‘i ~ | facts were given to an g World| |reporter from the hosp! | A.W. Fall, superinte an struction of the bullding for the ‘Thomp 5, “1911. oat oe MUSTCULTVATE “$8%-——S%-—_-S%_V ATTENTION EARLY, 3.4 Thousand Suits SUS ORFAINCES | Sacrificed ( $17.50 Braid Trimmed Serge Suits ‘University Head Also Urges. '§ $16.00 Novelty Mixture Tailored Suits High School Boys to Learn b $15.00 Black and White Check Suits $12.50 Hair Line Striped White Suits } TWO FACULTIES NEEDED Now $ yp) | |Lives of Many Men Barren { Reduced to Without Millionaire Confessed | rs to Appreciate. Them—What a A thousand suits at less than cost. Our object, a quick clearance—a rigid rule with us to close out all Spring stocks it the advent of June—yours the benefit to-morrow. A suit o fit every figure, a style to please every. taste, at a price o delight you all Dr, William HW. PL Faunce, Pre Jat the Btusverant High Beno! to Every Coat Richly Satin Lined of the need for the cultivation of ¢ Every one perfect, fresh and charming. Among them lovely Sum- | faculties of attention. and apprecta- mer grays and tans, as well as “fashion approved” white serges, with ' tion fine hair-line stripes. The trimmed styles showing attractive sailor ALLOHIION and Maeke OK eatenianee| collars and long roll frents. The strictly tailored models with flatter- aid Nes ita y. bel ate Wor therein ng perfect lines that ask no trimming. The very kind of suits, in | gib-ah va dauhe adic Whe aegued Sele! fact, that women in the higher walks of life love best the university ne and H liciaanrnee ie No Alterations. None C. O. D. I eC eat ran Cue cat Ae SALE AT ALL THREE STORES. [learned that when you were twelve] ra old Man may be compared to a ar which Ie operated by power from treet, without, If he be a trofiey car man he , 450 y is affected by exterior forces, but LARGE STORES. 1 is @ great man he will be nieved rom within by his mental equipment. | JAre you boys and young men here heciuse You were sent here, of | yourselves? Are you a trolley car u free moving man Ko) PIECE OF LEATHER TOOK THE PLACE OF WORKS OF ART. “A short time ago a toa | | | | Katadlushoe mayo Century. Ladies’ Silk Hosiery Registeres Trade Mare eather merehant in the ‘Sw Jand tried to induce him to subscribe to Of paintings eum of Art it maid to e that piece of leather the eran a he in At $1.00 per pair hi : Formerly $1.50 to $2.00 per pair Ya have placed on sale a large quantity of ies’ Pure Silk Hose ia Black, Tan, White, and a full range of the more popular colors at $1.00 per lito Jam Heaven You Darungs H E old berrv-patch saw an awful lot of Aunt Nancy. In her calico, o'ere topped with a greal sunbonnel, which Johnny always said looked like an upsel coal scultle gone lo a higher life, she moved in and oul among her creeping vines, singing and piching, Gnd picking and singing, until there seemed berries enough atout her lo match, one for one, all the stars of heaven. And then!—well, thal’s the theme. Yes, you recall how all the folks fell lo stemming and sorling and how not every luscious berry of the lot was anv too sure thal it would find ils way into the patient bowls and pails--oh, how many berries Jailed to achieve thetr destiny in jam and how many lips smacked in ecstasy over the inger- ceplion of their journey! That has never beenwrit. But the jam making has been writ and tts words are the words of Aunty Nancy possessed dominion over tle and the sugar and the spoon and when berries, “In darlings, in jam heaven,” ful mortal for a mile. Those were the davs and that was the jam that made jam cookery immortal. Premier Jam has glory: of the berry-patch and the or- 4unty's jam, Premier and artificial hearts only th son-Starrett ( all workman had been injure ing. This ia not the frst effort, has been made of an building. ALY accident in the White Te, ose CEYLON TEA One Quality Only, the Best Dandy for Iced Tea song the kel she said lo with there the vou, you wasn't 2 / to sorro caught the ard, fouch “WISSNER PIANOS ibsol and of and rnS (ness funty’s preservaltt Preservaltte Swe loving Jam color, Sweel the ind fruit, which Francis H, 06 Filth Ave., cor, 15th St., N,V. > \ WORLD 65-67 Fictbush Ave., Broeklyn, “WANT” WILL GO AND GET IT,

Other pages from this issue: