The evening world. Newspaper, August 2, 1911, Page 3

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THE EVENING ‘WORLD, WEDNESDAY, avavst 4, 1911. ! ! shirt to the street, where he notified Po- Heeman Loughman of the Union Market STAR BOARDER’ One Modern Paris Awards the Beauty Prize { FERBILLS 83 Mrs, Vredand Woul Wouldn’t Marry “Shrimp” She Says Wooed for Insurance, CALLS HER A NEMESIS, Hamernick Has Another Girl, but Says Jilted One Pesters Him, The bill, tate Presented before Magistrat Breen in Centre Street Court to-day by Mrs. Elisabeth Vreeland, the buxom, six-foot proprietor of a boarding house No, 2002 Highth avenue, reacted like ‘& boomerang against William S, Ham ernick, formerly Mrs. Vreeland’s star boarder, who had brought her to court om @ summons charging that she an- noyed him. According to Hamernick, who ts @ clerk in the grocery of Clark, Chapin & Bushnell, at No. 3% Greenwich street. he once stood high Vreeland's favor, annoyed him to the point of forcing him to seek other quarters, Since then, he said, she had written letters to his employers, losing one job for him and imperiliing his new position by her ao- tions and letters, Vreeland, however, told another Hamernick, she said, had made ardent love to her from the moment that he learned she was going to col+ lect $1,000 life insurance from the death of her late husband, “This little shrimp," she said, casting @ flery glance at the diminutive Ham- ernick, “promised to marry I got the insurance money, planned to buy @ farm. It went to the point of my taking my child from boarding school and getting my furni- ture out of stor: Then my brother- in-law came to town and looked Ham- ernick over. He didn't ike what he saw, and sald he'd only let me have the insurance money by instalmente of $0 &@ mont “Al m as Hamernick heard that. he grew cold and moved from my house, He owed me buck bourd and cash and a lot of presuts I had given him because we were to be married, Here is the bill.” “Would you marry him now?” the Magistrate, “Not on your life, Your Honor,” ‘Mee. Vreeland. “I'm glad of it, tn asked broke in Hamer- haps a real grandmother's point Mre | but lately she had | cared for nothing else. ' LOVE GREW COLD; To Bud of 18, Rather Than the Rose of 30 or 40 But He Declares “Matrimony Usually Picks the Bud; Green and Pickles Her Into a Sort of Olive tor Which One Has to Cuitivate a Taste.” A “Grandma of 75” Makes Some Pertinent Comments in Discussion by Evening World Readers ot the Query: At What Age Is Woman Most Altractive? BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. ‘ At what age is woman most attractive? “At forty,” said Caroline Otero, dancer of note and notoriety. Otero 1s forty-one, “At thirty,” replied Mme. Karin Michaelis, author of “The Dangerous Age,” the literary sensation of the Continent. rote a gallant man who reads The Evening World, “for that is the age of my wife.” “From seventeen to twenty,” declared a youth, casting his ballot for what he termed “the young girls + —the peaches and cream of life.” Ors On the other hand, many, many women of forty GREELEY" SMITH ana upward have written that they agree heartily with Otero, and one irate matron in Brooklyn sent a withering letter suggest ing that “some woman of forty must have wrung your heart,” because I had ventured to say that, while the mature siren may be more attractive, the girl of twenty-two or twenty-three {s actually moro beautiful than sho. Alas, alas! how did she guess the fatal secret? Yet it 1s written that a man shall and poise, Then there's the most fre not marry his grandmother, nor @| quent typo that 1s full blown at twenty- woman be Jealous of her. And yet per-| five and,atready a little faded at thirty. of |There is no reason why a structurally won this subject 1s the least per-| Pedutiful woman should not keep her looks indefinitely, As a man of forty sonal, the most discriminating of all. "| I must confoss that the She hae deen twenty-three, #10 89! imy admiration goes out inatinerivels na been forty, and she fs far enough away kenerally between elghteen and twenty. from both ages to have forgotten the |three—a lovely woman scarcely formed rancor one inspires in the other. Here or moulded, te @ letter written by @ delightful old| “A rose with all its sweetest leaves lady who signs herself “A German yet folded.” ” Now, what have the full-blown roses Relea to say to that? . HOW A GRANDMA OF SEVENTY: FIVE SOLVES PROBLEM. GIVE PART WAY 10 DEUTSCHES WURST twenty-five. I fully agree with you! opinion, which gives the palm of! beauty to the younger woman, I have Frank Hammerspflug Albert Ate Mary Murphy’s Dinners Up to 13—Then Quit. known several very handsome women of forty or more in my lifetime, but, as you s they were mothers. I am now seventy-five years old, but I remember the mother of @ chum I had as @ school- girl whom I thought lovely. Another very handsome woman I knew when I Was a girl had grown-up sons and daughters. “I could name more instances, but it ls not necessary. These ladies were not made up; they did not study how to look young; never thought of paint or powder or of captivating men, They were handsome because they were) happy. When they saw thelr husbands and children content end well they Magistrate Dooley Relations Court, Brooklyn, to-day or- | dered Mrs, Murphy Albert, bride nk Hammerspflug Albert, to re- in the Domestic “The forty-year-old woman of the Otero sort is @ very different person. I know some of them too, and I must Mary nick, “as I've got sngazed to anotier | say jt 19 wonderful how successful her cuisine so as to provide her La Magistrate dismissed the case, |the¥ Make up. When you nee them in husband with as many hamburger after referring Mrs. Vreeland to a civil! hey are old, and look steaks and Deutsche pfannkucher und court to collect her bill against Hamoere | Meet them later, perhape by gaalight, | kortotfel kloesse ay Irish stews, nick and ten or fifteen years seem to have) Young Albert, who migrated from fallen trom them, but the expression of | the Vaderland early In his youth, led the face 1s anything but sweet or youth-| Miss Murphy to the alter only three ful, quite the other thing. I was taught | weeks ago. They set up housekeeping from childhood that it Is t duty of tn 8 Vanderbilt ue and for every one to look as nice and decent asa we or so they w as happy as possible, so as not to be an eyes D| it Society Woman Who Divorced Son of Millionaire Iron Man Fors, VILLIAN DIMOND CUSTODY OF HEIR AND DIVORCE, 100, FOR MRS. D DIMOND Decree, Cibatied in Nevada,. Gave Boy Into Care of Mother, GIRL, 15, TAKES POISON 10 PIQUE HER SWEETHEART Tells Boy After Quarrel That Next Time He Sees Her She’ll Be Dead. As a‘climax to more than two years of marital infelicity, Mrs. Lillian B. | Dimond, wife of J. Renwick Dimond, |son of @ millionaire tron man, has ob- tained @ Nevada divorce. The decree was granted in Carson City May 1, but news of it has just reached New York. Mra, Dimond returned Eust as soon as the | decree was granted, but told no one of the severance of her marriage bonds. ‘The trouble of the Dimonds had supplied Asa result of a lovers’ quarrel, Bessie Schwartz, fifteen years old, cash girl in a Fourteenth street store, drank car- bolic acid early,to-day at her home, No. 8 West One Hundred and Eighteenth street, and 1s dying in Harlem Hoo- pital, She ves with her sister on the top floor of the house. Their mother ts spending the summer at Coney Island. Last night after coming home from DREAM SAVED 20 FAMILIES FROM FIREBUG BLAZE Janitor Awakened in Time to Prevent Fire Getting Good Start. Te was fortunate for the one humired or more tenante In the five-story bufld- ing at No, 91 East Ninth street that Maurice Troman, the janitor, had @ bad dream «@ 8 o'clock this morning. Tro- man hee an apartment on the ground floor rear, with a window opening into the hall. As he awoke with « start he saw a @lare in the haf and rushing out found @ ively biases. A streamer of of- eoaked rags led from an empty can on the ground floor up to a gallon and a half can filled with ofl on the second. ‘With @ broom he whisked the streamer away from the cane and ran In his night Linen Suits Values up Lingerie Waists (act 22-24-26 We must clear our warerooms, _ there- fore offer, unre- servedly, our entire stock of Clearance Sales White, Natural and Colors Linen Dresses 1N GREAT VARIETY. Value $12.50 Linen Travelling Coats Values $6.00 to $8.00 Values $8.50 to $4.50 JOHN FORSYTHE wes sstn st. station who sent in an alarm, Troman rushed back to the house and with the policeman and several other of- | ficors who had responded to Lough- man's whistle and nightstick raps, went through the house warning tho twenty families, all of whom escaped in good order and record breaking time down the front and rear fire escapes. ‘The janitor and p nen lugged sev. eral cans of ashes from in front of the! house inte the hallway and smothered the blaze, except where some of the | woodwork was burning, and @ hand ex. tinguisher mado short work of that when tho firemen arrived, aceaiesdlidapams OMIT TOBACCO DIVIDEND. Directors Working on Reorgant tion Sapreme Court Or ‘The directors of the American To- o Company voted to-day to omit the | uumal quarterly dividend on the common stock. A circular letter is being sortt to the common share holders tn which mention ts made of the recent decision of the Supreme Court and the statement made that the directors are working on & plan for reorganizing the company which will be satisfactory to all se- curity holders. The letter states that while the com- pany'e earnings are ample to pay the dividend it would not be policy to pay out any of the earnings to common stockholders until after the plan has been passed upon by the Court. The Forsythe Coventry Club Watst, $7.50. $6.75 $7.50 $3.85 to $20.00 SIZES) $2.00 ee Se v Wea Git oh eh hres New ek War ae eg, bat a ; Room Outfit, $75 4 Ko We Pay Freight & R: 1120 Wes 237 °St work Bessie put on her best clothes and waited for her sweetheart to come and patch up @ quarrel they had the society with gossip for a couple of years. After Mrs, Dimond filed her sult, her lawyers had trouble serving the papers HIGH-GRADE AT DISCOUNT FURNITURE 7ING D°S ‘T DEPEND ON ONE PAIR! Ehrlich optical repair sets contain two lenses (duplicates of your own), screw driver and screws, at the price of lenses onl; Invaluable for busy men and women or travellers. Crystal Lenses $1 per pr. Oculists’ Opticians 217 B’dway,, Lay omy ooD & 8 d Room Outht, $165 ot ina Ragiae ids. Furniture Ouitit, fas white Fo FOR NEW CAY LOGUE Free on al leation road Faro NEAR oo“ AVE. is possible for newlyweds to night before, on her husband. ‘They finally learned . N g “4%, any one: but that does not require! witch is somewhere in the neighbor-| An hour passed and he did not ap-|that he was going to California on bust: k RO} 10% to 83% R ABY TRIES Poses, paints or powder, only @ degre | hood of 100 per cent. bilss, But along| pear. Julla, her nineteen-year-old sis- | ness and boarded the train ou which he of good taste and neatness, about the second week the Teutonic| ter, was in the parlor entertaining her | Was travelling to serve him, 7 , . eau e : Every piece bears a plainly marked price. You can figure you ; cuse writing. My hand is no? very legroom began to sit up and fiance when Besste put on her het and] He engaged counsel and fought the Every piece t by & F urs YUE | Uk that his bride was providing him| said she was going for a walk, She| suit to the end, but the wife ga‘ned the saving, and our methods guarantee that it is not an imaginary one, | The hand of the seventy-five-vear-old | with a perpetual Irish stew. seemed very much wrought up. decision and with jt the custody of thelr w p {philosopher may not be very steady “Mary. ein he said softly,| As near as can be learned, the girl| four-year-old boy, who 1s the heir to There is a wide varicty of styles and finishes to choose from, Sho has mot the dracon of eid ase and), ROW about a ittle souerbraten, or | wandered about Mount Morris Park and |81.0%0W under his paternal grandfatior's containing Furniture for every room; each picce is standard in She hag met the dracon of old age and) yp anourg steak, or maybe some| that vicinity for several hours, weeping | Will. ae, a ‘: . cast him ae see x Ree enone frankfurters, vat?” at tlmes, Policeman Vogt of the Hast] Mrs. Dimond, who was Lillian Ba quality and modern in type. 4 7 . A: ; do who remembers the fir OPIS THE REBELLED ON THE THIR-|Ono Hundred and Twenty-slxth street}! the daughter of wealthy parents with 7 satis! yin relish ir ‘ : . d NEW iB 0. Wife’s Nurse Goes to Rescue |of animal taming. TRRRTLATEW station saw a gis! at Fifth avenue and| Whom she has been living since the 61-63-65 West 23d St. Juitk 36-38-40 West 24th St. nol ont fish, } OLD AGE BRAVELY MET 18) J Aiort did "A ne {One Hundred and LKighteenth street] break-up of her own home. She was ste See aan 3 en cold or hot meats or fish, of Gross and Has a Desperate EASILY ROUTED. liooked unutterable conten Neat S2°| talking excitedly to a youth, As he| Married to Dimond in 194, the wedding At Geodery'and:Dalisntiaesh eared | If we always look old ng arely| Braue Hemmer {ig Albert sat] Walked away he heard ner aay: REET Ge. AD TONSA ORaL, The 10c PER BOTTLE | Fight for Life Pots bess saratd anv vuadhn ene Renton fae pf M6 i Ibert vif] “All right, you'll never see me again, | husband had gained a name as a whip baad ig : roumatancenretveat from the Mon Tee tame Me gusied the slate cats | The tee ine YOu aot your eyes om me[ARd Yuchtaman and a follower of apor BROOKLYN The Re ons , A hi an BURR ES) HO 21658 I'll be dead.” in general. BRYVURETIN er, we will be very apt to see him 5 ‘ firient el iake neu reads a Ge Re Gill” & siaimea, | Th@ youth seemed to regard the im-| It was about two years ago that she e Soup that ae Frade. Arpaes, 1 Site nye ea | Opposing the very definite opinions of | oy Marl exclaimed.) vied threat lghtly and kept. on, left her husband and unnounced that nourishes 916, of No. 108 Piton avenue, tha Bronx || SPR ON oe ee ama oon 18 Be, Murphy Albert sata noth | SHOFtY before midnight Besste re- fie would mie, FO 8, separation. wile PPENHEIM OLLINS= (e) went suddenly insane tn her home the “erm T should vay @ very | ing, Wr mounted up wnier| turned home, but did not go Into. the as pending she vegan an action early to-day and attacked hor husband, |e man ' fo parlor, as was her custom before retir-]| against her nusoand and father-in-law a ees Se Willem C,, with a ‘or, inflicting se- | *), gerne voman’s face 's Hae gu PORN ; Ing. She disrobed, put on her nightdress |to recover furniture and household goods . “4 rious cuta on each side of his throat| "7A my opinion 8 wena tea, that * HKG my stew?" she welds sig went into the bathroom, In a tew| valued at $20, which she suid she Nad FULTON AND BRIDGE BROOKLYN ay Le aa Files el catn. Brevi " 0 ——— and almost severing his right ear, MC echinysave ta fortn previoun.to| often, always,” replied the| minutes her slater and the man in the| personally pald for and put into tho Ghe wae subdued after a fearful strug: | + he the face is immature it was testifled by | Parlor heard @ bottle crash on tho tile| house at Harrison. N. ¥., ad Ing the alo by Mrs, Margaret Gallagher, a this time the face fs immat an hav tonday, hia ‘one tow | M20" of the Athroom and rushed back |¢lder Dimond costly tanaion, °° REMARKABLE SALE OF OeUPSsS aided by severe) other tenente in theo; grand, beautiful panoran MT ste t aught most of it | @&ainst st and broke tho lock, had been withheld by the defendants J t 1 1 hot te house who heard Mrs, Gallagher trying Serena er iat ‘ ; i Bessie was on the floor, her mouth 4 in detatl the amount of the : e Just adc water, / ter thea Gearann ands care ceikeery, Ao wo and left his me picking china | | srea by the aold, with’ the beckan | and proved in dete ount of the i WwW t : ‘ to quiet the eee ia tala’ the Uy See Naxen nate ana [seared bY eld, with the brokeh| bride's money that had been spent for ingerie aists bring to a boil, and the rescue, OF ie orang lies Nor did his impetuous young | bottle nearby, They forced soap and| the furniture, She won the case and Mrs, Gross gave birth to a baby git) |" n. woman of maturer him again until they met in| the whites of eggs down her throat, | with it a sun fo aamores Paes serve, three days ago, She was attended dur- | iown iove in all its rich seaenines) aren When | but they did no good. Dr. Martin came| | In her sult for separation which she : beer ; ing her Hines by Mra. Gallagher, who | starrtage has rounded out and perfected the tragic te iny Was in, the| from Harlem Hospital and tried the | Per husband with being in the hatitot| ALL WHITE WAISTS, high and comes from Leonia, N, J. Mre, Gross 1m. and »wW ANd | Court asked th husband stomach pump, but sald the acid had} Coming home almost every night drunk. : r 14th St. Upholstery Co. Seared the Deby Wee Slerving Abd Gl | herenvament Dave. iat chastening | you do ish stew, eh?” done its work and there was little hope| She said that his persistence in this|" Dutch neck, elaborately trimmed a, W. 24th St. ! Pine B1b0 agreed with the nurse about feeding | 324 upon her f removing the| ar dice t en," replied Albert, | for the girl. j practice caused her to worry so much rs it Although assured by the attending | 1G ines of early 1 in their Re EPer ALLOWS THREE A| Policeman Vogt was one of tho ofcers| that she fell a victim to, typhold fever. with embroidery and lac physician ‘and the nurse that the baby | iiace jeaving the soft, tender beauty of | A Hehehe culled to the house during the excite- | Mr, Dimond dent aaa casa’ thar tre alues $2.06 and $3,00 was doing well, the young mother |? woman wha has sulfered ant ‘come | WEEK ment, He looked at the girl and sag) inte to excess and ‘asked that the $3.00 J | seemed to brood over ity fancied con- fold.’ The youth of sev-| “Well, I guess y ru are rat Oy sald she was one he had heard earlier yoy for at least days of each | dition. s good taste when he ad-|M ate Dooley sh stew has its in the evening tel the young man that! week. While some of the nelghbors held Mra » woman of forty, Such i s it i » next time he saw her sie would be, = | Gree thers waptiened 6 Be, Moor ag bee Ms | | 500 Lingerie Dresses others telephoned fo loore an fascinate evan Into tater | , of No. 408 Hast One Hi d and Fitty. |O8 en A : Julia Schwartz refused to give the 4 3: | seventh street, who had attended her NAN, 1 e the name of her sist weet nen the baby’ was born, After attend: |DFPENDS UPON, THE WOMAN, prone «1 art, and seid she did not know the | 7 | ing Gross Moore summoned an SAVS MONERN PARIS. p ; of the quarrel > ambulance from Lebanon Hospital, and! ana now me to the views of the I a Pe Ren ne Ne Ao Pe amar | aa OC Conia. ATOR Bo Ro AIRES | K. OF C, FAVORS FLAHERTY, misses; dainty iace and embroidery ; 6,00 PATENT BARLEY tion In charge of Dr. Brill of the howe | yimsolf thus pronouness the couple ; 1 2 . | The Only Infant Food pital staff, of Paris between the thred val G tles , t trimmed. Re ar values s $12 2.50, a is y Lint hii 5 —— —the wir! of twenty, the woman of thir- | Peer pi NR a _ GIRL MUST STAY IN JAIL. i yercasoalat forty | FEAR A BABY FAMINE. Then air 7 — e guest! At what age {ts a ay Conrt, Though, tastes an mont attrastive? can't. mbusy Its permanent maces) to Hold Inquest swered categori ve suite "it 9 Only AS Miethw Doing duty an 1° to form the principal popularity rests on 1000 Summer resses ORR TOMTETHMAMOOO NENT ndividual question having a differ sodenm, Of ork bu lay's sessions, . . ———. dismissed the writ o aes corpus cttainy Wand (eraeny te ¢ AC, Age. 2 ae mH. wil sworn out by Miss Kittle Witherall, who | Jot, fet aie ripens F air) |Aald 10 Ret BISHOP MALLALIEU DEAD Qualities. For Women and Misses, over 50 models, every E ¢ es pain } ei held in the Tombs under a commit: | oe rong her full menta ‘op. | PE nan a ee een pe A Wig ate erat an co alleged imiplion bbe ager oe Ment ca 1 a mby famine, | AUBURNDAL. Pande fashionable material, In white and colors i See tign in the death of Adolph Hullbe Ae tnd lewlea. | ce y et ste ay ne Tae iieh tee th f ss) he Justice told | taste, Epicures do, Then there jay that 200, dadtes a|point of years of service in the denomt o Tee eerie te Bienen that ugly duckling, the girl with big bones | month w. a thy Lae um normal oa nation, died here last night after a Values $5.90 to $12.00 Ghe Coroner's inquest should be held aw| and big features that needs the round-' timate for the city which aas @ popu-|month’s !'nge. He Was eighty-five pes pee v ness of the thirties te give her form lation of 40,008, i years of ge, Marcial

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