The evening world. Newspaper, August 11, 1911, Page 3

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IIE SCREANS “AND ASKS PLE ~TOARRESTROMED Ancient Feud of Montagues and | Capulets Leads to Jefter- son Market Court. “SHE’S A WOP,” HE SAYS. | At Any Rate the Fair Com-! Plainant Scorns Order of the Suitor. { | “Who ost this ancient quarrel sew | adroacht” ] —Romeo and Jullet, Act 1. | Thus might the Magistrate in Jeffer- fon Market Police Court have ‘inquired | when that ancient feud of Verona which | put the kibosh on the Mirtation of the | harming and sweetly sixteen-year-old Miss J. Capulet and young Romeo | Montague trickled out of the long, | long ago into the dingy, noisy court-| room to-day. | For, lo, there stood another Miss Capuiet before him—Beatrice her firat name—her eyes Mashing fire, not of Jove, but of that old-time hatred which Caused the retainers of both houses to fy at one another's throats and flash meel biades when they met in the nar- | row streets. | The object of her scorn, the target for her baleful glances was Gitercoco Bato, descendant of that hranch of the Montague family which thoved away to Rome after the Prince of. Verona threatened to put the strong-arm men @f doth houses in the lock up if they @an't cease to “quench the fire of “their pernicious rage with purple foun- fains {esuing from their veins.” WAUGHT OF JULIET’S ARDOR/ FOR HER ROMEO. @ bis ancient kinsman, Mr. Romeo | tague Gitercoco loves this fair de- | @eendant of the rival house, but there fa naught of Jullet’s ardor tn her breast = 03 him, at any rate. md though he has urged his love upon ber again and again she has re- mained cold to him. Last night Gitercooo stood under the tate Capulet’s window, which looks not owt upon a garden but is on the third floor of the Hotel Calvert at Forty- first street and Broadway. The envious moon shone down upon him, but the etrice of Broadway beat the Tays to it. He sang her a love sonnet, but instead of rushing breath- Jess out on the balcony she got busy ‘on the telephone and called ap Police Headquarters. “@end all the police at once,” she plored. “If you don't, I am gure that a man will put me to death, He fs waiting on the street now to murder me. They found him walk ng up and down vtel. Te was com-| lady, O It ts my love! ‘oh, that she knew she were .....1 am, too bold;”* | “SHE'S A WOP,” SCREAMS HER ENRACED SUITOR, te e® you are, young ke of the policemen ; own upon him un-| MOTHER GOES INSANE. With Baby Arms She Fell Ray- ivy Wher Boy Died sara 0 x ehy day becat Hosp told Mid diva fhe voy Pano baccwdtig \ was his sister, Who was so ed by lent that a physt rr roM . of the Natlonal Guard and review the five thousand troopa, — > THE EVE Wing W merican Husband “Good BLOWS FOR Enough,” WIFE But Not Too Good for His Wife, AFTER21 YEARS - One of the Latter Says Countess Corsini Views! the Comparison From the Continental Angle and Is Therefore All, Wrong in Her Sweep- ing Conclusion. He Isn’t Lord and Master at Whose Word No Dog May Bark, but a Loving Wornan’sHelpfulChum —The “400” Doesn’t Typify Real American Femininity, Says Mrs.! Brooks | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Ts the American husband too food for his wife? ! No jess 9 person than Countess Alex- andrine § Wilsehorst Corsini answers | thet q the countess the oter da: “The lot of a Itussian serf is com- fort compared with that of the Amer- {oan husband. Self-sacrifice is an un- known quality in the American woman. Catering to her whims and her desires is her one law. ‘American men make good hus- ds, too ood, in fact. They should be master in ths home as well as in busin “It perplexes Buropeans to find Amer. feans so aggressive !n everything per- tatning to business, and then see them take a eat when they enter the doors of thelr homes. . I not oelleve that women ded censorious | 4 ted for tho She should stay at ud make that home pleasant for fusvand, That $s woman's duty.” | HE'S GOOD, BUT KE TOO GOOD. And what has the Amertean wife toy to this Indictment? 1 asked one} terday afternoon—Mra, Arthur Al- Brooks, Preside the Gothain | isband {= good put Jefived Mrs. Brooks, | ng faults conversa: | learns that not the new- t Michelan- exaspera wees ane he Unt A person as an untimely | rf In the sf the modern woman, a man who sores alunos bad as one wad r pant: © Countess Corstnt « ay t e sells American wife es h id no the to acauire wes? Le sted. or te true!’ Mrs. Brooks re-| 1 “Or true} n n extren| 1 degree, vult In t m by; aud in most of the rit on Of the sur. tutroduction to New York wre immediately ions and atten- In the so. ve no chance to ob other part of American iif AMERICAN WOMAN NOT TVYPI- FIED BY THE “400,” an woman is not women of the Four NAG OO TTIE 40 $08 Hundred, The real American wom- t ‘flour was held) ay jg @ worker, pure and simple vt alle ino ther jushed) six milMone of her, including many aan tare areas ‘gta | wives, are shown by statistios to vee vd the doctors fear the ner-{ B® economically self-supporting, shock ma nye serous. “Uncounted ver millions are sup- SOA porting themselves and presenting to Dix of state Camp, ir husbands an jearned increment’ WATERTOV N Y, Ave a0 i ve year through the Jabor in and ‘ nor and Mrs, Dix left thi at|economival management of the home. A. M. to-day by automobile for) Then you think the Anerican woman Hine Camp to witness the manoeuvres | ts self-sacrificing?" I asked “She ls ea unevifish as any woman in she world,” declared Mra, Brooks, "S are granted io women, either for the ZG I LA fo of have known scores of women whe Washed, ironed, cooked, scrubbed in elr servantless homes, made the ohbil- Gren's clothes, even Je their hu: band's shirts, and in the afternoon the: same women tripped away to the! clubs. How they contrived to meet al thelr engagementa ana accomplish ali thelr tasks } dort know; 1 only kmow they did it. The American woman has her share of the inventive mind that has produced «0 many labor-saving machines in this country. She $s enormously effictent She doesn't need to spend all her time tn the kitchen, as the German woman does. She can get her work done and still find time for other things. ff it is a case of confitct be- ne home interests and her own she never hesitates to sacri- tween pleasure . latter, She does it with @ mile, too, which {8 one of the reas way people used tu morbid marty’ won't admit that she ts sacrith hevseit. ISN'T ANY | weg NOT LORD AND MASTER) IN THIS COUNTRY. “But, after all. the question wae shand fa too good for her, whether the h too meek and “Rats!” commen: Serentiy ) ig to fit the Ax Continental measure, and art t done. Over thera the husband 4 and master and when he « hts mouth to spear, let no dog Hils wife is either hiv chattel or plaything. "In the one case he regards her as necessary conventence for the pei tion of his house. In the other, 5 his birdie, his baby, and, lke r birds and bablos, ase rust endure being shut up in the cag spanked when it is her master's pleasure. That's c an marriage. . is {t's all different. The man is master in the house and the woman is mistress. Ov jelther one either. You can put !t whichever way you like, “In the happy American mar- riage the husband and wife are simply the best chums in the world, Zt isn't @ question of giv- ine commands to each other, Nat- urally each wishes to plea cause that 1# involved in loving, But nonody ‘bor if the husband apparently has less to say than the wife concerning the actual household management and the pringing up of the chil » it tm be- cause he thinks her bett ted to cope with these problems, He realizes that e nds the 7 tion Ly leaning o ns better And it is instinct th nto ran to pn with ind troubles, If the father se at his help s needed later on he di n't hesitate to give it, and his wife is glad to receive. | ‘Yn the average American home the husband doesn’t take either the back ‘weat or the front one. He chooses a vomfe ble armchair in the middie of the car, where he will recelve the few- est number of jolts, : {man answering the description she fur- OF HAPPESS | Trifle Changes Tenor of Man’s | Life and He Is Sent to Prison. After twenty years of happy married life spent on thelr farm on Riverdale Lane, Kingsbridge, Michael Coyne, fifty eare old, was sentenced to-day by Magistrate Krotel in the Morrisania Po- Coyne was rested after- ‘noon by Policeman Marrett of the Court! yesterday Warrant squad, on complaint of he wife, Mrs. Julia Coyne. Their bitter quarrel, after suc) a long and contented {companionship ts an tlustration of haw | peared trom my husband accused me of selling tt. T but he e, and things went k me. and hadn't sold it and 1 told him so wouldn't believe | from bad to worse him 1 mut he at wouldn't stand that, oli Ton dein and tae Statutory cause or for desertion, which iduadiy neelien it t Magistrate Herrman. “And, by the way, speaking of mar-| Put he promined to ty hunself, and \ital self-sacrifice, it was a woman who the judge let him go after scolding him |declared the other day that, though Koo ae ; she loved her hu nd, she wou'd He couldn't keep his word, however, divorce him solely in order that he and yesterday he again accused 5 might marry another and younger gelling the calf, and the end of it w Woman who he had decidea was his| thar he struck me again bac tlngs es dna antseus The farmer had little to say tn hie “Aw for the countess's fina aut | aeons a> atten weve as frage pronouncement, most women | defense, Shel ieee eit want the vote chiefly in order to ling him Magistrate Krotel pronounced ‘ nentence, |tect their ho: GAR ASSAULTED, ROBBED ANDLEFT LYNG ON STREET Helen Crevere Says Man She Met at Dance Hall Attacked Her Going Home. , ekg inninnes GIRL, WHO TRIED TO END HER LIFE ON, BROADWAY. | Holen Crevere, twenty-two years old, jot No, “18 East One Hundred and Twen- | ty-elgbth street, a packer employed tn ja downtown establishment, was found ‘unconscious early today in Thirtteth street, near Broadway, and taken to Rellevue Hospital. She had a fractured Jaw and many lacerations about the scalp, and as eoon as her jaw had been eet a0 she could talk she said she had been assaulted | jand robbed. | ording to her story, she had $8 left jin her purse after being paid off last night and doing some shopping, and with some other girls went into a dance hall near Fourteenth street and Third avenue, where she met a man who gave jis name as Harry Leonard, After the dance she and the man walked to Sixth avenue, she sald, and then started into Thirtieth street to go) to the subway, when, according to her | story, her escort took something from | his pocket, struck her and, snatching lher purse, left her on the pavement. She remembered nothing else until found |some time afterward by Policeman Sul- 4RANE SMITH. ONB KLS THO ANS FOURTEEN, WRECKS HOUSE Explosion in St. Louis Follow: general alarm was sent out for a | Rished. a —— | | ACTRESS INJURED IN TAXI. | ice Court to serve three month at ard Inbor on Hiackwetl’s Island for | beating his wire | Apparently unimportent things can al ter the current of two lives “He was a good husband until two weeks age,’ Mre. Coyne told the court “Then suddenly he meemed te become a different man 1 nagine what it Wan that at started fo quarreling with me money matters and objected ng an necount of $1,090 In the bank (n my own name, | Rut he didn't beat me about that. We have a cow, and a month or two ago a calf was born. The calt disap- the stable—1 dons know but tt must have been stolen—and | “11,1011. |NOTED AIR PILOT |tion tn the Bronx as an athlete a Receipt of Threatening Let- Edith Watson Je Hurried to a Hoepitar | ters From Brooklyn | Faith Watson. an actress, sustained) ;an unusual and serious ing F in an’ ar, LOUTS, Aug, 11.--A Mlack Hand jun per to-day. She was on) ee iy |her way downtown to a rehearsal from | 2°™ a ba. ome at No. 621 West One Hundred | Crowded Italian colony of Paso Hill jand Sixty-first street. At One Hundred here early toxlay kille man and a and Fifteenth street and Eighth avenue | Woman, and more or jess tously in \the driving shaft of the taxicab in| djured fourteen other rewiduts of a two which she was riding broke. j ato y brick building, white as com: taxi stopped short. Miss Watson|Pletely wrecked, The dead are Mra ae thrown from her seat against the| Joseph Sardelio and # man belfeved to of the passenger inclosure and) be her husban. her right knee truck @ sharp pro- The pincing of the mb rwed the} ection recetpt tT wan unable to walk when assets | two Bla r nm the ta and complained of | of the bul re pains, Polleeman kK sum- | Brooklyn, where the owner, moned an ambulance and Dr. Harring-| Tony Romano, resided antl ven ton, after an examination of the young months ago. ‘The explosion, which was woman's injuries, hurried her to J.|the most destructive of the kind ever Hood Wright Hospital. Expert and tm- | known jn St, Louis, occurret about 1 | mediate treatment may save Miss Wat-| A. M., when the twenty famliles were son from serious consequences, An in-|asleep. So @reat Was its force that fury such 6 she sustained has been| most of the residents were thrown nown to cripple the victim for life. from thelr beds street or ‘The etia Augtist Askiund, burted under the ped in. steering Immediately aft maton the h rom over the fr debris caught fir was with when t broke. daifeulty that th e' en- - > —— abled to take so njured Giadys Matthews to M. out of the way of th Va i Mott, According to the police, th > had i + been jaced in the front trance to Gladys Matthews, daughte: of the! io palin Its explosion lifted the liate A. D. Matthews of the Brooklyn |dry goods firm of A. D. Matthews’ Sons, aud great-granddaughter of the founder lof that firm, will be married at 12.90 jo'clock to-morrow afternoon to Stanton | dation and with. ided by the fire, structure from its fo in a few moments, it waa a complete ruin In addition to the wrecked moat of the other houses in butidings "As for his ‘goodness’ in the sense | Mott at Th Maples, the sunimer home for a radlus of wevers) blocks felt the t TRRAE TAGE eanOORe eee olaaae ioe une ore dfather, James 3 force of the blast, which broke many of faithfulness,” Mra. Brooks concluded | ows, Mott is the aon of an arch windows. jmore gravely, “the divorce courts prove wig ives in President street near| ‘There Was a report that @ man was jconclusively that. ho is a far greater) gignth avent He was graduated; seen running from the vicinity of the offender than his wife, Two-thirds of ¢rom Cornell University last June, The wrecked bullding a few momenta be: all the divorces in the United States! young people have known each other fore the explosion, No arrests have for & long time | been AND THE NEW YORK GIRL HE'S TO WED. (GRAHAME:WHITE, ~AMIATOR, TOWED NEW YORK GIRL? Miss Marie Campbell Is | | Announced in Paris. | Word ni \ Claude Graha aviator and Miae Marte € mpbell of this city have announced thelr engagement there, Mise Campbell made + vt with | | the aviator during the Boston meet last | Gepte ¥ and also tn October at the yon? Park meting Mis Campbell! f» the daughter of Mra. Willlam Converse of No. 15 West Sixty- Seventh street thie city. She has been th Paris with her mother since early In \a Her atopfather when seen yester- |@ay sald the reported engagement Ww [news to him | Me admitted that Mise Campbell and jGrahame-White hud been most intimate alnce ing on the Boston aviation | Meld, but declared he had recetved no |announcement of any engagement, al- |though he had had a tetter from his | wife vesterday morning | Grahame-White, soon after hin fight | With Miss Compbell, took up Mise Elea- hora Sears in his aeroplane, Immedi- ately gossip had tt thats |to the av phatte in denying the rumor. | ‘Then the name of Pauline Chase, a | musical comedy star, famed as “the | pink pajama girl,” was tinked with that of Grahame-White who had aince won the International Aviation Cup at Bt mont Park, Thetr engagement was for- mally announced, but wos broken some months af was enge ged Hoth parties were em- | et yy lest e ry sstonal av re With otal meet, ne y eclipsed the other con- Pane Boston Photo New Comi@ay) | rostante in pulling down prise money, | and last Novem er he announced that) POISONED TABLETS WALDORF CASHIER Girl bdaclitel ects of Jo- IS THe BRIDE Of crn rows | CARD BANKER Promafter. Courtship Began When W. F. Lincoln soughi Stamps From Mrs, Carman in Hotel. a) (Gop It was learned thin morning t iat Irene Smith, the girl who took bichioride of mercury on Broadway last evening, ie wife of Joseph ® theatrical promoter, whose domestic troubles have had much no- toriety. His wife separated from him some time ago and went to lve with A romance begun five months ago at her mother, Mrs. Mary Bower, of Ga edo Auton Peau ed pansarilas 189 Lincoln avenue, In the Bronx, 1 | i mar tatiste night she wont downtown to see him | afternoon tn the marriage at tho Ty and take him to task for not traating |Chureh Around tho Corner of Mrs. Tdl- he thought she should a jian Carman, a former cashier In the) treated, | " McAree, accord M otel rilireom, to William F. Lincoln | , according to Mra, Bower, told | Motel #rilire o | a Chteago banke When Mrs, Carman met Mr. Lincotn whe was working at the Waldorf as a her to get out and and that he wanted her. She walk: stop bothering him no more to do wiih 1 out to Bros wandered aroun fe « few minutes | floor clerk. He appeared at her desk and then awallon ed the noride eed Jone morning and asked for some post- ets at Broadway any nirty-firat SEUMENRE he [SaciRnbe street. Her life was saved only by [Sse stamps. From that roman the coincidence that Dr. I. O, Clauss | began. Mr. TAncoln was called back to of No, “T West Forty-third street was! eyicago on business, but returned as fn the crowd which gath when she fell and adm! tdowe promptly. The girl was taken to New York Hospital. ‘The unhappy girl has a great reputa- ahi won many priges for swimming, ru nin, soon as possible to the hotel In the meantime Mra. Carman had been promoted to the position of cashier | in the Bradley Martin grillroom, A few weeks ago she surprised H, L. Stewart, with the announcement wKement to Mr. Lincoln and line fact that she was about to change tered called at the house to get her to-|her residence from the Waldorf to the day and went into hysterics and fainted Auditorium Annex, in Chica when she heard that Irene had tried to, Mr. TAncoln has apartments | KIN harself, | Before Mra. Lincoin's first marriage| Joseph McAree last vear lived at No.) she was Miss Lillian Finn, of Schenee- | 1468 Soutuern Boulevard. Ha reported |taay. She married Milton Carman, the to the police on July 6 that his ittle won | and «ymnastic feats, She was tered to compete swimming races to-day, A girl friend who was also en- where | English Airman’s Betrothal to Ad had been kidnapped. After a long search he child was found in Brooklyn at the home of his mother, from whom McAroe had not at that the been divorced. When the divorce decree was signed, McAree had met Irene Smith at a sum: mer resort Ho persuaded her to breaic ement to marry onother man him 1 Septembe jgon of a Hoxton shoe manufacturer, but |thelr wedded I!fe was not happy and she ‘obtained a divorce. Mrs, Lincoln has {a young son, who {= living In Schenec- ady. Mr York office | Tancoin has a y Maret with Kahler & Co. In th an Na- \tonal Bank But! No. 527 Fitth | ' pvonue. In the Hot Summer Days nothing seems to so quite “touch the spot” as Pabst BlueRibbon The Beer of Quality it is 60 cool The and refreshing. delicate tonic tang of the hops, without an excessive bitter, whets the appetite and adds zest to the Order a | | meal, Wasvaserecessecesserteebeged } White Re Ise (CEYLON TEA Hull Ny CERTANTO THE BOUDOIR REMEDY Fox Ecsoma, Pimples, Slt Rhews, and All Similar Enemies of Complezion and Comfort Certanto means '' certainty."" ved serious cases in a single night. It has yet to fail in the most serious cones when persevered in for a short time. Hence the "' certainty." it in the ‘boudoir remedy Ornaments any dresser and has a pungent, ple: instead of the usual rank of eczeme remedies. It means certainty that it does not contain anything that is injuriovs ia the slightest degree. It may be used on babies, Positively no mercury or salicylic acid—it in the prescription of a U.S. Army surgeon. It means certainty that it does con- tain a number of pure, wholesome healing agente in unique combin- ation never presented in any other that it is the sweetest, most inviting remedy for in disease that you have ever scen—and the surest. It means certainty that if you hay eczema, pimples, aalt rheum, tetter, barber's itch, scaly scalp, dandruff, piles or any kindred trouble in your family, you owe it to them to havea jar of Certanto on your beth-room chelf. 50 Cents and $1 a Jar Never soid in tins, Get it at Riker’ & Co.'s, Kal Drug Stores, Hegeman and the James Drug Stores. Or seat direct on receipt of price. The purchase price ls cheerfully retunded without question if Certanto proves unsatie- factory. The Certanto Company New York Solid 14k GOLD GENUINE DIAMOND ‘I Ladies’ and Genticmen’s Sizes LUO MUILROW we shall have hundred of them Watebes (0. slww ou al! the wate trade“ M by with our full CHARLES w VV HEN you don't advertise nobody knows that you are do- ing business, and it won’t be long before you'll not know it yourself. ; } a Se see ue earners eof

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