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T SHOW GIRL BRIDE Suffrage O. K. for American Wom>n, (NON BANK JUROR STILL WAITS FOR MILLIONAIRE'S SO Bleanor Pendleton, ‘Trunks! Packed, Hears Nothing of Young Mr. Ream. ALL HER HOPES VANISH. Marriage Hasn’t Brought the ! Automobiles and Yachts for | Which She Pined. Aftene in her little flat in the Broadway | @eatrical district. with her trunks Packed and ready for the expressman Who never comes to take them away to the home on Fifth avenue of which she had dreamed ever since she came to New York to go on the stage, Eleanor Pendleton, the beautiful snow girl bride pt Louis Marshal! Ream, son of the mill- Jonaire, Norman Bruce Ream, is face to jfece with @ realization that all her ‘Napes—all the aspirations she had to be (® leader of society, a life of yachting {and automobiling and the other delights ‘that weaith brings—have passed away itke the mist over the harbor, and all Gmesause of the sternness of her bride- sreom's father, They ran away and were married on Sept. 1 and they kept thoir marriage eeret, spending their honeymoon in the bride's narrow little apartment at No..| 6 West Fitty-second street, until Sept. | 6 when the young husband decided tha: ft was time for him to inform his par. ents that there was a new daughter. tnelaw in the family. So he went to Thompson, | fig father has a million- immer | home and that was the last time his ride has seen him. One message she | «had from him—that they were forgiven —then came the severe interviews with Nerman B. Ream, showing him to be} , ‘m anything but a forgiving mod and after that silence and nothing more LISTENS iN VAIN FOR CHUG- CHUG OF THE AUTOMOBILE The chug-chug of the automobile that the former chorus girl had dreamed would glide up to bear her away to the splendors awaiting the bride of @ millionaire ts not heard, She lstens in vain for the ring of a messenger boy bringing her directions to move at once to the eulte at the Hotel Gotham, where they had planned to live; the postman brings her none of the cards and Invitations from her husband's family's smart friends whom ahe had pictured as taking her up and making her a soctety queen. She Is alone, save for the colored maid, who has been with her since she | began her stage carcer seven years | ago, for her mother and sister have gone away to visit !n Baltimore. And | her only callers are reporters—report- ers, almost in scores, who call morning | and afternoon and even at night to ask | if she has heard from Mr. Ream, when | he te coming back, if hts father ts keep- ing him away, and wnat she plans all do about it. ‘No, he is not here,” she said to-di “and I don't know when he is com! back. No, I won't explain and that's, all I can say.” | ‘The deserted-bride plight of "Penny," a her showgirl friends call her, is the | subject of much commiseration at re- hearsals and behind the scenes of musi: gel comedies, where her friends of the rs. | uid distinguish them from . erate Falls. One reason chorus gather to talk over their affairs, |one would not on Sept. 4 at Niagara IT MAKES HER ILL BECAUSE [Xe best-dressed women of half a dozen | CRASHES INTO WAGON. is tha: Avie tax another and previous SHE INTRODUCED THEM, —_urepean capitals, And personally, ex-| wife, and the other is that she cannot + lcept in the case of some foolish ox-| a, a ie find ‘him “My dear, I introduced them and it | tremes ike tho hovble skirt, I find Bu-| Mills Inspector, Driver and Motor-) ‘00 Mite theeeconé nakes me ill that such @ thing as him | rien : ; 1 xoing pore) ‘and leaving Penny should | Pean sontnmnen ag attractive on te} man the Victims, Former Being | wire of stein to apply . women of the West as the nations! - ; res on a ARurek have happened,” said Miss Josephine | . , Seriously Injured. ‘one charge tho is the new Mrs, Ream's {dress of our own women on them, 1| ne higat » found, upo' Sigg fel friend, and who was have seen a few English-speaking, Taken to the German Hospital with | authority, that she found by an Evening World reporter | women wearing our costumes, and the internal injuries and possibly a frac- | wouig have to uit until #he could ehearsing on the New York Theatre | result was anything but pleasing, | tured skull, Fred Doht, forty 4! produce legal proof of he arriage | Neither do Chinese women look well in| milk inspector, who lives at 426 T hay t to Nia “Bio, indeed, Louls hasn't come bac! tailor mades,’ Hach race should keep| Bleecker street, Brooklyn, may die as! 4.4 “tg she went on, “and nobody belleves he lio ite own dress, as conforming to its|the result of a collision at 4 o'clock this nari As soon as that why. It's Just because his father is an |” . | i aye rir Raga urrl : uefa stern old thing and is keeping CHINA AWAKENING TO THE ica Ear ig enol reer Tee cna ak inveatinaslen that him away from poor Penny, It's per- ha Bchelaser, tour, of 3 ier on Anvestigatic a fectly awful, but {t's plain to anybody NEED OF MORE SCHOOLS. 608 Grove trast Brooklyn a8 driving | syies divorce suit has not yet bi who'e a bit wise. He has just told “And do you also thins the Chinese hig milk wagon along M settled, Of course he may have thought Louls that if ho sticks to Penny he | women whould not receive the education | RU. Doht .itting on th Bee eee ei nates ate BaP ihe. teat vhan't have a cent and Loule knows | oi reciate in our women?” I asked, |When a Flushing avenu ert ea at Sek va cae le cant Appar Fenny op She salary |”), e in a different flela | Newtown, crashed ied me When he had another wife. he gets from the dank. ‘Oh, there we are in ‘ ass What our |the corner of Forest ri a CE ee ee Tentics, “Not that hie father ever gave Louis entirely,” he responded ie he car was in chars Motorman Ad no toctell me nuch—the poor boy cou!d charge a lot of | men, and women, too, t learn from | ee inineh No Evergreen | 88ked Willie Hammerste mo | hings, but he never had much mongy. | yours is the wisdom of is, ‘The naeae where Able Ww First he said Able Mr, Ream found out tat Louls Was goin8 wisest of us in China know thls nee? Ghelagar Waa EhPown @ome dlatance | WAS 0 @ santtarium en sald he with Penny and he made an awful row | ye a fact beyond discilasion, We |, Sehelsser was thrown some distance, |e ynow anything about Able and shut him up for a week, but a8 nave an immense admiration for that Be I may have anot wault on my have an ne | e Dillingha ore 98 he got out he ran away end | yongertul Constitution of yours, We leverturned veuinie, Dilingham was! ngs, In this mor pers Ar narried Penny. longer pep r ttudied {#UBHE between the dasuboard and the hands | it) To's ft Adita nadine “We're all with Penny and I hope know American history; I have stud a genme Ge nie’ Gay thu ui bh Was i Aa ravllig she'll’ stand on her rights and not ac: /it all my life, And wo read ‘all men eee ee cere who were in| there are " nen In New York ept a cent of settiement—she wouldn't |are entitled to the pursuit of hap the aires Car cams 10 ressus and ## Well as in Vir exe it tat have married Louls Ream if she hadn't as ‘entitled to th uit of edu @ Dilngham ant,Dont. ‘Tne former he 18 trying to ma arison be (ES Was found not to bo severely inured, tween me and "| "New schools are saphe. but Doht was unconsciou ae ee Th Stor ofa House in China. Women nan, escaped with mino its a »ruis Ae a slencerou K . B Y Al Si t * hood and mothe om Has to Tle Plane to Ground, ey wa a Darn and »ixteen that Woman fullls both those functions /his aeroplane to the ground so that 1 . me € y as sh co to know would not fly a esterday at City Lots: nore paul Bees qenlacday at atin a no: hinder | Was the gale that swept ove race Sutul cine Fe MN ae ie (track that no flights were attempted. ALYEA & BROWN n entering business a If the aviators hid gone into the ai 54 Park Ave., REAL ESTATE, Rutherford, N. J., Sept. 9, tyai Publisher The World, Dear Sir—Thanks to 4 World ad. we beg to report the sale of the Yereance homestead, bounded by Orient Way, Pierrepont Ave. and Mountain Way, at Rutherford, N. J, to Mr. Charles thle The property con eight-room house, teen city lots Respectfully yours, ALYEA & BROWN sts of a large barn and. six- World " Real Fatate 00 "Ras. Yesterday the Herald. More Than 31.1. THE FIVE OTHER New Vark Mors g Newspapers COMBINED, So Much for Quantity: » Examine Them jor Quality, \ 4 {{ More Than ‘Visiting Sun Warrior Ie | Kwang discoursead peace and goodwill | Yara, jcliffs or a mountain range. And at might the view from the river of the lighted city is marvellous, refused to But in China, No, Says Admiral Impressed With the Cleverness of Women in This Country, Finding | More Charm in Their Wit Than in Their’ Beauty. Each Race Should Keep to Its Own Dress; Eu- ropean Costumes At- tractive, but the Chi- nese Woman Would Not Look Well in a “Tailor Made.”’ By Marguerite Mooers Marshall A man, not very tall but with broad shoulders and erect carriage, with ex- ceedingly bright brown eyes, @ particu: larly square jaw, !s Rear-Admiral Ching Pih Kwang, who is paying New York ® first visit along with the Chinese cruiser Hai Chi, The yellow flag, with its dancing blue dragon, fluttered yesterday from the Gray, compact-looking veerel in the North River off Elghty-sixth street, The yellow cat, mascot of the Hai Chi, sprawled peacefully on an immaculate deck. And downstairs, in his own luxuriously furnished parlor, Admiral in perfect English. “No, I have never been in New York before," he admitted, with a smile, re- veuling a double row of fine teeth. “And even now I have not been in it—only around 1t I visited the Brooklyn Navy but we went In a lanuch, down what you call your Battery. But {s most interesting, most de- ghtful. When I was a boy I went to school in § nelsco, But nothing there was this. The view coming up your harbor {s one of the most beau tiful the world holds. The sky line of tall buildings has a picturesque quality only to be compared to a row of giant around I found your Navy Yard extremely | interesting. Of course our navy cannot be mentioned in the same breath with yours, But I should say yours com-|America. In those countries, for gen-| pared very favorably with those of the |erations, women have been taught to great European powers which I have|use their minds the same as me seen. Your ships have impressed me as| Why should they be kept out the tremendously high—»ut perhaps you | World of politics when they are su have gotten into the habit of bullding | Prominent figures in the —losely-akin “HAVING N0 MONEY tall thing: world of business? ADMIRES OUR WOMEN BECAUSE |aiviqusl, developinent, for al, anes | ’ THEY ARE CLEVER. | women and childr is why | There was a small, squat green idolham exceedingly glad American on the Admiral's mantelpiece, and it ideas and methods are creeping into} seemed to gaze at me sadly as I put the Chi is fe ever essential bromidian in of mg “What do you think of American| but tn business of all kinds. women?” farmers and small nis are But the Admirat tiad a surprise for ginning :o depend on someting beais| Brother Arthur Must Retract, |me. “Do you know why I admire them {instinct in conducting tie It afairs most?" he said. ‘Not fo beauty {8 an excellent and hopeful | She Says, or Be Sued or their chic, but for their education, “When TI have complet Metal YS, They aro so clever: duties and calla T wish to i eee, Ing in your wonderful vouutry,”” cone for Slander. ‘T have met a great many American women, In London and Paris and other European capitals, and with some of cluded the admiral with dortan smile to take one o another “Particularly do I your skyscraper eleva them I have become excejlent friends. tors, in which, ¥ told m Mrs. Miriam Henriques Hammerstein Always I have impressed with the one draws 4g from top to pur out of the Hotel York to-day things they know. Their great and spe- Botta, And Ta lous to try with her four-year-old son and her maid cla! charm Hes there. elevated railroad and your sub- because she frankly adm to the| “They are beautiful, yes, though the! “Ouytously the Chinese admiral {« {Management that she had no mone: type {s so different from our own. They! nothin:: {¢ not optimistic She said she saw only a remote chan wear beautiful clothes, of a cosmopoll- babies tar awo reasons of getting money from tan elegance. Judging by dress alone, Able Hammerstein, whom she married THREE HURT WHEN CAR always bearing in mind that they would have b ried far o me eve things shall come into to ‘sea by the w ith y litt contiict with the Interests of the home, chance of ever getting back to land We already have some women phy- | aga!n REFORM MUST BE SLOW, BUT IT IS CERTAIN. of course, all these devalop- (a {alze (me, and. when there has | Uniformly Excellent. been no education at all for centuries tons a minu of gene ything cannot be re- med in And do you belleve that women | should vote?" I asked this wide-minded Oriental. ainiy they should have a part in| © government as nae they are) eady t he declared, “It 1s a Joke, | y that Chinese women are | f such an undertakiny Toust siudy and work and de “But I do not see why the vote ts the women of Baglan@ and | White Ro CEYLON TEA 4| QUITS BECAUSE HE'S | a Foreman Says He Is Acquainted With Men Concerned in Investigation. WOMAN IS ON STAND. As Stenographer She Recorded Deals of Which She Has No Recollection. | | John FP. Gote resimned as foretnan of the Kings Jury toeday tn quaintance with anty Gran consequence of his aw men who may be affected by the inves: Ukation into the affairs of the Union | Bank, Mr. Gets remains a member of | the Septe rand Jury, but will take HE EVENING WORLD WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 138, 1911. ‘HANDSOME GIRL DRINKS POISON SITTING ON CURB Unidentified Victim of Wood Alcohol Draught Wears Diamond Solitaire dressed years o A smartly olen young A gat first street and woman on he Avenue drow a bottle from quickly drank ite \ moment later she fell un- nto the street and a pottes- had swallowed nearly | sohel | a bookkeeper in the, offices of the Knickerbocker toe Com- pany, the corner, noticed the girt | walking rapidly along Ninety-firat stroet toward the F River. She came back | In a few minut nd her agitated mane ner and her stylish appearance Inter- ested Borket, and he watched her. When | he saw her tft ottie to her lips he | Nine afterne hana. contente conse! ry found she ot wood at 8 Bovket, m | ran out of the office to prevent her ; HO part in the proceedings of that body | drinking, although he sald he had ml in which the Union Rank ie under dine |!dea what the bottle contal her ex- cusston, eltement had convinced him abe a | 8 It was reported yesterday that Asem. | tended some deaporate ac | slyman ho had been ap-| Chatles Roode reac he young! pointed District-Attorney. to] WOMAN fret, and when he waw nno was! conduct nd Jury probe into we] #kconscious called Pot ckwete | aftates lor of the Bast rity th street Union Pia vad complained of | Station, Dr, Kern immoned Jan ged friendenty between Mr. Gets| ay \ Ratner, both members of| he directed that #ie be + to the jt und Jury. and Ain officers and| Reception Hospital tf ition is je Interested in the bankrupt eritcal orn. Mr. Geis wrote a long letter to-| The young woman has not Went y Dike, expressing his opine! fled, Her comptexton is blond and her| ald be for Mm tol eve ie. She a white dre et Bank affatr, al-[ trimmed with lace rah coat ceriain that he could act] over tt. Her f and ly as a Grand Jur pite the] her slippe with larke wet that he ts slightly acquainted with} silver buck nas | Edward M. Grout and Gilbert Eliott al | RATNER WILL PROBABLY SERVE | jute J AS GRAND JUROR. a cee eae es | | No action was taken In the case of] sng had no mone,, 'Mr. Ratner, ie will probably serve as |a juror in the Union Bank investigation, Inside information co ping the relations between the Union Bank of Brooklyn, under the old regime, und | the Jerolomen Security Company, one | was given to-day by Mrs, Bertie Hul- drunkenness kept him out of work for a sart, formerly Miss Jor who was] month, Killed himself to-day with hy- head of tho bank's mortgage depart- | drochlorte nk house of ‘inent. and who was examined by| Mrs, Mary Vlanagan a’ No. 205 West putly Ate Superintendent of Bank- | jgjeventh str ¢ Dodge ‘The landiady's Uttie daugiier heard Hulsart sai * was employed} wiekenhofer groantug in room. | Mer ‘Traders’ Bank} with one of the boarders Mrs, Flanae | 1190 ad ned with the} gan broke In and found Wickenhofer natitution until February, 108 some] trying to choke back his moans with a [time after its organization as the] pitiow. ‘The boarder picked him up and |Unon Bank, Shortly af nto the bank's employ she was placed! Vincent's Hospital across the stree! in charge of the mortgage departme: Wickenhofer died within five minutes she said, and w nstructed by David] after raching the hospital, 1A. Sullivan, then p ident, or his sec ee een jretary, to make her headquarters in Inventor Wicke the office of Gilbert Elliot, who was In. HOSTS , Sept. U.—Willlar \" terested in companies which borrowed |#0m seventy years old, who was chief urge sums of money from the bank, | Clectrician of the steamahip Great E M ‘ot's office Was the headquarters |’ When she laid the firat Atlantic the Jerolomen Security Company, u y borrower, the witness sald | “WHIPPED” PANY INTO SHAPE. Mra, Hulsart tostified that she |directed by either Mr. Sullivan's secre- |tary, hier Ashley, of the bank, to prepare minutes for the Jerolemon Security Company shortly before the tate stepped in and closed the bank, Material was given her covering the ‘lings of sixty meetings, » whip tt into shape.” Mr. I she sald, assist her in this. Moa the d: s she was obliged to guess The was lott. w the effect t directors O88 ratified e tings. had all previous lat Information to this effect was handed | Directors, on Oct. 15, 1908, attended by | |he H ther mass of data, she Paul Grout, eae ahaa — baa Beste teidaey My been ale ‘or co. y by Henr: jsald that Was elected secretary and | 1 rit the President, and on which tho |treasuver ¢ full amount was loaned by the bank, mpany on June 4, was repudiated as belng unauthorized Former Police Commisstoner James C. pyis note was listed, after the reorgant- Crop! Who conducted the examina- yation of the Union Bank, {tton, showed the witness two notes ag- | Sanctioned by the daily at at the odome of the 50 Flying Mach Cross Country Speed Races. Mimic Warfare in the Clouds Starting. |] Ladies’ Races Steep Climbing and Steep Target Practice with Bombs Descent. Relay Races. \eroplane Scouting Passenger Service Mail Delivery Tests. “THE GRAND MARCH" OF THE GREATEST NUMBER OF AEROPLANES EVER SEEN IN THE AIR AT ONE TIME PRICES Gereral Admission 50 cents Good Seats $1.00 Reserved Gran, Stand Seats, $2.00 Box Seats $3.00 Parsing Spa e $5.00 Private Automobile “Boxes,” $12.00 1! Tournament Headquarters, room 411, 334 Fifth Ave. (cor phone S082 Mad, Sq, or Tyson's, McBride's and any of the leading } hotels wiy PROPITS, PHE MANUVACTURER NOT SAVE RBTAL LADIE Suits Made to Your Measure, ain TO LADIES’ SUI VIN West 27th St ROBINSON'S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food. All Grocers and Drugetete, 40, MFG. CO., 1th WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS. ter her entrance MINUTES OF COM. was and was | of hown an entry to at at a certain meeting the erything done She sald that INTERNATIONAL AVIATION MEET Aero Club of America Septe mber 23d to Cctober Ist, inclusive NASSAU BOULEVARD, LONG ISLAND loted by BUY DIRECE PROM Floor. carried him across his shoul or to Mt, cable, 19 dead at his home tn Reveri He was the Inventor of several devi used In connection with ocean cable wregating $8,000, made payable to the Jerolomen* Security Company and signed by her as secretary and trea urer. SAYS SHE SIGNED $35,000 NOTES IN BLANK, “These notes were signed by me in blank,” sald the witness, “at the sug- jxestion, I think, of Miss Burkhardt, Mr. Sullivan's secretary. These notes, 1t might be mentioned, remain among the assets of the bank, but have never been paid. Louls Speicher, Preaident of the Rem- sen Bond and Mortgage Company, test!- fied that at a meting of the Board of an @ Pealiz- ible asset, if. lwcore 4 ‘ALSE ALARM OF FIRE STAMPEDES NURSES. Scores Flee From Bellevue Hospital Training School When Big Gong Rings by Accident ‘There was another false alarm fire Aro at Relievue Hospital this morning. ectrictans, it was said, caused crossed Wires, ringing the big fire gong of the main building and spreading terror among the patients and nurses. Several of the nurses in the training opposite the hospital on Bast nty-sixth street rar out of the bulld- nm alarm. When the big Kong began to send its thrill through the hospital It was clear- schoo! 1 in ly heard tn the nurses’ building, and they fled without stopping to inquire re the fire was, Many of them ran To-morrow, Thursday Messaline Silk Autumn Gowns ) How Parisian—How charming— low dashing! These wonderful little wns, which New York's smartest ressers would be proud to wear. Chiffon and Silk Double Sailor Collar Really a marvelously clever copy 47 a French Autumn Gown, made Hor gor 4, dr % Empire style with pretty i Bo yoke, loose panel back. Exactly Like Picture. Real $18 Value. 14 & 16 West 14in Street ( a The Regis also Black and White, 2 Clasp, White and Netural, 12 button, Natural, Regularly $2.75 each, Acro Club of New York the Work Altitudes Greatest Low Aviators Flying, Quick When company drops in— Soups Just add hot water, bring to a boil, and. |, SET VE. | bility, hay im: Wissner Pian ar bargain pri 895 155 165 190 -180 .205 Chickering Webster. Sterling.... Everett Bradbury Reinhard MONTHLY toward First avenue, bit before the had gone far It wan noticed there Was No great excitement in the hospital, Then the timid ones returned end loarned that the alarm was false. Over in the bospital the parle not greatly disquteted. Some of tt helpers im the buildings ran into he hospital yard, and discovering that.tht kong had been rung by accident pat back to and helped nurses and doctort calm the patients. Two faise alarms were rang from the hospital gong Saturday and another Monday —_ © Drawing Ch commercial and free Ing at the Stuyvesant ‘Trade hool on Fifteenth street, near Second nue, will ri its sessions nex ition and materia ay Monday evening. are free to all boys over the age of six uurnies teen, Registration for this class Is now Lg front fastening, trimmed with hand made ornaments, combining ¢c!f color and that of the contrasting colored chiffon sailor collar and cuffs. Copenhagen, Brown, Black and Purple "ae Alterations FREE ALE \7 ALL THREE STORES ~New York 460 & 462 Fulton Street -—Brooklyn 645-651 Brnad Street —Newark, N. J ool Conta ce THURSDAY, SEPT. 14TH French Chamois Glove WASHABLE—SIZES 5 TO 614 ONLY The quality of tone sponsiveness of touch tog at Pianists estras and ope " WISSNER GRAND, UPRIGHT AND wELAYER - PIANOS Vrite for © pay ment of Wissner Uprights and Grands PAYMENTS going on surplice Fine Navy, Fall Importation of Kid Gloves MADE EXPRESSLY TO OUR ORDER FROM SELECTED REAL KID SKINS. 2 Clasp overseam, Paris Point, all the new shades, Value $1.50 pair 1.00 Value $1.50 pair Value $2.50 pair y Women’s Undervests LOW NECK, SWISS RIBBED, Plain or Hand Cro- cheted Fronts, reg. 50c each (Box 6 for $2.00) MILANESE SILK, Hemstitched Top, First qualit 1.75 (3 for $5.00 lasticity and her with dia reputation of the the and conductors of or ws use and in r alog and Prices list of Upr h were taken in part tsa wh Kroeger Jacob Bros Gabler Harrington Chickering Steinway ACCEPTED [NEW PIANOS TO RENT, $4 MONTHLY | NEW WISSNER BUILDING 55-57 FLATBUSH AVE., BROOKLYN, , One Block from Fulton 8t, Opp. Livingston St., te 96 FIFTH AVE., COR. 15TH ST., NEW YORK, .