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ILL AND HIS BRIDE ‘GETNOISY SEND-OFF -ONTRI TO EUROPE Dbtchents Brother Brothers and His Friends See to It That Hon- h eymoon Is Started Right. | CHASE AFTER WEDDING. ly Married Pair Lead Long =~ Auto Pursuit Before Going Aboard the Lusitania. ‘The sailing of the Lusitania to-day ras quite the merriest and noistest the boat had ever known. The racket All made over the honeymoon de- @ of Samuel Brill, the marchant, Nip bias, the daughter of Alexander 3. ot No. 22 Hast Seventy-fourth @yeet, a retired Wall street man. ‘The fuss was made by Sidney and N. B, Brill, brothers and associates In busl- ness of the bridegroom, with several friends and their wives. It was a con- on@muation of a travelling follification last )jiplght that covered the central part of rijiydhe elty on both sides of © 1 Park, After the Rev. Dr. Wise had per- med the ceremony at Mr. Mayer's and Mrs, Brill start usitania in a Wh 19V@he brothers and the fr 20ftf @ horse-power car and trailed them, <pyeuccesstully throwing and attaching tin fan strings to the rear of the pursued 218g and blowing horns and making “EQnegaphoned explanations to people on the sidewalks, tnsCMASED TWO HOURS BEFORE GOING ABOARD. ‘The bridegroom ordered his chauffeur forget the speed laws in getting away from his tormentors, and there was a ¥ Mro-hour chase across the park and up @nd down town which ended at the Cunard pier at midnight with a racket hat assured all the people on the ship that @ bride and brid>groom had come y"Mboard. ‘Thp brothers and an even larger Barty of friends were on hand to-day with quarts of confetti, rice and old hoes, and the chase went up and down be decks until the bugle sounded. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Brill will take a zigzag 1 across Europe from Paris to Monte on Passengers on the ship were thomas J. O'Brien, Ambassador to ‘ Jealy, and Richard C. Kerens Uouls, Ambassador to Austria. Mr. O'Brien did not care to comment on the Turco-Italian war except to say he did not think it would last very long. Mr. @Brien was formerly Ambassador to Yapan. Mrs. O'Brien {s on her way from Japan to meet him, travelling over the Trans-Siberian Rallway. ‘Welter Phelps Dodge, whose domestic troubles were made public recently, also Ned on the Lusitania. pores CATHOLICS MAKE PROTEST. Ban on Prises at Charch Euchre z Arouses Indignation. A storm of protest from Catholics of eOElzaveth, N. J., has resulted from the prder of Prosecutor C. Addison Swift bt Union County forbidding the dis- —Fripution of prizes at a euchre at St. Patrick's parish hall, The Prosecutor Hwas ordered by the Grand Jury to atop TWi'the euchre, but the committee modified ‘9 the usual euchre arrangements, so that h———mo prizes were distributed. Other euchres planned in Elizabeth have been abandoned. Retaliation 1s omised and bridge whist is going to “Wee tabooed, if those affected by the aan@rand Jury's orders can resent it. The efforts of the Grand Jury are aniingpid to have been inspired through the .L Mbody's failure to get evidence against 1 wrong-doing, that prevatis, iy awn Youth Quickly Develops Into Fortune Hunter, Seeking Bride With Money and Passing Others By, Says Dr. Hancock. Tragic Results That Follow Lack of Proper Training by' Mothers—Bachelor Maids Don't Realize Loneli- ness That Comes With Gray Hairs, BY NIXOLA GREELEY-§ Why is an old bachelor? Also, WHEN is he? Likewise, why and when isa bachelor woman? | Both these natural phenomena have no excuse for, being, according to Dr. Eugenia Hancock, who supple- ments her denunciation of the state of celtbacy by speci- fications as to the age and qualities which determine, when a man becomes an old bachelor and a woman an Za old maid. Dr. Hancock is a well-known woman physician of; ‘ New York and 1s the wife of another physician. 1 aneribye Sanit She practises matrimony as well as preaches It. i “Bachelors are becom!: more prevalent every ay,” she says, “Bachelorhood for men and women ‘s a modern dis- ense. The symptoms in women are: Dissatisfaction with the responsi- | bilities that marriage entails; fear of becoming home-makers and home- | Keepers; abnormal ambitions for money, clothes and social positio They scorn to marry a man im average cironmstances, and so b* | bachelor women, shop girls, or worse.” | “In men the symptoms of ap- cross the forty-fifth parallel of life, re- | Proaching bachelorhood manifest [Member: “All hoje abandon, ye who themacives in @ desire to cultivate | *teF he ecceavaee= WAESPLEAFALS TOKEEP BIGAMIST QUT OF PRISON @ence in women's ability to cook Mystery Back of George Scott Properly, xeep his home tidy and to be satinfied with the slim hon- Miller’s Second Matrimonial Venture. MITH. orarium that is his, ‘A man ceases to be eligible and be- comes an old bachelor at forty-five. A woman pass definitely out of the ranks of the marriageable at thirty-five. LACK OF TRAINING OF BOYS RESPONSIBLE FOR IT. “But don't imagine I blame the women for asing number of celivates in 3 “York. It's the training, or rather the lack of training, of our young men that ts responsi Courtesy, con- sideration for and appreciation of women Is not taught to the young boy by his mother as it should be. Very often the mother can't help it. She's downtown earning a living. “But the first thing the boy thinks of as soon as he leaves school is to g> to work. “Get a job" Is the watchword of his earliest youth. Get a job and That there 1s some carefully concealed mystery back of the bigamous marriage of George Scott Miller, the thirty-three. year-old son of one of the wealthiest residents of Mount Kisco, N, ¥., to Miss Frances Jameson, a former telephone operator, was the report made to Judge O'Sullivan in the Court of General Ses- sions to-day by Probation Officer Kim- ball, who has been Investigating the case since the young man, whose first Wife and their children live at No, 220 keep {t at all cost to honor or honesty even. “New York, like all great citics, 1s merciless, and the male product Side sea Geesbeuaee cotenouave “Think of the enormous number of young men in. this town who plan da-| Cooley place, Mount Vernon, pleaded Uberately to tarry for money. { guilty on Monda: “The Inck of right training at| Kimball found that Miller, who had home 1s proved by the development of|Courted Miss Jameson while they were such sordid and selfish tdeas in our| both in the employ of the Consolidated young men. To marry for money or live |Gas Company, had given her $4,500, and | in material ease In ore of the bachelor had spent as much more in luxurious | apartments that take the place of wives living at the Hotel Imperial and other | to so many New Yorkers 1s the for-| Broadway hostelries, and in buying her mula of quick success for thousands. Jewelry and imported gowns and milli- Tt is sald, of course, that young women Nery confections since June 22, when as well as young,men shirk the re-|they were married at the Little Church sponsibilities of marriage. That is trug| Around the Corner, of a small class which prefers the| Miller has steadily refused to talk of drudgery of a Job downtown, the pretty| his courtship of the former telephone | clothes and small luxurieg their salaries) operator, or of the incidents of their buy for them, to a real home and life| honeymoon, which ended abruptly when with some young chap whom they might/one of her relatives discovered that M!!- help to greasr success than elther|ler was visiting his Mount Vernon fam- could ever win alone. fly and had attended the funeral of one THEY FAIL TO LOOK AHEAD |of his children which had died after his TO AGE OF FORTY-FIVE. marriage to Miss Jameson. “guch girls don't look ahead. Now,| Both wives were in court to-day, Mies when they are young and charming | Jameson was extremely bitter, but the they find plenty of Mfien willing to take| first Mra, Miller. who was Miss Eliza- them about to dinners and theatres,| beth Tompkins when he married her But I, as a physician, see the end of| cleven years ago, pleaded with the all the good times. I see them at forty | Court for lentency, or forty-five, gray-halred and ill, yet} ‘He has always been devoted to me afraid even to take time for their tIIness| 4nd to the children, and he mado the for fear some younger women will push| Dest of husbands,” she told Judge O'Sul- them out of their Jobs, Men don’t care|/ivan. “I am sure that he ati loves for gray hair in their offices; they want| ™e, and I hope that you will let me young, pretty faces, and the young|t#ke him home with me,” she said, women, strong and efficient, too, push| “What explanation can you offer for their elders to the wall. Some of the a husband's conduct?" asked the middle-aged bachelor women I know re- gret bitterly that they have never mar- ried. Often their livas have hean de- voted to caring for aged parents or young brothers and sisters. They are noble, self-wacrificing souls, and thelr loneliness, their fear of the future, 1s @ tragic thing to contemplate. “They speak of such women as competing with nen, as taking their jobs away; but it is useli to tell women to-day to go back to their homes, Where are the ‘don't know of any, unless he ts out of his mind,” she declared. This opinion was reinforced by a let- ter from Dr, William L, Miller of Cro- ton, N. Y., who 1s not related to the prisoner, in which the physician de- clared that in his opinion Miiler was the victim of insanity, inherited from his maternal grandmother, In addition to Dr, Miller's letter, Judge O'Sullivan an- nounced that he had been written to in the prisoner's behalf by a number of prominent residents of this State and of New Jersey. All of them spoke of THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, Men at 45 Years, Women at 35, Case to Be “Eligible” homes? Wearly every old bache- lor means @ home that should been, but that never will b and self- This man is intoxicated—with joy. Just look at the load (of profit-dollars) he has. One sip at The World Ad. Fountain <M “Results” is usually enough to turn any person's head—in the RIGHT direc- tion in their search for ff Positions Workers Investments Lost Articles -~ Homes Bargains, Ete, Why clip the wings of your advertise- ment when The Worid will circulate it into more New York City homes and offices than are reached by the Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune and Press COM- SHOULDN'T STAY AT HOME AND WAIT, THOUGH, “You don't think a girl should refrain from getting a job and stay at home waiting for a husband, do you?" “Most certainly not. ‘The girl who stays at home hasn't as good a chance of mar- singe s tho girl who works, To- very often « girl gets @ job @ husband at the same time. Moturally, it's the more enter- prising who are downtown, and, F deliberately or not, they piok of the eligible during office hours, the fault !sn't with the girls, uptown or downtown, lies In the self- It BINED? ishness, the lack of courtesy, the lack “Why gaze into desert fields for op-| of apprectation of @ certain type of young man. I don't say all young men, <i> portunities when The World prints _jiQmore want-filling advertisements than re Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune and) | The man I mean 4s the fortune hunter. And only the poor girls New York know how numerous he 4s, ven he |s not altogether to be ress ADDED TOGETHER? eay blamed. His materialistic tdeals show Ve that he di " right sort of) Read World Ads, tor Variety|<t»*\ he eae ce | Use World Ads. for Results| was provav' roduct of conditions | ebA she could " N old bachelors, when you ESOS ERRAPACME, Sue’ heel asi Wo Bla bre noite Miller in the highest terms. Miller was sent to the penitentiary for one year, and as he was being led away, his first wife declared that she would take him back when he was released, __——-__ WIFE SUES G. H. TAYLOR, That a matrimonial action of some sort has been brought by Mrs, Lydta Taylor against George H. Taylor be- came known yesterday when Taylor, through his attorney, A. B. Morrison, of No, 40 Nassau street, filed his an- swer in the County Clerk's office, Taylor enumerates several parayrapha in his wife's complaint, the contents of all of which he denies, He does not state what the aotion is for, but save he was in Florida for five weeks last year, having gone there in January, 1910. The nature of the action ts not) disclosed in his answer, nor Taylor's ad- dress. a RES DISMASTED IN GALE. The four«masted American ship Ed- ward Sewall was towed Into port by the tug Dalzelline last night, partially dis- masted in @ gale outside the Delaware Breakwater, A wireless from the Brea water, which had been notified by passing vessel, sent the Dalzelline down the coast for her. The Edward Sewall was laden with high grade case oll for San Fraactaco Tt was the first time within recollection that « slip was ever loaded with such Pacific coast. ere exiaieurs v v PRESSABUTTON, PRESTO! SHE WEARS DESERTS HIS WIFE AND CHILDREN TO UMBRELLA BONNET. MARRY ANOTHER Montclair Milliner Startles Na- | tives With Her New In- genious Headyear. Until a Month Ago, Says Mrs. Fenn. (Special to The Evening World.) MONTCLAIR, J, Oct. 18. —Mile. Filtterby, the fashionable Cedar Grove milliner, who startled the womenfolk of home of her sister, Mra, Albert Crea- singham, 424 Fast Second street, Brooklyn, s t bi her town a short time ago with the in- Woy AeCletOe Wee Het: Buayeae has left her to marry another, Litte vention of a hat that buttoned up the) Agnes, her ten-yeareold daughter back and could be worn fore and aft or| gtands by the bed with large, wonder. on beam ends, hurled a torrent of thrilis into this model community td-day when she appeared on Bloomfield avenue wear- ing a mushroom hat with an umbrella attachment. Merely by touching a but- ton in this Creation it was converted into a nifty little umbrella that kept the ing eyes, and five-year-old Danlel keeps asking for his daddy. “Our married life was @ happy one, she moaned to-day. “Until about month ago we were the happiest fam- ily in the city, Then Dan began to stay out late at night and acted cool trim and slender Mile, Flitterby dry | toward me, but I did not suspect that a bone. he loved another, Even when I eaw ‘The hat itself was of attractive design, | the marriage license issued to purple in shade and garnished with a wreath of hollyhocks, There was abso- lutely no suggestion of the umbrella at- tachment until the little milliner touched the hidden button. Then the hollyhocks vanished beneath the spreading circum- that {t was my husband, but now I know that Dan has left me and mar- ried another.” Dante! B. Fenn, the husband and tere of the automatic umbrella.|in Brooklyn since Ort, 4 Fenn, an tn- Two old gentlemen from Verona, which | spector for the Hoard of Health, Man- adjoins Cedar Grove on the north and/nattan, kissed bis wife and children Montclair on the west, were so startled |goodby on the morning of his disap- by this transformation that they gasped! pearance, He stepped from the little with such volcanic energy they lost |home into the wide, wide world, It was thelr false teeth. nly yeaterday Mra Fenn and 3 arried on ( Smith The little milliner sprung her um- brella lid first as she was getting off a |‘ Bloomfield avenue car at Valley Road By the time she had reached the gas office, a few blocks down, several cur!- ous Montclarions we: trailing her, ut- tering “Ohs!" and “Ahs!" of amaze- thent. She very kindly turned her um- brella on and off @ dozen times to show the throng how it worked. She was fol- lowed into the gas office, where she took three dozen orders for similar lids, She expects that it will become even more popular than her toque which buttons up the back. Although a native of Cedar Grove Mile, Flittery is thoroughly French, Her father played a French horn and H mother K five first pri for His French toast at the Essex County DIX REMOVES FOUR OF WINGDALE PRISON BOARD. Ousts From Office Those Members ner address as West Twenty-th ret, Coney Island Little {8 known of her at that address Mrs. Mary Sypher, who conducts a boarding house there, says Miss © left on Oct. 5. Mrs, Fenn in her search for her band visited the Board of Health found that he had taken an uniimit leave of absence. DL aibeeomaoe BROTHER-IN-LAW TRAILS HUSBAND FOR SISTER. Discovery Leads to Divorce Action by Pretty Newark Heiress, Her love bitghted by her husband's many absences from hom: her suspicions confirmed by her brother's capture of her husband in a Valley her fair Who Failed to Resign After Stream hotel with a strange woman, pretty Frances Dutcher Abbott, a Award of Big Contract. former Newark society belle and heir ALBANY, Oct. 18,—Goy. Dix removed | ess, four of the five members of the State | the Supreme Court to-day and asked Committee on New Prisons which last! for an absolute divoree from J December awarded to the P, J. Carlin] 1. Abbott. Justice Greenbaum re- Construction Company cf New York, | werved dectston for over $2,000,00), the contract for the| Miss Dutcher, who ts a daughter of construction of the new Harlem Prison, | ¢he founder of a shoe ce came before Justice Greenbaum tn at Wingdale, The committee was re-|ark, wedded Abbott three cently requested to resign, but only one,| after a brief Wiliam J. McKay of Newburgh com. | to live in New York, nthe y plied. husband began to away from home the wife's brother, Edward M Dutcher, went on his trail and on Aug 20 found Abbott and a woman com- panion registered together “Oh, go away, Ba. I'm all in after a long auto ride,” was the response of the husband when Dutcher confronted ‘Those removed are Elisha M. Johnson ; John C. West of e Skiff of Gains- ons, C, V. Collins of Troy, They re- celved $10 @ day when actually em- ployed. The Governor propores to appoint « new committee of three, who will abro- gate the contract, the prison being un- necessary in the Governor's opinion. Duteher returned New York and inetructed Lawyer John I, MeGovern to begin an action for divorce, Sold in Sealed Packages Only. CEYLON TEA ; Happiest Family in the World | Mrs. Agnes Fenn, who ta 111 at hte| and another women I could not realize | father, has beea missing from his home| OOTOBER 18, 1911. tn ov | te 80} tor or hogan of Lindt Chocolate Px is always enjoyed by young and old. Lindt ty provides nutrition as well as sweetness, M Stoeeeeeeoos POVOPEL SHOE, Child Able to 7 Only That Home Is Mary Swan, fifty-two, fon, Hugh, © | Kingsbridge the Bronx, | Kingsbridge station. clad in a black skirt and had a shawi She had no umbrella and she and the small boy were soaking we! The woman Was unabie Policeman Adams's qi gently and talked in such a rambling mother yesterday afternoon, Dr 1 al in an ambulance and took the After observing And Pass Into the Confirmed Bachelor and O'd Maid ¢ Class| MEMORY GONE, WOMAN WITH BOY WANDERS IN in the Bronx. wie not known, her ta road by Policeman Ad. the rain clock this @ her head, way that he ‘ook her to the King. bridge station, Lieut. Delay, after talk- ing to h short the, decided that she wal ing from brain trouble Dan | and notified Fordham Hospital. | While walung for ¢ mbulance | [Lieut Delay gor coifee and hor food and the woman and boy ae as| though they had had nothing for a The ehild ng time li where he ved, me pla: in the Bronx ut and got hi nonue came fri ok hin r and son there. tha ni and she apital, The ing to find out wh ibble very All Sizes, Be. WANTS CHARGES | Pell the Police four-y found wandering about morning at nie, andy Heath a The woman lous took him out about 4 0 but he could not except that it was He sald that’ once before, not long ago, his mother You'll instantly recognize Lindt superiority. Imported in Cakes and Wafers Chas, Spits, Wholesale Depot 18-20 W, 21st St, New York renee |seume Gov, from office. Close on the beets of this move came | the oval of Robert R. Crowell from | the Moe of Engineer of the Topo |«Pipnical Department. His name fed es ZOOFFCNIS Borough Sessile ‘ident Connolly of Queens Makes Request of Corporation Counsel. Dix to remove the fatter 1 engineers mi make goed? ked of Moot Presiden* Cons “Give me t the months.” responded young engineer. “If you won't be y that T have made good at the that period 1 will hand you my to another tment. | Borough Presi jent Connolly to-day re. 1 to p or more | quested the © ft offictala of Queens Horough named In th ration Coun WASHINGTON, ¢ ment to-day abandoned its ‘over @ penalty from th my | National Stock Yards for at report of Commissioner Ordway after! ton of the twenty-pleht-hour Inw, Few’ his recent Investigation of the adminis«| tating the feeding and watering of Mve tration of President Gresser whtcn] stock in interstate transportation. Greatest of All Carnival Sales Standard $25 Suits 7 6°" To-morrow, Thursday Hundreds of stylish suits for kun- drec's of stylish worren—cavght up inthe whirlwind of ca nival specia's and priced at $16.98 to-mo row instead of $25.00— heir standard value. Picturesque [8th Century Styles harges against the twenty Fashion love's secking the new, the exclusive and the beaut'ful in tailoed suit elegance, at a saving, reed go no further. The right materials, the right models, the rizht lines, and cer- tainly the right sizes await ycu. Styles in profusion and_ perfection. Everything from a swagger English trotter suit to a richly trimmed call- ing costume, to glad len the heart of the fastidious. Every Fall Shade Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES RAIN so address ar-old ama of was 14 and 16 West L4th Street—New York 460 and 462 Fulton Strect—Brooklya q 645-651 Broad »treet — Newark, N. J. to answer intel! “Best Values at the Lowest Prices” 121st Bee #p Street Special Thursday Women’s and $9. 9, 1S Misses’ Suits Two models that have been the big hits of the season; made from the-best quality storm serge or all wool French homespun serge. One model has pointed sailor co'lar, with 3 rows of silk braid and tassel; back and front of coat and skirt finished with braid to match collar. Other model has mannish collar, wide rever front, finished with satin; skirt is open panel front and back stitched; colors black OF navy; sizes 14 to 44; reg. $15.98. $4.98 4& Women's and Misses’ Dresses Six different models in the latest Fall styles, made from \ 3 all wool serges with plaid silk sailor or pointed collar, fin- J ished with braid and gold buttons; other styles trimmed with satin or embroidered sailor collar, cuffs and panel front and back trimmed to match; colors navy, black, Copenhagen, red and brown; reg. $6.98 and $7.98. Misses’ § 4. Long Coats Beautiful quality all wool cheviot cloth; sailor collar of wool plaid, double faced, trimmed with large fancy buttons on each corner of collar; deep plaid double cuff to match collar; colors navy,Copenhagen and brown: sizes 13, 15, 17 and 14, 16, 18; can’ ‘be purchased elsewhere under $7.98. Women’s Polo Coats Women’s Kid Gloves In Tan, Polo Cloth and soft finished Pwo clasps; lambskin; heavy silk eme English beaver new large aU0© bossed bucks: white, black and taniree Sen 79c shaw! collar in King’s blue and corona, tion; latest style deep cuffs to match collar, looks like a $12.98 4.9, 98 Teddy Bear Blankets coat; sizes 14to 44; special Finegradecribbia anket, woolnap 9Q finish; sizes 30x40 in.; val. 49c IC Women's Shose Dr. Wright’s Underwear that his | jock Fordham t she was t to Belle. > endeav- CREE the best Here is the dandiest kind of o|appetizer ever set out for a ing |feast. Women’s Shoes Dongola bluchers, sizes 3 to 8; all black velvet or pat. velvet tops, sizes 244 to 6; special Women’s Petticoa Good quality black silk taft finish; special | Get Wise! | als’ Get busy and— GET A BOTTLE, itt 2 $1.98. leather with heel; $1. 29°" ; 1 Women's Underwear ta; soft or sizes a to $1.98 Patent coltskin and gun metal, sixteen buttons high, Cuban heel The well-known underwear for men; sizes 2! to 7 & $2.98 fleece-lined shirts and trawers; all sizes; special, at 59c Women’s Silk Hose © Pure silk; deep garter top; high spliced sizes 8! to 10; 9 ; Ic Heavy ribbed fleece-lined vests; long short sleeves; ankle or knee ler extra sizes; reg. 25¢ wool, ‘ade by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N. ¥ at or found articles ade i World wilt be j AVENU _Andrew Alexander Men's Brighton Tan Grained Leather Bluchers Full double soles clear to the heels, Extra Strong stitching. Mighty good sho:s for cold or wet days $7 NINET KENTH STREET, a