The evening world. Newspaper, October 19, 1911, Page 3

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THREE WANDERERS OF SEA HOME WITH | "TALES OF DISASTER Portland ‘(Ore.) Rover Lost Am to Lisbon Thugs—Bath | ((Me.) Seaman Shipwrecked. NEW ORLEANS MAN ILL. All Reach Cardiff, and the American Consul Ships _/ Them on St. Paul. s ‘The American liner St, Paul brought im to-day three rovers of the sea who were shipped from Cardiff by the United States Consul afver having a brary of adventure of the disastrous omer packed into a comparatively brief ®pan of months. John Dillon, thirty-one years old, aon of a merchant of Portland, Ore., re- turned to his fatherland minus an arm and shoulder, which he lost in Lisson @e the climax of a series of misfortunes Suffering an acute attack of wan! ty DiMlon left Portland in June, 1910. He Journeyed afoot to Now Orleans and| there shipped aboard the Atlantic| ‘Trensport liner Etonia as a trimme He was discharged !n London and in a few days his wallet was as flat as !¢ it had been run over by a ten-ton dra “I took to the road,” found tramping in eighty degrees worse vivid conceptions American hobo doesn't re @lorious country he browses in till he gets to England. When I got. crust @f bread I had achieved a banquet and ‘efter a while it didn't matter how stale ft wes. , TROUBLES OF TRAMPING ONLY THE BEGINNING. “How I existed until March I don't Know; it was the most miserable exist- @ace you can conceive of. But at that my troubles had only begun, March 2% I shipped on the tramp steamer Reum tor Bordeaux and kept my berth unti! May 19, when I went ashore with $19. “T set out to see the town and wh wandering through the Anoantra, the Bowery of Lisbon, somebody tapped Me on the head from behind. When I «came to I was in & hospital, minus my right arm and shoulder. After those Portuguese thugs had stripped me, they placed me on a railroad track and I wee mighty lucky to escape with my fe They kept me in the hospital till the later part of July and then shipped _jme to England. 1 gradually worked ‘Gown to Cardiff and the American Con- , ful arranged to send me home. Now, Stal I have to do ts,to. find my way back to Oregon—a good bit of a walk, but not #o terrifying after my experiences abroad.” Although the victim of shipwreck and fnoldental viciasitude, George Dennett, n able seaman of Bath, Me., got home hole. t. 18 he shipped on the Nor- _ Weslan bark Glenshee, bound from Mel- Dourne to Falmouth, England. He had reached Australia by devious routes and after many hardships, and consid- ered his berth on the Glenshee a good ‘one. ; TRAMP CUTS BARK DURING Foa. But off the Scilly Islands the tramp teamer Lillian shot out of a fog bank } @nd cut the Glenshee in two. The crew ‘were picked up and carried on the Lil- Nan to Liverpool. From there Dennett Went to Cardiff and prevatied upon the American Consul to send him home. 4. Joreph Boselle, who completed the Strfo of distressed mariners, sipped on @ fruit steamer gt New Orleans and was } discharged in Buenos Ayres. Ho shippe! from Buenos Ayres on a windjammer , bound for Bordeaux and at Bordeaux | got a berth on Eugene Higgins's yacht ma. While aboard the Nahma he | Contracted pneumonia, He was dls- charged at Cannes, where he fought off death in a hospital. When he was able to stand up he journeyed to Cardiff and there appealed to the American Consu!, who sent him home on the St. Paul. He will set out for the high altitudes of the West, as he fears he has fallen victin of the white plague. England than about IN ‘TWO GIRLS TO MA, BOYS TO PA. Court Divides Children When Yon-. kere Woman Gets Separatior. (Spectal to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Oct. 19,—Su- preme Cuort Justice Mills at White Plains to-day handed down a decree of separation without alimony in fa- vor of Mra, Wilhelmina Ruehl of Sher- wood Park, Yonkers, against Theodore tody of their five children. ‘The court allowed her to keep the three girls, ‘Wilhelmina, eighteen years old; Matil- da, twelve, and Annie ‘T., eleven, who have been living with her and sata they wanted to go back. The two sons, Theodore, seventeen yours old, and Ba- ward H.,, fifteen, who have been Hying with their father, were given into his custody. They expressed a‘desire to Ilve with both parents, and asked that they patch up thelr differences, but this could not. be done, At a previous trial of the ease in| December, 1909, Justice O'Gorman dis- miased the complaint and to! the lti- gents to go home and forget tietr troubles, foe C, Ruehl, a designer, of Union Squ New York. Mrs. Ruehl alleged cruel and tn- | human treatment. She sald all she asked of her husband wos the cus-/ that she is sought that makes woman sense Days of Their Doll Babies the Time wee | —Ghay HAIR DARK UNven| CHIN, WO GRAY AUGuRN HAIR eer ® Ocee oneen, Pum, BRILUIANT BRUNETTE TALLOW BRUNETTE CAR covoR YeLUW, Cove oo ire ANDID eal BLE Brown, wranr o€ ‘ Leauter Dane Dare THAN oo 6uve, ney BLACK HA, Jeweuty were betel pete viewer BREAD ANG GUTTER are GLORIFIED BY DAINTANESS" “MANY OREAWFASTS ARE SPoWED BY fmonos” QUT-DO THE CHINESE Foor But to Those Who Neg- lected This Early Train- ing the Magic Secret Is Revealed by a Modern Fairy Godmother. ° LUCE OFTRICHES, THINK WHAT THEY CanT See z : te | STHEM SELvES NO OMe ELSECAN = _sennsfone U) > conventional garter, which is generally 7 too short and too tight, tending to throw the figure off its natural centre | by puliing the body forward." PROPER COLOR IN CLOTHES DEPENDS ON WEARER. “And how about color in dres: aski “That depends on the woman, of course," Miss Gould replied. ‘For in- stance, a brunette with brillant color- ing of her own may wear crimson, rich blues and wn greens if she wishes the general effect to be one of brill- fancy. If, on the other hand, she # to emphasize her own coloring by the contrast of her dress, then she will wear such dull, neutral colors as Sage Breen, blue, gray and tan, which are usually dedicated to the uso of blondes. “If the halr ts black, | , | | "WOMEN ARE . Moderation, Taste and a Individuality, Without Fads, Urged by Miss Grace Margaret Gould. women NAVE NO sTHouGhT OF THE Pook osreicH BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. We all know how the fairy godmother waived her wand and turned poor, badly dressed Cinderella into & bewitching princess, but I’m eure it never occurred to any of us that this same fairy godmother would ever write a book to tell other Cinderellas how to work coal black, a woman should choose black for her the same miracle for themselves. But she has written} .oio, ana should avold white near the it. For in “The Magic of Dress," Grace Margaret] face, wearing instead oli and yellowish laces, She must not wear blue, for It Gould has taken up the problems of poor and badly dressed women of all ages, and with ® graceful wave of her wand, maybe I ought to say pen, has cavsed all thelr dificuRios to disappear. \ ae blue eyed Dionne: ia soe ansiost : fe : 5 of ajl women to dress," Miss Gould GREELEY®* SMITH Fat women, thin women, old women, young woneny utc, ks bia ol har eon, ak blond, brunette and chestnut beauties, rich, poor, plain, dazzling! Come y aain yellow of her hair and the all ye true-born daughters of Eve and gather wisdom and solace from of b heeks suggest the use of vio the words dispensed by Miss Gould to me’ yesterday in an interview based {nw b! us and reds are inte ¥ are * nf mingled proportionately to her eyes on the subject of her new book. Miss Gould, incidentally, 1s the fashton | nen’ propariunatuly th hat Mian att editor of the Woman's Home Companion, and for a number of yearé has) to pe charming on 8 a wor but solved the sartorial problems of thousands of women all over the United she must remember that if her ring * . | > all the talking, because when it comes to | !8 warm she should not choose an abso- States. lm going to let her de y By ne ; lutely cold color for her dress, for tho clothes 1 take off my hat to her with even @ distinct misgiving that Be) contrast will be crude. Pink to maten may not approve of the hat. | ner cheeks will be becoming, as will be Miss Gould, emphasizes very strongly| conform to the trend of style. a tint of blue to blend with her eyes, will bring out the sallow tone in her skin, Dull gold sewelry will be decom- dng to her, the importance of good first impres-| ‘These conditions being carried out,|Both black and white may be worn sions. {t really makes Ittle difference what | effectively by this brillant blonde. “Pirst impressions are very [te shape, material 9 » size may “Tho homely girl should |be. The woman who wears such a hat| Mt of dagh in her clothe wears a fetching hat. | j e women should not big women jittle strong in the life of the home,” she said, ‘Many a breakfast hae cilea by an untidy kimono, 4 butter is glorified by the daintiness of ¢! who gerves it, Love at first sight is @ common phrase, When it is a true one you may be sure that the object of love has been appro- priately and attract wear big hats. | and faced with a wld be be- | nes, an we: | which she ts hat, She wears dark c¢ | coming, if only r tailored suit has plain but proper | Well, let her wear it, aud sho wil Her hat is small ang her vel! | be different. splouous, She wears mannish|MOMELY GIRL NEED NOT DE- |eloves an@ sensible shoes, both in pers SPAIR, SHE SAYS. y | 0 BE MADE ON/ fect condition, You never think twice opiate CLOTHES SHOULD : HER OWN IDEAS. Jabout her colffure, It Is so simple and make that 4 4 be inate TRB for herself, There Is nothing of | ga0d point Tor fA women's.o5 HO ee ther |t28 dowdy about her, for whatever she| stance, if there are dull ver coples of) another | wears she wears with distinction, ‘The| Mehte in her brown hair, Miss Gould continued. first Impression she gives te one of self, | SHOWA Work over her hair’ until M1 dressed worman showld frncioct, and sho deserves It the ola lights shimmer snd glow make herself a pleasant detail, but not the principal detall of the ‘When she puts herself for- she puts charm backward. A woman is te be sought, not te {MUST KNOW HOW TO WEAR HER COSTUMES, TOO, “Money {8 a desirable thing, but many | a woman has been crushed under the | Once that, she can take heart with reason; for the tm- maculate girl ts always good loox- geek. |wetxhe of It," Miss Gould added. “The | “It Je the reserve power of knowing| Money sense is seldom the artistic] “How about the stout woman?” Very often the shop girl 1s bet- The stout woman must tremes tn style; they are desi | a model which she kn: ter dressed than the so captivating, A queen never has to wealthy woman oa ‘ rder to]Upon whom she waits. She knows ho advance from her throne in order t HE na whem abe M om | Is ARE ANAS Gannat e have her hand kissed, > wear her clothes and the other does | pi:c, Sit weak ¢ \ ' “Conspicuous dressing is bid for F It is this innate senso of the| gest long lines, She m thes that sug t shun cos to the form. were poured 1s ao very and favor which should be given with- [proper wearing of clothes that ts one of |tumes that fit as tf moulds out the bid, It is something that |the most desirable things in dress. She must not look monious and out of place, “A French woman always looks nice, |!mto her gowns; more than a gl because she {s nice about her clothes, |™UCh of her that, tn some 7 thom: ong {Wave In the wrong placoy, whe | ie in] perhaps nothii ing color or the poise of o hat. It She takes the utmost care to look a if she had sp calls attention instead of attract- [never rags thom out. Like @ good|Thiy ts one of the inatance ing attontion. yfriend, they stand by her to the end, | perfect fit is fatal, “A well dressed woman does not re-| “How is it with very many American! "The too thin woman must avold the women? straight up and down lines look with approval at tunt all styles, and fichus and jarge collar: an advance*agent for advertises After the first weartng they She ma skirts in quire ment. interest in thelr cloth Yn your rambles around New York have} you met the evicted family? Perhaps you Ihave seen the fow sticks of furniture piled up on the sidewalk In front of the home frem which Esaac ohd Riffke, his wife, and thelr children, hove just been evicted “For a hat bought in hi like wives, must will add to the becomingness of fh brings repentance at loisure, And cared for, after they are | waists. She may wear any sort of so fow women know what is 00- sleeve but @ long, ight one; and in fab coming to them? ‘Yet there is a hoos!” exclaimed Mise Gould, |rics and colors she has a large varlety to choose from. never let her ¢: a striped fa Of course e rest for an but then 9 very simple secret of hat suc- cess. First of all, MODERA- TION 18 THE GOLDEN RULE must jomething to do with or shuffle that goes for ® walk, and not lectures but hout bolng told; or 4 for hats. Mot too small, not too mong might be written on the mig. (io W/tNOUt being told or it lovge, whatever the fad of the takes, yeu, the sins, of the feet, | e best way for a woman to lear | George J. Gould Is Congratu- iF of Anthony J, Drexel Jr, GREAT HEIRESSES lated on Becoming a Grandfather. | | } | | aughter of Former Marjorie , Gould Makes Closer Union of Immense Fortunes. I Telograma, cablesrams, letters and crowded each other in the home 0. 1016 Fifth | tulations wera! he home of My. J uid also, for Mr. rexel are parents of a fige and Mr. and Mrs, Gould have | # become grandparents for the firs | the. | lAttle Miss Drexel arrived yesterday | handsome house given the young | me of their marriage | mew's Chureh, April 10, | J, Gould, flowers avenue, almoi to-day. Con: as plentiful tn Sho will be christened Edith Kingdon Drexel for her maternal grandmother. | Mra. Deexel was formerly Mise Mar- | Jorle Gould, eldest eh e Goulds, Moin doing well. from Lakewood her daughter's house when the baby was born, | The procession of messenger boys to | the house began as soon as the news became public, and representatives of the f: fly have since been kept busy r elving congratulatory messages. Mr. and Mrs. Gould have been the reciptents of many letters and telegrams of felici- tation, and thelr friends say that while | they had hoped for a grandson, they | are none the less glad to welcome a) wranddaughter, News of the arrival of the baby was} cabled to England, to Lady Maldston © of young Drexel, and to Lady De- | cles, who was Miss Vivien Gould and} was mald of honor at Mrs. Drexel's marriage, and to other relatives and to friends on the other side, as well as to! relatives in this cou: + Who tn to | Mies Helen Gould and the Drexels in Philadelphia, The baby ia one of the richest heir- esses in the country, The visit of the stork 1s of national importance in tls Instance, as the mai riage of Miss Gould and young Pe | Mrs, Gould cam on Tuesday, and was at united two of the wealthiest and most powerful families {n the country, Goulds with their {industrial inter and the Drexels with their banking in- terests, who are now bound by tiee of blood kinship. \ & For — —_— Decorations Plain Colors and Decorated Designs also Fest Color Napkins Festoons, Streamers Novelties Demnieona! Tne TAG 15 John St. Condensed —z*z;z~—~7{x{[{=[=== | dropped partly Jeach ot ‘Yanoe wane \y\ Mi 4 Crepe Paper Hallowe’en <. Has Nourished Three Generations of Babies and Started Them on the Road to a Healthy Maturity Borden's Eagle Brand THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OOTOBER 19, 1911. NEW DREXEL BABY For Women to Learn Art of Dress’ \SQNEQF WORLD'S | MOTHER OF NEW HEIRESS TO TWO GREAT FORTUNES. a MRS.AJ DREXEL. © THEo ¢- MARCEAY | AUTO TIRE CHAINS IN SLOT STOP BROADWAY TRAFFIC. | 7 West 31st St., off Fifth Ave. Fine Display of Electric and Other| Fireworks Before Intelligent Mo- | torman Solves the Ditticulty. | The tire ch ns of an automobile Into thi trolley slot of the Broadway street car line in front of No, 300 Broadway at about halt under st 9 o'clock to-day, There were | electric fireworks; also verbal | Novody dared touch the chain unless the power was turned of and | every bod trafic direction street w was dammed and In circle whole popul The hero Ackers, a motorman of the nue line. kicked a « from the dry side of a dry P ing case (dry wood {# not a conduct of electricity, and pried out the chain, and the city went tts way again, Coutractor Killed by Fall, James McComb, fifty-five years old, « contractor of No, 510 Wes: One Hun- dred and Eighty-first street, died to at the Hahneman Hospit tured skull. On Oct, 10 h reof of a two-story b course of construction One Hundred and Elghiy-elghth street and Fart Washington avenue. He was in charge of the erection of the building, He In survived by a widow and two daughters. from the ding in the MAKERS 15 W. 27th St. York Milk Solves the Probl of Good Tea by @ pitiless Inndto Why are they) moment may be. Tho hat must It ts positively crimine! the way | to dross well ts to hex always being evicted, why would they be artistic, Styles come and some women outdo the Chin ry by dressing her doll b Ike to keep on « evicted day after! styles go, bnt art remains, foot torture and then wonder why ‘ day for the balance of t nat lives? ’ o| re ee eel +) “in other words, t at must be! they are not comfortablo and | Rmasing true stories ever brousht to igne | becoming. It must be appropriate, It] graceful. This ts indeed a basic | ™\* ahai hadi khan ta Now York, and it is told in tie Magas) Must At the person and the costume, It] fault, con hed I had cared ‘mime Bection of next Sunday's World, | must Barmonise with toe face, dt must ‘Not far removed trem thie la se for doelia, ise 8 Wee Mew Trotteur Hats, exquisite models in black the new color eombinations, values $20 to $30........... wae ebane ae ) and all Afternoon and Dinner Hats, original | models, values from $45 to $120. A Few Quotations: at J ! Street Dresses, unique models from Paul Poiret, Drecoll, Paquin, ete. | Upward from Diaison Bernard, Special Sale of Imported | Millinery, Gowns, Furs | at Extraordinarily Reduced Prices | $7.50 $20 +50 $25 Afternoon and Evening Gowns and Wraps, original models only, guaranteed to have no dup cates in this country, at Trey.endous Reductions. exclusive in style, and reliable. Flastine- make them the most comfortable corset for the well-developed woman. The £ Exceptional Offerings in Furs Madc into sets and coats of all the fashionabte pelts, stine Gores in the corset confine the hips, re- lieve all strain, and allow perfect freedom in any position. W. B. Elastine Corsets are guaranteed to Reduce Hips and Abdomen One to Five Inches effecting a wonderful improvement in lines, the fi Elastine-Reduso Corsets, while especia designed for figures of over-development, suitable for any average figure. Sizes, 19t $390 and $500 Reduso models for every type ot average of developed figure At All De: WEINGARTEN BROS., Inc., Mebers Meriden Silver Has Intrinsic Worth 10 36. Friendship can find no more fitting expres- sion than through a remembrance in Meriden Silver, exquisitely wrought, which becomes a perpetual reminder of the giver's generosity. Displayed in this greatest of silver stores are countless needful and ornamental articles in Meriden Silver, Sterling and Plate. Alsc Sil- ver Deposit Ware and rich Cut Glass, in new and exclusive designs,of ourown manufacture, 'T MAKES Andrew Ale Silversmiths Anternational Silver Co., Success) 49-51 West Mth Street, New Yor! and 68-70 West 35th Street rH S xo = xander The Meriden Comparv A Wonderful Display of Evening Slippers for Women Satin in all colors, many handsomely beaded; fine leathers of bronze, blue, pink, black; beautiful ornaments of silver, cut steel, beads, gilt metal and rhinestones. waite, brown and Slippers in such variety that proper fittiny is essured, Slipper prices $3 to $10; Trimmings 50c to $50. TREET, SS} LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU "NEED— A WORLD “WANT” WILL GO GET IT,

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