The evening world. Newspaper, December 7, 1911, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MILKNAD = TO FIND SHE 1 THE Ev Een WORLD, THURSDAY, | Newly Wed Phi Philosopher at 19 | And Bride He Wants Made Trustee «REALLY CITY GIRL é 2 Is Satisfied With His Rural Romance. ( MARRIAGE CUTS INCOME. 4 Now Heir to $125,000 Wants Bride to Supplant Uncle as Estate Trustee. Frederick Meise, nineteen years old, Married just eight weeks, sat in pink and lavender pajamas to-day and dis- cussed the benefits of married Ife with the assurance of a man wno knows his @udject. Frederick 1s plump, good- natured and always smiling, But he ‘explained to an Evening World reporter that he had become tired of being a man adout town and had decided to settle down, with the result that he ts now living in a cozy dove cote at No, M4 Pulaski street, Brooklyn, with hie dark-eyed wife, whom he married after @ rural romance of four months that vegan on a farm at Shoreham, L. 1. Bridegroom Meiss has rushed into Print through the fact that he and his ¢_ But Blase Bachelor at Nineteen | | tuacle had a difference of opinion over ehis marriage, because he married a goweman six years older than himself. fhe uncle, Henry Mets retired reat estate broker, decided -Teduce Fred Dae week to $16. This despite the fact that his nephew is sole heir to an father, Conrad eral years ago, ap- peinting Henry Meiss trustee of the estate until Fred reaches his majority. BRIDE AWAY, HE DOESN'T MIND A BIT. where Marr Moise is, the 7m explained that she had felt utterly wretched with a headache last genight and had decided to spend the Asked it all; the future held nothing for the other philosopherg*of this Fecognized the fact, useless to that, after all, woman is man's ‘Without her life 1s like the cock- ‘without the cherry; life is insipid.” Lire TAUGHT HIM TO AVOID ee THE “DOLLS.” op “I looked about for a wife. Ah, it © was bere that my philosophy of life ‘taught me that what I wanted was a eweman who understood; not the ‘chip- that one sees everywhere, who <vthink only of their doll faces and clothes, but a woman of character, a gweman who would think of me and the t day in June poets sing I knew, not to be found in New § "I decided the best place would be to ‘at some farm house. I nelected a tty Ite place at Shoreham, 1 n't been there an hour before I met Anna Stumpf. I fell In love with instantly, and tt was quite roman- for the first time we met she was oing out In the pasture in a simple Minen dress, and one of those old- fashioned sun bonnets with a milk pall, to milk the cows, I followed her, and the romance begun “Two months later she promised to t until then that that, after all my philosophy ton the subject and th ‘that covatry girl, she w: real New Yorker, seeking quiet on the farm, But she understood me and had © the same ideas about what wives ought to be that I had, and re understand one Nia, Oddities Mistress Had to Pay for’ Load of Wood Parrot Ordered. Two wood peddlers were passing the home of Mra, George Wheeling of Lans downe, Pa., when a voice cried “Put tt in the cellar!” ‘They unloaded the wood in the cellar, but when Mrs. Wheeling saw it she de- nied ordering it. Just then her parrot shouted from the porch, “Put it in the cellar!’ and she paid the bill. others factal blemisnes of various sorts ecelved in the games. Leroy Wood. son of Dr, J. Walter Wood of Port Richmond, 8. 1, is im- proving from an operation for appen- dicitis, which attacked him at Cornell University. He is the fourth of the family to hav appendicitis, Dr. Wood, his daughter, and another son have Will Bury Aged Co ed rations for It. Fitty Years, in Same ¢ : Fourteen hours after the death of her | pegs, See husband Mra. Mary, Collin dled from) ie ie eee ane ciced $1,000 grief at Laurel, Del. lin a Boston bank to be pald to the fer- They were both more than seven’y | gon who can convince him that the years old and had, lived together for) earth is round. more than half a century, They will! He also believes that the sun movos be buried in the same grave. {about the earth instead of the earth travelling about the sun. is to Bi jan't K Hubby Has a Wallop Coming to Him Every Fall of the Moon. While Mr. and Mrs, G, W, Tate, just married, were chatting at Philadelphia! ye" Yont his aut with A. J. Tate, the bridegroom's father, | gyrup can, and his son put in its place the bride suddenly floored both men With! a can of real maple syrup. her fists, Abbott used tne syrup through mis- They were taken before @ Magistrate take, i his crank case, os rast th 7 “ plained his wife| Machine went smoothly and sweetly sor moon.) She was advised to get out Of] Humans to Have Only One town before she has another one. 500,000 Years Hence, Because the small toes of human be- ings are increasingly less used and the big toe 1s developing in an astonishing manner, human beings in the distant future will become one-toed, according .ucas of London, ted that in half a million G. O. Abbott, Toe ‘Toys tor MITIo: a Poor Chil Mrs, Edward MoLean of Washington, D. C., whose three-year-old son inher: tted $10,000,000 from his grandfather, has put in her Santa Claus orde* It shows that millionaire bables have about the same ity for enjoym as other youngs! as the young hetr is going to get a hol horse, a set of building b! mand a tin bug] that you wind u) fashionable ladies, those whe want to roll thelr wn cigarettes." me some pretty, appro- jace in the country wh priate na ee the cow was the Issue in Tuesday's) 1 would suggest ‘New Mown Hay.’ election was at Coupeville, Wash, | TAAE woud attract the ladies and another perfectly. “IT returned to town and told my * uncle about my approaching marriage and he objected 0 it, because be sald * 1 was too young. | told him that ar é gument was ureless and that 1 had met the one girl in the world who gould make me happy. He then op- g the marriage because, he said, Stumpt was too old. = told him “that was one of the reasons I would marry her; that she would be more | sensi than a young girl and would ‘take better care of m t down my tier in the t me, and T think, as a uid have a proper Jmcome, and I want my wife to be ap- ~ pointed trustee of the estate.” js BAD cll OLD SHYLOCK LOSES AGAIN. HARTFORD, © onn., will be no compulsory r Merchant of Venice” in the Hartford schools hereafter, Rabb! Harry W.| Biteleon appeared before the School | Board to-day and requested that Shake- speare’s play be dropped from the read- ing list “because it puts emmphasis on /Bhylock the Jew rather than on Shy- Yook the man.” He said other books of squat literary and educational value @ were easily available. The board passed Dec. 7. There ing of “The & Motion in line with the rabbi's re-! it. ‘& motion that the sessions of schools @hould begin with the singing and that there should be no religious exere was defeated by 5 to 4 Bo the schoo! ‘WM continue the old plan of havin; ‘the teachers every morning read a por- tlon of the Scriptures and a prayer. ——< MORE FUN COMING. you mend, as you can, ig. toring ov esta, if we Boal wor you duke bow The Socialist candidates favored tet- | Wouldn't be misbranding at |ting her Wander at will through the ¥ |town, and they all los | | ‘Tied Up v0 Satate fora w Centary, | Henry Strong of Lake Geneva, fl. left a will providing that hin $4,000,000) jextate whl! not be divided until twenty- one years after al! his grandchikiren are \dead. The youngest 8 two years old All the income from the fortune @x- cept $15,000 a y goes to his children |and grandchildren, ‘The duration of the | trust of the executor is 100 years | SAVE captain for the team next year, @ for- jmality usdally over with by now, | Capt. Fisher has a black eye and | DrBulls. Cough Syrup Eh. | a cold P. ¥ Aen) a hacking or racking y cough, RD caveana bronchitis, grippe; o1 asthmatic or pulmonary on h with sore chest? Has the baby croup, whooping Sn ho or | e8 cough SAMPLE, FREE. Then test the old reliable Du, Buu's Coven Syaur, free, Write A.C, Maren & Co, Bale timore, Md, Kenticn ts pipes “Thad a very bad cold and cough tnd one bots of Dr, Ball's sO hy cured | | Raiepteeraees: of the world's best mal Pease, Steinway, Weber, and twenty other’ makes. Very easy payments, Pl Fully warranted. lege with each, Square pi PEASE P Branch: Brook 34 Flat Ave. on your Xmas Piano by buying at the | sore - OF USED PIANOS De Free music roll, Open Evenings. 128 W. 42d, near Broadway, N. Y. DECEMBE R 7, 1911. EDITORIN PRISON, DRIVERS FINED ~ URGED FOR NEGRO FOR BENG SASSY UNWRITTEN LAW. TOBUSY WOMAN | Walker, Whom He Defended, Hanged After Being Shot in Court. | She Thought Spitz Should} | Blanket His Horses and Did It for Him. ATLANTA, Dec. 2.—The most desperate | ht ever made in G ‘gia by a negro Was lost yesterday when T. B. Walker, after being shot in the head in the |court room by the brother of his vie- | tim, was hanged in Washington, Ga, jfor the murder of Capt, Charles 8. Hol- | lenshead. | Capt. Hollenshead, one of the dest | known farmers in Wilkes County, was j found dead, with a bullet shot through j his body. For a time the: sno clue ;to his murderer, but finally Walker, who,had been working on his place, was arrested, charged with the crime. | Walker owed Hollenshead a large sum | of money and had refused to pay it. He had made threats against his employer. | A small band of citizens of Washing- |ton stormed the jail one night, took the negro out into the woods and made) | preparations to‘hang him. With the| Valley, Callfornia, and 1 know horsas | Jrope around his neck he was told that|®Md love them. T could not pass by and | he had time to confess and. pray. He| See them unblanketed in that weather. |told them that he was guilty, When| Thea when I blanketed them this man |the iynchers, maddened by drink, wore| Sbused me and used vile language to jabout to swing him up he tossed the| v0. naa no right to climb on this |rope from around his neck and dashed| mane wagon,” said the Court. “Why nto the woods. The members of the| didn't you cail a policeman?” | mob pursued, but were so befuddled “But he used abusive language to jwith liquor that they were not able:¢o) men Mra. Harsy Vide ‘anarenes: 00 follow the negro, and he escaped. ell, for using abusive language | But after a tine he was pete ery fine hin si," the Magistrate decided. | While his trial was on Jullan St. Goorge | rr a hay | White, editor of the Broad Axe, in At-| uncalled for. lanta, republished a story from @ Chi- — cago newspaper in which !t w: Shot in « Saloon Fight. charged that Walker had killed Hollens-| .y a result of a fight early thig morn- head because the white man had been |ing in Joseph Restler's saloon, Fifteenth too friendly with the wife of the negro. | street and Avenue B; Restler is held at Great indignation was aroused in| the East Twenty-second street po'lce Washington by this story. A warrant | station charged with felonious assault, | charging criminal libel was sworn out, | William Flahevty, seventeen, a driv and White was carried to Washington |of No. 51 East Fourteenth’ streat, is | for trial there, Since that time negroes | held as a witness, and James Conlon, have been working hart for White's} twenty-one, of No. S27 Hast Sixteenth release. It 1s charged that Walker de-| street, Is In the prison ward at Belle- nled the story WS printed. vue charged with disorderly conduct. | e me Walker was sen- asa bu his right instep. tenced to the gallows and was taken to| ee nee cuuee i his right inster Augusta for safekeeping. When the|* time arrived for the execution he was | started back to Washington. Although handcuffed and bound with ropes, he leaped off the car and escaped in the darkness. Washington offered $500 for his cap- ture, and he was cavght, carried into the courtroom to be resentenced. He was brought face to face with John Hollenshead, brother of the man le had killed. As the sentence was being pro- nounced by the Judge, Hollenshoad drew a revolver and shot the negro tn the head, Friends took Hollenshoud away, while the negro was hurried back to jail. Hollenshead {s ill, No legal action has been taken in his case, and {t 1a not belleved that any Will be taken. ceceniinlipeiec William W. Spite of No: 329 East Ninetieth street had stopped his wagon on the long hill at One Hundred and Fifty-eighth street and Broadway yes- terday afternoon to give his horses a rest when a woman dashed up, climbed to the+wagon seat and tossed a blanket over each of the horses. The driver was about to go on when the woman seized one of the horses by the head and then took out a police whistle and began sounding it. When Policeman McIsaacs came up the woman demanded that Spitz be ar- rested. She she was Mrs. Maud Hardy of S41 West One Hundred ond street. pitz was arraigned before fe McQuade in Night Court, Hardy said: “T have @ ranch in the Sacramento of that driver was most “Famous Sensational Coats Not What He Expect: (From the Boston Tran “Darling,” he murmured, induced you to care for a fellpw like me?” “I really don't know, George,” replied. “Pa threatens to send to a brain specialist.” she me Ask Those Who Use Them. Brandreths PILLS iMade of absolutely |pure, vegetable drugs. \One or two at night ‘relieve constipation iand keep all who use them well. To Less Than 14 somely lined and interlined Stylish and practical full length MONEY The best value ever offered for reliable Pianos, some kes, including Chickering, ker, Krakauer, Hardman FOR CATALOGUE Prices $48 and up layer Pianos from , up, Exchange privi- janos $6 each. \t f IANO CO., uol intered Newark Branch: 10 New St. hall, and Mrs, Corner All Sizes for Women and Misses. - We Pay Freight and R.R. Fare. ‘3."3! 4 rete OUTFIT, 5-Room Grand Rapids Furniture Outtit, Te Ravel et, 1 Conaint STUDENTS STORM HALL 10 RATTLE MRS. PANKRURST Interruptions Never Feased Her and She Triumphed by Her Good Humor. CAMBRIDGE, vard undergradua’ stormed Brattle Hall yesterday to hear Mrs, Kim- meline Pankhurst, the Brit kette. Two or three dozen aci through the windows after the doors were closed. For a time there was \uproar, but members of the Equal Suffrage Club marshalled their forces and drove out the invaders, The police were sent tor, and the large crowd banging the locked Dec, 7.—Har- doors were dispersed. An element, looking for fun or trouble, had planted themselves in parts sf the every opportunity let loose loud guffaws or organized cheering. Pankhurst throughout preserve! her equanimity and tha noise eventually died down. A probable reason for the exclusion of Mrs, Pankhurst from the rollegs 1s, by order of the Harvard Corpora- | tom.’ may have: been thet © Collcotisn waa made for the cause. For children or adults, RIKER’S EXPECTORANT is equally effi- cient. Keep a bottle in the house in case of emergency. RA FREE eonte ai at bottle by presenting this ad. al any Riker Drug Store. size> 25c oat SON RANTEED. D. for their Suits” 9 th Street Reductions Suits Instead of Weaitting Until January Prices Are Sharply TO-MORROW’S IMPORTANT SALE Reduced for Former Prices 350 Beautiful Suits Reduced from As High As $25, $30, $35 and $45 A magnificent collection of the season’s most fashionable and best selling styles in custom tailored and fancy | trimmed models of finest broadcloths, men’s wear serges, zibelines and novelty fabrics; coats hend- 12-5° tweeds, 400 Winter Coats Reduced from As High As $15, $20 and $25 models of rich black broadcloth, two-tone fabrics, reversible ‘cloths, cheviots, mixtures, winter weight serges, caracul'and chinchilla, in all the prevailing color- Upen ™onaays anu Saturdays Until 10 &. ™1. Cc ‘TOMOBE Rebit'+ iy 00 Down on $50.00 VERY oe OUR TERMS “ =75.00 100.00 150.00 200.00 300.00 Chali MAILED FREE. $75 $165 No, 7. Consisting of Parlor, Bedroom, Diniag Hoom and Kitchen, a i snes tn ai! vise! "AV. eee JAMES McCREERY & GO. 23rd Street 34th Street ANNUAL HOLIDAY SALE. MEN’S AND WOMEN'S SILK HOSIERY. CONSIDERABLY BELOW USUAL PRICES. 23rd Street 34th Street JAMES McGREERY & GO. 23rd Street 34th Street On Friday, December the 8th WOMEN’S COAT DEP’TS. in Both Stores, Unusual Values. Black Charmeuse Wraps, for afternoom or evening wear. 00 ning former pase Long Coats of Chinchilla Cloth or Zibeline. 27.50 former price 39.50 Long Conts of Rough Woolen Fabrics. 12.50 and 15.00 former prices 19.50 and 2350 JUNIOR SUIT DEP’TS. 1m Both Stores, Juniors’ Suits of Cheviot or Mixed Fabrics, Various models. 16.50 values 25.00 and 27.50 Girls’ Coats of Chinchilla, Cheviot and Mixed Fabrics. Size 6 to 14 years . o and Prk he pnts Girls’ White Galatea Dresses,—Russian model with patent leather belt. Also Waist Dresses of Lawn and Batiste. Size 6 to ro years. 4.95 Senn By een eR MERINO UNDERWEAR DEP’TS. On Friday and Saturday, December the 8th and gth In Both Stores, Women's Coat Sweaters,—V neck, high or sailor collar. 2.90 and 3.90 values 4.00 and 5.78 Children’s Sweaters in White, Tan and 2 1.85 value 2.90 Children’s Hand-crocheted Caps... NY 78S Red. The new Alpine Wool Hat, cheted. Crocheted Wool Slippers. Various an including ‘‘Mule’”’ shape. wee Scotch Wool Sleeveless Jackets... 6.75 vatee 3.90 SOROSIS SHOES. 4m Both Stores, Sorosis Shoes are distinctive in appear- ance, comfortable and_durable. “Luxurious” models.......5 (00. to 15.00 Ki JAMES McCREERY & GO. \ 23rd Street 34th Street JAMES McCREERY & GO. 23rd Street 34th Street FURS IMPORTANT SALE CONTINUED. ON FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, DECEMBER THE 8th AND oth. Fur Coats, Scarfs and Muffs, greatly below usual prices, i 23rd Street 34th Street “TO APPRECIATE THE CONVENIEN Ihe SUNDAY WORLD'S W a a \

Other pages from this issue: