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

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)

ee if Mother Has Baby. yh. CHILDS LOSES Woman i in Love May Give a Hint or Take One, | FIRE DRIVES 1,000 Old Dame Nature Forbids It It FROM THREE BG WS " LAST CHANCE” AND WIFE LEAVE Brief Reconciliation Ends When He Advertises He Won't Pay Her Debts. . HE WAS ‘ON PROBATION’ So Says Friend, Who Declares It’s. “All Off? Now— * The Irving W. Chitdses have parted again and this time for good, if close @riends of Mre. Childs are wel in- formed. Mrs. Childs and her four- year-old, daughter, Marjorie, left Mr. Childe at the Hotel Rector, where they had been living a month, about a week €g0, closely following the insertion by Mr, Childe of a newspaper advortine- + Ment, In which he stated he would not be responsible for any debts contracted by" his wife, ‘This notice, it is understood, was tn- Gerted without the knowledge of Mrs, Childs, She departed from the hotel Soon a’ter it was brought to her at- tention, “My wife left the hotel about said Mr. Childs to-day Evening World reporter, with her mother, who ts t@ in tarium in this cit Mrs. Childs's mother, Mre. Westfati, fe not 1Y in a sanitarium. She fs at her home, No. 185 Stratford road, Flat- ‘.Dush. or is Mra. Childs with her & mother members of her family re- ‘Buse to give her address. Irving W. Childs {s a son of the jate am Henry Harrison Childs, of Brooklyn, a manufacturer, who left an | @atate of $2,000,000. The young man is twenty-five years old. In the four years following his arrival at his majority he ‘epent $100,009 a year. A few months ago ho got anether lump sum of $700,000, which his wife succeeded in having tied up ina trust fund, but there Is a liberal spending allowance for Mr. Childs AGKS HIS WIFE FOR MORE OF HIS OWN MONEY. Gertrude Westfall married Irving W. Childe im March, i007. In May, 1908, Mra Childe brought a e@uit for separa- tion and won it. The Court lo ag her an aliowance of $00 @ month for herself and the baby. On his twenty-fifth birthday, March 28, 1911, Childs fell heir to his second in- feritance, amounting to $700,000, Prompt- ly his wife made application to have the money tied up to protect her interest and that of her child. Justice Black- mar of Brooklyn ordered the Franklin Company to take charge of the 6700, 000. ‘The trust company put the brakes on _Childe's allowance and Childe went to seo his wife and ask her tq allow him more of ‘his own money. The couple be- came quite of (nmy, and on October 31 last thoy agreed to live together agahh. ‘Teeir second honeymoon lasted until Tec. 9, when the advertisement ap- peared. Mr. Childs announced he had made his wife a dig allowance and could not afford to pay her bills, . “Mra, Childs went back to, her hus- oand,” sald one authorized to speak for “her to-day, “in the hope that he would ehave himself. It was his last chance, @nd he understood it. He did not take Advantaga of |', and his wife will riot lve with ain’ pt BOSTON CARDINAL’S ADIEU. 1 in Fare- well Audience. ROME, Dec, 19.—~The Pope t welved Cardinal O'Connell in @udience, at which he again expressed love for America, and assured the dinal that he was si had done the wisest thing for Catholicism in America by granting a larger number of Cardinals to that country, He said pe Receives O'Conn he knew the good work done by the Federation Catholic Societies, of which he beartily approved. He sald alo that tbe a pleasure to wo din & coun’ here the relations be- tween all 7 ex and sects were 40 «00d. Cardinal Wednesd. of which automobile trip. This Is the Week when Christmas shoppers will leave behind a long trail of i Lost Articles If you become one of these unfortunates bear in mind that if your “Lost and Found” ad, is printed in the Morning or Sunday World it will get « circulation in New York City greater than the Herald, Times, Sun and Trib- une ADDED TOGETHER. And Send Your World Ad. , In Without a Moment's Delay World “Lost and Found” ads. are printed conspicuously on ‘page opposite Editorial Page, Mornings, and on Firat Page of Want Section, Sundays. a — “@He EV. AI NG. ‘WORLD, But Propose? Ie an Immovable Stand- Patter and Will Never Permit Woman “to Take Advantage of Man's Timid, Clinging Nature” With “ Please Marry Me.” Copyright, 1911, Lecturer Cooke’s ‘“‘Wom- an Wooer’’ Far Behind Shaw’s “‘Pursuer,”’ but Yet Centuries Ahead of Nature’s Plans. NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. goes back to Pe GREELEY* SMITH headship of the It is the boy who is so-called mod- est, aimaent ana Yor there ‘Be leaves bis o .n home when mar- ried, just as the girl does here, “Another reason why women should do the proposing ‘is that they aro gotting better educated than the me. and, therefore, will Select more intelligently. Im téne 4% will be the wo.-en who will the courting.” Of course, Mr. Bernard Shaw's amiable| that would woo her." In a recent piay, theory that woman ty now, alwaya was,|the ingenue shows ti hero hiv own ind ever will be the pursuer of the shy |face in a looking glasa as the portrait and elusive male is much more ad-|of the man she loves. And all these Vanced than Mr. Cooke's little notion|things are true to feminine nature. that some day, some where, women wili| But women don't propose djrectty. | propose. But undoubtedly Mr. Cook'e|Nelther do men as a general thing. | scheme will meet with more favor |know of one marriage which was among women who go to lectures. t| brought about by @ remark of the man {8 not pleasant to be called @ purauor|as the girl with him stopped to look for how then can ‘the unmarried |1n the window of a furniture store. feminine person explain herself axcept| “How do you think that bookcase would om the theory that she has never been| look in our library?" Whereupon the able to persuade a man to marry her, | Very practical young lady began to plan Now there are many unmarried femin.| the rest of the furniture. ine persons at lectures, many doubtless| It must be admitted that the average 0 have achieved celibacy, but sti] woman in affairs of the heart tak thers who have hed it thrust upon| bint very quickly, and gives one on them, and to these it must be very|cesion. soothing and delightful to hear that| But propore? Never—three times some day, in a higher, fairer world|never—that 's, hardly evor! woman will propose marriage. a ee es As a matter of fact, she won't, KILLED BY A LONG FALL Fo ae Soa ae AMONG CROWD OF GIRLS. we are @ | Charles Normandsen Loses Life An iH, tending it tn Congress, & few even develop Guancial abiiity of igh order ap to entitle them to i Senatorial honors. Uitime ‘sly, there Hour After Getting Job may be @ woman President. But as Window Cleaner. mover while women are women and Hie plea for work so tht he would men are men will the order of courtship be reversed. MAY BE A FEW CASI AS THERE ALWAYS HAVE BEEN. be able to provide for his wife and several cure’ to-day for Charles Normar postion as a window cleaner In the 1 Christmas dinner seven-story loft building No, U4 West Here and there, then, as now, there|Twenty-fifth street. An hour after he will be found a woman who will ask a/had commenced work his body was} man to marry her and then, @@ now,/ picked up in the street. He had fal the man will be very likely to consent. | from the ¢ floor and was instantly For what could be more exquisitely | killed inden, who Was twenty: gratifying to masculine self love than|feven years old, Ived at No. an G the realization that his charms of | #tree’, Brwklen. A | he loft bulld'ns is located a few doors mind and person are such a8 to OV | grom sixth avenue and just now that 10/ come that instinct of feminine reserve | catty ie unusdally, busy. Hundreds of which he believes to be inseparable from the sex. If I were a man, I think I'd accept any woman that proposed to me, as a slight testimonial of my esteem for her nerve, Granted, of course, that the reason | y usually advanced against a proposal by | pu a woman is that the suggestion involves | the girls. the request for lifelong support, as weil| Traffic was blocke as love und affection, and tnat we may |hood for a half hi change all that, particularly when par- | Were so intent u lor lecturers on “the economte indepen. | from the vicinity dead man was forgotten dence of woman," “the ‘parasitism of th plied see wives, stop talking long enough! PICKS BULLET FROM EYE. to do some real work. vi ois dill But the recsons which mMAEO [panicl Stoddard, Shot Inatend of Mad Dow, Takes It Coolly. mon the wooer and woman the wooed are fundamental, phyaiologi- A mad dog was chasing pedestrians in! front of the Rorough Hal onl, as old as Mature herself, And Dame Mature, by the way, is the most umreconstrnoted, reactionary, ([5. 1., this morning when the most impervious to reforms =| Langford of the Stapleton police stat and the most formidable of all the who was paeming on a car, jumped ont | 01d ladies who stand, ike Mrs. Par- [with revolver in hand. He fired one | tington, with brooms in thelr [ghot. The bullet missed the dog, siruck | hands to sweep back the tide of [the cement sidevmtk, was deflected up- feminism, ward and lodged in the right eye of ‘There is no doubt that we shall get| Daniel Stoddard, thirty-five years old, girls coming from the various lot bull ings in the Vicinity saw the man m his footing and come hurlling downwa A score of them narrowly escaped being Several fainted of New Hospital is servi | & {ner partially tamed before we get}an onployee of tha Kichmond Ligit and \chrough. She may even live to cast her | Railroad Company toddard was as- | saitot against Suclalism, and utter ap-| sisted into the ferrvhouse and then i calmly picked the bullet out of his eye ropriate sentiments about saving the | @inly Pcie ee ae een tn ae Polty, aw did the several newly emancl | oycur jc than were the startled towns | sated centenarians tn Los Angeles re-| foie who watehed the « i |Sently, But she will never consent to] stoddard was taken to the + |e. ruthless woman take advantage of | irmary at New Brighton, |snan’s timid and olinging mature and | wiciens say they may by the pressure of # cold and cruel eco-| the sist of the ey nomic dependence and make him an un- | lodged in a corner and did the. pupil | willing hustand, a | DAME NATURE CAN BE TRUSTED TO SAVE SHRINKING MAN, started Brook . ni ing at all p y hand to hand to | the ahi f Stoddart the dog dt re hought and paid} SPRY tters at as an infuriated wif barred portals of his bev nation of the — TRAIN AS AN AMBULANCE. 1, Then Rushes Harts Man Mi what would situation? | be to prevent such old Lady Nature, who has decreed | an 8) » the perpetual wover | Wa Herman ¥ fifty by a Long Is and sive vomun what fy practloally {xvrese trains Whe be 4 veto power a As man omen proposed in the ft- Yau waa A une \ teenth century ax wii propose In the} War | appl, ittleth, And there as no doubt that | Sboord Biel cimsngie ; playwrights, in the Interests of a dra-|Yavey was taken to the Bradford Street matic #itu yuve alWays encour | Ffoxpital. s to offer) Yawer was wole to give his address ax No. 2H New Je avenue, Fas New York. There ts Luthe Chureh at this number cand it was noth- ing was kno nf the man in the neighborhood. He ts suffering from a | fractured wkull, fractured r and | But teach him how to tell bis story,en@ many vruises, His condition Js serious. | Board of Trade Hall, 1 that sh Ae to split her dance enly, just hefore midanig was | Waltzing with M ol aa from his arms and almost fell to the | ove floor, Instantly other dancers stoppea, | hom rushed to her and carried her to, BY Brown, she found it we e impos: | {einle to give a whole dance to every one, So she agreca to divide some of | the dances. | She whirled gaily through watts after waltz, always smiling and vicactoum | She never w ay she danced | with one partner a But a) few before 12 o'clock young Brown, with whom he waa dancing, felt her give a convulsive shudder, 1 neeks paled, and tie next tnstan she staggered out of his arms and woul fallen had it not been iat rome by The Press Publishing Co. (The Netw York World) ACCORDING TO G, BERNARD SHAW WOMAN WAS ALwaAy VURSVED MAN TUESDA., DECEMBER 19, 1911. s0Me on =A oF THE "Sky, ELUSIVE MALES" DROADWAY ates Wren WOMAN PROPOSES PRETIYGIRLFALLS AS SHE WALTZES, | . The Eyéninge Ma je the regular Board of Trad, Roosevelt, L. 1., Had Tried This Evening; Depart having been charged with countenancing | pis operations in puts and calls, a form of to Favor All the Boys. Tu-Morrow. ness prohibited by the State laws, ced the Open Board would | oe apace in the Traders’ isuttding, | Miss Caroline Carpenter of Roowevelt,| President Taft, with Mrs. ‘Taft and one es L. 1, nineteen years old and very| Miss Helen Taft, will come to New OING 8 ISHIPS, ' pretty® was so popular with the young | York OW FOF-B ARIAL RAS, Wren BAILED TO-DAY | {x to end wnt President boards his gallants at a dane untor Guia |i te en Shel ; at ah Baia ee ae aie | Pevale car for Washington a night a re&tiving room, Two ysiclans we: died without returning of an emplo: afternoon | Long Island Traction the President will lay the corner-st ae wail of the first s¢ttlement for the blind Aa sidered the best dance fest girl in Roosey it. At the! youths al- visit fty-ninth strect, he Is to dell Nv of his trip Galld’s quarterly dances: the Waya fought the honor of bein her pote Ant t. Weeks they becan cailing York R ean Club, hey up of the phone, asking her to jon this oecaston will be be sure and save turn dance There of Idaho, Chancellor we! nany ests that when she | York University arrived at the hall last nigat. with Miles exertion, but to conselousnes BY promises to speak at the dinner of the « Republica dinner: » dinner of the k to-morrow TAT TO SPEAK, MRS. TFT 109 DANCED TOOEATH, NAS SHOP Popular Caroline Carpenter of | Presideniial Party Will Arrive be at tl And to, Other speakers Senator Hora! own of and Herbert Parsons TellSantaClaus to bring you a “Victrola ac CHICAGO HOTELS | Blaze in C —— Board of Trade | | Causes Panics at Kaiserhof, | | New Victoria and Stafford. | CHICAGO, De ‘arly 1,000 hotel ited In pante guests were + earty tor day by a fire whten totally destroyed | jie Open Loard of Trade building, a fives andmark at No h | Lasalte Within nm mut i} ajar Was sounded flames had the The root fell in a few the ar wept whole mins | ival of the first fire Alarm was tumediately felt for the! f, New Victoria «, all of which were be touched by the Bucsts in the Kats and Btafford jot un to in the Open elevator men and even the n did heroic work in the and The sight of the women Into A serams Sts aWakene threw men lor eu Louuics Fit HALF CLAD GUESTS. Scoves of persons halt chad ew | the hotel iobbier, many dra arying suiteases. WITH Ay Of Wate No one | Directly across tre i Board 1 Trade In Lasalte s 5 the Chicago Hoa , with wht Hire the t ment would tinated His only Was that there inting 1 of incendiasy on the right invest! that dt might have be; fire ein, Within the builiiug many tabor Che fire’ was one of the most specs tacular seen in downtown montis. feot into the wind, An} hour after it started the fire was un-! der control After four hours hand fighting, the Fire Department declared there was no furthor’ danger to adjoining building A report that three furnace stokers h lost their lives was fo to have been untrue, all the employes of the bulld- ing belng accounted for, ‘The Open Board, which ta an organs feation for transactions !n small lots of grain and provisions, was only a few days & + cut off from rece eing quotas! Let al home, affords, Mixed Nuts, Extra Select Prunes—l.erge meaty C. Camembert Cheese—F: Asparagus—-California’s Figs, Smyrna Washed—1 Ib. baskets. 27D res D Dee Mg > 27; Shoes always seems to be wearing new Tee woman who wears Queen Quality wer Sa ad They. retain their original smooth, smart shape- liness until they are practically worn out. They require no breaking in. You see, the soles are so flexible that they do all the yielding necessary to accommodate the movement of the foot, leaving the upper so free from strain that the shoe does not stretch or get baggy. That is why old Queen Quality Shoes look sonew. Prices $3.50 to $5.00. Fen SSE JE: DRS. Over a hundred different + styles now on exhibition. D2 West 349 St CHRISTMAS PRESEN: s LAnGLST_ ASSCRTMENTS Diamonte, 7) apa Lites Its Commandin j Qualities Conceded | Acker, Merrall & Condit Company. ay Estatlished 1820 YULE-TIDE GREETINGS A well stocked larder spells Peace and Plenty to the us do your providing—the best the market prices that represent a material saving. Plum Pudding—A. M. & C.—Every ingredient the best— No. 1 tins 25e, No. 2 45c, No 3...... Peaches or Sliced Pineapple—-Extra Californi: a, Le urge C: Table Raisins—-Fancy Imported Malaga Clusters, Ib. pkg. ed—All new crop, 2 lb. pkg. 46e3 1 Ib. pkg. ‘4 alifornia fruit, 30-40 size, Ib xtra fine—Imported. Finest—Large tins, White 28c, Gre BY nak 1 carmen Tomatoes—A. M. & C.—-Fancy Whole Fruit, extra large tins.......- Cormi—Extta Choe MAING. i. csciccceresceseteeeceerenenes Re t to a clove with | But be sure to tell him to get it at » trenay one Of the three Landay rooms, Peas—Marcillat Imported—Moyens..........05 000002 e eee eee A A H ho nave: | aan, AON Wat DSTEUTTRNE Fe Mushroome—Marcillat—First Choice—Small tins 8c; Large : ed Pegi oods, “pougni at bangay a Jams A. M. & C.— Pure Plt Clb lars rveouceriucnney on tor ath every Vietrola they a is a Olives Large Queen, Plain, 10 oz. 23c. Stuffed, 10, oz. ‘ | TWO GIRLS “HELD FOR THEFT, must be satisfied or your money Coffee-- Plantation, full strength and deli ious flavors, Ib lina dack's Rest the «irl + in whose 1 when the poiler home last night and fc with the two girls, Emmer charged with receiving at for the trio wae eet at $1,000 each, re | back if you want it.’’ in our By reking wo Fifth » as thy you'’ ou have a Wider The prices we charg Heth Wvider Are} Avenue stores and in our Charged With § ! exactly the sar mall dealer Violet Emmery and Ma © Hughes, | purchase at Landay’s Gira Ander twent 4, were ar’ selection of models to sed in West sii to-da ‘ the charge of having stolen a d 8) from Charies Rar esman fi VICTROLAS $15.00 up | © trom. wih Street your | 130 Chambers St. 139 West 42nd St. sand St. and Broadway 113th St. and Broadway 180th St. and Breadwa: BROOKLYN STO! ———EE Authorized Victor. Factory Distributors * *27W.34thSt., bet. Sth & 6thAves, 400 Fifth Ave., at 37th St. *563 Fifth Ave., cor. 46th St. ai, © Open erenings ume Christ Our delicious Chocolates & Bon Bons 80¢. per pound NEW YORK CITY STORES: 57th and 6th Avenue Broatway and 102d St. 72nd and Amsterdam Ave, 125th and 7th Ave, 1eth st’and'Eenox Ave. 179th. St, and Broadway 1426 St. Nicolas Ave., near 18ist St. 448 Fulton Street, cor, Hoyt St. roadway, nr. 149th St. 16ist St. and Broadwa 1215 Fultoa Street an 16 25 28 30 Artistic bo xcs and bonbonnieres, Sunday World Wants Work Monday Wonders

Other pages from this issue: