The evening world. Newspaper, January 4, 1912, 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)

—— THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, Both Men and Women Are Slaves of COURT IN KITCHEN a THE EVENING WORLD 1912. ALL RIGHT TO SAY Dress; |WON’T PAY WIFE'S DEBTS.| Shere fe Only Gng | — | Dr. MeGowan Announces te Witt! | Pay ¢ Those Contracted | \PUT SUFFRAGETTES x Clothes Invented by the Evil One Himself) A MAN CAN EAT... 72 East Forty-firee street, advertised a — | ae dee, tee —- saree fusca tau oe ator! Bromo he Intends to separate from his wife. Who Sued | rurther than this tho doctor rotused | | to discuss his reason for bis action Author for $100,000 Dame | Dr. MeGowan and Miss Francis Ma: irs. Hackstaff Tells How She ' Defied “Funny Little Ser- CINDERELLA STAR TED THIS FASHION) Solace in Fact That ant Man Must Watch Angle of His Hat as He Would | Epicure \ my tilda Condict, daughter of N. W. Con. " geant-at-Arms.” Bis Reputert ages Loses Decision in Court. [See Oe aN TO at Seraey City covery remember the tah come Leet OD is Reputation. | | eignatere on every oo — Shurch. you LOOK To write of a man that he fs the dent of st | TRIAL ON IN BROOKLY: ‘ a ot ligtar eater ck @ataL IREE hip. eats | Sree CIS 208 Kaat His Slavery Even Worse FRIGNT! | earae eater cre oteh, Mint nis oie | Forty-second street Than Hers, With the} {back duck, one selected, and only the | Elder Supporters Trying to Foil | _ “Tower Crowd’s” Plans to §, Overthrow Convention. Consolation of Pockets, and There the “Equal Rights’’ Pioneers Should Centre Their Efforts. ulcer from the other three used," and that hia soup corte $1 a plate and his | | apawne—a case at a meal—only tne | e terested him to the extent of drinking | St “the top glass from each bottle” ts In. | ry e | ded quite harmless and not calculated | Fashionable Outer Garments for Women and Misses | to tnjure that man’s reputation, | At least this is the legal construction placed on these words by Justice Davie in the Supreme Court to-day tn sut taining a demurrer to @ complaint | against Getett 1 , the author, and | | his publishers, Bobbs-Merrill of Indian- tpolis, Drought by William H. Daly, a) San Francisco mining man, who) charged that he was the person res | ferred to as “Dalley, the Star Eater of Palace Hot Patiently Justice Jaycox, in the) Gepreme Court, Brooklyn, leaned back | fe bis judicial chair to-day and heard from indignant lips the stories of those | Wemen who felt he ougit to iesue an igjunction forbidding a new convention | of the Woman's Suffrage Brooklyn, and also of those who be- Weved he ought not. Gometines he put his hand over his mouth. But none knew whether it was 54 to 58 West 232 St. : Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Clothes and all their little ac- THE TYRANNY OF Crores MiTS WOMAN ANDO MAW Alike hat ts the frank declaration of Mrs. John Lane, who in her newest book, “Talk of the Town,” discourses ente' tainingly on “The Tyranny of Clothes. But Mrs. Lane's really interesting di: A_Conclusive Reason This being a new specialty store, every garment is epic, Lighest the in Burgess’s novel, new and fashionable and made in accord with the te hide @ smils or a yawn, Behind his|Covery is that woman is not the only ‘The Heart Line." Daily asked for) accepted standards and it is certain that our prices ere the old impartial calm tt was Impossible! sufferer from this despotism. It also $100,000 damages against the novelist, lowest ever quoted in a sale—when consideration is given to fer the palpitating fema! who! #W¥ays the sterner and stronger and publisher. | the very unusual quality and superior character of these suits, watched his face to tell whether he be- | And, Woman-like, Mrs, Lane is A demurrer to Daily's mult was! coats and dresses in this Geved Mre. Robert H. Hider ought to one {brought before Justice Davis on behalt| be pulled down from her post as Kings | County ch: ef the * only solace I have in tho tyranny trman and whether the effort | Under whicn I junguisn is that Adam ‘ower crowd," eecking to dom- | !#ngulshes also," wne exults, “I re of the novelist, where counsol argued | that the writer did not mean Mr. Daily, nd anyhow, the characters In a no’ |__ JANUARY REDUCTION S, {nate the party from Manhattan, would | Jee to watch his struggles into a are fictitious, Mr. Daily's lawyers held | ALBANS tha ly 68 om pair of tizat new gloves. I love to see that the characterization of their olient 150 Suits TO CLOSE OUT Drs. Prisclila A. Hackatatt, who car-| 2" Waen his necktie has slipped under in the novel, Which included references rles her two hundred pounds gracefully | Nis €ar. Tt is a comfort to observe his to “Dalley's” eating capacity, helt him up as a “curlosity Dally further charged that the public had been led to associate him with such San Francisco charactors as “Frank, the Frenchman,” “Big Berth Mammy Pleasant’ and anguish far away from a@ tailor and the one he loves best when a Plays havoc with his only pair, le reduced to @ spectacle! I pleased the other day at a@ dinner party, when Adam came bashfwily down and speaks with the sharp decision of a fodder cutter, had the stand for some time to-day. She described the Eller team roller convention at the home of Mrs. Talbot Perkins, Oct. i3 Inst, irreg- ularities of which are sot forward by For Women & Misses Velvets, Broadcloths, Tweeds, Zibel- ines, Cheviots, novelty fabrics, Cor- duroys, Mixtures. Marked down from as high as $45 others of disreputable bh 4 " in an evening coat and shepherd's plaid Strictly speaking,” : Fae Tones cd as Feovn or # Be | ltnareete® gant mera Pi ma tite ctavecats t's watts 108 Coats ‘ ) TO CLOSE OUT od the place & Ww A Lesched his kit-bag having been @ little by an author, But in these $ ¢ he place #8 | absent-minded. ‘ . crowded. I tried to circulate around the aN SUFFERS EVEN MORE THAN Saney ano pred ake dina cared ta For Women & Misses 9 Yeom. It w go. A much thinner Po! e ich the char- oman than T would have hed. dim. WOMAN, SHE SAYS. a aTy acters are thinly vetled representations of actual persons. I cannot see that the use of the word novel necessarily contradicts the allegation that the ar- ticle in question referred to the plain- tiff, Two-tone Cloths, Chinchillas, Chev lots, Tweeds, imported novelty ma- terials. “Zt 18 a great comfort to feel thi man also suffers from the tyranny of clothes. Ever. more than a wom- ie the victim of clothes that won't go together. “Show me that great and independent Marked down from as high as $22.50 TO CLOSE OUT SHOULD THIS OR LAST YEAR'S DELEGATES ELECT? “Pretty soon som one told me that ‘Mrs. Elder, who was in the back room, WouLo NeveA GO SHOPPING \oADED DOWN LIKE THIS w THERERORE THE TRIUMPH OR POCKETS HUBBY A MOVER, WOMANTELLSHOW wanted to see me. I don't know how I got there. It 1s suMcient to say that I did. She asked me whether I man who would dare to walk down Fifth avenue in a frock-coat and straw hat, or disturb the severe propriety of SO HIS WIFE ASKS After holding that a libel published in & novel is not excusable, the Court re- fers to th tual terms used as follow: 120 Coats For Women & Misses Heavy satin-lined black Breadcleth SHESHOTTODEAT ‘NN WHOBEATHER $15 Marked down from as high as $45 thought the officers should be flected by this year’s or jast yoar's delegates. I aid it was my strictly personal opinion they should be elected by this year's delegates. She thought not. ‘The matter t# not libellous per a either standing alone or in connection with the surrounding statement at would be a straiifed construction to give to this publication to say that it could the «ene Wearing a silk hat and a No: Jacket. What heroic soul not @ walter would venture forth in the early morning in his evening clothes? “There are things, it Is @ comfort to FOOTPRINTS LEAD TORIVER, COAT ON Coate—Beautifully trimmed Broad- cloth Coats—Handsome Evening Coate—Finest gray Zibeline Coates TOBE SET FRE affect the reputation of the plaintift “The convention started. Miss Kraft|know, which even a man cannot do, unfavorably with the people generally. tried to offer a motion. Mrs, Elder re-|and a man is supposed to be able to These words are not ambiguous, they | Fused to recognize her because she was| do almost anything. I defy « novelist ! Peripatetic Household Changed are easily understood and have but one obvious import—a harmless one. “The pleader has attempted by in- nuendo to give a libellous aspect to the words, The Innuendoes attribute to them @ meaning which they are incap- able of bearing. ‘They therefore do under charges. I worked over to the wide of Miss Kraft and told her I would Dut her motion for her. Mrs, Iider must have heard me, because she called te me, ‘You cannot offer her motton, because you ure under charges too.” It was the first I had heard of {t, but te put his hero's hat at a rowdy angie «oP his ear at @ crucial point in his reer and leave him still herol “The Achilles heel of » man is his hat. Me must guard that as he does his reputation, for it is at once bis strengt: and bis wenk- Mrs. Flyne Got Revolver Be- fore McInerny Could Reach for It. So Often Mrs. Pasbach Forgot Addresses. RAILROAD TRACK Cruger’s Island Mystery May not establish the words as livellous and \ really, what was I to do? In fact, I! mesa SEtk. CArcliner Raaaehy fled aulbi tes , i ; A there in no allegation of spectal dam- + think the charges must have been| And Mra Lane has two pertectiy| day in the Supreme Court for a separa- Indicate Fate of Long Mae MAERISS, Pinos wee ls cL ie) fe. the demurrur mut be sustatnod CONTINUATION SALE OF } written out after she tald me about it. | good instances to prove hy acs Bane for her life in the Court of General Ses- jo ‘when the time came for the cOm| Bho says: “It would hurt een aesn.| ton from Albert: C. Pasbach, Missing Virginian. sions before Judge Foster, was on the) ded in favor of the writer. Ww ’ M li U mitteo to consider the charges, they | pishop—and an. archbishop necensarny | Teueneaman. stand in her owtldetente: tocday, Hh 18 |e aie 8 omen Ss .Viusiin nderwear 4 told Miss Woltenbeck, Miss Kraft aoe stands for ail that !s good and grea. - According to Mra. Pasbach, her bike — |accused of the murder of her “common-| os out of the closet?” aaked Analat- myrelf to get out. They went, but I/ ess in the eves of the publi .] bles Degan in 1007, when, aho says, her slg th . \iaw husband, James Mclnerny, on Misirict-Attorn oul “ike Aida't. Then they appointed Mr. Ring, [mit a crime than to wear his hat on | Husband deveioped a manta for moving. | 4,.,.{Mr ge 1a Rac Be Rar Int BuMEL aeigrdinenti ND: [RRERCE MAC Re ne naa, penne ITEMS OF SPECIAL INTEREST AND VALUES &@ funny ite man, to be serweant-at-| tne back of his sacred head so that| She deciared he forced her to move; oo ot ae shadow ast One Hundred and Twenty-sixth| s76 never said anything that nice,” me to put me out. Ho didn't do 1 re {from one tat to another so often that Pootprin ding replied the prisoner, “but mumbled 7 1 Here Mrs, Hacksiaff turned and | 6 it are & Reale, and thus ex+1 ("eas almost impossible for her to| the ancestr " ha ! Irinkt tho| curses and started toward me. At the| Night Dresses— rf irre us- | Mbit himself to his distressed ai tides io Hol eased pe . ‘MeInerny had been drinking on the | curse! ( c 5 i glared at the “Home Iiulort” ant Jie | He may have all the linewn. vieteee,| Keen tack of the many different ad-|Rensaciaer Crugor, soclety Oey ae teen sit the woman, | time I firyd. the Inat shot T thought that Cambric, Nainsook, all styles, with trimmings of fine Embroidery, Valea ] ee long, tong time. and many that are not known, but a dresses, iinaily, when they were living | novelist, on Cruger's !sfand, to the Hut | pullad me out of bed where 1 was, Ne Wey Cored to hid Woe cevalee id oe Torchon and Irish Lace Insertions and edge, finished with rib- —s ng, . a » but e é . oe ; \ . and new thal eo &o e 4 “go as 1 wouldn't go out, the whole| an archbishop cannot’ with impunity {'" West One Tfundred and Second | gon River, and the discovery of a fae | Bilas 'You won't go to the, Me crowd went down Into the kitchen and) gery convention.” *Tatreet, iis treatment beeame #0 cruel | overoat and a handbas nearby, add an-| hospital tits ime for I'm going to Kili WOM MIM Me 85c, 1.00 1.15, 1.35, 1.50, 1.75 and 2.25 ja ten Minutes they came up and told EVERY POLICEMAN i that © had to flee from him at 2] a. mystery to the long iist of pe- {20U.' He hit me with his fist and then Arana aabon the Naslatant Divinon. J (J J 9 Se ye ts we were expelled for treason. 18 “AN ARBI-| cotoc): ona morning in scanty attire to | °% i 4 Uragged me by my hair into the sitting | Gropp ~“There & little trouble after that, TER OF FASHION.” her nis’ home, cullar happenings in that section. room, where some of his friends were Nastia avec Nik: bade bo’arani not Drawers— Regause they had forgotten, | et Rose And for Sartorial Tyranny No, 2 the} Mis. Pasbach said her ausband's| Tha handbag and overcoat mare ete oh LY Oa enene againet | breathing. Then, 1 went and dressed Fine Muslin, Cambric, Crape and Nainsook, with cluster tuckings, Ema | Broner, of the Fourt! 6. ombly + | writer declares he cast-iron laws off treatment of her Waa no lese severe | covered by a track walker naimed Car- ch fn ‘ f " myself and wont down Second avenue broidered Insertions and e, others with fine lace trimmings ibe inst them; they didn't expel her, | fash! which y 7 York Centra} the wall. I knew there was a pistol fae against them: they didn't expel ier | fashion, which fw oniy another namel than iis treatment of her mother. Sho |1man, empl jew York Centrat | the wall, ew there was a Pistol | here Thad @ couple of drinks. ‘Then bons. | ee to talk in. They hed to] for convention, aro such that 1 tho] gectared he threw her mother out of!on the fo stretch of track be | yt Meer wtarted to ket it, but {1 drank some more and don't remamber 50. 85c, 1.00, 1.15, 1 50 and 2.0 Tet us have it.” Greatest man in America were to walk| ity home and forbade hor from viniting |eween ‘Tivoli and Karrytown, which in-j1 got it first. 1 fired a shot, was anything elme ui IC, 00, 1.15, 1. a -00 "] suppose you found it possible, (cart Be accustomed dignity from | the place thereafter cludes Cruger's Island. Juat to ware bin away from me, He | - 1] Justice Jayeox, without smiling, “to say | ¢ ock Exchange to Broadway with] «ite on: home !ntoxteated many oy hrown moar the track {fan Into a closet and shut the door More Go! Corset Covers— : yi hat|a@ trailing peacock feather attach ig : i FY | The coat was thrown nea Then I fired a ry 4 OF! | “ . snapped Mrs, IMackstaff, youl jowed bs A PSSA alte . Mra, Cruger'a residence. It was brown jtoward me, He had put acid on ine | ee eles aay , is tions an tomatch. Others with embroidered or lace Motifs and | deans Tala ry kis pemee aot y Seen 8 two} whole fanuiy. 1 had to fle ey peg oavine the name of a Jonce that 1 dine, 1 knew that he {quested the Board of Estimate to ap- Torchon, Valenciennes, Irish and Cluny Lace edge and insertions, fim> tf aking of testimony will continue} $ JY | son to the cellar . and very heavy, be: " the actd or the other revol- | propr&te $860,000 for “the pur ished with ribbons. ; re tate of the law would take him into cus Because of his “outrazesus and in- | New York tailor. in the handbag were |.o. when he rushed in my direction. js farm, the erection of a rec | | ee as a suspicious character. human cruelty and brutality” Mw. |a few tollet articles and neckttes, all )\s hy came out I fred. Ho dropped to | hoapital, &c.," for the colony of want 50c, 75c, 85c 1.00, 1.15, 1.75 anc 2,50 FROM SING SING wery policeman ts an arbiter | regineh avid her mind hesame so af-|from New York shops, and @ suede |the floor and the gas went out.” to-be-nober men which the Inebrietv SAVED of fashion. To him any originality fected that shy wa t to the State | pound volume cf Kipling’s poems, The Didn't he say anything when he! Roard ts to matntain. BY THE WOMAN HE ROBBED.| {© clothes means either crime or | irospital at Central Islip for several | 4 He ¢ of the book bore the insonp: Combinations (Corset Cover and Drawers). . t Central Islip for se hy leat of book bore th onip- GED (100 GED OC GED eed jainsvo! ‘orchon, and ree ee the exceptional man wno| Months. While she wea there, she au tton | JP AED CHD ND CHD CHD CE ED la Dr Cen ae ees ceietallarad cate toa atertinar etn rate Sixto Sanchez’s Condition So Pilia-| nay the courage of his cloties, and] Pavaees wt ait the fuminive Wn ner) seharts AEST fy 1.00 1.35, 1.75, 1.95 «nt 2.25 ble That Mrs. Shepherd Pays | who would venture on any independence ri aensey ‘her joweity im alike a The World-Wide Fame o! Uy Brahe Bel Qy O4 d ag of dress, A woman will, if she has : | Taal — - sage to Porto Rico. cheeky ac ole manner, she sy 1a heavy brown overcoat Inqulred of the | 8 Passag ; raked and | a eee ae eee ee ie eice, £21 James W. Sinttn of No, 60 Wall atreat, | Barrytown Railroad officials 1f he could | 1 White Skirts 4 When Sixto Sanches, ema td ee chee dae tt ube to perfectly auce af nag. { attorney for Paxbach, denying all the | catch @ night boat for 3 rk. They | With flounce tucked, Embroidered and Lace trimmings. almost helpless from consumPiim Tule |selfebut What man Would have the] charges, attributes the biame for hia|told hin he could not, ral | 1.35, 1.50, 2.00, 2.25, 3.00 an 3.50 orralaned tcriay belive Pig Wen deel a ee OL eve the) ciient’a Woes to the muthpr-tn-law. | other questions, which Indicated to the | BALTIMORE oD, £00, GUY, 4.40, J. De | queen in General Sess 0 ? hechach declacaacaho , Mroad men that the man was de- | 1 o y to grand larceny, | “There have been certain great hie ash Declares ahe-weore At ni AR) CANTONS men iM oo ee ae ais tore characters, who haves set ‘the| threatened to send the “whole police | mented, he left them, later he was, J 4 ( Probation off told Judge Mul-|tashions,"” Mrs. Lane admits, “who| force” after him, He sala that by hor | seen around the wharf at Tivol, Here | | A 9 | queen that Sanchez, unable to earn ®! have !mmortalized themselves by aid| “bolsterous and unseemly conduct" ahe | he also inquired about a night boa for Is founded upon its superior Excellence | | Nvelfhood in Porto Rico, car ere oH curv: « hat, | caused him grea’ shame aud homilia- | New York, } ry "i | | eight months ago and hae since stary CE 8. ROPER Se auise. Gee Hoppe pe Ratlroad Detective Furlong of this! its Ripe Richness and Rare flavor —«" \ Desperation ted him to «rab a regi ‘lonely instances and the exceptions, The Pas’ were married Apri! 26, [city ja investigating, ‘fhe deseriptton ‘ vues Te Wet ewentye | that prove the rule, 189, and have on, who, since their {of the man seems to tally wit | Met at Broadway and Thinty-nec nie cota, 2 ,Oret, Nerole abous | separation tas been living with Mra,|® young man ey ie ely | et: 9 : thes; instances _ ch and ante in the 1 has been missing nearly a j 7 ie i atreet on Dec Me Hiueray es he doce enjoy are, te pe |Pasbach and her parunte tn the Bronx, | has been missing 1 ets yn a i Mra. Shepherd pleated p quite just, entirely due to the | > pee eanige ree wwe bee ven Fore, LY, ; . man for umbin house « mn Ne em Yor RY 4 Ort em eatisfled.” ho told Judge Mul-| Bold Americans, Columvee @iscov- NO MERCY FOR MAIL THIEVES. | Ney york. sett home April 16, 1911, Hie! | queen that hunger drove him to com-| fed Ammartes, bat the Americas | : eee ere ets Hye yaeeinal mit the theft je Two | yusiness troubles, | oq 00GEDOOGEDOUDGEDONOGEDCeGEDenamcs | | ve the ttriqeeen asked tio youth if THEIR ONE CONSOLATION 18 ore ae a inguehi ial Would “turn to Porto Rico provided THEIR POCKETS. Jail Each, , raroled die However, bad as the dase is for men, Wien Edward 9/. Kelly and Harry U 1 4s (gan't vou w ihe assure those fecuining | pioneers fexgad nail thieves, were arraigned f (nove Perit and Favor Give udge went on. | clamor its that above | sentence bevore Judge Chatfleld in the | n ‘i Gee ROR Tor Wo) reotlell the] ROT Se mee hele semana “9 Poleral Court, Prookisn.toway, Kelty's | ouble Sa actio All kid buttoned or laced; Gun Metal Calf with | Scan n money, Po came to ry to imagine a man doing jis| Wife stood at the rall beside him with . Le i fms city: hoping to condition. errands with a purse, handkerchief and{ their ten-months-old baby in her arm: | Use the old reliable dull kid or cloth top; Patent ather with kid top, | tT fatied. | have a sister here, OAC! shopping I'st in one hand, the tall of | ‘The lawyer for Kelly asked clemency . Also, a very attractive style in Tan cannot assist his ekirt tn the othe umbrella) for him on account of the wife and/ 7 “Let me afd him,” exclaimed Mrs \ cider one arm ing an effort to| ania | and Gray Suede, button, All sizes t Shepherd to the Judge 1 will defray | Keep his head ar for business pro ee Muaiaslacalank hla headritie | ‘ ‘ t femeer returns home on the fr#t/mmough we may be obliged, to starve, | crimes, They tot aol er rsa ANDREW ALEXANDER c 0. e dare wa ae etmanion.t af Christmas presents and were in each * @tegger to Porto Rico, Fe a ne Oo oe ae other's company while they were doing 01 Horehound and Ter t Nineteenth Sti C) AT SRBRLOCE yon mean pneumonia and tgat it: tiey stole persistenly, though they Sixth Avenue ai ne’ rect owns mean pheumonia and j tenly, though thes ANOTEEE ORB AT # owns that mean, prem ore trusted DuGHO servant, Tiley are For Coughs andColds t was with clothes undu' each gentenced to Avinuta penitentiary Free from opirm or anything injurious “Bue Advcaiure of the Bed Cir iagedy. Mitt came into the world, bat, for two veara ‘ ‘At all draggin @ fol t ™ 3 i na pr reaming. | of course, s@ owe them to jan, and, Mri ily fell Wo the flour, screaming, | Had sf be serried rem the casas

Other pages from this issue: