The evening world. Newspaper, February 13, 1912, Page 3

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ENVORCED FOUR, » SAYS HER FIFTH LAUGHED AT HER Mrs, Fauser Fell Off Horse at| Durland’s and Saw Him Grimace. ‘Lack of Chivalry Forced Her to Ask the Court for a ’ .Separation. Mra. Margaret Ernestine Fauser, « seirlish little woman who has lost four Whose effort to separate her the Afth is before Justice Hote! kiss in mony to-day by a hysterical out wobbed th she beg from her fifth Mré, Tauser's youthful attractives nés, in the face of her daugiiter's axe @f minetecn year: ain evoked the Curiosity of the Court, The chic little plainufr confessed to thirty- Sege was forty years. ST, was this lack of calvairy In Gua- Stave M. Fauser,\the present husband, witch ed her love to vanish, she wwere. Write he fad been Uacourteous several sole ma polo pony and rolled under her horse, Mer hus- a felt heavi a the ba tans was do Magered. she Sint moet 3 SAYS HE LAUGHED WHEN SHE PELL OFF HORSE. when she came to ten at aAficer the fron tent spate int No. 1 West buy her a to got a reptied Mrs. ne i would olaginins slaweer, When int) ocr affairs one eiappes his fees Thon in eiioned = proceedines of! me ¢! head and } tod al Ife told tie T vould nave to ase Mr. | 8" for striking him or | Meth Ho mail Net #9 m Promme's 1 would be that Fromme tro theatie ded to jai) 1 ges for nd’s charged famed dusban young nd she's with him ve . Mas, Fauser's crost-exam tien, during which she ff @pbbed, her husband was @end. He told of meeting > Breakfast at a hotel and of : sad ems. Mrs, Paueq bad wer.tten And Fauser opeoned the le breakfas( table. Ilo re oxnized Qandwriting and an acquaintance, fewulted In their mai . Myre. Pauser had previousiy testified that slice begged Fauser not to ask her te marry him, as she had quite enough of married life. Faueer declared under oath that as} @iany, as twotve times his wife had pur- es with a knife, and that on one lan he ran three-quarters of a mile to-eacape her. “@Me—Smith”, Who. Is He? Who is he? Virginian,” part of it, Just the story you love to read—and that You don’t get a chance to, once in te> years. ten ith” will begin serial publi- cation in y's Evening World—| apeie to-morrow—February 15. m the date in mind. It’s worth | i qj 4 h” will begin that day; a can't afford to miss the first ey Vey 7% hla Jusbands in the divorce courts and) it from | |Marriage Is the Opportunity Offered to Withdrau the Supreme Court, concluded her testi- | to let her escape | | Why the Woman Who Toils to Support Herself Be- but her husoand ungallantiy Rae nae | ng and | stated Mrs. | to foolish and snobbish chatter, I have often wondered what would happen if cide !some *\ for your lodg witnees | ver | Mal- Tneetenes che bigamy procoeds| SUPERIOR CULTURE AS IT GEN-| i vourt}a man T lw a Mra} a. hee a it sentiment, his nomic value to the world as well as to! him. It may be # a week or $10), ‘That {a beside the point. Whatever a gir! | waa worth y she ig worth to Much move, vf to be sentimental, Tho fact thet wives! in @ halt fainting condition from “Me—Smith!"" He's a western ‘Bad Man." He's the hero of the biggest cowboy story since “The humor and pathos and love and sus- pense running through every) (THE GIRL ON 1HE FIRING LINE | Copyright, 1918, by the Press Pubiishing Co. (fhe New York Wovld) Honorable Discharge From Army of Working Women the Recruit’s Ambition —Sixth of | a Series of Articles by Nixola Greeley-Smith. From the Ranks, but the Wife Who Fails in Her Duty Is as Much of a Deserter as the Girl Who Heeds the Call of Luxury. fore Marriage Makes the Best Wife, as Against the Painted Creature Who Doesn’t Know How to Appreciate a Husband. Nearly every girl on the firing line looks forward) TURKEY TROT TERS to honorable discharge from the army of working women. Marriage offers her such an opportunity. With it she becomes a member of the reserves, part-of the coun- a nn try’s great force of wives and mothers. Now, these re-) serves have their deserters, too. For the wife who does| not create a home, who refuses to have children, is just RIXO! full of them at the tea hour. Looking into their painted * tixn Chak EELEY® SMITH faces, at their costly, exaggerated clothes, hearing their in Raging Sea. hat do you do for a living? You won't make homes for the men|*teamship Oceana of the Bermuda- vin a|WbO support you. Housekeeping 1s too much trouble, and then servants|Atlantic line brought to port to-day ‘ian for |are so impossible {n America. You won't have children. You couldn't pay| sey Damsensers: who faily ruse! Even the Sailors’ “Timbers” Shivered and They Had to Nurse the Anchor Chain. ashore in their eagerness to set foot e for your hats if you did. ward fs only a reflection of conditions| oy golid earth again | equivalent do you render [!n the industries they leave. ver in thelr experience had there! ng and food and clothes,; ADVANTAGE OF BEING MASTER | teen such a tempest at sen ne they hind e and juxurious than OF YOUR OWN HOURS. passed through. r twenty-four hours} ¢ can afford to supply?” | But even the wife who does all her| tho Oceana had been at the mercy of wev—If the la ere not too/O*n work in addition to caring for) turbulent seas that had dance to make any—would be vague,|CMdren has one supreme advantage | bunny hug, the alfalfa ramble a sounding words: “We give | Ove? the Girl on the Firing Line—she I | pinwhoel quacriiie with the stout Cea % ‘ ‘an r of her own hours and the con- | ship) ration, C nionsh!p. ditions of her work, “It was most terribly awful” quoth| But Love ti Love iv help- She has another privilege of which.| Mrs, Althea P. Rex, a pretty. witow.! fuluess—Love is cympathy. M+ jtoo often, ae takes advantage, Ho sit on or cling to ar aptration does not ptint its face, jever badly she may perform her tasks, ) thing In the We were tum nything. Love gives; [or even if she leaves them unper-! grout and and pit There is no Gom- | formed, sho cannot be “fred.” The|anout, We into jaw Is very di Y Inepiratio: were pantonohip in :epenting © A” nerve- hive as to the duties of arms and rolled about t fegged man ovcr @ hotel dinner | vig a fe support, out of our berths and | table the high sounding phrases of fhe) tes to eae obitwation | pack into ‘em. Dice ina box were t fh iecture ¢n Bernard fhovw, | Kerra tae ‘ him and | shaken so ruthlessly. When the 7 ce upon a time} albtevpeisse tanding on her nose she was tt te cue of tts{ Bat the law ts not nearly so ngean jer atat all the wh ur inust cher- | cesene. ee obligations of {i was a case of roll, roll, roll." erlor culture of } to the “honor system.” They can the midst of a dance » Aw j a, vi , but th adda RALLY MEASURES UP, Heawiros, WAY ERSTE A8'He COmEOERS | tro Now, what does this superior culture! Now, when the opoprtunity comes to! tb: the Cirl on the Viring Line to marry a man she loves ether marriage {8 worth while even from the most selfish ee — |patnt ne must. aceopt the| TAXICAB SUSPECT FREED. honor sys ehood with the reso- “ = jlution to do her Just exactly as| Chauffeur Kent well a if there were a foreman to keep Charwe of Brooklyn her ejeeded up to the task. pest was the turke: pe of woman has room for etuMng her mind her husband has rould over nd Juste abury, in the reme Court jy oumal [REAL LOVE 18 THE HARDEST] ,.)43y aoe ie eS Rd ard a good dno man KIND OF A BOSS, ant Diet Nott, discha y neh wily 7 millstone e ve ia the most meretess! grom th os J. Keating, Vovout his neck hag 1 polich ¢ t of fren n this respect, chauffeur, 0 Des a st ‘ing Line! woman undersiands the honor eldom 1s that her ac nent has kept pace with her ideals, Phe Girl on the Firing Line, whe: receives her hone ‘a realize tive duties and r hor new eulistment. fa ea of human life #he cannot afford to let! g her imacnine ahead of ber, When she doen, broi reads wnd hearts are| the penalty | | ECE SESE JUDGE CALLS SHOPLIFTER | COMMON THIEF; SHE FAINTS,| ‘thomas vo Asa rule, the Girl on the F A to the mumber of thes who Was arrested Dec, 12 f : in the killing of Adolph Stern, a n Jacob Jacol xth avenue and wh as thi July. Keating Jewelry own Uving imows just what the problems of wage caruing sre. She knows Just what overy dollar will buy, aud if sho doesn't turn her er In Hurt donrly bought knowledge to th wre cR ace ous the head good account of ber home and hus- i : . face he Continental Insursnce Com eee ea tanunta ier’ | Miss-Peterson: Placed on Probation) ier a ee coer ea eigen. ti Gn the other hand, her hussund knowal After Admitting Stealing From |(i0!4 street, tnt, An ele considerations of . ‘ vane § ear struck ht has a definite ecoe| Store—Is Revived in Court, nto the shaft House of Rellef. quite apart fr was placed « the Justices of Special Sessions, to-day, following her arrest for shoplifting, | she became hysterical and was fet op or offlee me as a wife, course, if We are going do the most w the least re-| courtrooi. Medical aid \whe was goon a te ling, Mise P. | private ¢ ‘ partme ribbon, on found HAYE You Lost | the your Any thing? and its going to becorne more annoying Have You Found every day until you begin to use HAY'S Anything? HAIR HEALTH, r= ‘Then you'll sce the Dandruff disap. * pear entirely from your scalp, | HAY'S HAIR HEALTH will keep it out and keep your scalp clean and your "| hair healthy. Don't delay—start now and be one of * the thousands of grateful users of it. World “Lost & Found” Advts. Are most read and a _--- “L wish to recommend the very high quality Most sought, pjuries Batal, of HAY'S HAIR HEALTH ond tell you that it wh woa run over bas relieved me entirely of Dandruff and Itching J | Scalp, that for thelast fifteea years have caused tasdoy, Dy one | aoe a great deal of suffering.” mm of fae! GEO, W. JAMES, Chi Canal st on and cut He was a butchue und live) at | No. Varick street, The Largest Circulation of Any Morning News- paper by 150,000 Copies. 1 ‘THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1912. jand her andehtid, Ada Smith fyears old, w [ine man “\ L\ as much @ deserter to her duties as the luxury loving For Eighteen Hours the Oceana girl who drops from the firing line, New York 1s} . . : TT thronged with such deserters. All the big hotels are Did All Kinds of Dances WARNING IN DREA FAILS TO SAVE TWO GAS ASPHYXIATES }Aged Woman and Grandchild Are Found Dead, After Friend Had Vision. Mra, Ada Schmidt, forty-six yeare ott four found dead from p mother, hortly covery was made by Mrs, Minnie Sinith, Mrs. on Staten Island, returning to him home only once a week, was lonely and had been in the habit of keeping her fav grandchild for company. Agcording to #1X_ mem Mrs, Smith, the dead woman had com plained of the cold in her apartment and wae using the gas range for heating. This morning, when Mra, Smith called, ste smelied gas on the floor occupied by her mother and called for help, after trying the door, Together with the Janitor, Albert Flagg, she broke open the kitchen door and was) met by @ rush of gas. Wrapping 4 towel about his face, the janitor en- tered and threw open the windows. Mra, Schmidt was lying dead under an open gas jet, her hand atretched to- ward It, aa if hor last effort was to shut | oft the deadly flow. The child was ly ing dead on the bed. Dr. Robertson, | who was summoned from Bellevue, de- clared both had been dead several | hours. ‘According to Mra, Smith, the deaths | were due to accident and there was no | reason for suicide, her mother being in| the best of health and happy. of the a ante of its fect It had on night 3 warning which cam too soon. —_—--—— FORTY QUEUES ARE SAVED! Chinamen Flee From Fire That Standing in front of No, 33 Vell street | beth street yrey and sixteen days from off Hat down the bay to-day, © a slip of glass. ‘ousting steamers have re plunging slowly northwa slike & phantom of the seas than anchor n and his crew of fiftcen hands and ears . The first duty of the uck the xhip off £ on her stern and all the while teras Jan, 2, was to go aloft with o and beat the blocks until the foe which them was Knocked of and @ left entirely | the storm broke upon the ocean In, frore Khas ‘ could run freely. Hy, in| tack give an equivalent for what they (th, yt talons except potatoes | and the Captain to his cabin to was turned in and the fire- soon put out the * and delivered on first payment of $25, J.&C. fischer Salesroom, 417 West 2ith Street, Near 9th A nue, ' to-day, Patrolman Dunn of the Bitza- on, was amazed to soe Elghty-five days out from Buenos the building #uddenly erupt @ swarm of Chinamen, They came out of windows am, the 1,1@-ton Angerona dropped and down fire escapes like rata out of looking @ burning ship. Narrow stairs. A partition between rooms on the second floor was ablaze and the were wrapping around three gas Dunn kicked down the partition and stamped out the fire. A fire ehtef com piimented him on his presence of mind | and said he had prevented a gas ex ploston, The upper part of the build ing 1s a Chinese lodging house there were forty Chinamen tn thelr bunka when the fire started. ——— NAC FOR TODAY. Sun risea,, 6.07) Sun seta 1) Moon rises THE TI WK Low Water, AM 1 AM. PM Sandy 1 400 waz 164 3 fate Sy eb Mei 640 Ce —— HORLICK’S THAWS A GAS PIPE— lt Means Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. More healthful than Tea or Coffee. with the weakest digestion. Delicious, invigorating and nutritious Rich milk, maited grain, powder fora, ti A quick lunch prepared in @ minute, ‘ake no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S, SS Others are imitations, Buy at the Factory SAVE A DOLLAR A STEP —here we tel! without heavy expensca of separately conducted stores You will never know the real joys of music until you own a Fischer Player Piano TWO PIANOS IN ONE Priced at our factory at $650 upward, a ee ee DEVOE PREDICTS BLIZZARD TO STRIKE US SOON.!: | And It Will Cover the Period for} the Ryoha Maru was a ates the St. Patrick's Day Cele: mpton weather Yo which will strike Now 18th wurra, | ia to be as and 20th of this montt Patrick's Day as all outdoors. phet Devoe sent weather chart to-day to | who shiveret aw he Devoe says that ¢ cony of hia! sare aga he would the coldest in twenty-five years. He thin season's oon. “a great r Atlantte vols qver Spain tinued zero weat storm belt is ha ond Portugal." FORTY-SIX LIVES LOSTAS | TWO STEAMERS SINK. daughter of the dead woman and mother Passengers and Crew Victims of Collision Between Japanese 18.—Forty~ «of the crew and mon= Spring Suits, Dresses & Waists Tailored Suits, in stylish models of new White Ss, Fancy Stripe materials and other ap- oolen fabrics for Spring and Summer. Shown in the new Changeable Blu Prices $25.00 to $5.00. Linen Suits, of excellent quality Russian Linen, in White, Tan, Natural and colors. All sizes may Prices $20.00, 25.00 and up. Linen Dresses—A large collection suitable for tub styles, as well as Lace trimmed and hand-embroidered models in the new Mummy Linen, Pique, Ratine and Irish and French White and colors in all sizes, Prices $12.75 to 75.00. Lingerie Dresses—Simple or elaborately made, in a variety of dainty Summer materials, including oiles, Crepes, Mull, Dimity and other and-made Dresses in the col- $20.00, 35.00, 50.00 and up. Lingerie and Linen W. styles tor Spring and Summer, $2.75, 4.50 and up. Special Note—A few odds and ends in Coats, Suits and Dresses—the remainder of our Winter $8.75 and 15,00, to close out promptly. James McCutcheon @ Co. Sth Ave. and 34th St,’ waa gente rie Mary Allen, a tenant in the house with the dead woman, telis of a dream, in which she saw Mrs, Schmidt and her grandchild overcome by Kas, She was Telleved to ee them leave the apart- ment, yesterday morning, and thought 1, except to tell ange vividness Late last . Allen heard the child crying, probably too weak to rise and open the Goor, She belleves the dream was a twenty-four hours new fabrics, Dunn sensed fire and turned fn an alarm. ‘Then he broke Into the bullding and darted up the Waldorf-Astoria Lustrous vyed All Fur Se RicG'hbon & Co. y Brontway and 19th St) } a as Wet J/ta Strect Just off sth Avenue. SPECIAL OF f 3G41ch medium weight, w' Dress Linens . 35 cenis per yard. | Bed Spread > Byds. 1 Dresser Scax size 20x54 inches, teh, 3.90 crc’ | with had imade Lies, Russias Patsom I SHINGS FON SULRCT ROMES, DEPENDABLE Fu: gers were drowned by the sinkine, after collision, of to Japanese . the Ryoha Maru and the faru, to-day. of ;fighty-one tone net, built at |Miogo, Japan, and owned by the Yoshida Keltaro, while the Mori Maru ed steamor of 1,10 tons net, built at Weat Hartlepool, England, in 188, cnd owned Ai by the Yostida Seiko, | THREE-DAY TOURS February 22, March 7, 21, April 4, 18, and May 9, 1952 $12 from NEW YORK Including hotel acrommortations and DeceNArY expenses Under Personal Pacort. Tickets and tal. Information of Ticket or C. Studs, Vasenger \ Ween its Aral on Pith "Ave District Pavver (Cor, 2th St.) on: Pennsylvania R. R. Established Halj a Century e, Navy, Tan its, in all the new The Old Established Fur Shop of FRANK RUSSEK (Established 1886) 21 West 34th Street sesits ANNOUNCE THEIR End of the Season Sale of Fine Furs At Extremely Low Prices French Seal Coats, 52 and 54 inches... 44 15 e Extra Quality sett Pelts. Values up to $95.00 Russian Poy Coats, 52 and 54 inches.. 27 50 e Light Weight Moired Skins, Values up to $75.00 Caracul Fur Coats, 52 and 54 inches... 31 75 e Values up to $85.00 Mink Marmot Coais, 52 and 54 inches. 39 75 e Silk Brocadeu ianngs Ouly. balues up to $95.00 Natural Pony Coats, 52 and 54 inches. 39 75 Beauutaay ssarked., balues up $11).00 Trimmed Fur Coats, 52 and 54 inches. . 57 75 e Coats | Values upto Trimmed with Raccoon, SkunkorPossaind — $165.00 ts at Less Than Y% Price moved io ’ LRINGS y Prisvcd Cre Pass Ui

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