The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1912, Page 3

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4 wv || i \ ARBUCKLE’S HEIRS FAIL TO FIND WILL FOR $21,000,000 ersona? “‘Attomey Vtidteay See Years |g ‘Us.Ignorant That One « Mas Left. TO-SPLIT BIG FORTUNE. ‘All ‘Amazed That Philan- thropist Left No Provision for: His Charities, Dales the will of the tate John ‘Ar- Buckle be Cound in his private safe in thie office at Water street and Old Slip, the heirs of the $20,000,000 estate will pro- eed on the assumption that the aged and astute coffee merchant ded intes- tate, That a man of his carefulness in @ttending to the minutest is of ois Business should have prey to pro- Vide for the disposal of his property by ‘will 19 regarded as amazing, but this ap- Dears to be che case, Henry I, Dylcman of (No, 17 Mon- tague street, Brooklyn, who was Mr. Beauty Lotions Beaten By a Youthful Heart In Defying Old Age Astuakle’s personal attorney for many years, admitted to-day that !f anybody @hould know if there was a will he is the man. He says ho has no knowledge ‘of any wil, but refused to answer when ‘eaked point blank if he had ever drawn @ will for Mr. Arbuckle. Legal ethics ‘would nog permit him to answer the question. “So far asf know,” said Mr. Dylaman, “Mr. Arbuckle left no will. None of his relatives has reported finding a will. I do not know where @ will might be if Mx, Arbuckle left one.”" ‘There was some expectation thht « ‘will might be found in the Kings County Trust Company, of which Mr. Arbuckle was a trustee. to-day that he knew positively that no Arbuckle will would be found in thet in- ptitution, Mr. Arbuckle left neither children nor widow. His nearest relatives are his sisters, Mrs, Robert Jamieson and Mi: Christina Arbuckle, and the children of Mrs. Jamieson, one of whom, William Asbuckle Jamieson of No. 1 West Sev- enty-second street, some time ago suc- ceeded to the managership of the mam- moth business. charities of Mr. Arbuckle’s -are in the balance {f no will is found. Among those that had his warmest re the floating lodging hou: River for working men and women and the farm for aged men and ‘women near New Paltz, N. Y. Sev Pyettsknown charities not only Tounded by fim, but were practically upported by his philanthropy. ‘Mrs. Arbuckle died five years ago. , ‘Rie couple had children, but none sur- vive. Charles Arbuckle, another nephew, lives in Brooklyn, ‘It was admitted t diay at the home of Willlam Arbuckle Jamieson that the search for a will had | teen unsuccessful, } a “COLLEGE BELLHOP” KILLS HIMSELF IN BOSTON HOTEL. Haycroft Had Been Employed in Many New York Houses and Was Well Known. Edwand Haycroft, who shot and killed himself in a west erfd hotel in Boston yesterday, was well known in New York hotels as “The College Bellhop.” He was employed as a bellman in sev- eral of the big hotels, and because of this education and manne: ghat he was a graduate ‘This rumor was without foun ‘The Harvard Directory does no! th» name of Edward Haycroft asa dent at any time. But it is @ fact that Hayoroft, who was thirty-five yeas. old, ‘was qualified for @ more important po- _ sition than answering bell calls in a ho- a He was last employed at.the Hotel Breslin, Before that he worked at the Belmont. On account of his convivial hebits he could not last more than two or three months on a Stretch at one place, but ho wes ordinarily so capable ‘and courteous that he had little dift!- culty in getting a place, working at ome hotels two or puree <'tferent times, Heycrott Hved at No, 337 Kast Forty- fest street in a ¢urnished room. He told his landlady, Mrs. Smoley, he ‘had been at one time a salesman fo. @ big Boston woollen house. About four months ago Haycroft, & prolonged spree, left the city, saying he was going back to Boston to brace up. ee amnecce MIRACLE OF THE PALMS. Clatching Cross of Le of Leaves, Ohila Uninjured After Six-Story Fall. + Qtutching a cross of palm leaves which had been given her at mass, seven-year-old Fannie Farango of No, 415 East One Hundred and Seoond street fell late yesterday from a@ sixth-story ~ fre escape and landed $n a pushcart filled with fruit. A surgeon at the Reception Ho: says the child's injuries are of n sequence, consisting only of a fracture of the Jaw and three tinor acalp wounds. Tho ttle girl lost her balance as she was trying to hand another palm cross to a child friend on a neighboring fire escape. pe Mrs, Hannah Dickey Dead. Mrs, Hannah Dickey died Sunday ‘evening at North Manchester, Ind, She , was born at Westminster, Md., June 21, 180, and went with her mother, brother and two sisters to Melmore, Seneca County, Ohio, in 1832, She was twiee married, the only son of the first husband being Rev, J. A, Seltz of Cos Coo, Conn, father of Don C, Seits, business manager of the New York World. Of the six children by the sec- end marriage four survive, She leaves fifty-seven direct living descendants, pL Mg me President Fairchild said | Miss Molly Pearson More alierit, Who Wouldn't Generous Than Was Cav- Answer the Question When. J. P. Morgan Asked the Singer to Enlighten Him. J my eecrets, BY NIXOLA GREELBY-SMITH. Cross your heart and wish you may die{f you ever tell? Then listen while Miss Molly Pearson imparts the secret of perpetual youth. eon shows herself more generous than Lina Cavalieri, famous beauty and opera singer, who, when asked by J. Pierpont Morgan recently to tell him the secret of her perpetual loveliness, replied: “I trust no man with Goodby.” The world knows, however, that the ainger who inspired the immortal query, “Who's looney now?” re- es upon baths, massage, face creams, Jotions, all the paraphernalia of the beauty parlor, in fact, to preserve her charms. But Miss Pearson, who has endeared her- self to "New York this winter as the fascinating heroine of “Bunty Pulls the Strings,” declares that a woman is as young as her heart, and that In eo doing Miss Pear- all the beauty lotions in the world will not take a day from the age she looks and is and feels, REAL SECRET OF YOUTH. IS IN ¢ THE HEART. “The mere effort and worry of trying to keep young makes @ woman old,” Miss Pearson declared. “If I had thirty liver to live instead of only one I would not waste a single moment on beauty exercises, massage, rc.tuction treatments or any of the other :o-called methods of Preserving youth which make so many women old before their time, The real secret of youth fs in the heart. I know young persons who have always been old and old persons who will always be young. I would say to any woman worrying about her first gray hair or the coming of a double chin: ‘Take care of your illusions and your beauty will take care of itself.” Incidentally, Miss Pearson, when she stands in the wings of the Comed: ‘Theatre waiting for her cue, 1s just winsome as when she {s on the etage a! Bunty, managing everybody in sight for his own g001, Sho wears her laurels as lightly and casually as she does her hoopskirts, and no one who has seen Bunty's hooprkirts can be much sure prised that our dressmakers are trying to make us all copy ner. Now, don't say you never, never will wear. them, at least not until you have seen their possibilities of charm on Miss Molly Pearson, who belleves, by the way, that »/the threatened revival may help women to solve the secret of perpetual youth if only because it will stop them from worrying about attaining the hipless figure, “The motto of my life 1s this,” Miss Pearson wonfided, ‘Nothing lasts—not even bad lack. I believe that the secret of youth Iles in those words or in any similar formula which expresses the same thought.” “Do you beleve that a woman may keep young by managing every one about her as Bunty does?” I inquired, “No, indeed,” replied Miss Pearson, candidly. “Women grow old by man- aging or trying to manage. For the purposes of preserving one's youth it is mugh better to be managed than to manage. Managing is interesting, but you can seo that it takes thought as well a: good deal of worry to pull « many strings at once. No, I'm afraid Bunty doesn’t know tho secret of pre- sorving youth, ‘ut I do. “It's believing in things, no mat- ter whether they are illusions or Rot; it’s loving not only im the ro- mantio sense, but in the larger meaning of humanity. Wo sordid or blase person can possibly be or look young. Perhaps one might way! ‘Go tell my lady in her cham- ber, though she paint an inch thick and roll on the floor to preserve her figuro and massage to fright- Now, I did not agree with Mi son at all, Beauty, we are tol the eye of the beholder and this eye usually so superficial in Its observation and its admiration that !f a woman takes care of he surface through mas- sage, beauty lotions or what not, few persons are going to worry about the age of her soul. And this is why most of us would rather resemble the homell- est woman of our acquaintance than the so-called “pretty girl” of the period with Pomeranian pompadour, pert eyes, snub nose, self-satisfied ‘mouth and an X-Ray figure. To me the girls of from « and shrivel up or perhaps be made into second-rate olives. ‘The youth that ts ripe and warm and flowing never gets on the magazine covers, but then, perhaps, it isn't proper. REAL BEAUTY MIGHT DECREASE CIRCULATION. However, the ordinary little school girl can look at these pictures and con- clude justly, “If this ‘deautiful, then I must bo dazzling,” which must be 00d for circulation, while, of course, the contemplation of real beauty might lead subscribers to pessimism and other gazines, So, for the attainment of this sort of beauty, one should go to the beauty par- lor and not to Miss Molly Pearson for advice, But if one wants to be beauti- ful as the Venus of Milo and the Mona Iisa or any of the great masterpieces that express the power and the glory and not the weakness and puerility of womanhood, one can't do better than to follow Miss Pearson's advice. Keep your heart young and your illusions burnished and your double chin will take care of itself, Bi PASSAIC TEXTILE MILLS RUN UNDER DIFFICULTIES. Bosses Talk of a Complete Shut Ddwn Unless Weavers Re- turn to Looms, The textile mills of Passaic, N. Were Tun to-day under a sertous han cap becaus of the weavers’ strike. Un- Jews the workers return to thelr looms within a few days several of the larger mills may be compelled to clo: ‘There are 4,000 ra on strike, and some of them, it ds said, are disposed to return to the mills under the terms offered by several of the employers, who have promised raise in wages, but re- fuse to recognize the union, It was thought the offer of some of the mils to raise wages would and the strike, but the Industrial Workers of the World, who are gulding the strike, are determined to get recognition. At the Botany Worsted Mills, where 7,000 wopkers are employed, 1,000 weavers are on strike and it is feared that the miM will have to close unless the Weavers return to the looms. There is a rumor that strike-breakers will be imported. einstein, the 1, W. W. organ- the workers will not return to the mills unless the unton is recog- nized. Reinatein {9 hoping to other mili workers ¢o join the w and so tle up all the plants in and about Passaic, The strikers are acting quietly and have given the police little trouble, They are continually being cautioned by their leaders to avoid violence, —<—__—_ DREAM OF $80, 000,000. Lawyer for Churchill De Hopes to Have It Real Vidtons of an inheritance worth $80,- 000,000 are floating’ before the eyes o Bolin and Haffyard descendants of Sam- uel Churchill, ‘The property be land in New Foundland giv: MM by King Geovge JIL, in Following the suit of descendants in Boston, New York members of the fam- tly met yesterday at the home of A, Ugdren, No, § Fourth place, Brogklyn, and formed an’ association’ W. W. La- point, a lawyer, told them how they ought to recover at least $40,000,000, Lapoint bases his m on @ttorney that he says has recently been Gi800 power af! It’s very hard to say what they are wearing becauso they aro wearing EVERYTHING, but I have tried to picture some of the many Easter nov- elties. The firet girl in the picture wears a very distinctive theatre cap which Promises to be popujar this epring. Its lines are very bewoming and very Egyptian, Large picture hats are always popular and becoming, especially to the tall sirls, and the arrangoment of osprey on the one pictured is the very latest. It) will look perfectly lovely on your new Faster chapeau, I'm sure, And, if you are racking your pretty head for some original adornment for | your Faster eult, perhaps the creation in the picture will help you some. Its chief foatures are the long, broad panel down the front and the cardinal collar | the daintily frilled sleeves, Take careful note of her chic parasol, It is very | deep, as yours must be if you would have the latest and lavishly decorated adjunct to your frock. The fourth girlie dons @ pretty fluffy half-cap-half-hat for a young girl to ‘wear next Guhday. Just eee the last miesie! Now if you didn’t know that she is @ perfectly modern “Miss New York," wouldn't you think that she had just stepped out of one of the fine ok! portraits from the kingly times of Louis? Still, this is the very newest novelty hat. And, I think, the very eauctest, too, PRINGE OF WALES EERE PARS EST OF here of the Prince of Wales, who ts coming with ‘his tutor to complete his education in French. Most of the American women will at different times entortain the Prince, ‘The Marquis and Marehtoness de Bre- teull possess @ fine mansion in the Ave- nue du Bots de Boulogne, in which @ suite of rooms 1s to bo placed at the Aisposal of the young Prince, Tho newspapers express the hope, tn welcoming the Prince of Wales, that FRED THONPSIN IS ORDERED 10 QUIT LUNA PARK boy Ry Notice Is Served by Owners of Site at Coney Island. Frederick Thompson, the spectacular young emusement promotor, who with his late partner, Elmer S. Dundy, built Luna Park ‘‘on a shotstring” and later the Hippodrome, !s back practically where he started. A dreamer of big, sensational schemes for entertaining the Public and a maker of millions, he has, through a series of disastrous theatrical ventures, brought himself into financial straits. As a final blow a dispessess notice was served on him yesterday to oust him from control of the big Coney Island resort that was the offspring of his fertile imagination, ‘The dispossess notice was served on ‘Thompson and the various concession helMers in Luna Park at the instance of the Sea Beach Land Company, own- ing the land on which the big amuse- ment place stands. The notices cal! upon Thompson et al to appear in the F¥th District Municipal Court, Brook- tyn, and show cause why their fran- chise should not be taken away, And the cause of it all {s the alleged heavy indebtedness of Thompson and his as- soctates. PARK TO BE OPENED AS USUAL, THOUGH. According to Charles A, Nelson, sec tary-treasurer of the Jand company, the Park will open on Memorial Day, as echeduled, and will be conducted on the @ mammoth wale as before, “We are sorry that dispossess notices had to be served,” he satd, “but the in- debtedness of the former proprictors made it impossible for them to con- tinue in charge this year. We shall go right ahead with Luna Park, as Planned, and expect the most prosper- ous year in the park's history. ‘The strongest opposition, Dreamland, was wiped out last season by fire,"’ Thompson, who 1s only forty years old, 1s expected by all his friends to recover from his present difficulties and ain new fame and fortune in other big ventures. He would not speak for pubil- cation to-day, but a \remark dropped to an (ptimate friend indicates his at- titude. y think they have me licked,” he ‘but Til show them all that there fellow at least who can come back. BROUGHT THE “MOON” FROM BUFFALO. Thompson and Dundy came to New York from Buffalo, where their ‘rip to the Moon’ had caught on at the Pan- American Exhibition, They established the same show near the Steeplechase, Coney Island, and made some money. Then Thompson conceived tho tdea of Tana Park, and Dundy, the financial wizard of the two, promoted it. Men of SHOW .|large Affairs were enlisted in the enter- prise, and they got thelr money back several tinies over. Then came the Hippodrome, but after getting it on @ paying basis Thompson and Dundy turned the big theatre into other hands and were beginning new big schemes when Dundy dled, Thompson | we 0 the theatrical business, and after al successful ventures bis luck turned and he began dosing heavily. For @ year or more Broadway has heard lene rumor that Fred "wrote." pee tgd 4 ; ho, like his grandfather, King Edward, will become fond of Paris. ‘The Mar- quis de Breteull was for years a close friend of King Kéaward, pate lhc! sh HARRY KARALL A SUICIDE. | AMERICAN WOMEN sates See Will Stop at Mansion of For- of macrame lace, odged with black, together with buttons, extensively used, and | mer Edith Garner—Others to Entertain Royal Heir. Leaves Note Saying He Had No ad Was Out of Work, “Harry Karall trom Austria—no money, out of work; reason for this,” was the note that the management of Mills Hote] No. 1, at No, 100 Bleecker street, found to-day by the side of the dead body of one of the lodgers. Near the ded was a whiskey flack containing oxallo acit, Hoe had only the clothes with which ho was clad, Karall had come to ths MiNs Hotel about two weeks ago. He was a thin, frail man who told some of tho fellow lodgers in the reading room that he had been a tailor, but that he had been out work for four months, What little money ha had aaved ho had invested tn novelties and had tried to make a liv- ing as @ peddier, but that, too, had failed. Last night Karall met one of the lodg- ers ax he was going to his room, He patted the pocket of his “1m down and out, but L'vy thing here to make me feel good.” BROKAW-BROTHERS MENS & BOYS’ CLOTHING HATS & FURNISHINGS) It's the wear our Clothes give that proves the superior work- manship we put into every gar- ment we make— The most careful hand-tailoring in every Suit and Overcoat in our Spring stock is a guar- anteeofserviceandsatisfaction—and at prices that spell value. Astor Place & Fourth Avenue |suBWAY AT THE DOOR-ONE BLOCK FROM BROADWAY’ LONDON, April 1—The Prince of ‘Wales left here early to-day for Paris, mrhe:e he is to be the guest of the Mar- Quis de Bretouil. PARIS, April 1—France !s showing the greatest interest in the arrival this evening from London of the Prince of | Wales, who ts to spend several months in the French capital with the Marquis de Breteuil, whose wife is Edith Gar- ner, daughter of tho lato Willlam T, Garner, former Vice-Commodore of the ‘New York Yacht Club, The Viscountess de Breteutl, the als- ter-in-law of the Marquis, tg also an American girl, Edythe Gfant. Tho American colony in Paris therofore takes a lively interest in the sojourn “ Our Name Guarantees the Quality It's the time of the year when every home-loving woman wants something new. Every piece shown on our ,\oors is the very kind you desire. “You can have them charged if you will only take advan+ tage of our special offerings. BIRDS-EYE 17.50 DRESSER, Elegant Bird’s-Eye Dresser, 2 large and 2 smail, swell drawers, wood knobs, French bevel glass 24x30; regular Price $24.50, CARPETS and RUGS, Special—Axminster Rug mxdatt wood & $25 value, at A1- 50 Special Suit Sale 17" Actual $25 Value To-Morrow, Tuesday Your Easter suit is here. We have positively secured the largest and most complete line of Easter suits ever presented to the public, and a visit here will doubly repay you by enabling you to make an immediate selection of the very suit desired. One Style Pictured ' One glance will reveal style and fabric in fashion’s favorite edicts, foremost as- sembling striped novelties, wide wale serges, diagonals, whipcords,mixturesin every dressy or tailoredstyle; smart col- lars and revers, some lace tri chiccutaway jackets,trim tailored skirts. Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 14 and 16 West 14th Street—New York 460 und 462 Fulton Street—Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. y= Registered Trade Mark Half a Century Children’s Spring Dresses, Coats & Hats 2 to 6 Years h Hand-made Dresses, $2. £00 8.50" 10.78, 15,00 to 28 00 Paris creations in materials, styles po a laces, Domestic - made_ Dresses 2.75, 3.50, 3.75, 5.00, 7.50, 1o00-Sroch ves and sheer embroidered fabrics, Irish and Valen- ciennes Lace Yokes, Sleeve and Waistband. Hats, $3.75, 5.00, 6.75, 8.50, 10.00 and 15.00—Choice selections of both Paris and Ameri- can productions, Turban styles. Peanut Straws, $2.50, 3.00, 4.50 and 5.75. Splendid variety of Milans and Panamas. Coats, $5.00, 6.50, 8.50, 10.00, PETS s:00 and 8.60-Novelties i ‘Mixtures, Stripes, Checks, also plain Serges, Voiles, Craven ettes and Covert, exceedingly smart in style. Hand-embroidered Pique Coats, $5.00 to 35.00—In many unusual styles, Irish lace and Cluny trimming. James McCutcheon & Co., Sth Ave. and 34th St., waar Astoria Moeaaeaeasaaafafeate 3.75, jewest i New Shoes for Easter 4 Women’s Pumps, Oxfords and Buckle Shoes in alll: the new shapes and a great variety of materials, Street Shoes in colors to’ complete costumes; Whit Shoes in Buckskin, Can- vas, Crash and othe! fabrics; Colonial Buckle in an unusually wide range of styles. Prices begin at the minimum for well made and sere viceable shoes. An ample corps of competent salege people insures accurate fitting and satisfactory service, | Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street Sunday World “Real Estate” / Ad. Sells Two Brooklyn Houses. ~ 189 Montague Street Publisher The World: Dear Sir: We take pleasure in notifying you of the satisfactory result obtained from our Real Estate advertisement in the Sunday World: We trace directly the sale of two houses—one on Sunday and another ‘on Wednesday—to your paper. Our property is located at 62d street, between 19th and 20th aver We find that The New York World puts us in touch with more than any other paper we have used. We have authorized the Borough Adrentiaing Company to contionaes Be Ad. for next Sunday Very res ecttully, LOUIS GRETSCH, VicePR ae It should interest you £ know jal if els @ circ in New nh ere lie Hi Times, Sun and Tribune ¢ Herald, NSF ise

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