The evening world. Newspaper, May 16, 1912, Page 3

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‘FAILS TO TIE UP ‘Manager Says Only 12 Out of REST 43 Employes Left the Din- eu," ing Rooms, * Park Row Manager Suggests That All Fines Go to Blind Babies, From appearances in the dining roome rand restaurants of the Vanderbilt Motel to-day the strike of walters last “gight was not the striking euccess the @Micere of the International Hotel Work rs’ Union described it. The staff of walters was filled, every guest was Promptly served and there appeared to be no dissatistaction. : fer Thomas Hilliard was t- @ignant because a report was published im the morning papers that he had met ®@ committee of the union and made a Bumber of concessions. He denounced true this report, which had been ed by the union officers. ve made no concessions to the anion and will make none,” he declare. Conditions here uro just as they were ® Week ago. This hotel is an open #0 far as walters are concerned. Aan't care if our waiters belong to union or not, but I will not recog. _ @ise the union as an organization. “A committee from the union called me Isat night. I told them our j waiters had two grievances—poor ven- »@lation in their locker room and the @niform they were compelled to wear. 1 had already agreed to do away with the uniform and to put in @ system to ventilate the locker room, SAYS THE GRIEVANCES WILL BE ADJUSTED. “It waa an outrage to pick out this hotel as an object of attack, We pay our waiters the standard wage, they are treated well and the grievances I have mentioned will soon be adjusted. “When an outsider etepped in here last night and biew a whistle signal, 12 or 13 waiters in the Palm Garden walked out. There were 43 waiters on duty in fhe Palm Garden. No delay was ex- * pebog by patrons but of course ere was sone confusion in the ho’ foutine becaure of the unexpectedness ‘ef the affair. “S{ asked the men why they were Yeaving. ‘They told me they had been ‘ordered out by the union, T am tn- Pormed that they Were threatened with jolence if they refused to obey the Sanat All but two of them have re- @urhed to work. f « "There i no strike on at this hotel; thore {s no reason here for calling a Strike. And in forcing a few of our @en out last night the union violated, @n undersianding or agreement that they woud not call any strikes unti! @eir vo-called demands had been sub- mitted to the Hotel Men's Association. ‘These demands have not yet been sub- mitted.” Charles Sugar, manager of Haan's Park How restaurant has come to the front with a suggestion which @aims, will do away with dissatisfaction @ver the system of fining walters. All westauramt and hotel managers claim that only by the imposition of small ‘Bnes can discipline be maintained among ‘walters, FINES AT HAAN'S GO TO THE BLIND BABIES. , Ig Hean's tho fines inflicted are not @ollected by the management. When a ‘walter is fined, after his first offense fee been carefully considered by the ‘@apagement, the amount of the fine is \wade known to‘iim. He promptly drops ft fmto one of the collection boxes of Phe International Sunshine Soctety, ‘eperating boxes for blind babies. Beveral of those boxes are distributed (bout the restaurant and the waiters fnew where their fines go. Joseph Lister, business agent of the (eaten, wes ar! din front of the Bel- Wont Hotel last night charged with Central Office Detectives Moore Gousing ‘Walsh and fined $2 in night court by Freatetrate Krotel. Elster claims he ought the detectives were Pinkerton 4 The cooks held a mecting last night Bt No. 18 West Forty-Eighth street and Pormed « mutual free employment agen- ‘one of the things to have been mantea by them from the Hote! Men's Association. Arrangements are being completed to- e@ay for a mass meeting of women hotel qworters at the New Amsterdam Opera Bouse on Sunday night. Mrs. Roso Pastor Stokes will be one of the speak- fre and devote her remarks chiefly to @e need of organization. UY > CARDINAL AT CONFIRMATION. ts Eminence Ofictat fer the ret Time Since His Blevati Hig Eminence Cardinal Farley offici- Bted at the confirmation services of Swenty-six children of the Ville Marie Weoatemy, Seventy-ninth street and Lex- fngton avenue, yesterday. It was the @ret function of the kind at which the (Cardinal was presem eince his return from Roms, and his elevation to the Cardinaiate. There was great jubilation among the Nappy children and their parents when after receiving the Sacra- fhent he spoke to them in kindly phrases Qsking them to act as the crusaders of eld in fighting for the real Christian I. rut. “Pine Cardinal wns assisted by Mar. Lewls, Father Latelye and lather Hearn. The sisters of the order con- @neted the musical exercises with @ chorus by the puptls of the Academy, ‘A profusion of flowers was presented to fis Eminence. Among them one great basket, a present from the children, and dig bouquet of Illes, the gift of Miss HGesegn Bridges aciousaiin ~THEVANDERBL FULL STAPF WORKING.| | °° WAITERS’ STRIKE | What Type of Woman Is the Ideal Beauty? ——_—_===_ $$ Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). To NIGHT A? BYERY —AURAN 3? pestle? ¢' Y. wy her in New York bottles that pour the intrinsic merit of her wares, Every now and then some one writes &n article about the ten or the twenty or tho fifty most beautiful women in New York, and Invariably the names of the poster beauties of society and of the stage appear, Because these are the | beauties that advertise Tt ts likely that the fifty most beautiful women in Now York are not known as beauties at all, that they have nover seen their names or their pictures in print, | and that the neighbors think of | them merely as Billy Jones's sister or Johnny Green's mother or Pat O'Brien's wif pages have to offer, Not long ago in a Madison avenue car a gitl of perhaps sixteen got aboard with a giant hatbox which she was e' y on her way to deliver to some fashionable woman, POORLY DRESSED BUT DAz- ZLINGLY BEAUTIFUL. She was very poorly dressed and her gloveless hands were red and needod rare, But she was the most dagzling Irish blonde I have ever seon, gold hatred with eyes of the dark vivid blue of the fringed gentian and a full yet beautifully chiselled mouth, This girl would have laugho! had anyone suggested to her that her appearance mtght compare with the fair self-adver- tisers of New York's restaurants, but a matter of fact, loveller. But the Broadway.type {s such an artist in advertising, her clothes are her makeup @o frank, her contrasts so effective that m0 one looks, no one cares What her face is like, In truth her face ts often as round and yacant and inane as @ clock that has lost !ts hands, but even the young millionaire grub who has taken her out to supper and who enjoys the stir her eccentric costume creates does not look at her face. Look about you next time you are supping on Broadway, look above the shoulders which are very fine, look under the hat which ts very expensive, Plumb the eyes under the well drawn eyebrows, find the mouth under the conventional rosebud made with a Itp stick and add up the total and ponder It, Is that what beauty means to you? FACES DON’T SEEM TO COUNT IN THE DISPLAY, Maybe you won't be able to find any faces, The clothes, the curves, the Beerdsleyesque lure have been empha- sind, but the face ts merely eketched in-as though a im artist had left that negligible of work to an apprentice, And, In @ certain sense, the face of the restaurant beauty is n gible. She aims for broad effects and she geta them. “It takes a coarse personality to get over the footlights,” one of the great- est of the world's theatrical producers once remarked to an interviewer in a candid moment. It takes a coarse per- sonality to draw the eyes of Broadway after the play, The same exaggeration | of features, of clothes, of walk and ges yoort Glee Cluy | CORES. TPE Herein Is Considered the Restaurant Girl, the Kind That Is Seen in the Lobster Palaces After the Theatre and Who Is Made Up to Look Like a Broadway Electric Sign. Probably the Broadway restaurants never see them, I know that I have seen unknown faces of women and Is in street cars that were much more beautiful than anything the society or dramatic she was much! T HE £ STAURANT OR _ NIGHT: BLOOMING The appearance of the Restaurant Girl, as we ste after the play, bears about the same relation to real beauty that the theatrical poster has to real art. She is, in fact, a human poster in her quieter aspects, though when she appears in her full flare and regalia she ie more like one of those gorgeous electric & perpetual oblation to Bacchus in the night sky of Broadway. Nothing else in the world {s so flamboyant as the Broadway electric eign, except the Broadway Beauty, who knows how to turn the very smallest item of her attire into a noisy barker of her personal attractiveness. Now, of course, only cheap attractions have “barkers, the time to gaze analytically under the Paradise feathers of the restaurant beauty, one realizes that, Itke the Coney Island fortune teller, her season 1s short, and depends more upon the gullibility of the passerby than upon and if one takes ture essential to an effective etage en- trance are’ necessary when the audience Adjourns to its favorite restaurant. WOMEN WHO ARE ATTRACTIVE ON THE STAGE. The woman who makes the most ef- fective stage picture {s not Maxine El- Hott, not Lillian Russell, not Ethel Bare 'ymore, each real beauties of their sev- ‘al types. She {s perhaps more famous {than any of these women, but for her | acting, not her appearance, Off the stage ehe !s a dowdy, middle-aged woman, with a bad coinplexion and a bad figure, but as Juliet she seeme to sum the warmth and fragrance and de- | Mght of ail the red roses In the world. Another woman with this marvellous Poster quailty 1s Mary Garden, See hei as Thals you feel certain she might have taken Antony from Cleopatra, have lured Paris from the side of Helen of Troy, See her {n her dressing room af- ny, matronly looking woman, with reddish hair and a sharp nose, and you ask yourself: Ww or lias fled the visionary gleam, @ glory and the dream? Porhays thore iy more merit in Producing this false glamour of beauty than in being beautiful. ‘There 1s certainty mors art. And | every night blooming cereus of the | Broadway restaurants possesses | this art in vomo degr: peldentally, 1 learn (hat when the midnight flower blooms {t 1s tmme- lately plucked and preserved in a’- cohol. Too often the human prototype of this night owl member of the cactus family chooses the same method of Preservation, and the slim poster gl:! lor twenty becomes a e-sheet poster ' of forty. I have often thought that Haml:t Went rather wide of the mark when h said, in handling the skull: “Go tell my lady im her chamber, ‘hough she pain | an inch thick, unto this lkeness 8) must come at last." Now, I don’t think any of us mins the skull period very much. After & any one of us would make a handso.ne skull. It's the intermediate stage tha will worry me and .a lot of othe women; it's thinking about being fifty, not being dead, But one can't expect : man, even a Shakespeare, to unde | stand that feeling. ‘There ure beautiful women of fifty, urse—I've actually seen one, Oter the famous dancer and beauty, cre. @ sensation @ year ago by deciaring ti the woman of forty 1s the inost bea ful of all. Perhaps her nds mo} readers. of The Hvening World wit state the claims of the woman of forty in letters describing hee attractions, |_ A to \. tendered the wid the late Nicholas Harnett ¢ | 7 ‘ifty-elghth stre: 1 nue, tomorrow e@ The famous Harnett Minstrels, ing Al on, Jim Hill, Bob M Mins Ire , the Sullivan § te and many ot W will furnish jen Henry M. | we tra will play the da jm affair 1s under the # jance 8. & A, Club, w ub, Charles Association and @he Bre- neal ae i jdren o: | Palm ngton a sion of an rnett k: A. Ha terward or In her home and you behold { a Second of a New Series of Articles by NixolaGrecley- Smith. ° “UNTO THIS LIKENESS MUST ve COME AT LAST® WOMAN CONFESSES SHE STOLE BROOCH WHEN TEMPTED Pleading Weakness Pretty Mrs. Pearl Spence Arraigned, but Sentence Suspended. On the plea that she got into debt without her husband's knowledge and that the temptation to steal under these circumstances became too strong to re- sist, Mrs. Pearl Spence, a very pretty young woman, escaped punishment after pleading guilty to grand larceny }in the court of General Sessions to-~day. |Judge Crain uiuiowed her to go under a | suspended sentence. | Mra, Spence lives at No. 10 West {One Hundred and Elghtieth street. She is a niece of Olive Redpath, the act! who in private life is Mrs, Olive Branoh Demlel, and ilves at No, 272 West Ninetieth street. On Jan. 2 last Mra. Demiel gave a j reception at ber apartment. Mrs. | Spence was one of the guests and was the last to leave. Mrs. Demiel jnissed ja diamond and pearl brooch valued at \ $450 after the departure of her niece hurried to Mrs. Spence's home. Spence, was not at home. She not come home for several days } i | an aid and was finally located in a furnished in West Fifteenth street, She 1 the brooch and her arrest From affidavits submitted to Spence had exceeded her allowance. § sed a valuable at and toki nd it was worth cons{déravly than she had obligated herself tu was in easy reach She w n alone in the room. & dresser. After she had become a thief she was afrala to Bo home and ved in terror until she wag found by the police, Rex- titution has been made and the Court assumed that she has been sufficiently punished. es in Se n aR, ROCHEST Y., May 14.—oMm als, Counetl members and lay dele tes from nearly every State of th ton are at the Powers ilotel to-day where the International ine So- ty opened tts four vention. The opent welcome addresses, a Mra, Cynthia Westover Ald and President-General of th and the consideration or reports of by respone nt Who Said Strawherry Shortcake? It you want to taste #éa? strawberry shortcake ou try tho genuine shortcake Nour Presio Self-Raising Flour ‘The cake, the everything baked with Pre cure te Deiat nent: iettonst Lg’ Salargee'y Relpla the Wiese ‘The S10 Compons, Buffel, N.Y, | ninth @treet, sold his lite for the econ- | om THUGSKILLMAN | WHO WALKED T0 ~ SAVECARFARE , THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1912 ae RICH BROKER HELD ON WIFE'S CHARGE OF MISTREATING CHILD Mrs. Medina Says Husband Victim’s Body Found on Track] Showed Bight-Year-Old Girl in First Avenue Near Ninety- _ Fifth Street. Herman ¥F. Timtmerman, forty-two Years oki, who lived with his wife and whree children at No. 814 Bast Mighty- of a five-cent plece to-day when he Aisregarded his wife's urgings that he ride to his place of employment at No, 45 East One Hundredth and Fourth street. He chose to walk instead and was beaten to death by thugs on First avonue, Dbeween Ninety-fifth and Ninety-sizth streets. The man’s body was found at 6 o'clock this morning lying parallel between the tracks as if he had been carefully placed there. There was a wound at his left temple where a blackjack or piece of lead pipe hed cracked the skull, and there was another small sharp wound on the bridge of the nose. A careful examination of the body failed to reveal any bruises or marke @uwh ag would havo been inflicted had ‘Timmerman been struck by @ trolley car or some other vehicle, When he left home at 6.90 he had only fifteen cents in his pockets and this money was atill intact when he was found, The slayers evidently didn't take time to explore hts clothing tor the change. A bartender who was opening the ealoon at No, 1881 Firet avenue was the first to see the body. There was no trolley car in sight at the time, The bartender and Maurice Goldberg, who has @ newsetand at First avenue and Ninty-fitth street, carried the body from where it lay and notified the po- ice of the East Wighty-aighth. street station. Then Dr. Hoffman was eum- moned from the Reception Hospital, and after examining the wounds declared it his opinion thet the dead man had been murdered by thugs. The body was removed to the Morgue. At the man’s home his wife said that her husband bad been employed for ten years by George A. Fink, a hardware merchant at No. #5 Bast One Hundred and Fourth street. He had been ili for fourteen weeks with an infected foot. Yesterday was the frat day he went out, and because of his foot he consented to ride to and from his work. To-day, how- ever, he insisted that his foot was well and told his wife that be would save the carfare and walk. The neighborhood where the murderous assault ocourred 19 @ hangout for gangsters and thugs. CHICAGO BRIDAL COUPLES DODGE A MEDICAL TEST. Questions at Cathedral Return to Be Married. CHIQAGO, May 16.—During the last five weeks all persone who went to the Eplacopat Cathedral of 98. Peter and Paul to be married have been handed & lst of questions compiled by Dean W. T. Gumner, with instructions to re turn with ail the questions answered and certified by a reputable physician. The marriage records show only two couples out of more than @ score have returned to be married. Two-thinis of the couples have smilingly declined to take the question Ist. Ae the meeting of the Titnois Home- opathtc Medical Association yesterday support was given to Dean Sumner’ plan, Dr. H, W. Pierson in an addrees ald: “The State becomes party to the greatest sin any man or woman can commit when it e@uthorizes the unton of a man and woman before they have submitted evidence of thelr fitnass to ansume the responsibilities of the mar- ried stat H Severed by Train, ROCHESTER, N. ¥., May 16.—~The head of an unidentified man was sev- ered to-day by the wheels of a freight car of the New York Central Ratl- road., and see: Hires Improper Photographs, Gonsalo Medina, thirty five years ol, & wealthy broker, who gave his address @a the Hotel Prince George, was ar- ratgned in the Court of General Sessions to-day before Judge O'Sullivan to plead to three indictments, charging him with the posseasion of indacent photographs, impairing teh morals of a female ohild under sixteen years of age and assault in the third degree. The indictments were found on May 2 Margaret Medina is the complainant In the case. She is the wife of the accused broker, The witnesses before the Grand Jury were Mrs. Metina, Sylvia, the etent-year-ol4 daughter o' Medina and the stepdaughter of Mrs. Medina; Mabel uNer and Joseph Fuller, servants in the Medina household tn the St. Urban Apartments, Etehty-ninth street and Central Park West. ‘The testimony taken by the Grand Jury shows that Mra, Medina disco’ ered her husband on April 27 showing indecent photographs to his eight-year- old daughter. By questioning the ohild Mra, Medina learned that her husband had not confided himsetf to exhibiting the pictures. Sho ordered him from the house and he went to the Prince George. After consulting with friends, Mrs. Medina visited the District-At- torney’s office and Inid the case before Assistant District-Attorney Perkins, who conducted a careful examination before eubmitting tt to the Grand Jury, Medina pleaded not guilty when ar ratgned before Judge O'Sullivan. As- sistant District - Attorney Deleranty asked that bail be fixed et $10,000. Charles Le Barbier, counsel for Me- dina, protested and the court made the bail bond $5,000, Medina could not furnish dail and was sent to the Tombs, acne eae DOCTORS’ DARING CURES AGED WOMAN’S LOCKJAW. London Cable Told of Injection Through Spine, and Staff Tried It. A week ago Mrs. Ray Spiro, © years old, of No, & East One Hundred and Eighteenth Street was admitted to the Har Moriah Hospital on Second street near Avenue A, suffering from tetanus. She had stepped on a rusty nall. When she was admitted the hospital staff, Dr, Samuel A. Blaumer, Dr. Leo Steigiits, Dr. Harry Steinmets and Supt. Abra- ham M. Spector, held out small hope for her recovery owing to her age 80 com- was nouvished means the staff decided to experiment, am a last resort, by injecting anti-tozin serum ipto her spine, as @ eable trem London hat a few days before an- Rounced a successful experiment, where the injection was made through the spine of the patient. So successful was the result of the daily injection of 10,000 of the toxin that the woman after ok'a treatment has now recovere4 normal faculties and ts ready to be discharged. ——__ FAMOUS BEAUTY BURIED. Mies Elis: h Latimer’s Fane: Held at Wilmington, N.C. ‘The funeral of Miss Dilzabeth Latimer of New York and Newport, famed for her beauty, was held yesterday from the family homestead at Wilmington, N. C, Many friends and relatives from this city and Philadelphia attended. Miss Lutitner died at Hot Springs, Va., last Sunday. She had been {i for more than a yeas, her illness haying atarted with pei when she was Mving with her mother, Mra, E. 8, Latte mer at tho Plaza, in 1911. ‘Tho mother and daughter went to Hot Springs last June, but health was desp of several months ago, when heart disease developed, In @ tour of Europe five years ago Miss Latimer's beaAty attracted atten- on in London, Pa:ts, Rome and Vienna, She was a close friend of Mra, Anthony J. Drexel Jr, and was a bridesmatd at the wedding of Miss Marte L. Logan to Count Henry de Sincay, 6he was summer drink, herbs, the sap of forest trees. tonic bracing property. But not a trace of drugs. ter of Mra, 13. Wynne Foulkes of Phila- Gelphia. a fountain—and Hires There's one sure way to feel just as if you were sitting in a draft from an iceberg. Here it is—try it Step into the nearest store where the fountain sizzles—and just say Hires. Needless to say rootbeer. It's so cooling. And besides, there’s a tonic value to Hires that makes it far better for you than any other Natural juices of flowers, roots and Albthese give it that only helps— never harms a glass and see. §c—sparkling, snappy—simply fine, Or in bottles, carbonated. her are Mins Latimer's FA eae co OHI HAN He ” = : ne Q SURRENDERED CAR BERTH |, DIDN'T BRING $98,000. APACHE CHIEF WOLF LEAVES MINNEHAHA WEEPING IN A CELL Maiden Lured by Red Ballyhoo of Movies Stole Her Papa’s Wampum. . » ih i i Chief Wolf Wanna, who called Mm- seit an Apache and proved the nobility uf lhl. Geseont by beating @ tom-tom as) & bally-hoo for moving ploture shows along First and Second avenues, has turned his proud face towards the set- ting sun, And Chief Hughes of the Centre street Bluecoats, with many @ fiatfoot brave, le on his trail. Meanwhile Muzietta Dencciara, a fair maiden of an atfen race, sat in @ cell of Harlem Court to-day, with her hands tled to her sides #0 that she could not tear her raven tresses out in her despatr and rage. She raged not only becaur the Chief Wolf Wanna |x outspeeding the wind over the Erie tles toward the prairies, where the tall grass grows, She raged that a crue! and unromantic police have taken from her the beautl- fully colored elght by ten photograph at her hero, ‘They found it tacked to} the wall over the washstand In her boarding house. Muztotta is in Jat! because, when she Celebrated her eighteenth birthday by running away from the home of her father, Philip Dencciara, at No, 24 Bast One Hundred and Fourth street, she took $5, all the money her father, « Poor tailor, had saved in two years. The police, by the direction of Inspector Hughes, have been looking for her ever | since, i ; &% “Those stories make whet I you newspaper men call ‘heart stories,’ anid they aren’ Mr. true, I who wae well able to |tion. I never met | train. Sho and her husband wi | friends of my father ana 1 was a child, “There was no other reason should name me as her heir. stop-xrandson, John Porter Marsh of | Chicago, she left a valuable diamond ring, while to her step-greateramison, John MoWiliiam Marsh, she bequeathed | $5,000," The papere filed in New Heven snow the value of the estate wae $117,308, ; i At 2 2 “Just Say” HORLICK’S Wt Means : Original MALTED ‘The other day Detective Ditech of the| The Feed-drink for All Wast One Hundred and Fourth street) go 1 Neagggne | 3 station learned that wherever Chiet| More healthful then Teas or “4 Wanna was to be found beating the| with the: weakest . tom-tom there was Musletta of the; flashing eyes, smiling upon him # fully, But the foot was quicker than | the eye. By the time Musletta had ceased kicking, biting and scratching, Chtet Wolf Wanna had gore—sought the Westward trail. | Some day, when he hears that Magie- trate McQuade in Harlem Court hae committed Muzietta to the House of the Good Shepherd for three years, Chief ‘Wott Wanna may come back and scale the wall and rescue his adorer—not! FATHER PROSECUTES GIRL ON GRAND LARCENY CHARGE. Morris Cohn Has Stella Arrested When She Flees Home, Taking Clothing With Her. G otck nek prnoered ire stam wo substitute, Ask for HORLICK’S., To-morrow Night—Friday After the Play “CARNAVAL de NICE” SUPPER AND DANCE BUST ANOBY’S and days ago ahe left her home at No. 372 South First etreet. After she had gone the father says he missed two eutts of. clothes amd ten Panama hats from his hat factory at No, where she had ‘Cohn eaid he had searched the streets for his miaging Gaughter in vain until last night. When he told her that un- less she came home he woula arrest r, the girl darted aw: father pursued Stella and finally 4 policeman arrest her. lay, Stella asked for an ment until Saturday, did not have a O'Connor set the date for @ hearing on Saturday and held her under $1,000 honda. The girl, unable to find @ donds- man, had to de locked up. poctindlas. tk Ty EIGHT NEW M. E. BISHOPS. Gen Conference Orders Thi Ralloting Begin To-Morrow. MINNBAPOLIS, Minn, May 4.~The iscopacy committee of the Methodist Ascopal Church to-day recommended the election of elght new bishops of the church, ‘Nhe report wan adopted by the con- ference practically without discussion and voting on the bishops probably ‘Will be begun to-mgrrow, ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY AND PATENT GROATS | ie lntante,, mothers and la: 200 authorities for ualtty. "For iutante, Robinson's Pate ‘with fresh cow's milk Is ute fo! her's milk, erinvaluable mt Bar- the. Easily both done in typbold Drink

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