The evening world. Newspaper, May 23, 1912, Page 3

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Living to Be a Hundred Is Only a Matter of One's Mental Resolve. Live your life calmly, conserving ‘HARPOONS FOR OSLER. century mark. Woman Eighty Years Young Is Among Medico-Legalists ‘Who Hurl Them. Exercise in moderation for the vital organs in healthy condition. After alt it tc a simple matter to at- tain @ ripe and placid old age. All you have to do ts make up your mind that You are going to live to be ninety or hupdred and teke things easy. Don't try to crowd all your efforts into the iret forty or titty years of your exist- @mce; be temperate in eating and drink- ing, avol @ meat diet, and be calm. ‘The trouble with us, according to Gpeakers at the meeting of the Medico- Legal Society at the Waldorf last night, 19 that we have grown to accept fifty or eixty years of iife as the average Umit of existence on this mundane ephere. As & matter of auto-suggestion this point of view inevitably brings on G@issctution at the end of fifty or sixty years. On the other hand, if one decides to live to be ninety or one hundred years old and thinks resolutely of that lit Imit and lives in a way to conserve th mind and body, the end wished for Is largely a matter of course, The theory of Dr. Osler that a man fhas reached the age limit of usefulness at sixty-three and is not worth much efter he has passed forty was refuted by all the speakers at the meeting, malo and female—more vigorously by the females. These spoakers are persons of experience and their conclusions are based on observation, experiment and piltosophy. ‘The mecting was presided over by Seoretary Clark Bell in the absence of President T. D. Crothers. The presid- ing officer was rosy of cheek and white of hair and looked to have passed the Osler period by not less than a score of years. When sémebody said that old age shouldn't overtake a man before he was ninety Secretary Bell looked up in pained surprise and ask “Why at ninety?” YOUNG LADY OF EIGHTY HAND. BO IT TO OSLER. Tt was Miss Bessie Fowler, a young lady of eighty, who administered the Medicine to Osler. Miss Fowler ad- mitted that she was eighty. None of the ladies present had the shrinking wensibilities of the girls who never ac-| knowledge twenty until they are thirty. They were all women of ini nce, of! foree and energy. They were proud t say how old they were; they were) He Is Though EE RE is iS i Proudef still of their activities at their ‘What is old age, Anyhow? they bly longevity q well’ as senescenc They describe a symptom complex of senility which may be norma period o iife and which may ture if occurring at an ea Wuen old ago should normally make 1 .pyearance does not acem to hav definitely a @ phenoinenon of adaptation which has I, “when he said that ‘a man more than re- | forty years is useless, a man past aixty: should be chloroformed.’ It is not true that the brain at the age of forty slowly but steadily declines at the rate of an ounce in tan yea: The theory that the brain stops growing at the age of | Might that Mott would. be forol woved. ung Mott and the ‘Wore living together in a house on Am- gterdam avenue when he learned of his Mather’s plans to get him ai from yr, and the Might of himself and the vgctreas was hastened. twenty-five has been disproved. if a in = eourae! ct. te — consequence of tho MOTT 'HA® HAD CHECKERED | TM Were choloformed at sixty the | Decies, ‘This ts the opinion of Daster, world would have been a great loser in experience and,good work, “Cornelius Vanderbilt was reventy when he solzed the opportunity of open- ing transit to California by way of Panama. Betw the age of enty and eighty-three he increased the mile- age of his road from 120 to 10,000 miles. Gladstone was a mighty power at tho age of eighty, and did some of his best Mterary work after passing his eighticth birthday. Pope Leo XIII. did some ot his best work after, he was mty. Susan B. Anthony {is an octogenarian and still iv Mra, Ellzabeth Cady Stanton was over eighty-five when she ied and did the best of her public work after sixty, Mrs. Gilbert, the clever ac- tress, was atill in harness when died, more than elghty years of age. NEARLY ANYONE WHO'S DONE MARITAL CAREER, (Whe younger Mott's episode is only Opa in many wat has marked his career (SP Rirty years. Although born to mill- foms.end social position, he early con- ~ esived @ hatred for conventionalities, After running away from Lawrence Scientific Schoo! at Harvard at nineteen wy oped with Miss Caroline Pitkin, of @ Thayer Academy Drofes- | led to conclude that the expe! ments of Maupls on the senescence of the infusorla show that death must have appeared at the same time ai ual reproduction. show the wasting process mo: brain and {ts appendag tive system and mucous age have ide by side with senile elements. the disorganization of the not’ gone too far they mi Success In this respect en Russian phystologi Kuliavie, to keep a man's heart ing eighteen hours after the official verification of his death. Old a self, as @ period of life, ts cle more to be treated as a state than life at any othe. stage. is the opinion of Quain, and he furth states: years ago the wife was forced flee from him. Since then she been “under the protection of her in-law. Unable to restrain his son in any way, the father put him under the care of Fuller, who was to take him on a trip. eround the world and receive a handsome sum if he kept his charge .from drink for one year. Preparatory “to atarting on their trip Fuller took Py Mott to the Mott estate in North| ANYTHING HAS BEEN PAST 60. | For the atttinment of loneuuls Carolina. (Fhis was two weeks ago.) “Bismarck was Sift: when ‘he con] iOien as vet without aie palatine A Gay or % later the actress appeared | solidated the German Empire and Lived) i ine most Mat hang Gavisw!| And the “elopement” followed, to pass the eighty mark, Tulare WAS lheert equaiiy euceenstil oF fullle,” ar ee verre elected President of France, after the) Dy wWiniam Benham Snow made an | > WHLBUR WRIGHT SINKING; — | Hranco-Prusslan, er Mivantleld vee fumoansctous stab at the Beef Trust, but . & 28" | perhaps, t aware of It, He suid MAY DIE BEFORE NIGHT, | came Premier of Groat Britain at sixty | that nis¥miasion in life was to save life, | four and at seventy-four took the lead of the Berlin Cong: Grant wag over 5 Pate forty when he became tho greatest K¢2-|iation of physical character to old axe, eral the country ever produced. Robdert/and said that if the body were kept in E, Lee was fifty-five when he took com-| good condition old age would be kept mand of the Army of Virginia. Ad-lfay away, nergy was the au Hy miral Farragut wos sixty-three at Mo-|needed to keep a man in the by bile Bay. Gen, W. ‘T, Sherman was|eondition. Exercise of the proper kind | when fame came to him as/was the rejuvenating spark, and diet and thought that a preventive ter than a cure. He spoke on t be Chance in a Thousand for meett’ His Recovery, Says Brother of the Aviator. DAYTON, 0., May 23.—The death of SWupur Wright, noted American avia- tor and builder of aeroplanes, is moman- and Von Moltke was seventy|went with exercise, People eat too became head of the German|much meat, he said. If a man only realized the harm that an excess of the Republican leaders of the Senate have passed the sixty mark. judges of the Supreme Court more than sixty, the best | ticlng lawyers ary ident Eliot of meat dit to him after a certain age, he would bar meat from his menu, Dr. Elinor Gridley of Chicago and Dr, Cecile L. Griel of New York both made addresses, The latter eseribed herself a8 @ woman's woman, She believed that it was a woman's province to marry and to raise a family, She has three children, the oldest a man of twenty-two, She wae married when sixteen and gave twenty years of her life to raising her family and prepar- ing herself for her mission in life. This she’ thought every woman should do. She studied medicine when her children were all launched in the world. Sho said she was forty and expected to live forty or fifty years more. sWright has been in a #1 for two days, unable to recognise of bis Cietaabi ll Ww made President and Abraham Lincoln fifty-two, Milton wrote ‘Paradise Lost when fifty-eight. Victor Hugo wai sixty when he wrote ‘Les Miserables, and sixty-four when he gave to the rki “The Tollers of the Sea." ‘I am more than eighty years myself and I don't think I'm old. I don't feel that I am anyhow and J am a very busy woman. I believe that after we have pameed the meridian we are all better able to accomplish the work of lif Columbus discovered America when he was fifty-six. Gen, Booth ts elghty> three and 1s stit! active in | j MITOMOBILE Ki KILLS GIRL. 18, Strack by Ma- Street. e Crome i (Special to The Exeuing World.) @PAMFORL. Conn, May 23.—KRun over y an automovile driven by a weaithy jelphian who wth his wife, | | 2, Belgium, mobile In which George A. Aanghter and son, were en route to thelr! argument for his sensational expresso We see him disproved by the people wi er reilenge in Rhode 1 | re Tork, (he thirteen-year-old ter of Stephen ‘Tork of Darien, Ged @eriy to-day, seven hours after the| meet every day in every walk of Ii! ce aa ‘going to eleep, papa,’’ she said to| OR. MILLS ALSO THROWS A FEW father, who sut by her bedside. | HARPOONS, eh sod her eyes and passed| Dr. Charles F. Mills of the Newark Sanitarium Hospital didn't mention Oe} “Do you think the Ton mes. of, the “hve ascertained later that the own-| ler, but he shook the creases out of bis| next generation will be able to eay thoy eof the car is John H. Clayton ir.| doctrine and his paper will bring Joy | started in life as barefoot boys?" ner residence Is at No. 20 Ar-| to the youngsters of seventy and eighty.| “No. But some of the wealthiest | » Edgewood, R. I. His son| He ng in part: neers will be telling us they started omy. w "Ol age—these words ordinarily ime oui.” xe hurt, broken. but bia wife’ “Nobody Is Old if He Just "Keeps On “Thinking Young” to Sontey Mark BY HARLEM SLEUTHS and. Defy Reokontng of of Time Make up your mind to live to be ninety or one hundred. Determine that you will not wear out your mind and body by undue exertion before you reach forty or fifty. Plan to do your most effective work after you have passed the half- Be temperate in eating and drinking ana drop meat from your menu. Millionaire and Actress With Whom *|GALLOWS ROPE BREAKS, {to walk to “THOME RNC WATH TWO ARRESTS Boys and Girls Had Been Sup- Plied Mysteriously and Raid Follows Complaint. your energies, Compiainta have been coming in from purpose of keeping the body and || Police Headquarters in Harlem from young men and women, mere boys and @irls, im fact, were being supplied with cocaine from some unknown source, afd detectives from the Past Eighty-sighth Bast’ One Hundred and Fourth Hundred i i i t to Have Eloped il f i § i ij . i i i 4 £ i if! ri eae t ; i cage which he declared; the men were jwitnesses. An argument ensued, dur- ing which Ditech and Unger had made their entrance, They now came for- ward aml opened the door to admit Kahn. When questioned as*to having any of the drug in thelr possession, both men made vigorous denial, Tho officers proceeded to make a search. One found and seven amailer dottles con ‘ining tn all ten more ounces. In the stove ‘were found one hundred and fittv tiny bottles, each capable of contain- jing about a tablespoon of the drug. | All the bottle taken evidencs | Police Stattor |men wore arral | Frescht and held Tate th five, and his addre#e at the flat. twenty-five years of age, gave enty-second street, In the kite! found @ wireless machine and said that he was familiar with Its use, bead ire dlibl THRILLING RUNAWAY ENDS His Seat and Wheel Frac- tures Ankle, ‘The busiest corner in the Bronx the scene of a thrilling runaway | ” th attached to a fire hose cart sitagqe fares while the driver, John Rahle) was thrown from ,his over by one of the wheels of the t An alarm had been sounded from Wes chester and Robbins avenues. y No, 41, which is One Hundred and Viftieth # out on the jump followed by cart. There is an incline leading from fire apparatus struck this it was go: ing at a rapid rate. ed place where Westchester avenue, Melrose avenue, Bergen avens One Hundred and Fifttieth s! into one another.- A Westche: nue car came through just as the en gine ped by. and the d imminent DASHING CONDEMNED MAN TO YARD OF PRISON. | Spectators Aimost Faint as Limp] way. Raniey pulled heavily on his Knew = $ j rai J his horses were almost thrown fram Form Is Lifted and Again thelr fect. ‘Then Rabley pulled them = Swung From Gibbet. back again tn the mix-up lort con- LANCASTE May As he n vf Innocence horace dashed Into Bergen ave- dak Rahley pulled at them Pa, when the t he body of swerved to the sidewalk, Ss Antonto to de for patting them off the sidewrl< he murder uf a companton, Tony ser-|the Jerk buried tim from iin seat te afine, some months azo. was shot |the street. Bare Wes SE Ae HA passed over the driver's right ankle, fracturing tt. —-— PRAY AS BUILDING BURNS. downward from the gallows here to- A day, It reached the botiom of the drop rope broke Just above the knot and the body eravhed on down to the prison court yard. Several of the spe tors almost fainted, The sheriff and his deputies hurried down and picked up the form of the! ihe services in the synagogue {n the purderer, ren¢ unconscious by the| rear yard of the premises at No, 12 fall, Another knot was tied in’ the|ftiage atreet continued to-day for an rope and it was readjusted and the| pour, while firemen worked on a blaze crap again sprung. This time the hemp] on the firat fluor of the tenement in held and tho condemned man dled slowly of strangulation Up to the time that he was ordered the gallows Romezso re- fused to credit the u.'.* shat he must when the first alarm was given, die, Ho laughed and joked . {to remain, He held thelr attention until juard: 1 insisted “re wor aut, Prison guards and insisted that the ieee oS aes TKS isa earn Ure plan of trial and huge Joke designed to him confess to @ crime about which he knew nothing, Not until he stood squarely on the scaffold and the rope was being ud- justed over the lack cap did he r the rear of the 4.7 “*raham Ve standig, The tenement is five stori stairways before the fire had spread. Poschdadina Aenieliaena While He W: (rom the Boston Transcript.) lue that he was to dio. Andlas his last despairfhe protestation of {nnosence|I hope to see your sister pretty soon? rang out the trap was sprung. The| Kad Brother—You'll seo her pretty, all motive of the crime was robbery. right, She's fixin’ up to beat the band, A. FRANKFIELD & CO., Jewellers 38 West 34th Street In Liquidation ‘We have leased our store to the Mirror and will sell the balance of OUR STOCK THE NEXT FEW MONTHS AT A GREAT SACRIFICE Consisting of Fine Diamond Jewelry, mounted in platinum and gold; American and Imported Watches, Solid Gold Jewelry, Solid Silver Tea and Tableware; also French and Travelling Clocks; Swiss Cuckoo Clocks, The quality of our goods is well known and we guarantee A SAVING OF FROM 25% TO 40% ON REGULAR PRICES, Bighty-sixth street up to the river that | ight ounce vial of cocaine was ind the cocaine were nd the men excorted to the One Hundred and Fourth Street afternoon the Paap Calanan gave as his occupation as that of electric engineer, his age thirty- Doyle, cupation as that of a plumber, living at No, 1272 Kast One Hundred and Sev- in response to inquiries by the police, IN INJURY TO FIREMAN Driver of Hose Cart Thrown From afternoon in which a team of horses wildly through the erowded! thorough- the hove Mejrose to Third avenue and when tho ‘The engine awung through the orowd- Behind was the fire truck saw that a collision was ¢ ald not swing out of the sone Un- front, The congregution wanted to leave but | the rabbi, knowing they would have to | pass through the hallway of the tene- ment to reach the street, exhorted titem high and the tenants all e#caped by the Mr Spooner (to her kid brothe)— My hoor tae - at 6.0 and M., being mout Have an Attack of Appendicitis, Comptroties Wittan A. Fremdergeet te seriously tI! at hip home, No, 500 Firth street, Brooklyn. ‘His physicians re ported to-day that he will not be, able to leave his home for at least a week, and it be tong gume hie duties, The Comptroiier is) sald to be suffering from indigestion, although It wan etated at the meeting’ of the Board of Estimate today thet pga may result in appendiottis. ‘The record wae marked by tend Phen trregularity, Estimate last night when the Comp. troller was near collapse during the discussion of the subway report. fe harrieg from the meeting ts his home and summoned.e physician who nd him uffering a: an timate to-day was ee- cupled by Deputy Comptrolier Douglad Mathewson. The Comptrotier'’s Mineas comes at & critleal moment in his political career, |] A new gon During Col. Roosevelt's invasion of ith & olate ae New Jersey in the interests of his can- or Raspberry Richey, bc. didacy Mr. Prendergast was looked to 1129 Broadway ==: ‘26th Ot. 124 Lenox Ave. es be of greet aid to the Colonel's stump- ing campaign. It will be necessary for Beth Stores Open Bvenings Uniti 12. the Comptrotier: to forego the Je potl-binding trip, and tn the event t his tlness does not respond to treat ment his friends fear he may be wi able to place Col. Roosevelt's name in nomination at the Chicago convention. —<»—_—_—_ TAFT IN PHILADELPHIA FOR MASONIC CBREMONY PHILADELPHIA, May %.—President Taft, who arrived here this forenoon, will spend the entire day in Philadel- phia, leaving at 690 P. M. for Camden, across the Delaware River from this city, to open his New Jersey campaign for delegates to the Republican Nation- al Convention. The President's programme for the day called for an address of welcome to the delegates from thirtf nations to the twelfth International Congress of Navigation, After leaving the Metro- politan Opera House, where the con. gress is holding its opening session, the President will be driven to a prominent FUR STORAGE, REPAIRING, REMODELLING DRY-COLD-AIR VAULT ON PREMISES Insured against Theft, Fire, Moths. | Moderate Charges. SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY Sale of Women’s Wajsts AT EXTRAORDINARY LOW PRICES hotel where he will be entertained at luncheon by William L. Gorgas, Grand Lingerie Waists Master of the Masonic order in Penn- Made of fine voile and batiste in a variety syivanta, Moat of the aftemoon will be of lace trimmed and embroidered pent by the President in the Masonic mple to witness a speciil Manonic cerenfony, and after taking dinngr at @ : hotel he will leave for New Je: Habutai Silk Shirts President Taft, on behalf of Made of habutal ellk with turn down tion, welcomed collar and Freneh fold link cuffs. wates from Value 5.00 twelfth Internati gation, which beg will continue about a week. dent talked to the delegates of wi way projects and problem» in thie country, and also spoke about the Pan, ama Canal know you will believe me when 1 the Preatdent declared, “that the anal acrowm the western contin- ent Is an evidence of the desire of the United States to do Komething for the welfare of the people of the world.” He said that tile one great work would be @ monument to this nation's ‘owth, The President was cordially received by the delegates and others invited to Hand Embroidered Waists Madé of cotton voile and French batiets trim. med with real leces, High or low neck. Imported and Domestic ai Made of fine sheer fabr! ——« beautifully embre- - agen oF fe narrowest pai mew wv ISS peadea forrecsrre Thiele paterson sy laces and hand 0 Value 13,50 Pierrot Frill Waists ) Made of voile with vari-colored embroidered dots. jPierrot ‘frill and cuffs of shadow cat “ 7.90 ‘Fifth Avenue at 38th Street _ In Our _ Store” Cav Be Bought On Club Plan Music Lessons for one ye’ Private instruction, Beautiful New $250 Plane FULL mize, Hl Andrew Alexander Women’s Walking Pumps Correct and comfortable last, fi at the ankle, with am forthe toes, In Gun Metal, Tan Russia and Patent Leather. 92, 93, $4 and 08 1b) Bisek or White Buckskin, ¢3.8@ and 95. Sisth Avenue Store Onky, Fifth Avenue above Forty-fifth St. Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street NOTE—Player pianos also the Club Plan at special prices and terms. be you s eanne all write. or tele- one we will send representative Sith full particulars. Sie on: hag tenet 13 and 14 W. 82ast, heen Reese ier Haleey Sty” | H™ often do you see this man or that forging to the front while his neighbar lags behind? To tind business suc cess one must SEEK it, and there is no better place to look for tt than through the great variety of opportunities advertised from day to day in the Morning or Sunday World. STRIKE OUT, GUIDED BY WORLD ADS, NEXT SUNDAY, AND PROSPER ? ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY AND PATENT GROATS ber mhe' be bovatide. World “Real Estate” and “Business Oppor- tunity” Ads. were printed last week-— 722 MORE Than the Herald fa wee holt sen pee tial seaally ais sustains rengthens, Grocers and dsrugaiats,

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