The evening world. Newspaper, June 11, 1912, Page 3

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TOM PIERCE, “ONCE SOCIAL PET IN POLICE COURT Accused of Creating Distuib- ance in Maxim's and Kick- ing Out Taxi Window. IS LET GO ON PROMISE. Led Cotillons and Rode to Hounds as Millionaire’s Wife t —Divorce Followed. Katherine Pierce, known in other a: @e Mrs. “Tom” Pierce, the dashing ¥ ©f @ Boston millionaire, intrepid ho: woman, leader in the smarter element of | Boston society and daring originator! of “stunts” for the enjoyment of the gay set at Newport and New York, appeared in the Yorkville Court to-day to answer to a charge of disorderly conduct. She had created a disturbance in Maxim's last night, so the manager of that re aort declared; Kicked through the Window of a taxicab, it was also as- serted, and hed used language more Ploturesquc than elegant. ‘ When the former society leader and rider to hounds appeared before the Dar of Magistrate Corrigan’s court her White sallor hat was battered in tne crown and vet askew on her head, her Mrs. Kathleen Norris De- clares She Would Un- dertake to Live on $50a Month in New York and Save Money, and Tells How It Can Be Done. Marriage as a romance, marriagt reformer have m of experience or of our time too More arid more girl he loves to whnt in th thing. It has been said that our younge! and not enough marrying. is, thousands of young men and women obsessing problem is wrong, for the how little is enough to marry on? I know made eater no woman who has a and mother ress ax a wife rather mannith check suit was splotcacd with dirt and there was In her eves a tired, troubled low! She listened quietly to the story of Walter Caries), the manager of Maxim's, and when the Magistrate asked her if she had deen Guilty of the conduct ascribed to her whe bowed her head and nodded faint assent. Mrs. Plerce had come to the cafe late fast night, the complaining witness de- clared, in the company of a man and @ Won and s! mediately begun te create disorder, When protests were Made she swore roundly at the head Waiter and the manager himself, he @aid, threatened to kick things o te chaos if she mally, after much persuasion, fuduced to get into a taxi, but the {nstant the door was closed Mrs, F had revoiled, so Mrs. Carroll wt ad Kicked through the window, yelling to be let out. Carroll called a police. Man at ihat jumeiure and had her ar rested, Mra. Plorce was accompanied vy two women When she appeared jy court, and during the recital of the complaint @gainst her sie drew from her reticule @ large roll of bills and began to connt them, evidently anticipating «tine. When Carroll + he wanted Mrs, 1 the Magistrate that ree put under bonds not to come to his place again Corrigan | Yeoked sharply a the thin and dark circled eyes of the prisoner and wail: PROMISES NOT TO GO TO RES. TAURANT AGAIN, “You hear what this man says. I put you and alone, or will yo 40 go there age hall ke 4 promise not JT promine,” Mes. Plerog said, and she Was discharged. Writers of & certuin variety of su- called “strong” fiction would not have to go further than Mis. Plerce to tind material fo one of their studies checkered | She was Miss Kat! Ywe Rogers of Salem, Mass. when in 206 she married “fom” Plerce, in- ted $7,000,000 from his father, a Bos- tem railroad promoter. On echild, « boy, was born to the couple shortly af- er thelr marriage The wite « * Pierce immediately tyund her place tn the way set at port, She was inown as an intrepid Wider, entered some of lyr hunters in 4he Newport and New York horse shows, won the reputation of being “daring” when she rode to the hounds fm trousers and bootsh, and quickly be- can the leader of a certain element of the younger set in Boston and New- port soctety. She once evoked the ap- Dlause of the gayer wet by remounting Her horse and riding a hurdle rage to a Anish after her mount had fallen and broken her log. Mrs. Pierce began suit for divorce inst her husvand in 107, The suit Was unopposed. ‘The wife won large allmony but lost the custody of her aon, After her divorce Mrs. Pierce dropp out of the gayer sot in soclety and he- @ap to find new friends among the theatrical folk, Mrs, Lesiile Carter and Adele Ritchte were friendly to her. @ROTHER FINALLY PUT HER IN A SANITARIUM, After a Texas rancher had browgit @uit against her for damages incidental ‘te the robbing of a house she had leased from him in Texas and suddenly aban- dined to the mercies of thiever, Mra, Pierce's brother put her in a sanitarium (im Connecticut. Mre, Pierce and her | tefends among the actresses complained at she had been Kidnapped and thrust the sanitarlum agains: her will, finally Mrs, Pleroe succeeded through court action in being released. Ince that time her action: ve been and more erratic. The woman who | ye ied cotfliions in the millionaires’ » what it was to see the white co im the psychopathic ward at Bellevue and heer the ravings of the drin qrqsed patients strapped to thelr code, @he who had knewn the intoxication of ership among the Newport villas then once fi :nd herself in th of the police. Jist two years ag manth she was arrested after she this had tried to thrash a policeman who tried | to curb her in one of her trensles of destruction. Be refused her address when she was arrested Jast night but recently she had home in Pelham and drove a big ya@low automobile at breakneck speed over Westchester roads. sudden | nadian yachts. wamen by Chicago women skippers was received last night by the officials of the August Water Carnival, to be hoki hare. The message came from the Roya! Canadian Yacht Club. The Cana- @lan women announced that they were willing to meet the American girls in ‘eny size of craft and also stated a pref. qretice thet ie entire orn be women, fale bonds to leave his place! than Mrs, Kathleen Norris, whose name will be recognized as the author of “Mother, one of the most charming and successful books issued tn rm at years, And Mra, Norris told me yes terday that in opinion no income! can be small enough to discourage the right gir! from undertaking the great adventure with the right man “If a girl is convinced that the young fellow che loves is hard- working and industrious she shonld marry him, no matter how @mall his income may be. I would say that to my own daughter if I had one. And I would under- take to live on #60 a month is Mew York, and save money!” | | lost to domestic !lfe Mrs, Norris t | back the leaves of het account-book | and showed me ow she managed on $25 & week and saved money WILLING TO SACRIFICE INCOME BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. with these aspe:ts of life's great adventure, novelist and cynic and social Incidentally young men and women who from lack couraged at thefr failure to hear from consider marriage as a success, We are marrying later and with«dess optimism. more the girl refuses to take the hazard of marriage on a small income and wastes her youth in waiting for “How much is enough to marry on?” {ts the question which is puzzling And, of course, the only valuable answer must come from those who| have married upon small incomes and made good in matrimony, as in life. | She Says the Secret of Economy Is in Doing Your Own Marketing, and She Pities Those Who Fear Marriage on} a Small Income. e as a failure, marriage as a trade— ade us all tiresomely familiar. philosophy take the cynical attitud seriously, grow more and more dis: those who the young man hesitates to ask the! share his modest salary. More and he cold-blooded vernacular, @ sure | r generation docs too much reasoning} to-day. Yet even the wording of this! 1 question should be not how much but NA whieh careful out the budget of her struggling days:| Rent, $30 a month, a week $7.50 Table . + 7.00 Laundry 1.00 a. 2.50 918.00 “That lett us $7 recreation and incidental expenses,” says Mra, Norris, “Our gas bill ave 50 a month. | | tay ‘There never was a W t we didn’t) pied on $1 a friends from California j the excellence of the f my little home dinners. DO YOUR OWN MARKETING AND SAVE MONEY. “L think the secret of economy als of | od served ac! on | for two days at once. The pot roast | is the first aid to the young house- | per, served bry! and in stew: 1 always boiled potat ® roast the frat gave us $110 at the I would see $10 or $20 hande: ® waiter for a dinner or supper at which we had been guests. I would always think, ‘Why, I could run my son the price 1 know f have writing lotion, and Mr. methodically sending it out and sendin’ it out again. Me Kept a | Ust of all the magasines published | _ A Girl Should Wed Man She Loves, ADOLPHUS BUSCH GETS BRAVE LITTLE WILLIE No Matter How Small His Income MRS. K. NORRIS _ le by my housekeoping hi end of the wally and We divided ly for new clothes: ple who had ten times our income, I tell you my heart ached when Norris still speaks meals wi of the |; GOT THROUGH WITH THEIR BIG BLUFFS. ‘Nobody dreamed of the tremendous | blu we were making, but I've talked | our experiences over with m couples since, and they alt me thing—that a hardship shared The iwes—the author of | the table is in doing your own mar- that the struggle “Mother,” 1s the wife of Charles q,| keting. If you order by tel vor of the whole thing. | Norris, associate editor of The Chris.|@-vound chicken your butcher is sure any husband and wife who miss | tlan Herald—-are now living in Port|t® send you one weighing 7 or § and woman Washington, 1. 1, where they have| Pounds. With such an excess deliberately forego it by fearing mar-| bought a charming home, but a few] Chased day after day It ix no w riage on a small income. years ago they began housekeeping in| that housewives weil about the high) As I said in the beginning, 1 would | York an income of $25 a| Cost of Hving, | Undertake to run « home in New York ind e bencft of the youny “T have always made it a rule to {3 hair the money I had—on $3 and women who hesitate and are| Market for two days and to cook and t Id save money, — “THE EVENING WORLD, _TUESDAY, | JUNE lil, year, | A out} Up to that! le of course, [ had had my trous- apprecta- ad then, and never spent a happier y YOUN) mon 50 a) © en — tee "1912. | YOUNGER EVERY YEAR; 'CNOW ISN'T THIS SILLY?) | HE'S GAY YOUNG FLIRT KISSED ROBBERS AWAY ; Millionaire Says He Never Can) His Belated Good-Night Put Be Too Old to Have Ey | Yeggman to Flight in Orig- | for Beauty. inal Way. | The North German Lioyd steamer June i The ftaet | Krompringessin Cecilie ewiied vonday that 3 Sclwinoker Mag rea} ic th her firat and second cabling Jammed. it € at the sar n gate brie vi bide fel tab Buech, th it. Loula brewer, safe blowers Inst night and his wife. Ae Wille blushingly admitted today | ‘The deck was thronged and s0 WASP he had reluctantly torn himself away the ship. The was a ee in the] after reiterating “Good night, dear,’ for lwuite of the Busches and the crowd] the one hundred and. elghty-seventh {there became so great that the brewer} time, He might have run it up to one [had to move to the promenade deck. | hundred 1 ty-seven if a erutt |The last to say good‘by to Mr, stilt atr with was his daughter, Mrs a command to the girl to" send that and her son. - home." Willie couldn’ jstaod on the di make out if the Glanks were compl j Well and agme | mentary or otherwise, Anyhow, he beat rae fehopg tis Mh oh it and was reeling off a stift heel | as my grandson ‘here, with @ sinile, -"E| toe clip when he walked Into th muzle of # revolver. This was on am getting younger every koing for a three months’ tam hoot on my wtate near Wiesbaden. ‘There's no use| fust abaft the He ostofticn, If |xetting olf so long as you can stay} Witte had taken a atep funther, he ng, and 1 expect to stay young for] opines, he might have swallowed that a ek yorgman's gin. was. he stopped Now, father,” said Mrs, Reisinger, 1 Just fof nushe a laslldieenneenenanel took at thel charge by Deputy Commtstioner James revolver bar-|K. Dillon, who showed him through the 4 Into @ clump! putiding as far as the Detective Bureat, There Inspector Hughes explained the fn time, took o1 ominous hittle hole in el and back-somersau! The yewgmnan didn't pursue Witte, “4 ut Willie mcampered just the name, |*OFKings of the detective bureau, with never stopping tll! he came to the home|!t# indexed systems for identifying of George Robt, the Bellmore pluma Rohr was sitting up making out bills and as he had a couple of revolvers handy he volunteered to escort Wille back to the postoffice and save the safe. On the Way back they picked up Norris Weeks, who provided himaelf with a duek gun With intinite caution they invested the postoffice and dared the sate blowers to come out and be shot, However, the safe biowers fled, after havini achieved a peek-a-boo effect in the sate door, but failing to open ke and get xo much as a postage stamp. W Cohwineker hopes Andrew Carnegie will hear about thie, criminals by portraits, finger prints and | Bertillion measurements. An oppor- tunity was offered to Mr. Astor to have his finger prints taken, but he did not avail himself of it. VINCENT # ASTOR VISITS POLICE HEADQUARTERS. His Late Father, He Shows Interest in the Department's Workings. Vincent Astor and James B. Regan, who manages the Knickerbocker Hotet, owned by the Astor catate, visited Com. missioner Waldo at Police Headquarters this morning, Col, John Jacob Astor used to take a lively interest in police affairs and was one of the committes which selected the names of the men | distinguished for heroism to be placed on the MW of honor in the ball ' Yount Mr. Astor had a talk with Commiasioner Waldo about the oppor. | tunities offered to young men of wealth | life, and then was t PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS te els Tea evant tonal quickly of @ nuinber of pianos which have, bees taken xchat for Werer Players or Ave been out on rent. iv Tend ake among the number, ther co in this SUMMER BARGAIN SALE From $75 Up Me Weeer Uprights. jew Discontinued Bt TERMS LOW AS 85.00, eat our special VRB rmgae Oevbnend’ tor ow Catalogue B, WESER BROS. wrae es: Minfacee’ RiMoeneabine Like 1 We Open ereaines don't you do any flirting 1 this trip. Of course, 1 don't expect you to ov < any pretty girls, but have « eu “Ha, hat laughed the old brewer, “The last Lime We went over she caught |) at it. IT hope fom nev grow oo olf to @isregard a pretty girl, but one's children are sometimes embar- rasding on shipboard,” human be- kets his pro- ker for having a cents ine out once, I think we have sampled ail tha 50 und 6b cont talle whetes in| time than that frat year In Now York ~ town. Our table was always well sup-{ When 1 Was my own maid and had to ta ndar 1 scheme and plan to get along. ee lly noth: Beechers & month and paid $6 a had. { OFr mo belleve the opportunities come to those who tako the hazard of matri- Of course, if you réason about ge you wor want to make a cl to-| the man or woman that goes with it! Years no Fries Ss cue This Solid Oak, Early English, Porch Rocker, saddle seat, is built for serviceand is as comfortable as it isinviting. Instead of the old price, $3.48, for this week, Les sat doid having them iu the United States and Bugiand, S i ] $2 25 | gO, KIVELIN NEW YORK. Yin ir Lyon tees: maj Ghd Aim my merce rete the Me ie, “When Mr. Norris and were mar of ° es, Be om all, When he got to the bottom cy ried in Ca "sald the young and] as, 1 did my marketing on Thint! of the iist he would wena the every Porch Chairs, without rockers same | blooming a of : 1 was avenue, u ak ‘ the but her biek 46 4b6 sine at the top. | price. King $40 0 ewsnaper and] shop UllT saw of meat that T| ak veal pene pe, But| liked, f would sae DULGNGEE halt? . pars This complete Porch Set, consisting of his income wae larger than mine, BF "tean't telly much T owe te his 6 Ie RUeStaNT (ot Siar anNE 9 Weigh that pieve of veal. How amt? | pergintene couraxement, Hel Settee, Rocker, Arm Chair, and H nd Mr. Norris 2 cents’ ‘Then 1 would take nt one of my manuscripts out forty Side Chair, only $14.74. ive to take wate eshen it in boiling spite water, PUT! two times before it was finally a Crex Rugs, 9x12 feet, with figured | ne and he t in the oven, and have exac by the Ath Monthly. And of i where the sume roast of veal for dinner | course he was advancing in his own] border, another special, only $7. 24, hol earned cents [bought my tables intyany man succeeds fa And sented our total {nome ve 1 well on it, entertained ou riend ofter, had people to dinner twice a week—and saved money, How?""* Mrs. Norris seized the pen which has rneé home, nd Wrote her country BRISTLES HOLD | | One of them is just your size, Prices to fit the size—-15¢., 20c. quality of genuine Siberian bristl The $2. “THE BROWNIE WIGGLE” He’s 51 Feet High. He Performs at 52d Street He's surrounded by 3,500 lights count ‘em—in the biggest electric toothbrush sign in the world. He is a chubby brownie and tugs at the bristles of two big Brisco- Kleanwell Toothbrushes, but can’t get them out. The Brisco-Kleanwell sign is 63 feet high—81 feet long—and con- sists of 3,500 electric lights. If it were placed standing on the ground it would occupy the space of four five-story houses. The letters in “Kleanwell” are 34 feet high. Each of the two toothbrushes is 66 feet long. ‘The bristles are 7 feet long. The figure of the browni 51 feet high, his mouth 8 feet wide and his eyes 414 feet wide. He wriggles his legs and rolls his and yanks on the bristles—but he can’t get them out. to keep them clean, fres' 25c., 35c. in all sizes, Same City and Suburbs, ALFRED H. SMITH CO., New York & Broadway TOOTH BRUSH BRISTLES HOLD RISCO= KLEANWELL ‘The toothbrush that holds its bristles” There are four sizes of the Brisco-Kleanwell toothbrush, They come in transparent Dust Caps or sealed buxes h, unhandled, Sold by high-grade shops in all parts of New York ving :! JOHN 1 FRIEL, 3rd Ave., 53rd ane 54th Streets open under You know how it is, « ds Cen Nuy be days when the| ! a grapes | y nd comes h cursing | e head for five| the boxs and vowing that he will tet| peddler asked) him what he thinks of him next day, jseven to begin wich, but if £ watked| And the wife Hstens and soothes and away he would always call out, ‘fh | tells him to wait a Httle—that his }cent!' after me. |merit must be recognized ev tly. | , ] ' ' 1 ‘ ' ' i} | | \ | | ‘The effect on the ankles of wear- The same feet pairofCow- ing shoes that po nor HPHor arp Arch Surrort Snors— the arch. ankle strain entirely relieved, | For Children sinks ankles turn-in | | The natural, mechanical support, so necessary for strength. | ening growing foot structures, is the helpful part of the Coward Arch Support Shoe. Furnished with regular heel, and with Coward Extension | Heel, which is a daily benetit to weak ankles, falling irch, and to all stages of flat-foot, A shoe so. beneficial to growing teet, it has the endorsement of orthopedic surgeons and physicians of note. upport Shoe and Coward Extension Heel, have been made rover 30 years, nwich St. JAMES S, COWARD 2°4,224 dreenwich s Mall Orders Fitted Sold Nowhere Flse All tat ta earth Te GTaublect 10 paint NURIT« TONG SSemeD al PRESCRIPTION ict @ Patent Medians) Guaranteed to Relieve Rheumatism SCIATICA and NEURITIS Whbout Use of or you Memey MTG ty Magistral Chem Oo... 3 FOR GaLB BY & g, Riker © Mescman of any leading drusstet NEW YORK Send for Catalogue SORE FEET ure eased and. cooled. by Autineptle F sive odors refresblig. A now that dissolves in qualed ay + douche, oEND FOR FREE SAMPLE TY REE’S Antisep Powder 6, Tyree, Chemist, Washington, D. C, using wld Conte cer FOUNDED 1827 ‘Dry Goods-Carpets-Upholstery . General Clearance Sale | Wednesday, Thursday and Friday final extraordinary offerings of | Laces, Veilings and Wash Dress Goods Laces and Veilings, &c. IRISH INSERTIONS—% inch. Formerly ssc. yard, IRISH PICOT EDGES— Formerly 3gc. trad VALENCIENNES Edges and Insertions—All remaining Formerly 12¢. to soc. TRIMMING LACES—All our laces, 20c 15c past season’s colored vet: Jc 30c ite and black, geld, liver and steel sonar ace watitay Sete 100825 ie ey 7 83.95 6 Sra yar, 95¢ 05.25 REAL APPLIQ' \CES—6 to 9 in: wide. ormery oat 05.00 yard 50c 15.00 DRESS NETS—Colored, Printed and tucked Formerly $1.00 to $1.78 yard, 12C, 2c, 18, 20c, 25c & 30c DRESS sidan Ad novelty ells aie. 38 07.50 VEILS Of Chien co erty 8125 und 8573 each, TSC and 1.50 ODD COLORS— Formerty 730, 35¢ GAUZE VEILS—Black and Purple. Formerty 82.93 each, 75c SH, VEILINGS — Black, White, Brows, Navy pee “ Formey 30e ie 982 vet; 15¢% 25c and Magpie. CHIFFONS—All the latest Shades. Yard, IN. raf een les ae Fd from previous sales; 14 to baa including Nets, Edges, saserescee faiees 6 ws ue Ue, Wash Goods Beat: FINAL Ro pek OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK'OP VELTY WASH GOODS, Comprising Former Prices : PRINTED IRISH y DIMITIS FLOWERED SILK AND COTTON MULIS; STRIPES, CKS AND PLAIN COLORED 18¢ GINGHAMS Formerly asc. to soc. yard, at OTTON Vo! inch, crisp finish; FEE orto res pgp eee Cloth. Formerly sec. yard; 18 PRINTED COTTON FOULARDS AND SATEENS, SILK AND JACQUARDS, IMPORTED LINEN LA‘ 25¢ yard, OSC Formerly 35¢. Ke henge pad ead HIGH CLASS BORDERED NOVELITIES IN BATISTE, VOILES AND TISSUES—46 inch. Formerly $1.35 to $2.75 PLAIN COLORED FRENCH PIQUE —Fancy rests in a large variety of colors. formerly 85¢. yard, SOC JAPANESE AND AUSTRALIAN SILK eumtincs | _Vaslety of strlen and cee ety vas and 81.25 yore, SOC 000 BEC PIQUE—27 in IMPORTED WHITE PIQUE—27 iach, Formerty 50e. yard, 29C | corduroy wale, Black Broad Cloths LIGHT SUMMER WEIGHTS (IMPORTED), A limited quantity-of bright satin Gniah, sponged, ready ie ae ak, F EEA, 1.75 | “ inch, Formerly 82.95 yard, 1 OS | Brassieres Embroidery and lace trimmed, | : Formerly 85¢ to $1.50, Silk Parasols REMAINING LOT OF 200 PARASOLS, IN FANCY BORDERED EF- FECTS, WHITE AND BLACK STRIPES, PLAIN COLORS AND CHANGEABLE EFFECTS, Formerly $3.00 to $4.00 1.95 65c, 75c, 1.00 Men’s Furnishings SILK NECKWEAR—All odd lots; regular and knitted styles. Formerly $1.00, MERCERIZED PAJAMAS—-Summer weights; choicest colorings; neatly trimmed. Formerly $2.00, $2.50, 50c 1,50 5.00 2.00 2.50 NOTE-—No Clearance Sale Goods sent C. O. D, or on approval. | _ Mail orders filled while stocks last. 98 Sree) SILK PAJAMAS AND NIGHT ROBES—White and colored stripes; handsomely finished. Formerly $7.50 to $10.00, PAJAMAS AND NIGHT ROBES—All discontinued line: | grouped together. Formerly $2.50 to TERRY CLOTH BATH ROBES——Plain color: only; excellent quality. Formerly $5.00, | ay oem

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