The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1912, Page 3

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SEFORHER JAS EARTHLY HEL, GAYS MRS. UNGER Declares Max Unger, Strong Man, Vowed Marriage Would Be Garden of Eden. i ROMEO WAS NOWHERE. His Love for Juliet a Shadow How Little Is Enou While Cost of Living Is So High? There Are Many Women Who Can Live on $50 a Month, and a Young Man Ie Lucky to Find One of Them, Says Mr: Woodallen Chapman. When You Can’t Afford a Thing, Do Without It, Is the Principle Which Makes It Possible to Compared to This—Dif- ferent Now. { W-Garden of Eden that wae promised to her before marriage, but which she © eage quickly turned into @ hell upon earth after marriage, was described in as affidavit presented ¢o the Supreme Court to-day by Mre. Melsine Unger, (Site t wutng Max Unger, known on the @age as Liond Strongfort, a strong | ae physical culturist, for a separa- "He told me that if I accepted him G4 encouraged him he would marry as @0on he had been divorced, and that the Garden of Eden would be @ mud pile compared to the home he would fit up for me,” said Mra, Unger, “But {t can be truly eaid that hardly had the meats of the divorce Proceedings got cold when the hot wed- 4ing breakfast wa: rved, and since that time not only has there been no Gerden of Eden but it has been worse hell for me." Unger told how ehp was married t§ the “strong man” within en hoyr be divorced his first wife, Cornelia on Web. 18, 1910, They lived to- Wether two years, finally parting in ‘Parts last February. Mrs. Unger de- laps that during all that time Unger 44 not contribute more than @ few _ 4éllars toward her support, while he managed to get from her thousands of dollars of her own money. “His protestations of love for me were #0 sincere,” continued the plaintiff, “his attentions to me eo endearing and his ections at the time so convincing that, ‘woman as I was, I readily allowed my- gel to be beguiled by him.” TM one outburst of affection, she added, Unger declared “Romeo's love for Juliet was like a passing shaiow is love for me.” who was formerly a + German operatic singer, dwelt at con- siderable length on the subject of her handling it with the skill of a novolist. Firet she said she met the “‘strong man”.at Nyack in 1908. ray “He told me his ambition was : stented through lack of encouragement { from a good wite.” “Within three days after I married the defendant,” said Mrs. Unger, “a new claimant to the wifely throne of the defendant herein appeared in the person of one Julia, whose full name I do mot know. While he wag ill in bed and I was nursing him I recowed a letter signed Julia, who wrote me that the defendant was her husband, When I showed my tweband the letter he said thefe was nothing to it. “% realized that my ¢uture life would get be strewn with roses, but only a ® woman who hag loved as I have can ‘@nderstand how strong my affection for ‘fay husband was and how easily I was @ooled and learned to forget and forgive, It ts impossible to convey to any Judge, no matter how learned in the law, trains of the heart chords when they are being played and played upon as happened to me at that time.” Mrs, Unger has asked the Court to @rant her §5 weekly alimony and a counsel fee of $600 pending the trial of her uit, fe A DOC COOK’S BROTHER FINED. ‘William L. Cook, the milkman brother of Dr. Frederick Cook, known in Den- mark as a polar explorer, was before Magistrate Naumer, in the Gates avenue court to-day, charged with violation of the law governing the misuse of bot- tles with the name of another firm blown im the glass. An inspector for the Bottlere’ Association compiained thet in Cook's milk depot, at No, 747 Bedford avenue, one hundred and « enty milk bottles of firms other than his own had been found. Cook pleaded guilty and was fined 60 cants for every foreign bottle that had been found in his possession; that footed the bill up to $85, which he pa ‘Then the magistrate became curious and asked the milkman where his fam- ous brother was. “Oh, he’@ coming back from a lectur- tour in Europe,” the milkman sald, wilt be in New York Sunday,” —— Are You Interested in The Conventions? Are You Going Away? Arrange to Have The Evening World Sent to You. Convention Reports Will be writtén by ‘Martin Green with humorous sidelights by George Ade an Cartoons and Caricatures Maurice Ketten Live on a Small Income, She Declares. cause it is June and the “open season” for hearts, but also because of Mra. Kathleen Norris's } declaration in The Evening World yesterday that it {e possible to marry and save money in New York City on $50 a month, Mrs. Noreis believes in marriage, 60 Tam oure ahe feels to-day no remorse for having given a gentle push to the young men “standing with reluctant feet where the heart and checkbook meet”=the perilous brink of matri- mony, PUTS HEART IN THE ; YOUNG MAN. “If a girl is convinced that the young fellow she loves is hardworking and industrious she should marry him, no matter how small his income may be. I would say that to my own daughter if I had one, And I would undertake to live on $50 a Month in New York, and save mone: ‘With these words Mrs. Norris stiffened the backbone of the hesitant and the timid, And now Mrs. Woodallen Chap- man, who, like Mrs. Norris, is young, @ writer and a happy wife and mother, offers her opinions and suggestions, which she gave yesterday at my request. Mrs. Chapman has served as an officer of the New York Mothers’ Club, is the author of several books, and was for some years editor of a magazine de- voted to the interests of the American mother, KIND OF A GIRL A MAN 18 LUCKY TO GET. “I am afraid that I could nog live tn New York on $60 a month,” Mrs. Chap- man sald smilingly, “but I have no doubt there are many women who can— and a young man fs lucky who finds one of them. . The first year we were in New York we got along very happily on what is considered here @ tiny income. There {s just one principle which makes It possible to live on @ very small in- come, and though it eounds simple and Platitudinous few persons apply it to thelr own live “whe do without it, “I have never been very good at ac- counts, #0 I can't quote figures as to what our actual expenses were, but I ire you any couple will be able to manage who have the strength of mind to limit themselves to what they can afford and to waste no money on » foolish“pride of appearances. “I live way uptown and on the top floor of a non-elevator apartment, where I get plenty of al nd sunlight. If my friends think I live too far fram Broad- y or from the ground to come to see me, then I don't miss them, “The frst thing for a young couple to decide is to spend what money they have for real values— for themselves, not the opinion of their neighbors. TIMID can't afford « thing “If a girl has what the New England- ers call ‘faculty,’ that 1s if she knows how to buy and to cook economically, if she can make her own and the bables’ clothes and trim her own hats, then she will be able to manage on very small income, But she must have a natural taste for and interest in econ- omy, A naturally extravagant person cannot change his or her nature and @ girl accustomed to lavish expenditure and luvurious gurroundings has seldom the talent for economy ne ry to the poor man's wife, ‘Mrs, Chapman paused, IF SHE HAS THE ABILITY TO EARN MONEY 8HE SHOULD DOIT. She may have other talents, of course. She may be able to write or paint or sing, and I believe that if she has ability in any direction which will bring her money of her own after mar- ri @ should continue to exercise e until the babies come. at Gometines & woman can make money | more successfully than she can save it. “It is possible for a wife to make too many sacrifices, to be too economical, you know. A wife should make sacrifices when it is her turn, but not all the time, ‘Women can be too pliant and so deprive men of the pleasures of unselfishness. “The wife who ts too saving convince her husband that he need never make any more money, that they et along on his present mbition, She e can, but not by spiritual starvation, She must not heap the table of the body and skimp the table of the soul It is a matter of spiritual necessity for @ wo to g0 occasionally to a good concert or @ good play. Young people in making up the budget of thetr lives together must allow @ certain regular sum for amusement and recreation—the food of the soul—and they should de termine to save togethe: “The young man must not expect hie wite to make el) the enerifess. if che may SECRET OF LONG LIFE (5 FOUND IN MICROBE THE FOE OF OLD AGE Prof. Metchnikoff Says Untir- ing Search Has Solved Prob- lem of. Resisting Disease. PARIS, June 12.—Prof. Elie Metch- nikoff of the Pasteur Institute is etill conducting his researches to prolong life by staving off the diseases that cause old ai “Old age," said he to-day, “and the inevitable death that follows it are due chiefly to three ilnesses—hardening of the arteries, cirrhosis of the liver and intestinal inflammation of the kidn Let us arrest these and we arrest 4 cay. “White rats, being essentially omniv- orous, were selected for many and varied experiments ut the Pasteur In stitute to determine how to destroy the baleful microbes that hasten old age.” Metchnikoff went on, referring to the Paper he read before the Academy of Sciences yesterday, ‘we found that ani- mal food, generally, produces more toxin microbes than vegetables ‘Wow mark you, our digestive organs rapidly abeorb sweet food, whereas al- buminold foods, less assimilative, lodge themselves in the large intestine, which seems to be the chief centre of the stru gle between the toxine microbes and th beneficent microbes, the ‘phagocytes,’ which may be called the policemen of the human system, living germs of Breat voracity which prey upon the harmful microbet “Sugar acts as an energetto destruc- tive agent on toxic microbes. But sugar 1s too rapidly abserbed, #o it does not reach the battlefield where good and evil microbes struggle. \ “So we of the Pasteur Institute sought to solve a double problem. We wished to find a microbe which assimilates sugar and which we could send into the large intestine. But, besides, this mi- crobe must be able to live where only albumino!ds rem “I rejoice to say as indicated yester- day, that we have discovered this sugar carrying, sugar preserving microbe, It exists in dogs. It 1s a parastte of starch, and {t transforms starch into sugar, It has the further advantage of not attacking albuminotds or of produc- ingsany potsonous matter. “I am extremely hopeful that we have solved the problem; that soon we will be able to prolong human life, to delay time, to balk death—for years at least,” pettiei cat eather ater H, Pond Dead. MOOREHEAD, Miss,, June 12.—Chester H, Pond, aged sixty-eight, inventor of the self-winding apparatus generally used in clocks, died here last night. He was a native of Medir Mrs, Ogden Jewell of New York, @ daughter and a brother, and Rev. C. M. Pond of Ober- lin, 0,, are among relatives who survive him," He served in the signal service of the Union army during the civil war. trims a last year’s hat or turns an old gown while he pursues the expensive ways of bachelorhod—the cigars, the ‘treats,’ etc., the wife 1s merely train- ng her husband to increased selfishness, “Sacrifice must be reciprocal. Saving, to be worth whtle, must be done to- gether. When these conditions prevail or are likely to prevail, when the man {9 industrious and ambitious and un- selfish and the ' »man is capable and efficient and interested in the tasks be- fore her, a poor marriage is bound to pay Gividends ef one hundred per cent.” a ALL gh to Marry On EARTHQUAKE HURLS PEOPLE FROM BEDS INSOUTHERN CITIES Savannah and Augusta, Ga., and Columbia, S. C., Get Bad Jolt but All Escape Harm. AUGUBTA, Ga., June 12.—Distinct | | | I CHAPMAN G CARGO OF AMERICAN BEAUTIES ON OLYMPIC; CHILD BRIDE IS BELLE Mrs. Wilcox Vouches for Pul- chritude of 123, Ranking Young Mrs. Alsop First. ‘The Olympic discharge? a cargo of “Deauties’ to-lay, There were 123 of them in the first cabin. Miss Dla ‘Wheeler Wilcox, a passenger, pointed to Mrs. Hdward B. Alsop, the chio litt’ telephone girl the octogenartan Pitts- burgh millionaire wedded five months 50, “Bhe'a the prettiest little woman I've ever ween, I deleve,” Wilcox. “And @uch devotion! Spring and winter never mingled in euch frank and perfect harmony.” Miss Wiloox then lef the ship re- {porters to where Mrs, R. H. Channing of the Gotham Hotel stood with her husband and four emall children, “In all my life, I don't believe I ever saw @ Matron who more completely filled the requisites of beauty in an evening dress. She is heavenly,” as- serted Miss Wilcox, enthustasticall: “As for any number of the others, T could—"* But Miss Wilcox turned to find her auditors moving in @ general direction toward where Mra, Alsop sat with her aged husband, after spending parts of their honey- moon trip in London, Paris and tour- ing the Continent. The former Miss Fffie Pope Hill, just nineteen years old, beamed with happiness. Her fingers | Were decked with diamonds and there jwere enough jewels about her neck to ransom a potentate. She was gowned in black and white and wore over her dress a long ulster. “Oh, yes, we've been on our wedding titp,”” said Mr, Alsop, who is seventy- five years old. “Not a wedding trip,” interrupted his child-like wife. “We have just taking @ little jaunt over the wav dearte.”” Mrs, Alsop added penstvely: “And there wasn't an exciting moment on the whole trip!"* Mr. Alsop sald he and his wife would stop twenty-four hours at the Hotel Waldorf-Astoria, after which they would go to Washington. pe LITTLE DOG SPOT IS DEAD. | | Third Canine Guardian of City Hal Meets Tragic End. “Little dog Spot’ 3d is no more, and the City Hall 1s again without a canine guardian, Shortly after daybreak to- day Spot leaped upon a window ledge on the upper floor of the City Hall and began barking furiously, Below a stranger was trying the doors leading to the corridor, Watchful § giving tongue, lost his foot! to the plaza walk. I Spot 21 was poisoned, Spot kicked to death by a mule on Mayor Gaynor's farm. Outside or Inside? Don’t judge by fancy packets, but contents, Famous for quality. WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Forty Cups for Ten Cents, A White Rese Coffee, 3 Pound Tina, $1 ALERT LIS LEED DEEL EIEIO, assorted Miss | ‘They were home-coming | earth ehocks were felt here and also in @avannah and Columbia, 8. C., at 6.80 A. M. to-day, Houses were rocked and the #leeping residents were roughly awakened when their beds swayed and moved @everal inches. Three shocks were felt, each lasting about fifteen seconds, Ae far as reported, little damage was done and no person was hurt | Here the shocks were felt more dis- tnotly on the hills about the city and in the residence section. In the busi- ness part of the city they were less perceptible, . There were alarm and excitement in! all three cities, and many negroes be-| fore the last shocks had ceased were in| prayer. | At Savannah the vibrations were eant | and west. Houses there were rocked sightly, ewaying pictures and iicht fur- | niture, A feature of the quake at Columbus was that persons with dots felt the vivrationa more than those in the open. There beds were moved several inches, and parlor statuary was thrown from jeatais, WASHINGTON, June 12—Sharp earth | tremors were registered to~lay on Georgetown University's seismographs, Rev, Father Torndorff said that the shocks began at 7.60, developed max!- mum intensity at 7.69 and at 846 were atil being registered. He entimated| that the disturbances were in Alaska. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., June 12.—Earth- quake tremors denoting disturbances Harvard Uni- versity yMolala in harge of the Instrument believe the voleante disturbances in Alaska the cause of the tremors, which lasted nearly an hour. jeismograph at 8 o'clock to-day, earthquake fn the past six days was recorded to-day on the St. Ignatius Col- loge seismograph. The tremor began at |6.51 A, M, and ended at 7.35, the greatest motion being nine m —————_ Shoots Himself. Charles Davis, thirty-five years old, an tronworker out of work, committed suicide to-day in his home at No, 128% Webster avenue, the Bronx, by shooting | himself through the heart with a shot- «un. He fastened the gun to the bed- post, then daid down in the bed, placed the ' muggle against hin breast and pressed the trigger with @ broom handle. NGQv aN them to are ex i} BN Cc | & STORES FLOERLY FOLKS! stomach, liver and 30 fe« decaying food, | You old people, Syrup of I particularly for you. You who di exercise as much as you need to; like the easy chair, You, whose steps are slow and whose mugcles are less elastic. You must realize that your liver and ten yards of bowels have also become leas active. Don’t regard Syrup of Figs as physi It stimulates the li and bowels just as exercise would do if you took enough of it. It is not harsh. like salts or cathartics. The help which Syrup of iga gives to a torpid liver and weak, sluggish bowels is harmless, natural and gentle. When eyes grow dim, you help them, Do the same with your liver and bowels when age makes them less active, There is nothing more impor- tant. Costive, clogged-up bowels mean that decaying fermenting food tad. the pores or duct perhaps 3,600 miles distant were recorded | | By UNITED sand clog TOD SLOAN’S ANSWER | IS SUIT AGAINST WIFE. Files a Counter Action in the Su- preme Court, Naming Two Co-Respondents. | Tod Sloan, once a Jockay, filed to-day a counter-claim to the sult for divorce brow in the 8u- prome Court by his pretty young actress wife, Julla Sanderson, tn which he named two men who are sald to be prominent in political life and athletic circles, The little Jockey eays that in Long Reach, L, 1, at a place known as Beaux Arts, in May, 1910, Miss Sanden seen with a person named F He also says #he was friendly with man named Worthington” during the year 119 at “divers places. Sloan all the charges against him and ke that his wife's suit be world-famous | that hor hus- My with a Misa Robin. | between this city and Sar- eral places in New ars 1908 and 1909, aleo tn | Paria, Hrussels and Ostend. | Sloan f# in and has written | to friends here that he never intends coming back to America, _>— band was tric son a tral a and York tn the y A After Second Operation, | Alderman John Walsh has success | fully undergone two major operations | within eleven months, The first was an operation for appendicitis, The ond, from which he has just recove: Was for mastolditis, necessitating the removal of @ large section of the left side of the skull, The latter operation equired three hours. The use of the rgical saw was found impracticable, making necessary the employment of a small chisel and a mallet for the re- moval of the bone section, Alderman Walsh was able to go to the City Hall to-day, anes FLIES FROM HOTEL ROOF. PORTLAND, Ore, June 12.—What te sald to be the first attempt of an avi- ator to make a start from the roof of ® bullding was successfully accom- pitshed yesterday by Stiles Christoffer= sen, an amateur aviator of Vancouver. He ascended tn a biplane from the | roof of a ten-story hotel in this city, dl directly for Vancouver, #ix miles ant, and landed there twelve minutes later without mishap, The aeroplane | rose from a 175-foot runway and main- ained a gradual incline until an alti- OLEVELAND, June 12.—The thirteenth | tude of ‘about 1,600 feet had been | reached. —_—— “TEX” RICKARD, FINANCIER. LONDON, June 12.—"Tex” Rickard, former Alaska gamter, Goldfeld | Donkeener and prise-fight promoter | at Savoy, dignified, prosperous, | quiet, entatious and reticent about | Goldfield. He dislikes to be reminded of his former life. He has been in Argentina for @ year, and is here as a financier, promoting a trans-Andean railroad, He returns to {Argentina tn a fortnignt. MANILA |f\ CIGARS have a distinctive quality, especially marked in the Perfectos at 5 cts. each ‘ \ Smokers who find these cigars to their taste prefer all others, They tremely mild. iit ALOMEL, oALTS IGAR AND CATHARTICS AREN'T FOR YOU. Harmless, gentle “Syrup of Figs” is best to cleanse your) st of bowels of sour bile, ed-up waste, thirty feet of Lowels suck this decaying waste and poisons into the blood You will never get feeling right until | this is corrected ut do it gently Don't have & bowel washday; don’t! use a bowel irritant. For your sal Pease use only 5 of only luscious figs, senna and aroma. ties which ean not injure, A teaspoonful to-night will gently, but thoroughly, move on and out of your system by morning all the sour poisonous fermenting food and clog: up waste matter without gripe, nauca or weakness! But get the genuine, your druggist for the full name, “Syrup of Figs and Ehwr of 5 | with contempt, any unless it bears t name—prepa the California Fig Syrup Company. | Read the label, y 20 ER ae meme RINE OC Startling Dress Values $6 Lingerie Dresses $3.98 To-morrow, Thursday NOTHING could prove a better comple- ment for the summer wardrobe than a dainty lingerie dress. ment is both extensive and reasonable, as the picture will show. One Model Pictured The dainty one here pictured is made of silky batiste elaborately trimmed with dainty embroidery and lace. Other beautiful models at this price are made of eyelet embroidery. $4 White Wash Skirts, $7.98 bargai Complete Assortment and al summer styles are represented. The popular fabrics of the season, ate wash ed linons corduroy, piques, reps, linens, embroide: —are here. SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 14 and 16 West 14th Street—New York 460 and 462 Fulton Street—Broeklyn 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. Richard Webber “The Food Department Stores” MEAT—POULTRY—GROCERY—DAIRY—FISH DELICATESSEN—VEGETABLE—BAKERY ORDERS BY TELEPHONE will receive our most prompt and careful attention. If it would be a com venience forus to phone you daily, we will be glad to do so. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY SPECIALS at All Three Stores MUTTON CHOPS, loin and rib, Per ib. He HADDOCK, Fresh Newport... .r« ».... SMOKED SALMON............ren.... 33¢ STORE CHEESE, 5," Fancy Sharp run. 21¢c NEW POTATOES—ikz; *™ .......6 lbs 17 15¢ 5c BROOMS, Thistle No. 6...........0+. 27¢ PEAS, Checker Brand.......... reas... 10c CRACKERS—Unrs, “0*-""™ _...,..3 for 10c Positively Nothing Sold to Dealers Orders by Phone, Mail or Driver Carefully Executed. Prompt Deliveries Everywhere, Money Back If Not Satisfied Richard Webbe Ketabiished 38 Years, 120th St. & 3d Av. 177th St. & Webster Av. Ist St. & 6th Av., Mt. Vernon Phone 7100 Harlem, Phone 2700 Tremont, Phone Mt, Vernon 1800, A COMPLETE STOCK OF White Shoes with competent, courteous salespeople to give prompt and intelligent service. For Men For Women High and Low Cut Shoes Button $3 to $9 $3 to $8 Lace 4to 7 For Children Pumps 3to § Button and Lace,also Oxtords and Pumps Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street 3 fo | 2to 6 Fifth Avenue above Forty-fifth St. Colonials * Oxfords Earning Power of Money Credit Terms. $3. Down on $50 There are good and bad in 5 * (75 )] ments just as there are good am@ 7.50% ** 100 || dad of everything else on the face of i] the earth. WHITE FOR CATALOG. 3 429 K | ’ ‘4 A wees “Real Estate’ and “Business ACCOUNT | Opportunity” Advertisements - were printed last week tm r my THE WORLD; 881 More than in the Herald, Offers to sell houses, lots, shops, stores, markets, goods interests, &c, among which were many exceptional bargains, Prica To Py at the Lowest ‘ead World Ads. LIVING KoOM 2188 2190 eer. | VE) 5'A ST.

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