The evening world. Newspaper, August 9, 1912, Page 3

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FROM CHURCH BY HUBBY’S FRIENDS Then Brother Elks Lead Him .. in Mad Hunt of Town for Captive. THEYRE TWICE WED. For Pa and Ma Were Scan- dalized by Early Morning Marriage at Coney. Te you should obtrude to-day upon the marital joys of Mr. and Mrs, Mark Wance, honeymoontng toward Canada, ‘they would be likely to admit there ‘Were three agencies that come pretty near putting the mar in marriage. One ‘was Pa, another was Ma, end the third was the Elks, Pa and Ma made the Vances get mar- Tied all over again last nignt in a really- truly church when a Coney Island dominie, the Rev. J. W. Kitzmeyer, had Miready married them the night before, and when the second ceremony was » Over Vance's Elk friends kidnapped the bride and wouldn't let Vance have her for a heluvatime, Mrs. Vance was Miss Edna Flinn of No, 27 West Sixteenth strect. Vance has been living at the Elks’ Club, With John R. Wall and Miss Maynard Rozel! they awoke Mr. Kitzmeyer when the night birds were calling and Insisted on being made one until death did them part. It was Ma Filnn and Pa Fiinn who were scanidalized when they heard about it, and had the Rev. Kiernan to marry them over aga night at St. Bernard's Church on West fourteenth street. While a happy occasion, the ceremony was a very dull affair compared with Programme that followed. Vance ts Elk and gives the Elks’ Club as his address. There were a number of his brother clubmen at the wedding and when the bridesroom and best. man stepped within the chancel to sign the record the attending Elk brethren got busy. Two large automobiles were wait- ing at the church door and into one of them the bride was rushed. SPRINKLED SIDEWALK IN FRONT OF ELKS’ WITH RICE. The car sped round the streets for awhile and finally landed in front of Jack's restaurant at Forty-third street and Sixth avenue. This ts just around the corner from the Eiks' new home end a delegation was sent there to cover the street sidewalk and club en- trance with rice whereby to mislead the bridegroom should he reach the bi as in his hunt for his bride. A long table on the balcony tn the restaurant had been prepared and around it the kidnappers and their vice tim gathered. So as to make the bride (feel quite at ease @ taxicab was de- | They were found at home and went to Jack's to prot Mrs, Vance. Meanwhile another delegation hau) captured the bridegroom and were driv- ing him about town a-calling at various cali and restaurants for his miss: mate. Occasionally one of the capt would call Jack’s on the phone and in- |, the bride of the wherabouts and | condition of her partner, but Vance himself was kept in the dark, Finally, he was taken :o his wife at Jack's am‘d a shower of rice from the! balcony and main floor and was told that he might start on his marital jour. ney a8 soon as he pleased, ——____—. MOTHER’S ESTIMATE OF DAUGHTER'S NEEDS, Seventeen to Twenty, $75 a Month; Twenty to Thirty-five, Average $125. CLEVELAND, Aug. 9-H ‘3.8 moth- er'e estimate of the cost of supporting an@ educating a daughter from seven- teen to thirty: From seventeen to twenty, $76 a month from twenty to twenty-i\ve, $100. month; from twenty-five to thirty-five, $10 a month. Mrs, Clara FE. Kroehle, who died June 27, left en estate of $35,000. Her will, probated Thursday, leaves the bulk of tt to her daughter, Gertrude Virginia, sev- enteen, F. Bosworth, Lakewood, trustee ,is to invest the funds and turn |* trustee, is to invest the funds and tur be ‘ated by the mother’s schedule, Mrs. Kroehle provided that at no time {clutch on wien shall the trustee give the daughter for adv. education more than {s tndica THE DRIFT|: As the river sweeps along the course of least resist- ance, so the great current of Apartment House advertis- ving picks its way through the sea of publicity, dodg- ing the friction of least productive mediums. 19,940 World “To Let” Advts, Last Month 8.979 MORE Than the Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune and Press COMBIN | It's Smooth Sailing to ‘‘Results” | via The World Advertising Route SOWNNIES ARE AL OUT IN ERONT OF THE THEATERS Now “‘As for Dress,”’ Writes “‘A Grass Widow,” *‘It Is Not a Matter of What the Individual Wants but as the Merchants and Dressmakers Want It, or in Other Words the Inexorable Dic- tates of the Prevailing Style.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Winoue GREELEYWSMITH gentlemen who seem to have the freedom of the stage door. But even! | these privileged characters make themselves small, step softly and cross the palm of the stage door man with silver when they inquire if Miss Violet | 7 or has come in yet. Is it likely thet ‘ “Johnnies” rush in where angels fear to tread? If you spatched for the mother and sister! think so, play “Johnny” for an evening or an afternoon and stand outside You will experfence the lonesomenéss of Robinson Crusoe | *riday’s tracks in the sand, the feven faintly her spec | a stage door, before he saw Man | SOMETHING TO ‘GASP AT THEATRE. |& woman who dpfends the hatl-fellow ithe only suitable helpmeet and com: , ror and dismay om hundreds of nejther will you, perhaps, but at any 4 3 ttene played an the marvellously shaped ¥ | jlegs of Shirley ut that’s daring! seo how @ girl cam havo the face to @o it!” gurglea one overdressed young lady to another. nobody had the face which at a discount in that exhibit, n the usual array of young inadequate and too-slen- fied through the the- irred to me tt might Ung to contrast t jatre doors, tt No, not the gost of | rather shabby drew there appeared res destined to rise o'er th: |to higher things—to star pe . though here and | One Uttle person conf she “had a date with a which I knew. might-have-be had forgotten th; pretty little girl went home alone. suit with @ well cut, that touched the very unobtrus! \identified for 24nd, came a that had led the | ion of girls | not one Uny of this girl's dress | i NOTHING TO SUGGEST HER | SPECIAL CLAIMS, There was abgolutely the attire of the girl with the pre ein New York to suggest for Gaudy Girls at the Front Entrance Copyright, 1912, by The Pi “Why do you use the word ‘Johnny’ to describe The young men of New York when you know very well a ‘Johnny’ is a stage door ‘masher,’ on the lookout for chorus’ girls—who! are just as much on the lookout for! him?” | To this indignant inquiry of a New York youth I can reply only that the | stage door “Johnny” 1s the rarest of | his species—so rare that a chorus girl may live to the serene old age of a grand opera ballet dancer with- out having encountered him. | With every musical production! there are, of course, two or three 1 claims to py echritude, no cunning or crude appeal| to the roving eye, the philandering Imagination : No wonder the “Johnny” has d- Serted the stage door when there is 80 much m to interest him in| | front of the house! ' And now we come to the letter of; Birl of to-day, saying that she is} panion for the modern man, 1 di agree with every thing she says, rate you'll find her interesting, A [letter from a man follows hers iy | WHY MEN PREFER GIRLS WHO ARE GOOD FELLOWS. Dgar Madam: My observation ts this: Men prefer girls that are hail fellow well met, and eventually that kind of girl and as happy as it ty possible to than if goody Man ts nat at, you can't take that he best of them re puld say, the more le to Kex. They are morn with a who fs like then selves; they do not need to be their guard all the time; thay 4 not give an account of themselves rls have the learned a kind and ade or profe are at @ loss ho and they make it thelr thelr vietim, hi s Publishing Co. (The New York World). $3,000,000 viOW WILL AD NEEDY AS AGED RUSBAND DID Mrs. Lyle Says Philanthropy Will Be a Labor of ComPsiced Te THE MERCHANT accomplished in the arts and wiles and gets his vietim so entangled, WIDOW OF CORNELL WLL GET $50,000 "INSURANCE MONEY ess aware of what she is doing. men have had their day; up to women to swing the pendu- lum the other w: tics that woman Is most interested in—it is the marriage question, which is as vital to man as to whan, Women are not fighting for personal ambition, they are fighting for the rights of womanhood, It 1s not poll- to protect the and the mother, ne world benefits with wom- pital Sheds Policies on Husband's Life Will Not Be Held Up—Taps at Grave of the Suicide. mistakes—that |, but she will do than men have done, for she will not for herself, but for mankind In general. . A new intellect, women have been given power te do Through streets Ined with sympathts- mitted suleide on a train brought here from New @ charge of misappropriat! As for dress, ete, has no one ever thought that women are con to wear what the merchants off r if you do w sleeved walst, short sleeves are all Oakland Cemetery p sounded at the grave though it was not anything else, The same thing a can go from one end of the city to surance on bh all the waists {PRREAAGE Gn husband's Ife would pout narrow skirts. about $0,000 of —_——> EAGLES ELECT OFFICERS. they look at had just come No matter fy you are trying eventually have to succuinb to their wear your last year's sty and that could be out of the ques: not a matter (ouby HUAND, Ohio, aternal Order. ot ful In the balloting with only one of Richmond, merehants and dr RASS WIDOW. Little Rock, Ark. MEN’S BLUFFS SCARE GIRLS OR WARN THEM. the young man, of posing as having a would tell the ake a suitable elected Grand W ceeding Frank her willing to atin reapoliy defe wake for Grand Worthy > Two MORE WAITING, MOTHER els must have cost and they generally ost pliable (in the tie arly all cases thing of the sort, 1 nature. r ¢ ave power over men of al a good Woman, A good wan is, £ hate to say It, narrow > many siects. She wants to ma an Was herself and .t tes and wears on his n ‘ of satistying her der deavors to outwit 1 naling 4 yocriie of himself Times will not change women come Into thelr own, the sooner the better, Man thinks of woman as a tim; he only thinks hor sex The o Js, nore latellec- tual Me sa, the worse he is, ue is They're Quadruplets a—Now, Spruce Up. @ than two! tf by tell: | t that she has mo better not to excite the ing her that she } So Refreshing These V’arm Days LIPTON’S TEA HOT OR ICED. WASHINGTON and the Gover al fur the Insane, Love to Her. “Philanthropy will be the work taken up by Mra, John 8, Lyle of Tenafly, N. J., whose husband has just left her more than $3,000,000, Sitting {n her beau- tiful home, Mrs. Lyle, who has fair hair and big blue eyes and whose ap pearance fe made only more striking by her deep mournin aid she was greatly distressed by the publicity thrust upon her. She added: “I have not made any definite plans. All this has happened so suddeniy that tt will take time to dectde exactly what in the best plan to pursue, Of one thing I am certain, however. Mr, Lylo was alwa Interested tn philanthrop!> work; he loved it and his interest in tt was Intense, and I can do no less than take up hin work where he left it. Don’t misunderstand me, I am not entertag upon it from a sense of duty, but be- cause of ite asyoctations as much 4 anything else It will be @ labor of lov “Do you intend to remain here?" was asked, . “Of course,” she replied, “Mr, Lyle lived hero since 1867 and he was very the place, It has been made a you see, and there n for me to leave it permanently. 1 shall go abroad in ihe near future, Just what J shall do upon my return I cannot sa William Newcomb, « brother of the first: Mra. 1 Who inlertted $50,000 has been mentioned as a possible cons testant of the will, He refused to-day to discuss what his attitude might be. if she had plied Mr. Lyle was an chant, He died last July Was probated t eo cays ag WOMAN PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO CHARGE OF MURDER. With Benjamin: Silver, Accused of Dance Hall Killing. Mra, Sadie Tittle partner Benjamin silv on June 21 in ¢ in thelr dance hall nty Jud) 1 pleaded no She was held for trial, At the tim vaume was discharged, while silv When the erime was committe pr hall, Skanane, w was shot, Mrs, tlebaum and Silver According to the story the two pro. a stranger? lea shot Skanane fo then vanished the could do anything, Many Prelaten for Ser SYRACUSE, Aug jall parts of ¢ J and pay. rick A. Lad Lnmacula on at the arciy ry his Lewis, i who will t | Rey. Jamaw Carson, M. A. Burke, Albany | BARBAROSSA the bent beer brewed. ty most bars and cafes. (Brewery bottled enty) KARL, VILE. Wholesale Deatre hy ue |\Contagion Avoided By Tyree’s Powder For the treatment of all catarrhal and infected conditions of the m is me brane, the nothing so efivetive as Tyree's Antiseyt ‘owder. Not only is t positive i wtion, but it is abso ately safe in the handy of any one Contains nop thas making it the nd anti ious cent bos will make two y tlard antiseptic solution, — Strongly recommended. b, physicians old by druggists every where. Send for booklet and sample, 1, \3: ‘Tyree, Chemist, Washington, D. G Mrs. Sadie ~Tittlcbaum Indicted n who with ier was Indicted nection with the mur- nthe night of May 12, Dike the trial of Silver "Tittle. baum tn the Magistrate's Court, Imme- diately after the shooting, Mrs, ‘Tittle who had acted as bar in the place, wie Mrs. Tittlebaum promptly disap 1, ‘but was finally found up in last week ts declared, » but three persons prietora told in the Magistrate's Court 1 through a window sume way, all before ether of them BISHOP LUDDEN’S FUNERAL. niher at Sracuse raymen from Diovowe of Syracuse nany other dioceses are in Syra- ral of Right ‘HOMELESS GIRL TRES TO FIND REST IN RIVER, | BUTLANDS IN TONBS Gussie Berger, Alone in Big! City, Declares She's Sorry She Was Rescued. Pretty Guasie Berger finds it almost as hard to die In New York as I was to get employment. To-day she ts in the Tombs as 4 result of an attempt last night to end her troubles in the East River. Feeling herhelf alone in the world, although sho has relatives here, she jumped into the water at the foot of Jackson street. She was rescued by Robert Moore and George Gallagher, erneur Hospital ‘The young woman aays sho is twenty. seven years old, ‘but does not bok Ite She went to the patrol wagon mechanically this morning when they took her to the Madison Pollce station. She exhibited no feeling when later # sat In the Tombs police court charged with having attempted sutclde, until to-morrow morning. In the mean! time an effort wil be made to enlist ll] Palma de Cuba Bouquet .. . Palma de Cuba Benefactor Invincibles . . Orlando Orlandos . . Florencia Victorias . . . Ricoro Perfeccionados Havana-American Perfeccionados = GLEAN YOUR LWER More effective than calome You know wh your liver is bad, when your bowels are sluggish. You fecl «certain dullness and depgession, rhaps the approach of a headache, vets sour and full) of gas, ton ted, breath foul, or you have indigestion, You say, “L am | billions or const sted and T must take something to-night Most people sheink from a physic they think of eastor oil, calomel, sults with Syrup of Figs, hat of fruit; of eating coarse food; of exercise. Take a spoonful of delicious Syrup of ht and you won't red y r taken anything until worning, when all the up Waste mat longshoremen, and sent to the Gouv- {I tik Perfecto Grande: . . UNITED CIGAR STORES - MAIL ORDERS FILLED Address: Mail Order Service, Flatiron Bldg., N. Y. ter, sour bile and constipation poisons move on and out of your system, with. | THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1912. 3 a gome charitable society in her behalf. wen he git as ona te tho None he eald ehe was sorry they pulled her out ef the water. “T think it would have been mich better had they allowed me to die,” ohe eaid. “What have 7 been saved for? What good ts it going to do me? For yeare I have tramped the pe fi it it z : “Weren't you sorry after you had Jumped into the river! ashe was end. If somebody could be found who would be nice and kind to me, that would be different. They were aa good as they could be to me where I Hved, but I owed three months’ rent and of cours they wanted their money. I couldn't get any money and I couldn't Hye on % cents a day, a0 what was there left for me but the river? “My cousin, who owns @ factory, has given me money several times, but I don't like to take money from anybody. to make my own money, and if f "t do that, of whut use am T to the world? T don't know why I am here or what they are going to do to. me, It doesn't make much difference, anyhow.” ‘The girl came here from Russia four years ago. Her parents she lett be- hind her, DON, Aug. ¥—Isnac N. Ford, the w York Tribune correspondent in Lon- xa Her examination was postponed! 1 bone died yesterday at the ope ef éthty. four, after a long iliness, He was born in Buffalo, The follow- ing standard brands now on sale in con- venient pack- ages to slip in grip or pocket. Just right for | week end or Sunday exe of 6 Havana blended cigars 25¢ Package of 6 full size Yerfecto Grande cigars Package of 5 full size Invindlble cigars Cc Package of 5. The lar- gett sete. Lad ig of 50 lomestic cigars in New York " ic Three for ae quarter quality 12 for 65¢ Our most ular Porto Henn eigar $1.00 Havana tobacco, made in Tampa and $1 25 Key West 12 for o AND 90 FEET” “OF BOWELS WITH “SYRUP OF Fea.” , castor oil or salts; gently cleanses the stomach, liver and bowels without nausea or sriping. Children dearly love it. sea or weakness, Noth- regul our sour, disordered stomachator id liver cause injury. If your child is cross, sick und fever- ish, or its little stomach sour, tongue coated, give Syrup of Figs at onee. It's nr ty all that is meeded to make children well and happy again. They dearly love its pleasant taste, Ask your druggist for the full name, “Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, and look on the label for the name— California Fig Syrup Company, ‘That, and that only, is the genuine, Refuse any other fig syrup substitute with contempt.

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