The evening world. Newspaper, August 17, 1912, Page 3

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{ i 2? She Declares Big Ones Best ‘ \ “Others Wi al ve wrote Matron Murphy, “They are y to be easy golng and News ivritable and kenerous, ‘The Mie man is more ikely to be nervous Sarid thdgety “A ma a sharp, thin nose is Apt to be uw id. Where a man of Mati stature ix endowed with a nasal .ox gan of this sort won have a bad co _bitiation you have @ prize fault. ‘Pinder. Me wii rail at everything from hg.way the s is cooked to the way is wocks are darned.” Mrs, Leavitt added this ‘Phe gmail mon greatly outnumber the big men tn the cases that come be Policeman Dide't stop to \egue, and Pet Out Wince. Mrs. John Dunn, Iving ve fourth floor of an apartment at No, 4] Manhatian avenue, answ loud ring Ing at her front door last night And encounte ep In the hallway "What do you want | “Your house ts on fire, madam," re- Plled one of the police "You are mistak insisted Mrs, Bunn, | But the policemen, who were Mazer | nd Dufty of th ith Street station, into the ajariine cur: | tains in the par put out the flames of the engines, Then Sirs, Dunn thanked them, Phe poicemenssaw the flames from the THE EVENING wORLD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, LIFE ELI ELIXIR WILL AMAZE WORLD IN SCIENTIST TALK Interest in Brit © Congress All| i; Turns on Discoveries by Prof. Schafer. FINDS ORIGIN OF LIFE, | Join Edinburgh Doctor in Disclosing Na- ture’s Seer ets. LONDON, Aug. Address to be deliv fer, the famous Ed nburgh physiolo- Bist, at the opening of the British Association Congress at Dundee Sept. 4, will produce the profoundest exctte- ment amc ntifle the world will devote the entire address to the fascinating subject of ‘the origin of life, and he promises reve- Yations that will astonish the world ahd make vita! additions to the sum of human knowledge of the subject. The address will revive in new form the ancient philosopher's theories re- 17.—The presidential ‘ed by Prof. Scha- men @rding the clixir of life, and subse- quent discussions will show that life Atwelf, instead of dead substances, ts becoming the prime source of inquiry among mod clentific men, in Prof. Schafer's address there will Be grouped together so many small dis- eoveries leading to the one point as to Startle those not well acquainted with Feceut scientific prograss, In ation of this address an ex- cep! number of notable sclentif. men attending the meeting. | ASTOUNDING EXPERIMENTS TO} BE REVEALED, astounding results, of which has been heard, have been re- achieved In the region of chem!- ealiy manufacturing fe, It has been found in one case that the essence of the lifeless relics of some of the lowest forms of life could produce an effect which it wus supposed could only be brought about by living things. Prof. Minchin of London University, who will take part in the discussion, has some strange tales to tell of the fertilization of lower forms of sea life. Students of plants have made discov- eries that in some cases corroborate the Tesults of students of animal life, Dr. Chalmers Mitchell, Controller of London's zoological garden fn the discussion and has a personal xpe onal re ne interest. An increasing number of men of acience have confidence that they have touched at least one important secret tn the making of rudimentary life and esin to think that it may be repeated im the laboratory, BIG HUSBANDS BEST; BEWARE LITTLE ONES, SAYS POLICE MATRON and Little Ones With Thin Noses Worst of All. CHICAGO, Aug. 1.—Kig men make the best husbands and litue en with sharp, thin noses # eclally to be aveordin to Mrs. Anna Mu patron, in her ofe f of Police MeWeeny. "Mrs. Marie Leavitt, Clerk of Court Of Dow Relat Iso forwarded @ rep which she jolted the little men whether it 16 In business or rimony st to get, along fore this court for non-suj und on t the tle, unskilled man is offender by far. NO FIRE, SHE SAID, BUT— Most of our ¢ omplatn| the worst puree. Equal Moral Siandard Considered as Scientifically tht. 1s be ted Voniishin Co. efhe New York World) “THE WORST GIRL 1S BETTER THAN THE BEST FELLOW" “The Worst Girl Is Better Than the Best Fellow,” Writes “‘A Young Girl,”” Who Adds: “I Ama Good Girl Myself Because I Hate Men’s Unfairness, and I Defy to Make Me Otherwise.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. NI*XOL4 GREELEY-SMITH Now, to the young ladies who inquire, “Is it fair didly that it is not, just as one must answer truthfully the child who {f a particularly nasty ‘medicine is good. will Join| that some devil's brew of ipecac or calomel “tastes just Iike lemonad “yuch more readily the child may swallow it, and I am not one! ‘theory of the origin of life of particular | of those to turn a dishonest sentence or a dishonest penny by writing of) matter how ~ “painless morals.” There are no painless morals any more than there are painless denssts. whatever the moral or the dental quacks may say; and both are coining @ lot of money by the pretense. But the okler one grows, the more one sees of life and the value of established for- mulas, the more one {8 convinced of the necessity of morals as well as of dentists, Isn't it better and safer to take the precepts of the catechism, &c., rather than to ind to deny them if Life will writ em over again in your heart's blood, If Experience will prove them with your tears? When one tackles a problem in arithmetic or al- gebra it ts much easier and safer to know the rule. On can do the sum without it, although not 80 easily or swiftly. But, however one proceeds, by f ing the rule or ignoring !t, the ANSWHR fs always the same, EQUAL STANDARD MEANS NO MORAL STANDARD AT ALL. The on we are con: sidering hether the same rule of conduct for women and fo} men, So far as have ever to discover, equal moral 8! means no moral standard at all, W e the sail purity for themselves particular ques w pl is ndard an ft ineans that men will ha ideal of sexual advocate then indeed we will stand m and those that battle Lord will have a walkover, should the skylark argue ause the hippopotamus But that shows ® preference for muddy water the heaven-touching bird should abandon its familiar medium and trail its pinions in the mire? Ana I don't mean that women are all skylarks or men all bippopote- muses, but simply that one should have a standard as an individual and maintain it whatever happens. If one is s hippopotamus, why mind undoubtedly is the best and most congenial clement. If one is a skylark one prefers the clouds, But for the encouragement of the girls who ask if the double moral andard 18 fair, one must state that many tendencies of modern life and social ethles are toward the elimination of the moral hippopotamus, And now | let's hear what som these girls have to say, I have added to their let- te commuateation from a man who suggests another problem and seeks to abolish another social convention, the ne which requires that young persons of different sex shall meet only through Introduction of a common, or as wenerally say, @ "mutual" friend. ‘ THE WORST GIRL IS BETTER! THAN THE BEST FELLOW, Dear Misam: Why don't we have equal moral rights? Why ts a girl utterly condnned and sneered at by the men that have tempted hi It is a@ true saying, him who is without sin cast the first ston It es that que push to ask theme no contempt for the bad girl, rather contempt for themselves, for the worst better than the best fel- low! There are a few men who look at it in @ fair way, but they are as ren | ‘on able | | and try to enforce | Them Enter the equal moral standard! For a long time this shadowy ideal | of conduct has been hovering on the verge of the discussion by Evening World readers of the dress-paint-and- | powder situation, the New York Johnny and other related problems in the ethics of sex. I have received | many letters from young women which propound the same conun-| drum: “Why should young men ex- pect to marry good, sweet, ‘home girls’ after they have gone around with the ‘painted dolls’? Don’t you think this {s a little one-sided? In it fair?” "HE THRUST HIS HAND NEAR WER PACE natural attraction of body and mind. BROOKLYN GIRL. HE THINKS THE GIRLS ARE A LITTLE SELFISH, Dear Madam: poor, What do all these ‘discouraged girls want, any Why, this, and nothing else: A number of eligible young men, not Becessarily unattached—ohy dear no! —each enjoying ® good salary or its ulvalent, led up as a lamb to the slaughter and th couraged girl to choose 1 have the privi paying her expenses and devoting all his titre not occupied in business to the discourased one for the rest of ns 2 life, ‘This is what they ce of a few young hypo- have found by expertence ot @ girl hon- one must reply can- ks | It is ethically indefensible to say " lel Which one sh rare as diamonds, I can't understand why men should expect good wives. Tam a good girl myself, But IT am good because ! hate thelr unfairness, and I defy them to make me other- wise. A YOUNG GIRL, EN DON’T WAIT TO BE ASKED TO FLIRT. the mark!-is at a Dear Madam: Keally I not see ehurel pra: meeting or similar anything ridiculous in) ma cr in function. At the any young which the men now dress, with the man with @ smooth countenance can exception, perhaps, of a few “loud” Kain admission, introduction ad lb, socks. 1am speaking of the average | and everybody seems satiated, If “man,” not “near? men, Of course, the divcouraged girl ix suflelently no girl admires a orset man, determine she, by some intuitive as We al! “dream” about a “prince | tranples on any attachinent of princely proportions, and corsets ¥ have, Sexregates him fre enter not ams of “the fellows two or three times and f¢ man.” B. means, let them wear with she oWns him, Should he them “as a brace’ in the seclusion another girl wh he knows in of thelr own re 8, but to venture atinetiv is a more fitting mate for not forth therefrom. On the oth him, can he transfer his attentions? hand, the way some of the girls are | No more vian a camel may pasa dressing {9 simply seandalo: through the needle's eye, What we Say the very least. How can a git have we hold,” ts discouraged one's reared in refinement, who possesses tnd she marries him, ‘Ther even the slightest degree of dec or modesty, venture on the clad In dresses (7) and enough to make the angels It bs a reflection on their hoi ing. 1 do not agree with those who say that no man will flirt with @ girl And what does this mea uuless she iny such attention 10 know their ehar While riding tirough the subway , Mttons, eh? ib from Brooklyn last weck To saw a mutu nna who was “modestly dressed. teach ina 1 wore a large black hat end a Way, butt simply made Itnen dr 1 also introduction an old man (at least fifty years of your age) leave his seat on the opposite ery da j ide of the car and stand directly in ’ front of the giti. W he had tine, tried to attract her attention betore det I saw hin or not I cannot say, but mutua this 1 did gee: He wore a ring on his [POY hal, 1 finger in whic uy inassive DT ROG Cota cae diamonus were sei, ani he f them was made on the his hand beneath her as is ethical dim her face as he dared, displa © dumman avove mentioned ring. ‘The poor gir 1 tes, as re Was in agony and her face Was the ‘ ik hard to shade of a poppy; but ghe re y | de ‘ lo) door, The “man” then to " Hot im, produe of paper trom h le | ei = 1 : so sinatl, an! held y her, sh at lea kk @8 mucl never gave id seen like wt the J ud thelr roseh, him, excep eon the fa Al STED MAN, 1 left th n aiteet, so did | - — wes thie vot | HUNGRY MAN DROWNS, cuinedy ' € abso lutely no 1 Polly pron 0 lacked no t ti) veut ster many m¢ r wh not as nut deser \ * t above ‘ 1 remer h ya joe pnt u young m 1 , et h : bewu " \ 4 ' ' “nice Httle quiet ¢ ‘ fh t fair to this ma ia Would he gr the a ‘ i " fond snp): aa had she moved 4 maf hist Do you tis ra one-sided It is @ poor argume 1 1 the bo 1 ed by the g h ' that they do #0 to rece atten t y and t tlon they would otherwise forfeit, 1 | lungsnoremen dragged, think T would be just a tittle ashamed | rh to let ev@y one know 1 ! re eer ae Mand sofhe attention turovgh my | Hospital with Dy. Livingston and each In turn to be o« DUPLAVING HIS DIAMOND Raine? SAYS WOMAN KNOWS WHY HE SHOT HER AT HOBOKEN PARTY George French, Arrested Here, More; Mean- Swartz May Die. Will Say while M rs. : Applied to the ie Sexes AUTO TURNS OVER, No 17, 1918, HIT BY ANOTHER, ~ KILS'3, HURTS 2 | ' | Philadelphia Merchant, Wife \ | and Chauffeur Crushed to Death Under Car. | | Edwant 1H. Burling. a retired me chant, accompanied by his wife, Emma, Miss Lillian M, Tiel and Miss Emma Robinson, and driven by his chauffeur, Jobn Kilroy, left their home at Beth- jayres, Pa. a suburb of Philadelphia, in an automobile yesterday for a jour+ | ney through New Jersey. On the rear neat sat Mrs, Burling and j the two young women, Mr. Buyling t with the chaufeur. Tne automo- bile reached White House, N. J, at hoon and then started on the macadam road toward Flemington. Two miles outside White House the machine came to a deep cut. On either side of the road the embankment rises | to w height of twenty feet. Kilroy, jing under instructions from Mr. Bur- , Was driving slowly. | An automobile came up behind, con- taining @ Mr. Taylor and a Mr. Webb, Newark men, with offices in the Essex Building. The man driving the second car called out: ve us room to pase.” Kilroy, without stopping, pulled Sainst the left embankment and the car behind shot ahead, In doing so the rear wheel of the second car struck the | right front wheel of the B and the latter's steering Gisurranged. Before Kiiroy th could get car under control it shot up the em- bankment and turned completely over. Misa Tiel and Miss Kobinson, being much more active than Mrs. Burling, leaped from the car, but as down with @ crash Miss Kobingon was caught under the wreckage. Miss Ties was only slightly injured. Her screams attracted the attention of Taylor and Webb, and they hurried back. As they came up Miss Robinson crawled from beneath the overturned machine, She was severely cut and two men saw under the over- turned car the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Burling and Kilroy. They strained at the wreckage, but were unable to lift It. Then one of thom got int. their car and went for help. Several doctors and a number of workmen arrived. Tho bodies were got from the wrecka: ‘The skulls of Mr. and Mrs, Burling and their chaut- feur were crushed. The doctors said the three had been killed instantly. The bodies weve taken to White House LADY DECIES, DAUGHTER OF GEO. GOULD, WHO IS MOTHER OF BABY GIRL. | sa MISS VIVIEN GOULD. LADY DECIES MOTHER OF BABY GIRL BORN IN LONDON TO-DAY Daughter of George Gould, and Her Infant Doing Well. to Lady Decies, formerly Mies He fifth Baron Dy on Feb. 7 of sas and placed jn an underiaker's shop and Ambler Armutrong of Camden, an intl- mate friend of Mr, Burling, wag notified. In his automobile he drove from Camden to White House, a distance of more than seventy mileg, In two hours, He the Je arrangements to send the bodle back to Bethayres. Miss Tiel and takn home by tra cal and required m Mr. Burling was sev and his wife about t She was Mr, Burling’s Miss Robinson were Both were hyateri- eal treatment nty-five years old years younger. cond wife, and =, see eR “ tn. | before her marriage to hin was Mra, Geotes Reranch) <scellenty AUGRY IAS lca rg of Moorestown, No J. Kile dividual, was arrested to-day hislisny was Hity santa Olav and in eurvived 4, No. i Prospect place, Manhattan, | by a widow, Mrs. Kilroy, when told of | Detective rone of Hoboken on o | the nt, said : FGEARAA THI THAR “Et don't helleve tere war such an Pescripton: Curnieneg: Wi che acclde There puldn’t have been party in Hoboken wht with John driving.” tended night. Kren eae with «ty ng Mrs, Mary & vi 129 Harrison. at . | mits the shooting, but will give no reason why he went to Mra, rts’ ’ apartments Inst evening while a part was in progress, French had not bee 1 pd, but ben raug the bell Wy Twas admitted 1 stayed a while, drinking and eating There we .o women and throe| n the house besides M w h pulled ar wad wituont| —-+> --- sying «a word the hostess, | - a unding hee in the hig, An uproar] “Republican All My Life,” He enw during which” the dushed for the and g the) Asserts, “But Can't Stand street. Mre, Sar uncon: relous, and ene of th nn 9st Me for Taft.” who in the po Doctors «um MELAS none Mary's Hospital said | snap tn Wan in 6 avieie| Willara WileCon President ie Jot the Stect ‘Tra iruing to-day It c avatgn | on the hip France of the French for t ahoe rays th line from thiee months motor trip why he shot her, and ar jab vad, declaring that Woodrow Wilson k made to revive Mere lgas his chotve of the thr sidenttal nay tell the police candidates before the untry of the party which end- | oo, seen a Republican all my t arrested and h life," aatd Mr. Corey, “but 1 can't or ander MoGovern wana Gon wate ot Abe Phey could | sttow about Mr. Itvowevelt? was vail, Their names as given | n court are Otto Kleyenstuie ty. | Oaks Da ae ee area eel Gatieet Certainly not," laughed Mr. Corey Jaccond atreet, Manhattan; Miss Pauline | "Nor can 1 nee neseaiiy fcr fh Jones, twenty-five years old, of Bing- | third party. Mr. lsen represents al hamton, y Henr MeLau wivanced fdeas of th day t " t yeu by of No. 90 vd omake a admirable Ireatde rath oe f C ly ai the Americans 1 have. met M tease ii from her | abroad feel the same way about it husband The untr was ver Ina ——EE ond! ion during the months A | SEEKS DAUGHTER'S DIVORCE. |p ani haa repre der this Banker HP. Wilson's Wife Wante Who has en ed by the Demo | = craw. Mr ft t made good and elm Jr. Pree, he people want a man like Wilson began! dle out and we w ttle da o the Court tlon of Woodrow \ » Oo her cimhteen-yeurcold | there will be a lot of uolse and then t n Wilson Ope lin tte cratn there will # the hive rom Ht Gerson French people seem to have w | lowed the career of Woodrow Wilson per s4 1 on interest and s mination “tow ried in he Democrats was a «reat surprise later the brid notion prev road that cer: nt " ‘ terests had piled up such @ bar ; rere inst him that tt would be im: a her aguailane | for him to capture the nomi | nation 1 io a disagreement | Big : bs nd ® separation Nine More Typhotd Cases, ae ArT Atk \ Mr Wilson Nine more cases of typhoid were ree ved fe js nonth She ported to the Board of Health In Brooke ted to have this ment Ket antd ‘Mite fare tn Saudsyancisca, Former Helen Vivien Gould, Cables trom London to-day announce the birth, this morning, of a daughter n WEEPS AS SHE “ADMITS CHANING, HER BOY 10 STEP Mrs, Sassa Pleads Guilty After Lad Tells in Court of His Mistreatment by Mother, Ihe story little Chaley Sases, the dog boy of Bast One Hundred anit orty-etghth whose mothe hainet him to doorstep, told tv Magistrate Hree ¢ the Morr! ‘court to-day moved to tears scores of ably-attired women, who bad Into the room long before the ray Charley's mother, Mi Minnie Sasaa, was called, The boy shrank from bis mother be- protect form of Agent f the Children’s Socity, and a chain, with which he had fastened to the maternal door- step, was Introduced in evidence. Jo- seph Baccacino, twelve years old, one of seven-year-old Charley's playmates, was the star witness for the prosecu- | tion. He told how he had hacked at * chain with a chisel until he (freed him, Mra, Sassa, he testified, | had emerged as he completed hin task, | upbraided him for his interference and made the “dog boy” fast jain to the | railing. “She's always beating me," sobhed Charley, when it came his turn to t tity I'm always a good boy. T dant know w she tied me. I'm afrald of mama, Don't let her have me agaly. Mrs. Sassa had a different opinion to express of Charley's goodness. She, (oo, wept as she took the stand, and go «lid her other three children, whom ahe [itt brought to court—Freddie, aged four; Henry, takes his litte brothers to the railrond yards when I have my back turned,” she sald, “I never ean coming back to me parley to punisa him from get! He is aure to dy run loose, and if t Keep him in the house he worrtes me to distraction, Yesterday waa the firat time [ ever chained him.” Mrs, Sassa was represented by At- torney Samuel Greenberg, and at his advice she pleaded guilty to the charge of cruelty, She wos held in $500 ball or trial ting into miachtef, that tf 1 let hin Vivten Gould, Mother and child are he boy may be, as the mothers Feported as doing wel ridley 1’ Magistrate Breen. wi OGuk. te ho ‘but the day when children can be ee Gould, daughter of George J] punivned tn stich @ way with tmpunt y Gould, was married to John Graham] hax passed. Mrs. Sasea should hav Hope de la Poer Horsiey-Heresford, the | appealed to the authorities to tak= of the boy, If she could note. t | car ley, so far as Maxistrate Breen year in Ht. Bartholomew's Crurch, he | couid jeurn, had not been tled to the ceremony being performed by Right] post all night, but only from ten o'clock Rev, David IL Greer with Rey, Dr.| yesterday morning until noon, Leighton Parks assisting, The event wax one of the most brill > Daftaloes Are Thrivii of the season. Miss Gould's trousseau of | WASHINGTON, Aug. IT—Lleut.-Cot fifty gowns cost all of $30,000 hak . commanding Yellowstone Nationa! wedding gifts represented hundreds of | Park, has reported bp Fagan tary of the thousands of dollars. Mr. Gould save | Interior Misher that his mon have seen his daugh magnificent co mice of th len Gould ser rgvous collar of matched p aame her niece ts, and more buftloes In the park recently than for ten years paqs ey counted forty-eight buffaloes, he sald, and all of them appeared to be 10 fin vondition. tame herd, which ‘s brothers gave a wagstvo | kept a n ene a Fl oe ae: nald th wolltaire dlansonds, Phe | Col Brett, numbers 4 now, Nearly one- Dnichesn of Connaught sent | Walé of the buffaloes in the United soclety members vied with | = este lo vellowstene. each other to show liking for the | ataiwart brides and his girlish bride vz Lord 1 Lad Decles began thetr bd = id hgneymoon on Jekyt oe the 1 LDiystin ‘eee 1 Geotgia coast, and 4 it on “ Erypt, sailing from k early ° Z, - ° i at year, Shor at arriving tn ; tlon of being the frst Amorioan woman Vv At auc w Reid to be pre unted to King George on was made in May alace by Ara, White # returned vinit. last winter, arriving ft yrand going home again shortly Christmas, Lady Decles de 1 that she was homesik. Whit here they were a much observed couple at the Camoys-Shermal Lord Decten found time to of the Judges at the 1911 horse show RUNAWAY HURTS GIRL. dren, Dragwing One 20 Fees Annie Bernstein, nine years old, of No, 140 Throop avenue, Brooklyn, waa knocked down and ly hurt by @ runa horse to-day while playing | with weveral Httle girls at the corner] of ‘Throop and Fluxhing evenuen Tie horse ached to ned Edward Berg 0. roadway, Hrooklyn, had b teed a bitehing post on Flushing avenue ptween Whipp! street and Throop! avenue. rr a motoreyel the horse snapped Hitehing at » nd bolted. The runaway swung round to Throop avenue, dodged a trol anged Anto. tue group hildron. All eacaped save the Bera n we drems caught in a heel & was draggel along for twenty She was badly cut at ined, and an ambulance sur yved ti to the Eastern fistrict . ! Hospital, ‘The runaway stopped whea | Shattered! surrey overturned. Insist on Getting This Package simpler aiteker and way moat Women Use, VAN'S NOKL DOES T No hard poard Tut your. clothes beautifully clean, VAN'S NORUB gives better romulta, with lone work, than ru yesterday, yn to onw hundred and forty-seven thus far bringing the number up for August, against ninety-three of last year, Investigation as revealed no suse for the sudden spread of the fever. from us, VAN ZILE COMPANY, 590 Summit Av,,W. Hoboken, NJ The to New York for | en Into Playing fern] The theory of some that oppar- tunity Iles within the easy reach of but a few has been again .xploded y the printing, last week, of 2,885 4 “Real Estate,” “Business Op- ty” and “Financial” advertise- ments— 1,184 More than the Herald, Chances to not only safeguard one’s savings but to acquire houses, lots, farms, shops, stores, markets, cafes, restaurants, manufacturing plants, stocks, bonds, mortgages, etc., that are either increasing In value or yleld- ing goodly profits, or both. For present onportuntties see the Over 7,000°Sunday World Ads, To-morrow.

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