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ii ce ams >. ETESS SO RUDE | TEWAY ZAY 00 ~ TREAT CABREL *WeePurser, He Have Ze Nerve ' tedisk-for Ze Ticket, Too, _ MEN GOME ZE PRISON. Wet Wes, Ob, Whit You Americans Say? Yes, ks Ze Limit, Eh? ‘Fou have to hand it to Gabriel Fan- es for the polish on his fngernatis, Qe mannera and his nerve. The officers ef La Lorraine, of the French Line have Banded tt to Bim already, Gabriel went aboard the vessel at : mag of ‘wes still reine o' to-day, When the French equivaient for “All eshort that's going ashore” was sung! ashore that's going agbore” was sung the first at table for the fret meal of the voyage and he kept up the record for several days. He was a cheerful soul and, in his search for congenial spirits, acquired considerable populanty in the second cabip, Gabriel had a way with tho ladies, too, There was the second maid of Madame, who had an expensive suite in the first cabin and she fell under the spell of the immaculate Gabriel. She ceased then to bemoan the fate which had put her among the bour- seols, for indeed here was a man of | noble birth, undoubtedly, travelling in- | coguito, She accused Gabriel of this and he blushed, But he did not deny. ‘The rumor spread through the cabin that he was @ man of standing and the stewards went out of their way to favor him, thinking of surprising, unexpected largess at the end of the voyage which should not be surpris- “ing nor unexpected at all. | For the first few days of the trip| the purser was visibly worrtsd, Time and again he wandered about the siip, | counting noses. One by ono he called the socond class passengers into a pri- vate conference and quizzed them. The last to be cross-exa:nined waa Gabriel. Every one else had been able to point out thelr particular name on the pur- ners and show in other ways that thelr passage had been honorably co! tracted for. ZE RUDE PURSER, HE ESS TOO EXACTING. snapped Gabriel, have neglected to purchase his passa “You are ridiculous, too, and I must re- fuse to discuss this affair with you. Without delay the purser preceeded te live up to the character given to him Gabriel. He moved that young gen- Menon trom his comfortable stateroom | to the lasaret, which Is ship’ And then—but no! It ts too horrible; it is monstrous, the act of a} tlend—this rude, ridiculgus purser dug up from the hold another who ha: started without the equipment of stowaway luxe. Thi Tuclen Guillermet, a Swii had worked with his hands. dirty from his days of intimate con with the cargo in the bowels of hip, and not at all debonair, And into the lazaret, whioh is not as large as the prison ashore—not by any means—they put Lucien Guillerm Gabriel sent an indignant message to ig that he was unused | with another, particularly one such nis, But the pig of a purser intercepted | the note and he camo before the grating | f the lazaret 1 sneered and chuckled and which caus: the fists of ney qurned both Gabriel and the | who con he wanted #0 to work with his hands in the new work! that he had stolen a_perfe: goo! passage from La Comp ‘Transatlantique over to the Ells Is! ithorities this mor 1 #a'd nothing, mere! over that he wanted 3 WIFE OF STEEL MAGNATE DIES AFTER OPERATION onverse Had Been Ill Mrs. E, C, C ce Last Janue ary | (Special to Tho Evening World,) GRBENWICH, Conn., Sept, 3.—Mrs.| B®. C. Converse, wife of the muttl- Millionaire steel magnate, banker, golf enthusiast and owne beautiful Conyers Manor here, to-day. Mrs. Converse was operated on for appendicitis last Jan y and had n in poor health since, She had se! been geen of late out of her sick root Prior to her illness, Mra, Converso took a very keen Interest in the de-| velopment of the estate and the fruft farm, which ts part of it Varying estimates of the amount spent on estate are placed at from one million dollars. | Mrs. Converse, who was Miss Jessie! M. Green before her mafriage, leaves, * husband, E. C. Con jr. of Los ‘and two @aughters, the Bayoness yon Romber f Bern ond Mre, Benjewin Rudge DP noe to ilve i rons might dues bo woh Kaeg OB wei! ae TS tHe, Why Don’t Wives Think of Doing Their Share Rather Than Getting It?”’ Writes a Girl— Should a Wife’s Share Be in Keeping Up What Publi Copyright, 1912, by The Pr 1M GOING TO NAME Wwe BABY! CISION 2 What Is Usually Termed the Illusion of Love?” Asks a Husband. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. ’ NiKOL& GREELEY-SMITH Now, the point of this somewhat cyn- {cal young woman seems to weil taken, A discussion of the wife's share to be of any value should Include all questions where there is possibility of @ division of authority. And no one outside the state of matrimony can have any notion of how many and how perplexing these questions are. Let's begin, however, by try- ing to be fair, There ere mony, many things in which it is the husband, not the wife, who gets “what's left.” Yor instance, ts there @ masculine eutocrat inside of civilization who does not havo to content himself with the worst piece of steak, the tail of the fish, the big loaves of the salad? Mo carves his own destiny to be sure, Dut it's @ tough one, nevertheless. As a rule, a husband has the Initla- tive in the larger—and less frequent if ions of married life. He may move from New York to Chicago {if his business tak him Westward, but it is his wife who decides to migrate from the fourth to the seventh floor, IMPORTANCE OF THE DOMESTIC REFERENDUM, the most | ortant element irried happiness Is the domestte un, the willingness of one ¢ of the matrimonial firm to sube Perhaps however, protested. He w sions affecting then both to the affair, an I the other for ratiication, The recall te also a Valuable weapon in the hands my of those Wno know uw to use It, The the. Wrench recall idges may ve an unwise will pr « thornycbande ’ n plodding § have his way, white the | of the recall of mothers-in-law? Berl- most desirable Gabriel must yeturn | Was. the Breatess barrier to mutual whence he came. fapiiess and understanding in mare —>———- sa third and necessarily alle nt presence, ‘There are, of se, happy homes where the nv ‘aw \# @ member of the fa’ have given hostages to unhap . Here are tWo interesting letters, one from a girl with !deas of her own on “the wile's #! the other from a husband who complains that his w. won't do ler share toward keeping his love alive. The girl writes THIS GIRL WANTS A WIFE TO DO HER SHARE. Dear Madea: Why don't wives think of doing thelr share rather then getting it? The major of girls whom I met lave an idea that marriage ts in their eyes simply a form of be- ing supported for nothing, that any effort on their part to make j a foolish, any gift way wie ba claim that ita is talented ° in any should use that talent to money whether she is married or not, or in other words take some svare of the financlal side of the game. If she no children she “I do not think you are right in declaring that the greater number of marital differences arise over money,” writes a disillusioned youn, woman who signs her communication ‘Dejected Wife.’ Money plays only a small part in the state of warfare which we call matrimony. You may settle what the wife's share of the family income should be, but how about her share of other things?— Power for instance. How about her right to discuss with and decide equally with her husband the ques tions of daily life which have nothing to do with money? You know very well that men and women quarrel If we are going ‘a what's left.” for then she is not wholly depend- ent on her husband, A woman should marry because she loves and not for support, and 1f she loves she does not care Whether she is supported in luxury or has to turn her shoulder to the wheel and help. I am told because of these views I am still unmar- (No one taking in the fact a ried, that any woman who ts not humpback can marry any timo 6! wishes.) LILLIAN C. WHAT HER SHARE IN KEEPING UP ILLUSION OF LOVE? Dear Madam: There has never been any difficulty in my household about money. But laying aside all pretense, I have to state that my or rathor our) little di Mcuity lies in the seeming inconsequential matter of a wife's appearance in the home. Writers of all ages and all classes tell us that by falling, even at odd and Infrequent times, to make her- self neat, becoming and attractive, a wife forces her husband little by ttle, gradually but surely, to see less and stlil less of the qualities that once endeared her to him. At times, during our four years of married life, I have, in various ways, suggested to my Wife how possible it 4s for such & condition to arise, and critielsed often her departure from what I consider d estic conven- tions by carelessness In her appoar- ance. My wife argues that to make herself what I call presentable in the morning, she would have to rise an hour earlier than usual. I would be giad to have your Views as to what a wife's be in keeping up what termed the illusion of love. AW. | _ Mow, there ia no doubt that » wite whonid do her shaxe—and it is usually the lion's share—in k ing alive the intangible fame which the hearth is built to sheiter, Beauty or the illusion of beauty is off to the dame, It is ev duty to be at all usually ex, that this Bvening World reador dues \ mot expect his wife to array her- | self in @ high necked Usen shirt- waist to pour his cotfe: And now we cone to the views of a foreign ert that wife's shar all there ja Ho writes: AMERICAN WIFE'S SHARE IS ALL A MAN CAN MAKE, | Dear Madam: The American we in e | all a om \1 perfectly t average Now York wife is very super. int and always out for a good time {1 ne average New Y how. | axeni viehe lares a who de in Ameri of the share ma convinced am at the rk husband, Is Ro ep 3 dav ste be world of his wife until she makes him \ EBVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, BEPTEMBER 8, YOST: prreereyeryerrre eco WHAT IS THE WIFE’S SHARE? PIIPFSSIOSIS STITT BIGITITSIIFSISS PSS SSISSDIFSSISSS FOSS IOOIISSOSS ISS BOVIS FIIISSIOTI99 D “I Can Briefly Tell You What Mine Is-- It’s What’s Left,’’ Says ‘‘A Dejected Wife’’ ishing Co. (The New York World). TAT WRENCHES FOT, BUT STARTS ON TRP FOR WASHINGTON Injury, Not Painful, Stops Golf Playing, Although Not Speaking Tour, oa BEVERLY, Mass., Sept. 3.—Prest- dent Taft did not play golf to-day. He stayed at Parramatta resting. His constantly over thelr children, beginning with the first row over the first rignt foot, injured slightly several baby’s name, Then there's the matter of schools, of religious instruction,! years ago, was wrenched late yester- of which college the boy should attend when he grows up. to discuss the wife's share intelligently, it will have to be her ehare of Playing golf for a few da everything—power, government in the home and all relating to it—not °’uses him no pain but some incon- money merely. But I can tell you what my share ts. day and the Pr dent decided to atop The foot | Yentence. Despite the injuries to his foot the President leaves Beverly lite to-day for Washington, where he will make the opening address to the Interna- | tlonal Congress of Applied Chemistry On his way South the Premldent will | stop in Boston long enough to address @ national convention of post-office |clerks in Faneufl Hall, and will dine| go | with Representative John W. Wi of Massachusetts. He will stay in Washington over night Wednesday, and leave Thursday in time to board the Presidential yacht Mayflower in the North River about 8 o'clook that afternoon, Charles D, Hilles, Chairman of the Republican National Committee, and George R. Sheldon, the t Join the President on the Mrs, Taft also is expected, to meet the President at New York. The May- flower will carry the Presidential party to New Londen, Conn, where, on Friday, Mr, Taft will address the | Atlantic Deep Waterways Association. He expects to retarn to Beverly on the | Maytiower, arriving here early Satur- day. His conference with Mr. Hilles and Mr, Sheldon will be the first of political importance the President has held in many weeeks, ko back to the old country to find 4 wife there and 1 found her immedi- ately (n Vienna, A hard working girl, with common sense, healthy tn body and mind, She can make her own hats, her own dress, knows all avout housework and cooking, i» an expert photographer end last but not least a great beauty. I told her (what every man should toll his future wife) that we may have to put up with hardship, and she answered would rather have it that way to prove her love to me, What I could not find tn Now York for fifteen yetra I found in the old country immediately, You in America make too much fuss about your women anyhow, No wonder r men rather thetr servants nts than anything eise. tions ago there were nin this country; hence the exaggerated veneration for , then | Both Claims Valid. I do not claim strength alone or quality alone. | claim both. | e DhiteRose CEYLON TEA 1 Ib,, % Ib, and 10c. Packets. Rose Coffee, Poand Tins, 35¢. eeerseeesoosesee? EXTRACTS DENTIST FROM OFFICE THEN COP 1S LAID UP seni Pulling Teeth Nothing Doughty Officer's Encounter | With Dashing Doctor. to “DOC” VERSUS VIDOCQ. Crashing From Stove to Sink, | From Sink to Floor, He Landed His Man. Ghorlock Holmes in his most strenu- | ous days never expertenced a more ex- | asperating hand-to-hand, shoulder-to- | ghoulder and foot-to-foot, rapping, scrap ping, rocking, swaying struggle than did Detective Deishiy of the East One Hun- dred and Twenty-sixth street police stn- tion thie morning when ho arrested Dr, Harold Harland, dentist, dextrous and defiant, on al tions of practising hie profession without @ license. When @ warrant was handed to the detective, sworn to by the State offi- clala, the officer thought he had a pipe. sed up the doctor As a “come: All he had to do was to put a hand on him, nod his head and say: “You're wanted,” and wait for the prisoner to drop his tools, put on his as becoming in a gentleman of the molar-moving profeasion. Not so! ‘The etective reckoned without his dentist. When Detshly walked in upon the den- tist at his office, No. 179 East One Hun- dred and Fifth street, the doctor was packing bis instruments. He had al- ready packed hin houashold effecta. “Oh, doctor,” said the detective po- Mtely, “moving? “gure,” aaid the doctor. “Well, wo'll bo moving together,” re- turned the officer, displaying hia war- rant and his badge. “The hell we will!” shouted the des- Perate dentist. “Never, by a dog gone aight! THE DOCTOR JUST SEEMED TO FADE AWAY. ‘The warrant was enough. Dr, Harold Harland never stopped to see whether JUMPS IN FRONT OF TRAIN IN SUBWAY, BUT ESCAPES. Women in Panic on Platform as Two Cars Pass Over Man, Doing Little Injury. A man believed to be Harry Shetn- baum attempted suicide to-day by Jumping in front of a Lenox avenue @ubway train at the One Hundred and ‘Tenth street station. By some freak coat and accompany him to the station | dack again. Deishly felt aomething give way in the direction of his float ing ribs, THE DETECTIVE LANDED AMONG THE MOLARS. Tt mado him mad, and when the two men confronted each other on their knees Detshly Just couldn't help it Ho reached back and shot his right fist forward and it landed among Harold's ara t made the dentist good. Anyhow he had to be good, for the detective whipped out his gun and said that he would let him have it if there WAN any more nonsense, As the men landed at the foot of the aire little elght-year-old David Cohan me in through the frorft door with some groceries for his mother, One of the men kicked him tn the face, cuttype his lip and loosening several teeth Be- les bruising his forehead and nose, A doctor had to take care of him, Magistrate Corrigan was about to hold the dentist on a nominal Detshly @aid that he had ‘fo: doctor's pocket @ ticket for the Campania which sails in the morn- ing, Delshly sald the dentiat had raked In @ good deal of coin in town and that ft wouldn't be eafe to allow him out on & shoestring. The ball was then fixed ‘at $1,000, After that Detshiy, who had been in great pain during the hearing, complained of his ria, He was sent to an hospital and there It wi lett lower floating rib w Hamfttatin: (from tho Boston Transettpt.) Ethel—Cholly says he ts beginning to find his place tn the world. Edith—Poor Cholly! How humtit foet over it. ed | the badge waa phoney, He stepped—he Jumped into his bedroom adjoining and slammed the door. fe went through of chance the wheela of the train did not touch him, but he was pulled out after two cars had passed over him, unconacious from @ blow on the head doubtless inflicted by the airbrake ep- paratus. ‘The man was seen pacing up and down the platform excitedly, before the train, under control ef Motorman Carl Freeland, pulled into the station, When the first car was not more than ten feet away, he jumped squarely upon the tracks. The motorman stopped his train with the emergency brake, and while women on the platform were fly- ing up the stairs In a panic, the motor. man and two trackwalkers crawled under the third car and brought out the would-be suicide. ‘The only mark of identification about the man was the name pricked In the band of his hat. He was taken to Harlem fHospttal, a prtsoner. ‘The dazed detective recovrd from his surpris and bolted after the escaping manipulator of incivors and grinder He grabbed him as he was reaching out through the window for the fire escape. Dr, Harold Harland got @ half Nelson on Detective Delahly and they fell over together on top of the stove. The stove didn't survive the shock and the detec- tives with @ deft wrench put the doc- tor in the sink. The doctor threw the detective back against @ shelf and it rained pots and pana Both got fresh holds and went to the oflcloth, The doctor wriggied from under and tried to Ket a hold on the detective, but the detective used his toe, all hin toes, to better advantage and kicked the dentist in his bicuspid, They broke and no gong wounded. Out into the landing sktpped the “Doo.” Only one flight of staire was between him and the street. The “Doe.” wado a Jump for the atairs and the Vidocq made a Jump for him, land- ing fairly amidships. The doctor F | couldn't stop himaelf, and neither could the detective. They rolled oven and ever each other down the stains, bump- ‘ing from bunnister to base-board and ——__— @BT A DRINKING OUP FREE! Do not send your child to school individual drinking cup. asert that the publio drink- give them to you After the straw, a Young Soft Hat—the ideal early Autumn headwear. Featherweight styles that are not only smart looking but ascomfort- able as you could wish. 3 8 $4 1490 Mroadway, Only Store o@ © Broadway, Nassau 8t., 87 Nassau St, No, 87, two or three doors and into the kitchen. | Have you enjoyed this great “‘quality- blend”? No expense wasted on a fancy package —that’s why we give ten additional. 20 for 15 cents More money Is epent for FATIMAS than for any other cigarette. Doctors Advise Tyree’s forins of antiseptics as preventives of dir ease and safeguards to good health, Many such preparations in use are actu- worthless, while others are positively t when used under a 'yree's Anti lutely safe to use and has been recom- mended by physicians for more than twenty-one years, It is also the most e cent package W jard antisepti olves instantly in water and when asa douche is unequalled. absolutely ne kept constantly on hand as a preventiv: of contagion, Sold by druggists every- Send for booklet and sample. ree, Chemist, Washington, D.C. HEN our doors opened this morning, com- mencing our 20ih School Year, we counted more enrollments than at any other time in our history. So much for quantity. q As for quality, no school ever possessed a finer lot of Boys and Girls than those who somehow choose “The Miller School"—which is a point that parents should mark well. : Our Catalogue will tell you more. a 4-Room Flat Furnished $110.00 NIN Guinn Ow.” finkenbergs pletely Furnished Do YOU Know It? Made fY FE. Pritchard, $31 Spring St, New York, Powder for Women ‘Thousands of women are using various eptic Powder is abso- lestroyer known, as Being “poisonous, it should be | To-morrow; introduci | modele in fall Tailored the brand new style touches, st models with notched self-collar, bindings, self-colored buttons, | teed satin linings; skirt bound with bi button trimmed; also in the new mixtures; colors are wine, brown, blue and black; never intended to sell for less t! $16.00. Rebuilding Sale price, to morrow $4.98 J. wW 9 ALTERATIONS FREE Cor. 14th Street and Best Thing for Artificial Teeth iif a ite The use of Odol— just a few drops in a little water—is the best way to cleanse and purify artificial teeth. And it's the best way to keep the gums in con- dition. Simply rinse the mouth or use the tooth. brush just as you would with plain water. Geo. Borgfeldt & Co. Justa pate Touch o ARMEN eS lovely complex: and ‘show Woeter ack come off ath removed, CARMEN Complexion Powder feunlike other ene, 1¢ ont sn ow-white—non-stichy — softens and soothes the skin. seand 850, Stafford-Miller Company, |S Olive Street, SUNDAY WORLD “TO LET”’ ADS. Simplify Home-seeking by saving time, temper end tramping.