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

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_SAYSCURT AND PLINGER FRE ormer Race Track Man and Promoter Finally Released From Sanitarium. ‘ WANTS FORTUNE BACK, ystery in Commitment— Wife Signed Away Some of Real Estate. W. Newton Bennington, former race rack plunger and promoter end re-| ted millionaire, was legally declared his right mind to-day by Justice! elby in the Brooklyn Supreme Court. ip to three months ago Bennington | an inmate of the Middletown iam for the Insane under treatment Dar 5 Since 1907 Bennington has practi-| ; lly dropped from the ken of New ork, He was went’in June of that ear to @ sanitarium in Flushing, L. 1. PLater he was transferred to the Mid- Kdletown Asylum. He has always in- Sisted that he does not know how he got to the Middletown institution or} who put him there, August Belmont and other business 10 had known Bennington in his @ race horse owner were Inter- spring to the extent of taking obtain his release dn June 7 Bennington Waa brought to Brooklyn on a writ of Wg and Justico Kelby after rot him tn the cus. Frederick 8, Ware, NO OPPOSITION TO HIS APPLI- CATION TO-DAY. that time Fen: owed to ¢ Ils actions has, Mr. W eed iis re ngton has not 118 oWN inclinas have beon watched has fully recov- epoerl tage he State authort- Ware asked Jus- » formal order res oring * rights as a cane Ave on p 228 con tan’ Whe tad not Bennington : tila wife, his com- th her | Institution of litigation f about $100,000 worth {tts alleged, Mra,’ his vid friends who huve he is the picture th and bis mind ap- Ve tevovered Its one time dd quickness of action. Hel inngunced that he will start to muhe another fortune, 1 estate promoter and al vr of Wall street pools Ben- ccumulated a big fortune in the 90's, He had a magniil- home Wath Beach and was known r New York for his la in| | bs PN agreeably surprised.” | taken seriously. bat > BENNINGTON SANE, | Three Recipes for Ma THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 0, 1912, rried Happiness; Two Practical and One Theoretical IS IT Possiece we ate /8 DoweaRs woern OF MEATS WHEN “ Good SHORT® MarR! Copyright, 1912, by The Preas Publishing Co. (The New York World.) GS “FLASHY DRESSER® -seg *stENG” “The Man Who Marries a Flashy Dresser Soon Be- gins to Squabble About the Bills,’ Writes “Sten,” Who Is Single—‘‘Fifteen Cents a Day Would Buy a Nice Outfit of Clothes,’’ Says “Interested Reader’ Garbage Can,” Warns a Husband. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. In fact, I should #2) elsc, the more one expects the more one is } ; expectancy {s of the positive, aggressive kind, the sort that gives Fate a | gentle pueh now and then or meets opportunity h ow that it is easy to make a) and quite impos- is, without uns. Ash expendicures, | Fh * lone's tdeals are large CLEANED U? $500,099 AT THE ‘ Pill ney jenough it ts able to cut RAGE TRACKS |them down to sult actual conditio at In the heyday of racing Benuingtun! inio business of running} He had excellent Juden chare of thoroughbred f0on vullt up a formidable stable which included Beldame and De Mund. With these two and some other capable per- formers he won $59,000 In stakes and eaned up an riune in bets. tle was a plunger in the betting ring yd thought nothing of risking every- thing (he bookmakers would take. His q 8 took up so much of his me that his business vegan to suffer. He sold out his stable—getting $40 900 from Paul Rainey for De Mund but was unable to resume his grip a Physical illness in- n and about six years Ago he suffered a nervous breakdown which led to the final loss of his for- tune and his confinement in an asy- lum ——— ORIENTAL JAG LANDS JAP IN SAYVILLE’S NEW “JUG. F Was Fired Out of Job, Fired Off of Train and Fired Into Cala- boose in Record Time. Down at Sayville, L. 1, the Town Council built @ nice new jail a short time ago, but there didn’t seem to be a Boul to use it. Even the village souse Retayed out of town when carrying his d But to-day the prison happy. The booby-hatch 4a occupied at last. It was dusk yesterday when « train olled into Sayville station. As the train stopped the cramped figure uf a little brown man shot out airily and grecefully and landed on the plat- motive power for the ascent hed by ¢ No, 10 of a brakeman and the descent was look«4 after by gravity in accordance with the usual laws. The bundle on the platform undoubled itself and began a Diue line of talk which might be translated by some very wicked Jap- nese, but no one el: Then the bun- 4 and taken in triumph to Vigorous treatment brought to light at the wild eyed Jap was recovering from an Oriental jag, and it was some Jag too. He was so sad. He had Nwept when discharged by Henrietta Crosman, who is occupying a cottag: at Bayport. There seemed but two things left for a man of honor. Ie would either commit hari-kari or get stewed. Being a modern Att fallow, the ex-serv: did the latte: He told Judge White all about it to- dey. eerie Bod Grose oh Cough Droge. if one begins with narrow, pett of life and tnd! other lives ace ment of happiness is sure to burst !8) guccestion mado by @ married woman should realize that if he has chosen unwisely, he is merely the victim of self-decoit. experiments and temper instead of trying to strait- jacket another read. both mental and moral, are essentia| to thoughtful letter from a young woman stenographer who describes her tdcal HOPE, FAITH, LOVE AND HIGH viduals and tries to 1a} ng to them, the reams and if it survives at all, becomes in this column t at best a thing of shri sand patches. | in at home, but it Suppose every untappy wife should say to her- | 1 “Bvidently this to not the | noble aud godlike creature I took hia to be, But has he changed, deteriornted, suffered @ sudden metamorphonis into 2 selfish, fault- finding, ordinary creature? Or is he the came and hac my judgment improved? Then why ehould & hold him responsible, for my own defect of judgment? Why not make the best of what I have, instead of reproaching him be is not what I thought I was getting? Perhaps he, too, finds me strangely | different from his ideal.” Suppose every disillusioned husband Suppose each should try with his own character human being in a -made {deal that doesn't fit. elasticity, | Breadth, common sense, successful marriage, Here is a follow: IDEALS RECOMMENDED. Dear Madam: I, for one, belleve in @ marriage founded on hope, faith, love and high {deals, and where these find a place tn the home-~-no matter how ¢imple and poor that home may be~there need be no Dickering and argument concerning money matters between the husband and wife. > ‘ It 1s the girl seeking the “good sport" and the fellow looking for the coquette and flashy dresser, who when they marry find soon enough that each has swallowed some bit- ter medicine, and the only cure @ divorce. No wonder that in the interim the man should begin to squabble about this or that little ex- in the house, He has married and ehould not expect a Intent on the latest creations girl from Paris to think about hie earn- ing capacity as a husband, T am @ poor. girl, working hard to make enda meet, but I’m not anxious “sport” with the automobile for marr today. band of and contentment; who {s happy, but knows other wives But this pleasing bit of cy ’—<* Don’t eed the Three distinct and separate recipes ed happiness confront us One is supplied by a hus- thirteon years’ experfence another by @ wife lees fortunate; a third by a young unmarried woman, who tells of her ideal man and her dream of domestic bliss, A very worldly woman once re- marked to a hoverer on the brink of matrimony who bad asked her opin- fon of fatal plunge: “Expo-t something, and you'll be disappoint- cd; expect nothing and you'll be fclsm 1s not to be y that in marriage, as in everything likely to get, provided one's the alf way. but Tam some fellow, sanguine enou must be fellows have good morals, equal to the ight of day, I may have my fond hopes sadly attered in the non-real! my ideals, s ‘The letters of the married contributors are less idealistic, ng with human atures, dally food and clothes and, gars, That of a wife relates to the at “many wives would be satisfied tu receive as ® personal ale lowance what a hus! tobacco—say fifteen cents a day ALL THE NICE THINGS 15 CENTS ‘\ A DAY WOULD BUY. Dear Madam: The statement in @ letter the other evening that “even fifteen cents a day, which the aver- age man spends for cigars, would In @ year amount to enough to buy a neat outfit for a woman,” {8 food for ought. I made a few calculations think the subject !# of great enough interest to set others think- ing. Fifteen cents a day 's $04.75 @ year. Here !s what acdgrding to my judgment could be bought for a win- ter, outfit: ‘One sult. ++ $95.00 Hat «.. sere 10,00 Shoe 5.00 Gloves 1.50 Underwear 8.00 Hose 2,00 ‘This leaves a balance of $8.2 for a waist or accessories, I am sure many @ weman would be well pleased to start out this season with as good fan outfit as these figures would buy, I suppose fifteen cents @ day ts taken as a general average, but while I know a few men who do not smoke DONT Tau “SOME PEOPLE PUT MORE IN ‘THE GARBAGE THAN THEY EAT? SEHED “IGYAS, EXPERIENCE Atteen cents a day and if one ine cluded a drink or two the average would run way beyond this figure. I have always had one hundred dol- lara every fall to get the articles men- tloned in my list and have thought it quite generous considering our cir- cumstances. But it seems very un- just to me when I think of some women wearing @ suit and hat two feasons when their husbands are speuding at least twenty to forty cents a day for smokes und drink: I know one woman who sald she could not afford to take the extra quart of milk a day the doctor order- ed for her her allowance for household expenses would not cover the extra expens Her husband smokes ,Turkish cigarettes. I also «now @ man who always complains that he has not the means to make 4s good a personal appearance as he should. He {sa constant smoker and wood cigarettes, I have seen & box in one evening and know he also smokes nearly all day. Cigarettes used to be considered & vice even by men smokers, but now we even sco the gray haired men "!8- ing them, An American man with a little of arette In his mouth {s not @ pleasing ‘cht to an American woman, I think If the average woman really knew the amount spent each day for “a few smokes and a drink of two,” she would be more than satisfied to recetve a like amount for her share to clothe herself, as she has no habit calling for such an expenditure, Most women don’t complain publicly, they like to give the impression that thoy fare better than they really do. INTPRESTED READER. ‘A married man contributes his formula of hapiness as follows: HIS WIFE A DANDY HOUSE- KEEPER AND THAT HELPS. Dear Madam: I do not believe that & family should be run on the basis of paying the wife a certain amount and then let things drift; that ts, man and wife pay thelr own bills, I belleve @ man should be a man all the time and a woman likewise, The trouble a good deal is when in court- ship they do all tm their power to ploase each other in.the way of good times, love, presents, &c., &e., but what happens after the minister has said the final word? Then it ts a of seeing who can do the most ‘They have forgotten how they caressed one another in court- ship; it was love then, now ft turns into business. Why not be men and women and do all in each other’ power, or at least do all reasonable things, to make each other happy? Love will grow so deep that they I think the majority spend more than Buy your tea in grown. There's no pos —no chazze to cheapen it addition of inferior tea. (there are enough du 4 others who think they can catch a nice girl Maunting thelr dlamoia@ and explod- tea apoul taelz msdan stharwiaes dheaitmee: Bin aaa eae strength, clean tea when you get White Rose. ackages air-tight, dust-proof— won't think of the wife being “a paid packages—Buy White rose CEYLON TEA the only popular All-Ceylon tea in America that you can buy in packages sealed where the tea is ssible chance for adulteration or lessen its flavor by the You buy fresh, full- can't get in. 5 servant, ain't it awf man should give his amount to care for the table, and coal bill, also It she proves herself r try tt himeelf and do the better; and t “INTERESTED READER® SAYS SWE COULD BUY ALL THESE ON. IS @ A DAY CIGAR baone ‘ T each wife a sufficient rent ght bill, Then if unable to make jonadly good use of st, let him ee which one can hen if they have the right spirit they won't have any further argument, but let the one that 1s the better manager do the managing. I heartily say the wife should have a fair allowance, so that every time she wi ants to make a purchase she won't have to go bes- wing for tt. Some people put more out in the garbage can than: they eat. I pride myself having a good—yes, a dandy— housekeeper learned before we years younge ried thirteen years. 1 got as low 2.60 per month. monthly allowance nd wif were married. We both had 1 We have been mar- During that time $40 and as high a My wife gets @ of 6%, out of which she pays $9.0 rent and keeps the table and buys most all of her ciothing, and has saved an amount of $20, After taking out a suffictent amount for incidentals I bank the balance. We s in Brookly: rted housekeeping later we moved to a smaller town, and for eleven and @ half years have lived In this city. pay the coi in a while that my money in her purs has less than $% ove T Should it happen once wife should need assistance !u the way of a new dress or hat, tt 1s forthcoming cheerfully, for I never want her to be without e, and rand a she really needs, and it often rung to $10 and $15, When I spend money my wife gets her share of it; when arried her for, THIRTE! Harrisburg, Pa. 199 Broadway, 908 €05 Broadway, 1197 849 Broadway. 1390 500 Fifth Ave, 6 ‘Only Store in Nassau St,, Onip-Brooklyn Store, 871 with m toe- That's what I I love and court her more than before. Troadway, Broadway roadway. Br Fulton Bt, Opposite City Hall Homes Furnished Moom» $49.98 “ 75.00 99.98 $4.00 a week Opens an 4 Account. ROYAL Compire OM $27.50 Creat Value $45 $3 on $30 NN YEARS' EXPERIENCE, FURNITURE : HARLEM STORE 2190.3’ AVE BET 119812051. f Golden Oak Dr Pa vs value B40, |HOME FROM PARIS hat you'll find comfort in forestalling the derby with a Young Soft Hat—just the easy featherweight headwear for the “time between.” \WED AHEAD OF TIME STILL BLUSHING AT | AFTER BIRTHDAY PARTY NAUGHTY DANCE Architect Jacobs Fled When 1,000 Models Cast Off Last of Flimsy Costumes, A aort of red glow hung over the Rot- terdam of the Holland-America line as she steamed into the harbor to-day. Ar- were blushing, as they repeated in un son: “We'll never go there any more. ‘They reforred to Paris in general and more particularly the Bal des Quartres Arts. Mr. Jacoba made many acquaintances | ia Parts in his search for “Ideas” for the | new Friars Club. AM of these acquaint- Oct. Al for almost anything from a sauce to @ and sermon at the Bal des Quartres Arts. Molly, her sister Kathert Having @ingerty explored the Moulin | joiner Rouge and various other tourists’ traps on rambles personally conducted by Mrs. | Jacobs, the architect winked siyly and | = avked if ft was an affair to which he could take his wife, Wee-wee, yes, in- deed! The Parisians wore astonished that Mr, Jacobs would harbor the thought of anything else, A trifle gay, Perhaps, with those trrepressible young students from the atellers, but nothing one had better not see. 80 Mr, Jacobs and Mrs. went to the ball, The excitement started at door, A nonchalant, person whom Mr, a “sporting duchem to the the matter-of-fact mount was about to place his north- west column on the Jacobses when the duchess, with an exclamation of con- cern, put him about on the starboard tack. Then she ran Hghtly down a) ladder and jogized volubly for th clumsiness of “Fin.” ARCHITECT AND WIFE FLEE FROM BALL. Tt was to be an “Arabian Night's’ ball, Mr, Jacobs had been informed, He found ouy when he was once tnalde and a swirling throng cut off his re- trea’, that the guests of honor—falr models of the Tatin Quarter—were in the flimstes Arablan or otherwise, ning, before t wa) Later the odele—neatly a thou sand strong—found even the nigh tes too hampering for thelr graceful \urkey- trotting, and appeared tn thetr natural. professional costumes, When Mr. Jacobs, making a bee-line for the door wich his wife in tow, complained to one of his well-meaning acquain’ances that | the ball was @ trifle too giddy for hin the Paristan raieed his hands in a tontshinent. | “But, my dear sir," he expoatulated. “Truly, this 1s nothing but beautiful nature—and what more — beautiful? Why the abominably strict manage- ment, in order that no tinge of vulge ity shall shame our merry-making, have made @ most positive ruling as to the of attire which gentlemen shal be allowed to put aside In the hall. 80 Mr. Jacobs explained his blush to ship news reporters in hushed tones. fon was absolutely de- he said, “Rome, in ‘te palm- lest days, never witnessed such a state of affairs, I am through with Parts forever. ee nt on W KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 9%.—Eleven | hundred dollars, the savings of @ dozen | years, was spent last night by Guiseppe | Annello, a laborer, when his daughter, Mary, sixteen years old, became bride of Vito Campanelio, years old. Fifty-nine motor by Annello whirled th "a boule ing for the event ever since Mary was a little girl in Stolly, discard| your straw $3 and $4. 5 7.50 Write for Our New Catalogue 1 * Our Sree terms | = Apply Also to | a 927 50 Wertche ter County gram signed waid: “We are married and are on our way to Thousand Islands, is connected with the ances were sure he could get “ideas | Bullding, Saturday he had a birthday | she had lived in Flushing since the | death of her husband, fifteen years ago, | cobs describes as | “came cantering tivities on the quarter deck of a bejewelled elephant. Her dainty —_—— OF GROOM 10 BRIDE Now Mother Is Recalling Invi- tations, for Brooklyn Pair Is on Honeymoon. Mra, Ellen T. Coleman of No. 62 Macon street, Brooklyn, ta busy to-day.) sending out recalls of the Invitations chitect Harry A. Jacobs and Mra, Jacobs| to her ehter Molly's wedding on 5. Yesterday she received a tele “Molly and Albert.” It bert ts Albert Jerome Coveny, who Department of @ a dinner to his fiancee, Mise and hi wedding, James. The Fall Suits, $22 Values leading cities—made as a very under ordinary circumstances. London Walkin, Three-quarter len, fatigue lengths, with the richest orate trimmings and silk linings. new cutaway designs. In the rough diagonals. A very Bedell expani 645-651 Broad St.—Newark, ASASY ASRS which | . Harrie, mother of Mra. Jack took place at the Church of St. Vincent | more. Celebration Sale In Honor of the Opening the Philadelphia Bedell Store 15 Being offered simultaneously in four value to show the whole range of ap- proved Fall styles at a price impossible New Postillion Models Coat Models Square Point Ensign Models coats and the and the completest line of twin-tone demonstration of the economies of Alterations FREE Sale Tuesday at Three Stores 14 and 16 West i4th St.—New York 460 and 462 Fulton St.—Brooklyn Ge Paul in Weet Twenty-third street, was the surprise of the occasion, ‘The bride's father, John Coleman, was for many years Buropean buyet of costumes for one of the big department stores, At the close of thetr honeymoon, Mr. and Mra. Coveny will receive thelr friends in thelr new home on the day that had been fixed for the wedding. —— MAYOR COMES HERE TO WED Maryland Executive Takes Boston Girl ae Hie Bret Mayor George Gustave Young, of Cumberland, Md., will marry Miss Irene MoAlpine, daughter of Mra, Charles A. McAlpine of Boston, at the Plasa Hotel this afternoon. Her brother, the Rev. Charles A. McAlpine of, Rochester, N. Y., will officiate, Mian McAlpine hag been secretary of the Assoctated Charities of Cumberland, Bho sraduate of Wellesley. Mayor .oung an ride will leave Tuesday on the Kronprinsessin Ceefite, _— ee jow of Juatice Brady Dies. ’ John R. Brady, widow of 6 former Supreme Court Justice of New York County, died at her home, No, 15 Franklin plac Flushing, to-day. Mra. Brady was seventy-one years old, Mre. Brady leaves two daughters, Mrs, Robert Harriman and Mrs, Catharine Barry- of special of elab- Trim, boucles NJ. 2 SS SS Se oe Re rede Merk We invite attention cludes— $29.50, 38.00 and 45,00, 48,00, 55.00, “Once You Try It, You'll Afways Buy It— At once the most savory and most economics obtainabl sauce Per bottle... . At Your Grocer’s 10° PRANDALL'S Established’ 1811 Oldest Makers of Baby Cartianse in New York. CLEARING SALE THIS MONTH tai 3.4 A, New Fall Models Suits, Dressesand Coats. vance models for the Fall and Winter season. The assortment is very attractive and in- Tailored Suits — Cheviots, Diagonals, Cordu- roys, English Mixture, Bedford Cords, etc. Prices Trimmed Suits — Velour de Peau de cerise, Velveteen, etc. Prices $39.50, James McCutcheon & Co., 5th Ave. & 34th St., I= Established - Helf « Conturg to our collection of ad- laine, Eponge, Oo; ite Waldorf Astoria, OCCUPANCY Read the list of vacant apartments as printed in the daily and Sunday World. It will save you time and trouble. No other daily or Sun- day newspaper offers the number and variety of apartments to select from as does The World. Last week The World printed 6,914 “To Let” ads.— 3,380 more than the 3,534 printed in the Herald.

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