The evening world. Newspaper, September 16, 1912, Page 3

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“ILUFHEEM SO!” L- WEEPS BARONESS | DERE HUSBAND Mrs. Percy Procter Says She'll Find Him If It Takes Her Fifty Years. HERE TO PLAN sais Says Jealous Relatives Caused | | | Divorce ana Now Keep . Hubby in Seclusion. ‘The former Baroness von Kilfuss, now fe divorced wife of Percy Procter, member of firm of Procter & Die, Cincinmati soap manufacturers, on the warpath. She arrived from Bu-| ope a few days ago and is stopping at, the Hotel Astor, but If you've pressing Susiness with her you had better go to her lawyers office, where she spends f™any hours daily mapping out a cam- paign which she expects will result in fringing back her mfitionaire husband | to her. | Mme. Procter wi start for Cincinnati this week, and promises that on her | arrival there certainly will be something @oing. Only ehe doesn't eay it that way. In fact she talks very, very little Eng- lish, but counts on getting by tm the famous city on the American Rhine by ftinging at the natives a choice assort- ment of German—high or ‘low, pay your | Benoney and take your choice. ‘And & mere $0,000 in woap stock, said to have boen given her as @ pre-nuptial gettioment, isn’t going to stop her one dit. No, sir-oo! Here's the secret. She loves her husband, And when 20 pounds of sweet femininity declares violently that she loves her hubby and {s going to have him, what is @ fra{l millionaire of sixty-three going to do about it? PROCTOR MET BARONESS WHILE TOURING FRANCE. Mr. Procter was travelling in France ¢ 1909 when he met the charming froness von Kilfuss, A few weeks after the Baron died the charming wid- rs. Percy Procter. He had dan't seem. until six months later, tained a divorce in Ohio on the krounds of neglect did the former Baroness become really interested, ‘Then she took the first boat for this rched for weeks, but couldn't husband, and she declared his es had him iryhiding, Two years ago a civil action was tried in Cincinnat! and the court decided that Mrs. Procter couldn't sell the $40,000 in stock, but could have the interest, umounting to $1,920 a year. Then Mrs. Procter returned to her be- Joved France. This two years’ absence convinced her that she loved her hus- and more than she first thought, and that’s why she started back for this country. Mme. Procter is a large woman, tall nd fat—beg pardon, stout. She hes, ' Bowever, the pretty, innocent-looking fase of a girl just out of a convent, and the look that ehe gives one from her Big. blue eyes could be put down asa baby stare. BARONESS SAYS SHE DOESN'T WANT HiS MONEY. ‘t want their money—I want my old @ reporter, and she @miled mischievously. And moment later ia “I tut mein husband” in s way that would Rave brought joy to an ola Weber-Fields Budience. he dangted the locket of a heavy wold chain that hung from her neok ang which is supposed to have been ‘worn by a friend of the Czar on @ boar Qhent several hundred years ago. “le relatives are trying to keep him Brom me," she continued, a tit angrily, “But they can't do it. ‘They don't Realize that they're dealing with Baroness. They have what you oall— Kidnapped him. But I'll find him if it takes fifty years. “1 must find him, and then everything twill be all right, For I love him, and 1 know he loves me. Ah-h-h, poor Percy." ‘" If the aged manufacturer could hay heard the expression in her voice when she sald this it is almost a gertainty his heart would have melted. t about the divorce?” the ma- was asked. that’s it, fraud. Tam In nd I send answer to a lawyer ati and he 0 they say Perey wets mistake, My ph t, however, I SAYS SHE'LL ESTABLISH SCHOOLS FOR THE BLIND To m ear a: she didn’t give a ray about the P millions, the for- me #5 sajd that she intended es- | & two vhools for blind girls tn this one here and another in ie will teach sclentific mas- to show that she 1s capable ed that she has a degree of doctor of medicine bestowed at Caris- bad. Her mother, she added, 1s @ phy- ‘an, too, and started three euch | chools in Europe. Furthermore, aro 1s an author. Her forte ts " suggested “1 write on mititary politics. No votes for women business.” What's Good for Papa's Bab: Ped Ceo + Cough Drops, Lees WHAT IS THE IDEAL Men “But Have They Any Judgment of Women? \SHIDDENINPARS THE “Women Can Be Happy Husbands Money to (OGAL WOMAN cores Se yee Lee PRM rer mene THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1912. MUSBAND? “szescs= TWARES LEGAL WAR — Generally May Have Common Sense Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). OF ANT FEEL] If They Will Give Their Start in Business and Help Keep Store,” Writes “Optimist” —“I Will Never Find an Honest Man I Can Love,”’ Says a ‘Disappointed Girl.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. What is the ideal husband? It would be foolish to pretend that this not impossible. He that shall or does possess thy heart and thee is a mere agglomeration of moral excellencies. While it is true that the ideal husband need not put the beauty of Hermes to shame, we need not pre- tend that he {s all the more splendid for having outstanding ears or slop- ing shoulders. Every woman's ideal husband must possess the quality of manliness, which—though men don't always realize it—differs as widely from mere maleness ae does the ex- Quisite gift of femininity from the generic attribute of femaleness. | To be manly is to be truthful, ourageous; to posi not the hardihood of the stupid or phlegmatic brute, but that fine tremulous exaltation of the! spirit wherein the fear of Fear {s so much greater than the fear of Harm. To be manly {s to be intelligent, to spend one’s sympathy on others and one’s humor on one's self. ‘The reverse process is far more ‘sual, so much go that the student of fe has to admit the truth of Le Rochefoucault’s bitter aphorism it friends--some- how. In my opinion, the ideal husband must have cultivation of mind and spirit and is Just as much entitled as the ideal wife to the fascinating, Intangible fairy gift of charm, The {deal wife, inct- dentally, should share the attributes of Truthfulness, Humor, Charm, and in addition she needs Com- mon-@ense, Breadth of Mind and Feel- ing and a Sustained Interest in Life. Practioally all men have common sense. MEN NOT BORN WITH COMMON | SENSE. ‘They may not be born with tt, but! they acquire it through the inescapable contacts and processes of making @ living. | Anq men generally are broader fm mind and feeling than women. (Always excluding if they may be said to such expert wire walkers, such dazzling performers tight-rope, on. away and throw out the saving net of human sympathy for error—or what they consider to be error. 600 Fifth Ave, 903 Broadway 07 Broad IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND GET IT, Chee Cultivation and] of Mind and Feeling and take the | band. | ‘That is why! tude of husbands {s mainly the revult of I say the Ideal wife must have Breadth what I referred to Saturday You may care for style, you must care for qual-|§ ity—otherwise your money goes to waste.| With a Young label in your Hat you get both' Evening World reader: opinions. wives, and in my opinion they are en-| on the ethical tirely justified in their dissatisfaction. | that they are harsh and im-| They are starving for what Wordsworth patient of bungling performances there. | rightly defined as And when they see a aister or a|"Human nature's dally food, brother plunging headlong, they are not! For transient sorrows, simple wiles, so apt a8 men are to cast thelr theorles| Praise, blame, love, kisses, tears and quality for granted “in the Idea! Hus- several letters from about the Ideal} husband and other related things, and I| hope many others will send me their| Here are some interesting communications on the subjects under| Giscussion: HAS TO TAKE HER HUSBAND'S LOVE FOR GRANTED. Dear Mai am a young mar- ried woman and a good housekeeper, have ample money for the table and &n allowance, not for clothing only but des! Now, some women would call this married happiness and my husband ideal, but I do not; for with all I have I never receive one kind word from him. He thinks now that he has furnished me with a good hom, t is all that ts meces- sary, and he stays at home at nights it 1s proof of bis love for me. He wants me to take his love for granted, but I find just through lack of affection my love for him is wearing away. Please tell me, because people are married should they take things for grante’ and not say any of the nice lttle things they did before marrige? LONELY, This 1s a common complaint made by I have received smiles." But it seeme to be this occasional atti- as the features to the fullest. | é Only Brooklys Sore | 871 Fulton 8t., Opposite City Hatt | THE IDE, AL MAN fght-hour brain—the mind that really onsumes and exhausts itself in work and at home in hours of leisure secks only silence and peace and restfulne ‘Women perpetrate a great 4 of unconscious cruelty upon men who have reached the supreme point of fatigue and are even too tired to quarrel. Here are the views of other readera: WIVES WHO HELP TO START THEIR HUSBANDS. Dear Madam: I believe there ai many lonesome maids and widows who could be quite happy and n- 8 of the Jewish race tt the women bring a dowry to their which gives the man a These wives live in the husbands, start tn life. back of stores and help their hi bands in every way, denying them- selvos luxuries and pleasure unill he is on his feet. In this way in of being a millstone around his ne they assist him in every way p sible, It takes money to mace money, and I believe these people set an example that could be followed vy others with good results, | heard so much of life this last two years that 1 am rather Ured of kt. | My ideal 19 @ good, true and honest man, one | could trust and love, he- cause I know that I will make @ good wife, I can sow, cook, bake and clean as well as anybody, but will I ever find 008 and honest? No, never. true that girls like only men who bluff. you. None of them for me, thank T don’t want a man who says he makes $30 or more a week when more than in fact he doesn't mak $8 or $10. The truth fo A DISAPPOL | | | Bernard Shaw's First Play,” comedy, London to present the play, e last night. engagement at ght. A Garbage Pail! A Smell! Flies !-—=— Disease! STOP the smell; PREVENT tho flies from breeding; DESTROY th | gorms——-which might bring disease into your fumily, Keep an inch of water stand- ing in the garbage pail, with a was given by the English company the Shuberts brought from in the The play the FORSON SHESAYS ’ stiindiiamisis Former “Beautiful Miss Hitt,” Now Mrs. Fox, Seeks to Get Hugh Jn og Thourh only four years Corby Fox jr. has had some atrang experiences that have taken him first to Reno, Nov., then back to New York | and then across the Atlantic to Paris, | France, where his mother says he now | 1s. Ho Is likely to have some more of | adventures bofore he ts much older. The little fellow’s mother, before she married, \was Margaret Hitt, | daughter of an aristocratic Kentucky family and known in foctety as “the | beautiful Miss Hitt." Her marriage to Hugh Corby Fox, Harvard graduate, member of the Calumet and City mid- y clubs of New York and prosperous manufacturer of railway supplies, at- tracted Interest In the Blue Grass Stat and in New York But the wedded life that started #0 auspictously for tie beautiful bMde end- ed sadly, 7 made known when she ull , who had been liv- ing at No, 190 West Fifty-seventh street, separated tn 1910, when the son | was two years old. |" Shortly after the soparation the for- | mer “beautiful M! Hitt" inatituted habeas corpus proceedings to regain pos- | © session of her baby. The child was then with Mrs, Fox's parents, Mra, Fox charged that that home ‘as not a fit place for the baby, ‘The Reno t granted her sult and awarded her the custody of Iittle Hugh Corby jr. The decree was handed down April. } A response to an order requiring Fox | to show cause why he should not restore the little boy of many adventures to ni mother lawyers for both Fox and Mr Fox appeared before J Bischof of | the Supreme Court to-day and presenied | briefs and affidavits, Justice Bischoff | [A 1d he would the NIGHT SCnhUUL 'HE boy who spends his night in a school room inatee: of a pool room is in line for < better job—also a stouter pay- envelope. Y You'd be surprised to know how our Night School has helpe« boys to help themselves. G Why not call this evening—it might be the turning point i: vr life PUT THE OTHER FIFTEEN CENTS IN THE BANK. Autumn Dresses Brilliant Gowns New $18 Models $s] Wr 98 re Sale begins our Second Weck of Expansion Values—due to the opening of our new Philadelphia Store. Range from midshipmen serges to copies of famous Parisian models in semi-recep- tion styles. Autumn Aeolians Charmeuse — Messaline — Serges Duo-Tone Diagonals Trimmed with satins, velvets, laces and embroideries—productions which other establishments would hesitate to present under $18 to $25. New French neck and collar arrangements—full hey fancy slecves, over-draped skirts with plaited effects and side drapings. A genuine price demonstration. Alterations FREE Sale Tuesday AT ALL STORES 14 and 16 West 14th Street—New York 460‘and 462 Fulton Street Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Street_—Newark, N. J. NEWARK 141-145 Halsey Street New thoughts in wall paper EW thoughts—creative genius have produced radical changes in wall papers. Thibaut’s papers of to-day are not mere wall coverings. They increase the cheerfulness of their surroundings. They are just a little better—a little more reliable—provide a little more value than the ordinary, yet are no higher in price. Thibaut’s wall papers express strong, aggressive new thoughts in decorat- ing along proyen lines. Ask your decorator to supply you with Thibact’s Wall Papers. Thibaul’s Wat. THE DECORATORS” STORE MADISON AVENUE & THIRTY-SECOND ST. par NEw YoRK enon THE LARGEST WALL PAPER HOUSE IN THE WORLD BROOKLYN Flatbush and Dekalb Aves, noss men, but need a little en agement and assistance, I think there Safe | would be fewer divorces and happier Pe ecu wenmerrens ice ein er Ess toUse! Per 10c Bottle Ave ing to meet men half way. Gaek aad | ee OPTIMIST, neiceten Siete Ire Zee eal IT's WORTH A QUARTER Se, he eae indon™in pgs [A -OIBb IB AB OARH RF AN, *Girial aise, We), Or write tor pour copy to TRY IT 438, 440, 442 WEST Bist ST., FORMERLY “Eddys Bld English auce marriage too much 1 transaction, The plenty of good men who coi would make {deal husbands an CARPET CLEANSING BY COMPRE! AIR IN FIRE-PROOF STORAGE FIRE-PROOF BUILDING FOR HOUSEHOLD GOODS | spoonful of Power. | ful, yet » 300 7th AVE, FOUNDED IN 1868 isi ‘1 24 East 42d St, YOU WILL SAY 80 YOURSELY, West Disinfecting Co. ** nen Yorn | teens oe P. S.A 25¢ bottle CM makes Dear Madam: years of age, T am only twenty but have seen and Lan. TELEPHONE 8867 COLUMBUS ia FSM QUARTERED OAK & POLISH SPECIA ONLY SIX TOA $] 0 ; CUSTOMER 2 An added attraction to the » lunching and dining hour. Blatz is appetizing and nourishing. &aeThe popularity of the Blatz products is due, first of all, to: pronounced individual quality. ee Such is the recognized fact by those who have passed scientific judgment on its merits as a table beer. HE Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more ‘‘Offers of Positions’’ than any other two mediums in the universe. ALBERT KRUMENAKER, Wholesale Dealer 508-516 West 166 Street New York City Telephone 69 Audubon Trade supplied by Rotail Liquor Dealers and Grocers. First-class Bare on Draught. 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