The evening world. Newspaper, September 24, 1912, Page 3

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a CHISTITOH! | ~ FANCY ANDY KNITS | HIS WAY ON SHIP Giant Onderdonk of Harvard Says All Young Men im, Should Crochet. - KROONLAND BRINGS HIM Also Boy ’Celfist. Whose Music Added to Terror When "Storm Raged. « When the Kroonland of the Red Star Mine steamed into the harber to-day Andrew J, Onderdonk jr, A. B., who io over six feet in height end weighs Semething like 190 pounds, put away his fancy work with @ sigh, Me hed crocheted his way across the Atlantic, “Fancy Work Andy,” the girls on boa! the Kroonland had nicknamed him, and he had revelled im the title All he said in self dofense waa that the young men of America, if they had a better idea of the artistic pos * sibilities of needles and thread, of their efficiency in whiling away tedious hours and = banishng —_unwelco thoughts, would probably time to embroidering than the: resent. Onderdonk, who 4s a graduate of Hare vari and in his third year at the aw achool there, was such a capable looking @tizen that the reporter to whom he Was pointed out approached him with ‘trembling. ‘Some one—er—they've been telling mo You do—er—sewing,” ventured the re- Porter, satisfied by a backward glance that retreat was not cut off. “Yes, indeed I do, thanks," rumbled “Fancy Work Andy,” pleasantly. “Would you care to see some?” He plunged down {nto hie stateroom | and came back with a datnttlysem- proldered landkerohiet. WAKE THE NICEST PRESENTS FOR THE GIRLS. “Filet work, we call it," he said, Teising his voice from his shoes with AiMculty. “Of course I do all sorts of fancy work, but T really prefer the Met. I have hundreds of handkerchiefs 1 made while abroad. They make such pretty presents for ginl friends, and besides it's such fun to make them. “I don't see why any young man should be ashamed to be proficient at embroidering, It is just as artistic as painting a water color. On long trips in trains or sea voyages what better could one do than embrokier?”’ ‘The reporter asked if Mr. Onderdonk had epent all his time with hie needle while abroad. “Ob, dear, no!” he protested. “I've had a very active time golfing and at- tending cotillons at Moritz, Switzerland, with Prince Plo de Savoye and the Marquis Centurione!” ‘The Kroonland brought to America another European “Infant Pro! . Gutman Katz, at fourteen, has made the continent thrill to the moaning cf his ‘cello, wader the name of Gutia Casini. He is going on a concert tour with Mme. Sem- brich. “The Infant’ is six feet tall and has eae hundred and eeventy-odd pounds of muscle behind his fiddle arm, He kept much to his stateroom and playe hts ‘cello as industriously as “Fancy Work Andy” plied his needle through- out the voyage. On Tuesday night, when the Krooniand was being buffeted by heavy seas that caused great un- easiness among the more timid passen- wera, ‘The Infant’ heightened the heaven - protect - poor-satlors-on--such-a, night effect by plaiyng & moauing, brooding, tragic improvisation on nis ‘cello. Those who hear it sald 1: was ‘& fine descriptive offering that gave all fons of drowning except the @IRL CHARMED BY PICTURE IN THE LOUVRE. Miss Rebecca Schneider, daughter of Abraham Schneller, No. 120 West Wighty-eighth atreet, brought back with her @ome vivid impressions of the Louvre after dark. Just before the Kroonland sailed @he visited the «reat azt gallery with her father. ‘They comme separated, and Mias Sobnetd charmed, stood long before Rembrand which ho plays exclusively) THE IDEAL HUSBAND DESCRIBED BY ‘EQUITY’ He may indulge in to bacco, beer and wines (no whiskey). He may “cuss” a little He may tell ‘‘white lies. He may even fail to at- tend church. He may differ with his wife in questions of phi- losophy and world-policy. He must be healthy, clean, neat, orderly, com- panionable, thoughtful, considerate, affectionate, calm and well poised. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. NiXOLe GREELEYSM To the unmarried, or rather to of indtfferencs auniess area of darren jand in which only the weeds of eelf- jehness spring up. An@ through this desert, sur rounded by danger, overhung with @isillusion, every hermit walks lone, uncertain of himself, sure of BO one else unless « gentler hermit walke beside him. Beside him, not before, with music and banners, as some of our modern Joans of Aro conceive the picture; mot behind him, carrying the but, a load of hay and a sack of potatoes, in the good old Indian way. To me the ideal [hermit who Ives up to her adjective of gentle, But she must have the gon- ences of strength, of serene polse, not of weakness, not the supine attitude |which suggests that she has misread |the Book of Genesis and imagines that Mcther Eve, and not the serpent, was condemned to crawl. WOMEN OF GENTLENESS WHO REQUIRE A TONIC, There are women who have a gentle- ness which {s merely a mental and spiritual anaemia, The Fates defend the man who mistakes this lack of red co: puscles for ® feminine virtue. Such women’ require boyonl anything elae a toric, Their souls need iron, and tf 1 could I'@ makeevery one of them march in @ suffrage parade Irrespective of thelr convictions and merely for the good of their homes and husbands. You know the type. She has a Ustle, flat voloe, duo to lack of effort or energy to produce it prop- erly, She has o little, flat mina, which wastes itself in perpetual indecision. She is the sort that spends two days of weary debate om the subject of whether her new nit shall be blue or brown, that tekes twenty mini to decide whether she will ed to take an umbreliaethe ‘yes-no-I-don't- “Spring.” Each Inspection revealed a| $8, OOM smink?” woman. a eee ty ept up the wall, and still| Wiiy a man should wish to undertake Mige Schneider stood entranced, ‘The {the task of making up a womgn’s mind gasrdians of the art treasures put’ n addition to his otiter burdens I can't cat out and looked up—and still Spring |understand. But lots of them prefer to held Misy @ohnelder's attention, And |i", then it became very dark. To i] ‘There are, of course, many qualities Prefecture of the Police, to the Amer!- can Consul, to every one he oould think of went the alarmed Mr. Schneider, His daughter had dienp- peared. Paris had swallowed her—the aity of menace, At the Prefecture they heard him tell of the visit to the Louvre. Ah, his daughter had a fond- neas for art that amounted to a weak- ness? Ah? Pierre, the keys! ‘The prisoner of art was almost hys- terleal when the rescuers came, Tho ings became strangely lke peo- ple, whe sald, when daylight went, and atirred uneasy in their frames. She was sure the evil-looking Don had followed her movements with siniater eyes. Joseph Mentznor, @ diquor dealer, tried to kill himself with @as to-day In the home of hia parente at No, 18 West One Hundred! and Pighteenth street, He left the window of the bathroom slight- ly open and the escaping so was smelled by Mra. Kis jer, & neighbor, who ran into the Mentaner apartment and found hun half conscious, He was taken to Harlem Hospital by Policeman Howard of the Lenox avenue station apd Ambulance Surgeon McKinley, Mentaner has been #1 and despondent for several months oe They Cure Colds in One Da “hay mag Cermh Bey ha ge ty bestdes that of gentleness which are es- sential to the ideal wife, In a way, every man !s a Pygmalion, making or choosing his own Galatea and then praying the high Goddess of Love breathe the spirit of life Into the clay Perhaps the original Galatea when sie came to life wanted to pick up her eculptor’s chisel) and make a few ohanges in him. I would Mke to hear from all the Pygmatons and Galateas am to the quatities and characteristics of their !deals. ‘What {s the ideal husband? ‘What is the ideal wife? In answer to the former question realer of ‘Nie Evening World supplt the following excelient definttlon: HE GIVES THE IDEAL HUSBAND SOME LEEWAY. Dear Madam: In my scheme of things, the Sdeal husband may be conceived as indulging, moderately, in beer, wines (no whiskey) and tobacco, cussing a little, if emphasis fe demanded, and ayen telling white Mies, 1¢ occasion warrants. He may even fail to attend a church and occasionally differ with his wife on questions of philosophy and world policy, but he would have to be healthy, In a large percentage of cases the @ physical reason for the OeAnh Wescible, obstiuaie, He May Even Fail to Attend Church, but He Should Be Healthy, Clean, Orderly, Chummy, Con- siderate, Affectionate, Calm and Well- Poised, Writes “Equity.” merry, then the ideal spousal association, acvording to Nietzsche, is that of hermits in pairs—perhaps @ variation on the familiar French phrase of @ solitude of two. Don't you agree with him? gether by ties of love or friendship—life stretches itself as a vast desert wife is the gentile | T Copyright, 1918, by The Prass Pubtishing Co. (The New York World). BQUITY* PAINTS THE IDEAL MAN “Hermits in Pairs” is Friedrich Nietasche's definition of the ideal hus- band and wife, yet the great phil- osorher of nihilism conceived {t to be best for “higher men, freer spirits” to remain celibate because owing to the scarcity of “higher women” they must necessarily wed with their inferiors, if at all! This {8 really not so different from the conclusion reached by the Say- ville, L, 1., reader the other day when she declared that the ideal husband could be found only among old bach- elors. But if men and women must the unattached—those not bound to- nagging, unfair, unreasonable, pars!- montous or brutal husband. He must be clean. An unbathed, unshaven, slovenly individual, care- fess of and indifferent to externais, could hardly qualify for the blue ribbon class, He must be orderly and neat in his habits. The ideal husband wil! not Provo @ source of disorder and extra work in the home, How can @ man, pro! ing to love his wife, be blind to the ethical side of running amuck in the home and leaving wreckage and debris in his train? He must be companionable. His love is founded on admiration and Tespect, and he will have no foolish, mediaeval notions of authority or EXEMALION WEAR HIGH TOP BOOTS priority position in the home, Of the iia et idea! husband it need never be asked: “Are you out for a good time, or Is your wife with you?" In addition he must be honorable, thoughtful, considerate and affection- ate, but calm and well poised. He must be liberal, refined and must possess both physical and moral courage. QUITY, ON ROAD 10 HEALTH Womin Physician Says Count- less Ills Come From Low-Cut Shoes. SHE GOT 100 WORKERS TO STREET IN FIRE DRILL IN JUST ONE MINUTE Woman Inspector Had Whistle Dr. ida the ar Nahm says low out shoes e teat evil of the present day. Hieh-t and thick Hele Blown — and — Employees | storks are the reat things, ehe says, Thought There Was a Blaze, | tait oie sickness in thts countey ts 1 idea of w an 1.Dr, Nahin, “They Mes, Sarah Christopher, ¢ telde the house, woman fire Inapector of the F ee a ee that office by Mire Commisgioner Je boil Gur young girls, fon last week, held her first fire in-| ng men, are continu spection drill to-day in the sult and] qa? vine About pains and aches jeloak house of M. Steinberg & Co. at} 1 n to consider the No. 4 West Twenty-ffth atr i me tt on thetr 199 employers Were on the \ © medicine and floors below, just one minute a st they will not forego @ fashion fire whistle was blown. The fq ax of ir vanity, was emptied in elichteen soc New York weather jy too treaehar- Mrs, Christop uecompa oun to permit any rinks to be taken. fireman, visited the place unexpectedly | We ar in the morning this morning and told the head of the] «1 n the evening J cloak Journ their own living, Whether thay | find out} erayel around during the day or stay properly protected against |: 7 ry they are la repetition of the Triangle disaster at t must Jour- | Acting under her “instructions, Steins ; berg appeared In the work r¢ thelr feet the m of The Dung w or no. firm and the fire whistle. of them + slightost and quietly 1 place and were and the Inn lly 6d. evidence leach ff in eighteen {down the rea ses out nd feel tl ng ¢ bodies. eather are many ils, neumonta, many see anit all r being satisfied with t plimented the {| Shortly afier vhe gloak and sult hou ganized the makers’ Pro members axi Hon agalist and to dntis in | Meg dactorica ai lamas ong. Week ney are A high: un mos Cloak, wou om Tue Wugih of the walking ehire of er HE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 19 HAT IS THE IDEAL HUSBAND ¢ HAT IS THE IDEAL WIFE -- - “Hubby” May Drink, ‘{Cuss,’’ Tell “White Lies,’ Argue With Wife, but He Must Bathe Every Day Ninth Article | of a Series ? CONSTENETINS HIS \DEAL WOMAN to-day reaches just @ Ittle above the ankles. Consequently, all the dampness and ohilly alr atrikes at the ankle. Prace tically all our nerves pans from the ball of the foot, through the body. Needless to say, Unless the ankle ts protected, the health will be impaired and the nervous system run down. — UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN DROPS DEAD IN CAR. Wore Diamond Earrings, Several Large Diamond Rings and Valuable Brooch, A woman wearing diamond earrings and several! largo diamond rings, who dropped dead late yesterday in « | crowded north-bound Jerome avenue jcar, M atill untdentited. ‘The woman was about forty years old, She wore » taflored auit of black | taffeta and carried @ stlver mesh bas, Shoe had gold eyeslasses and a brooch set with three diamonds. Her hair wan dark auburn, she was a little under '5 feet 4 inches tall, and weighed about 0 pounds, She wore silk stockings and black velvet shoes Aa the car stopped at Burnside avenue the woman attempted to mise, but lost her balance and foll to the floor, Women passengers tried to revive hor with smelling salty, She was dead be- fore the arrival of an ambulance from Yordham Hospital, ee New Mail Division, WASHINGTON, Sept. 24, — Post- master-General Hitchcock —_ to-day created @ fifteenth division of the Rail- way Mall Service, with headquarters at Pittsburgh, Pa, The new division will handle all of the through mail tween New York City and Chicago. John M, Mason, Superintendent of the |Fourteenth Division at Omaha, Neb, and for fourteen years an official of the Ratlway Mail Service, has been jdemtgnated as Superintendent of the Pittsburg Divielon. For President OT, w.w.? Ten? win 7?) ‘ out for your next TEA Tos Party | - LIPTON'S. t 24, 191 “TOM AO | ARE MARE. THAT SAL SHE WIRED Pretty Frances Romaine Left | Home “to Celebrate Her Eighteenth Birthday.” , Before the eyes of Mr, and Mrs. Henry G, Romaine of No. #3 West One Mun- | Gred and Forty-eghth street there ewam to-day the five words of « telegram. “Tom end I are married,” it sald. ‘Tom and I are married—married—mar- ried! Whoops, my dear! What are you) Going to do about it? ‘Tam and I are married!" , Realty, it didn't vay tt but once. Only, ‘The Romaines aa not know the Hig. @inees, even if Mr, Higgins is « retired Dasiness man, but for five youre Miss Romaine hae known “Tom.” It looked eo susplcious get apring that Mre. Ro- maine carried her daughter away te Weat Hampton, 1. I. The Romaines came home last week PHONED TO GIRL FRIEND—AND VANISHED. “Ie that you? Huh? ta Frances. Oh, listen! Are you going to be home this afternoon? Say, I'm coming down to see you. Will you? Of course! Cer-tain-ly! Now be wure you walt, Goodby! Accortingly, Miss Romaine went. She $a Btil wenting. When ashe did not come home to dinner Mr. Romaine called up the girl friend and became immediately aware thet two and two were making Yes, this It is even whispered around the neigh- borhood that Miss Romaine actually bundied up her clothes, dropped the bundle out of the window and went wieefully away with it. For hours the Romaine residence wae wrapped in a mantie of silence to-di ‘The only information forthcoming w: that Mre. Romaine was indisposed and could see no one, Gradually the intel Bance was allowed to percolate to a crowd of baie) interviewers that the mother’s indjeposition was due more to the failure of the elopers to come tmck pat of parental approval! theo to “To Frances ané—and—well, John: Forgiveness is awaiting you here. Come back, please, and end our sus- ‘Dense. MOTHER.” ‘There was a cereain alr of ibarity at the home of Fdgar F. Higgins, No, 415 West One Hundred and Forty-sixth street. A jolly, matronly woman of middle age, who wouldn't admit she was Mra, Higety, beamed on the re- porters a# @he protested: “Now, boys, I'm a mother and I have @ large family to take care of. 1 just haven't time to talk with you.” Mies Romaine had been a student at the Barnard School at One Hundre and Forty-elghth street and Conven' averrue, a stone's throw from hor home, for five years. She would have been graduated at the end of the winter term. She feared, some one sald, that she would have to finish that last term in another, distant school far from the city iNuminated ) - the presence of Tom ‘Higaina., meinen orckcar WHITE WIFE WEEPS. Kegligh Girl Who Mai Fighter Learns Truth on Otis Smith, @ ni prise fighter known to the ring as “Kid Rowland came over in the firet cabin of the Kroonland with a white wife. been Carrie Thomas of Liverpoot when married to Smith after hy had defeated half # dozen local pugi-| Matle celebrities, In England und on the Continent no one regarded her out of the or- was ved on the steamship, and when #he came down the gangplank to-day with a bitterness her round, red face. She had heard that in the country which waa to be her home racial intermarriage banished the of- fender from Intercourse with others of her color, Calf, Tan soles fo Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street She had} Medium or heavyweight Russia STUDENT WHO ARRIVES WITH ADVICE TO MEN ABOUT NEEDLE WORK. | PUT APE'S STOMACH INTO FARMER'S BODY: OPERATION A SUCCESS PARIS, Sept. %&—The Academy of Medicine 1s shortly to hear described the operation by which, it is reported, an apo's stomach was recently put into a man's abdomen to replace his own stomach, worn out, although the patient ts only twenty-seven years old. Tho operation and restoration of the part exerciaed, the first of Ite kind, were rmed by Dr, Roulles, surgeon in the hospital at Agen, near Bordeaux, ‘The news of it has excited intense in- terest here. Tho patient was a farmer. most delicate #kill and the nicest knowledge of tomy the surgeon! opened the patient's abdomen and, tying | the great arteries as the operation pro- ceeded, excised the useless stomach | and fn {ts place sewed an anthropold| ape'n stomach. After twenty of treatment the cure was compl the young farmer left the hospital, n se shso : 0” Rubber @ We Place on Sale Today at Our Two Stores 5,000 With the English Slip-On RAINCOATS For Men and Women $3, $4 and $5 Values $1.75 Also a full line of Men's and Women's Raincoats, Gabardines, Overcoats and Slip-Ons $3 to suit any pocket to suit any ti TO v fo ploase al $30 OVS’ AND GIRLS’ RAI’ COATS, RULBER COATS AND CAPES Durable garmen's tm all weight $2.00 QF $3.00°7 .45 $5.00 DOE sais 1 whe 2 Sale Takes Place In Our Two Stores Jo Ribe 4 FIFTH Rub Con..14MST, l4y Wkoi dénd ST, OPPOSITE KNICKERMOCKER HOTEL) Autumn Tans button or lace $4 and § Calf Colonials with medium r mild sunny days $5 Fifth Avenue above Forty-fifth St, ISTINCT- ively indi- vidual”"—A cigarette. A quality that has success- fully met the critical Amer- ican taste. 20in plain pack- age—that’s why wecan offer them for 15 cents. Justa 2 Little oa Touch of ARMEN > ar iad Use Tyree’s Powder To Avoid Disease The need of an effective standard deodorising oad daatecting sick reoes jurizing an rooms or for the prevention sd detection all infectious or ates caused by germs, is a well swat’ fact; and there is nothing more economical than Tyne Anti tic Powder, A Ley piven See make two gallons of teen, yree's Powder is in pate uo the wens 2 strongly recommen: ry for more than twenty years, oben instantly in water, contains no poisons, and when used as a douche it Pps unsur- passed, Extremely beneficial in the treatment of catarrh, Sold by averya Wn Send for booklets Se Lawyers Doctors Dentists To make time pass quickly and pleasantly for waiting clients or patients, lay on your re- ception table a copy of The New Magazine 24 Pages—16 in Colors To Go WMREE witn the Sunday World: Beginning Next Sunday. A new departure in News- paper Magazines that is pend to make an instant it. Order from Your Newsdealer in Advance

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