The evening world. Newspaper, October 7, 1912, Page 3

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WIFE OF BECKER — HOPES FOR QUICK ENDING OF TRIAL Says She Is Confident Husband Will Be Acquitted and Poses for Photograph. NOT Judge Frowns on Custom Al- lowing Wife to Sit Beside Man on Trial for Murder. “1 am very sorry concerning the il- ness of Mr. Hart, and I sincerely hope it will not in any way delay the trial of my husband,” said Mrs, Becker to an Evening World reporter as awalted the opening of the trial “Naturally she I was considerably trrt- tated when T heard that the iliness of Mr. Hart might cause further delay. 1 am anxious for a speedy trial and so ts my husband, ‘There should be no further delays, “My husband's innocence, of course, own, but the anxiety—the anxlety—ls very trytr The y 8.to have it all over with.” ined to Mrs, Recker that ty was brought into the » through the great | She was asked if she object to letting the photograp: t her picture aud pose for it. Upon the promise that she would be relieved of the snapsho as she left the bulld- ing Mrs. Becker onsented to go to the reporters’ room on the fourth floor, where her picture was taken, Mrs. Becker § spectators in om afte permitted to sit nea was io room at the Mr. MeIntyr missto t , but was not ner husband. There punsel table and see fit to ask per- vurt to permit the de- to sit by his alde. A seat ded for her just within the s to the Judge's chambers, dant's w was pro lead and fully Mfty feet from the prsoner’s table. Justice Goff frowns on the formor c1s- Permitting wives to sit oy de- He has tom of fendants charged with murde not allowod this in his courts firet Molincux trial, when Mrs. M neux, later divorced from her husband, @at within the tnolosure at Molineux's aiie. “My husband has deen seriously {1 wince Saturday last,” said Mrs. Hart ‘when seen at her home, No, # West Ninth street. “He is now in bed and euffering from a very severe cold which| by the greater freedom and opportunity provided for meeting and being, as! she is apt to imagine, admired by men. shop, or wherever the job finds her, May in fact introduce to her a more} thas settled in his bronchial tubes. Mr. Hart is under the care of Dr. John H. Carroll of No, 4 West Twelfth strect, ‘and he says that my husband cannot|Y@tied masculinity than had appeared eave the house for at least forty-elght|°" the horizon of her whole elghte; And, still new to th oMfce or the shop, she !s apt to regard interesting strangers from course it ts something he cannot con-| drawing-room point of view. ‘When they gather about her desk or her typewriter—as they will if looking oF young—she feels for the first time that there is an actual relation and resemblance Detween her favorite heroine and too, is eligible to the sisterhood of sirens. For there fter all, not so much difference between the Honor than at a fashionable dance, sur- rounded by peers of the realm con- tending for the first waltz, and her- self, Ethelynda Jo her typewriter bookkeeper she’s so sorry she can't hours, else it might result very serl- ously. Mr. Hart ts extremely sorry ebdout his flness at this time, but of trol” HUBBIES ALWAYS BECOME POOR WHEN WIVES DEMAND ALIMONY, JUDGE OBSERVES. Their Prosperity Flees Immediately When They Face Prospect of Producing Weekly Allowance. Supreme Court Justice Greenbaum wants to know why poverty suddenly affitcts ao many previously prosperous men when thelr wives sue for all- mony. The Justice remarked from the bench to-day “Ninety-nine men out of a hundred under such ofreum- stances protest they are without prop- erty or income. “Perhaps the litigation itself causes the condition of which they complain,” added His Honor, “but maybe tt doesn't.” This remark was made during « hearing of argument on whether Mrs, Olga Schnoll should bring her two ohildern back from London #0 that their father, n J. Scholl, stock could see them. a broker and musician Mrs, Scholl's lawye hts client would bring th children back willing- ly provided the father would pay their transportation. Mr. Schnoll's lawyer declared this client did not have money enough to do that, averring that Mr. Beholl had to get from his father the money snow giving his alimony Woman Ad Rosa Zi do) Manufacturl sand wh marvel of ma to-day plead ullty Court Just h of forgery in the was remanded for wa. the tor senten indicted name of 1 5.7%, pa turing ¢ sing A note Do You Want Rich Red Blood | Str end all the Good Hea Evans men make and NEAR HUSBAND | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. RRDRWAER0004 00000000004 An Incompetent Girl May Keep a Job a Littie Longer Because the Man in Authority Thinks She Is in Love With Him, but She Never Holds Her Position Permanently. NIKOLA GREELEY SMITH or twenty years. uhese whe is fairly good merely fairly herself. 8! ds, Lilly Levia- she tells tho the ing abo 0 out to dinner with him because fer’s invitation. she has already accepted the cnsh- | of romance, She her p may ev: Now, is this: in @ happy m home, velope, There which more en p arriage than oth work—~may bring nearer h the truth about office One in @ hundred may One tn ten thousand m Ja woman to attain a posit! Now, the business world is @ realm of stern realities, not a rosebud garden jand analyzed the causes of their suce ind it fe very seldom, all, that the girl who philanders grows Into The Girl Who Makes Good. that one can blame the pleasant little philanderera too much. GREED OF CONQUEST NATURAL TO SOME WOMEN. Among women there are many natu- ral coquettes who when thrown for the first time among large numbers of men experience a greed of acquisitiveness comparable only to that of a mall child who has been told he may take all the candy he can eat inexperienced girl who meets the Down Town Man for the first Jously flattered by his casual Bhe does not realize that hesheds | his office @irtations as lightly as | his oMfee coat, never remembering | 0! either in his hours of ease savo as something hanging patiently on a | peg till he returns and needs them. fat Not | i quest and an The ne tx tremen- tention, er} jon, | romances sult | a Bucc ay enable n to wht her own abilities would never entitl Plhar, Hut in the infinite majority of | such affairs, the girl is temporarily ad vanced, | An ine compete ob a Little longer pority we thinks she tn, But she never hol y Aside from its ques s the office fMirtath girl who makes In tt, She realizes that Cupid, Ike every else, is entitled to an eight-hour d d that his day begins when her work 1 “ Throne The girl who 1 succeeds, nd ly a means to a pay en- | 3 occupat xp sine, L don't ~ one stu |! | be h Our ancestors were cautioned | not to “bring the manners of the | Pot-house into the drawing room." There are more persons to-day who, | ignoring the value of appropriate- | ness, commit the fatal error of| bringing the manners of the draw- | ing room into the pot-house. And chief among these may be num-! bered the young women who invade | the work-a-day world with the| light graces, the airy impertinences, | the playful pouts and shrug and wriggles which belong properly to! the stage ingenue with a son at | Harvard. i Every young thing who enters upon a career of self-support with a deter- | mination to grow into the girl who makes good is likely to be dazzled Ner first day in the office or the | w how many women have sald to “Oh, yes, @ writer's work has in- terest and variety, But suppose you had to adda up columns of figures day after day, or teach arithmetic children with colds or gowns to nt old women, you'd it deadly tired of it!” rhaps I should, but I hope not. ause if I were tired of it, if | re- 1 against it, 1 I even held myself to be superior to it, I should not do it THE EVENING WORLD, MO} \RPAAUAVADE ADEN DORGOAAE E1004 THE GIRL WHO MAKES GOOD (NAVA UATERTATNTE TATED ET EHOEEU EVER DO DURTEDORERUDEREEOEREDEUTOINUTTTS DETR OEEEUS: Office Flirtation Is Bad Policy Aside Fron Questionable Ethics Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). CHANGED KER NAME OFTEN, BUT DENIES SHE'S A FIREBUG well, “If your art is not in your work,” to use a trite expression, your] ’ head 1s not in {t either.” Girl Dramatically Declares WRITE YOUR EXPERIENCE FOR OTHERS’ BENEFIT, If the girl who makes good—and there are thousands and thousands of her who read ‘The Evening World—disagrees with any of these suggestions, or if she has any of her own to offer to the girl whose long road is still before her, shall be glad to hear from he from those men who, or over women employees, have # cess or failure, r pn MOTHER AND 7 CHILDREN, |» DESTITUTE, ARE EVICTED. Father of Family Disappeared Three Months Ago; Eight have Lived on Few Cents a Day. Who was arr rh and who the @ gang of a dozen firebugs, dramati- cally head of men It {# ridiculous! 1 these fires. Giuseppe Zoccol. everything he demanded. But a leader of firebuge? She’s Wrongly Accused of Leading Incendiary Band. Leona Elmarco, with four aliases, ted last Friday in Har- son, N, J., charged with incendiarism. say was lea of asserted to-day that ahe was innocent, “So they say I am the leader of a band of firepug: in she cried, folding pose of Carmen in , @ girl, wt the who do such cr-rimes know nothing of ve veen @ Slave for . for I have done I Never-r! “They say I tried co kill myself by Mrs, Bertha Berman and her seven | jun ping from a window, That is a» children, who have lived since July 1] lie! Why should I die? T have done on earnings that ranged from twenty |ffthing. Joo Zoccola told me to to forty cents a day, are homeless to- | change my name sometimes. I never day Because they were unable to save asked him why 1 never told mo. - x 1 was r I enough to pay the $14, which would in- | ithe him 4, f sure them a roof over yhelr heads for|Lavato. I never oT was another month, they were turned out|only thirteen when randmother their three-room tenement at No, 13 me marry mJ and I lJ Bayard street, with what few sticks of orth Our how rnt emained to the: . . ws turnt a i menee § th “ed % a T lost all my wedding x ie children are under tw and jewolry in that fire. and unable to serve ag bread-winners. | 4 ‘the gir collected $600 1 The seventh, y 8 this fire loss. She acknowl. heart trou the t man, father of th n heard from since | e had Mr Ing va Min to derive the talk, To Cure That Tickle Spend a Nickel. Bed Crom + Cougy Drops, Te. per bon, ** Order ip adv did not way know what but she sald ney had pl rooklyn July 1, presumably to ic as an overail operator.) TAFT IN VERMONT. 1! ux an lee cream peddler, hie), found his earnings of $ on $y 9) Ueesident Avolde — Pollet im Woek thaslejuate | Speeches at Several Points. Py BRATPLEBORO, Vt, Oct, 1T— PRINCE TO STAY PENNED, jiiesident Tart and hin party reached fe iia: alr attleboro at 1.80 this afternoon. ‘The | Pignaiehiity Pheatre Party Called) jc cdect wnade shart py 4 Of by Uncle Sam, | Adams, Adains, Williamstown, Mass. and Wilmington Vt, but did not Prince Ludovic Pignatellt a’Aragon | mention polition, “He left h was Informed to-day that he might have today f r Ve} to wtay in the detention pen on Fi ue ie by auto Irland ind . awalting CHEF WILLIAMSTOWN, Mas, Oct ‘om France regarding Ms reported ex value of @ col reo was em: trom F tog Lat Dhaulsad bi Beonident Tete it an aa pulaion from that country as @ common 44 to the undergraduates of Wille fe r i ns College to-day » President an aut ould not talk polities ving @ vacation > as he was NEW STYLES FOR WOMEN } FASHION SUPPLEMENT FREE, Man- with ited. MONDAY, t {| from Havre. OOTOBE SECOND ARTICLE OF A SERIES AAVORVHNTE000000 0000 9000000000 1 SMUGGLERS USED UNCLE SAM'S 0. K. of Thousands in Duties— Customs Men Suspected. Robbery of the United States through probably the Customs Service, ing many thousands pald duties, frauds h theft of Customs labels, which been attached to baggage conta! much dutlable property, the packages equently being passed on tho atolen labela when they reach this port. Many thousands of these labels Involy- telling how many trunks have been en- tered with them, duty free. The method of entering the goods upon the etolen labela is simpli “- cording to Customs officers, — The smuggler, upon landing here, has, for) example, #IX out of twelve trunks ex- | ami 1 and passed by the inspector on labels that Rave been stolen and sent to him in Europe. The other six trunks he leaves at the pler, 1 souks off the labels from the tr that have been passed, takes thi tho pier and attaches them to his un- claimed baggage, after which he then haw that passed, that cannot thus be tampered with. cannot which they have been attached without showing the crooked work precautions have heen taken by having | al! labels now stamped with tho date of | lentry and initialed by the passing them, an indelible pe used a Iter the characters, side ered unlikely that 1 eb stolen save through co- pete of Custom em- Ployees, @nd an investigation ts bens made to find the thieves. The new labels appea a toe day on Rochambeau of the. French ‘la No Ste PLALNPLEL town elections to-day are p quietly. 'Dhe interesting feature in the entire absence of the Hull Moose party counties of are that ey |town in this county and three-fourths of the towns in the other whree counties are being carried by the Re- | publicans, Tie ssing off R 7, 1912, 26 NOGES START NEWTER WITH PLENT OF ROM Rearrangement of Chambers Gives More Space and Com- fort for Justices, | | | ot the Supreme! The October term Court opened to-day with twenty-six! Justices presiding, Justice George A.| Benton of the Seventh Division being ned for temporary duty here. Dur summer months the interior of ing t the old court buliding was painted and the rooms were rearranged to provide More space for the County Clere and also to utilize the space on the second floor made vacant by the removal of the Justices’ chambers across Chambers street to the Emigrant Bank Bullding. Three spacious new court rooms wore | made out of the rooms formerly cupled by the Justices on the seco jfloor. The chambors on the ground floor, occupied by twelve of the Justices, have been aonverted into a large robing room. More space haa also been pro vided for clerks of Special Term, Part I The room on the ground floor ta als to be provided with @ ready reference brary and specially constructed steel | cabinets for protecting the personal and | private property of the Justices. | Of ghe three’ new court-room: on the southwest corner of the floor will be occupied by Part I Term. The former room of Part 1. small, When the calenders were bh lawyers were often unable to that | The room a, the northwest corner will be used Part 1, Criminal Branch, in-which Justice Blanchard presided to- day. The room formerly used as the no) — DOBSONS’ REMOVAL SALE ' ONSTOLEN LABELS Cheated the Government Out been stolen and there is no means of ‘They are made of onion skin paper and be removed from baggage to! Inspector cil being ‘This e¢mears when attempts are New labels have now been obtained) [being arranged for the exclusive une | jot t |wouthwest corner of |HORACE WATERS & CO HORACE WATERS z o Additional | the brary has been transferred into Part | V, Trial Term, and ts one of the largest | rooms in the bulldin; 7 new private elevator which i# Justices will run from the en- to their private rooms on the the building to} It will cost an addi- tran the top floor. tional $8,000. WATERS PIANOS Founded 1845 Horace Waters & Co. have selected from their large and elegant stock of Pianos and Player-Pianos the follow- ing leaders on which to make A Special Offer at low prices and on easy terms. Style A—Waters Upright An artistic piano of the highest grade, celebrated for its full, rich, deep tone, with fine singing quality—one of our most popular styles, only $250 $10 down and $7 monthly, and no charge for interest, Style 85—Chester Piano 7 1-3 octave, 3 stringed, full iron frame, ivory keys, good, durable tone and handsome case. Warranted 6 years, $190 on payments of only $5 Per Month without interest, Stool, cov- er, tuning and delivery Free, Siyle 88—Chester Auiola Player-Piano with full scale, | 88 notes and automatic track er. A most excellent and up- | to-date player-piano that is | simple and easy to play, Price $425 $25 cash and $10 monthly, and no charge for interest or extras. Send Postal for Catalogue, Horace Waters &Co. Three Stores : 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St. | 127 W. 42d St., near B’way, | Harlem Branch (Open Evenings) 254 W. 125th St., nr. 8th Ave, teeeccccecoceseoceccensoenseses coosesoosores oo ge a th F ee having had your hands i note how soft and white they were. Velogen is fine delicate dress fabrics. the woman who has to work RANCIS H. LEGGETT & COMPANY Fashion’s Favored Coat Suits Actual $25 Values He esday’s Sale med which ne been accepted by women who wait to choose until the perrs styles assume a permanent tendency—smartly practical costumes which one may wear and continue to ; wear with a feeling of comfortable cor- rectness, Slightly Fitted Cutaways ‘high Waist Effects Distinguished French Models The richest Autumn materials are represented in the modish colorings— cloths with the rough refinement of English tweeds, Huddersfield weaves, boucles and beautiful two-tone diag- onals; together with fashionable wales at serges. The kede.t Line of $25 Suits Chale Comparison Anyw vere in the Wort Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES 14 and 16 West 14th Street—New York 460 and 452 Fulten Street—Brooklyn 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. 12th & Mariet Streets—Philadelphia the court-room to argue their motions. | guaranteed. Rugs (9x12) Value 100, Hemeraipaee 920.00 US730 weeres Spee $47.50 Asmiaet roggeeb Aye hood $17. 00 | Asminsters. Tapestry Brussel: price 615. ‘ut to... Makers of Carpets for 60 Tears, fow RERP no A Oct. 9th, |WHY HAVE RED HANDS AND POOR COMPLEXION? “It is of mo use,” declared a young atron who does her own housework. | “| simply can't keep my bands from ting rough and red.” “Indeed you can, my d r friend. “If you would VELOGEN “Beauty's Guardian” night and morning or after water, within week you would be astonished to ig retorted | e ery jor both bands won't soil the most It boon to mplexion and e¢ kitchen.” At all druggt rollapsible tubes, @5 cents. Better) ¢, n cold cream, used the same way. CANNED CORN Every dollar's worth of our quarter-raillion dollar stock must be sold be fore we move into our new location. Prices greatly reduced. Articles fully + unusual quality. C 1.65 yd. to. Wines a1 sre to, wastage sv" 65¢ $11. 50|T nag NS yd. omen Good Quality Inlaid Linoleums at 70¢ sq. ya. DOBSONS’ 53 to 59 West 14th St., New York Subway and Hudson Tunnels, eneescceoccoccoescccconcocsoscors cece Important padi Sale Extraordinar The First General Sale Extraordinary of the Fall Season of 1/12 wilt be heid on Wednesday---Thursday ---F riday FULL DETAILS WILL BE GIVEN IN THE EVENING PAPERS OF TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8TH Carpets G Wir, cae at. re 7B ie a site 65eyd 10. 60cyd Bet Oth ané Oth Aves. Oct. Ith “i PUT THE OTHER FIFTEEN CENTS IN THE BANK, dys Bl, sutage nin Per au ice ad|IT°S WORTH A QUARTER TRY IT WILL SAY 80 ¥ GROCERS BELL F Delhennene Makar, 331 ing St., N. We you SUNDAY WORLD'S “TO LET” ADS,

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