The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1912, Page 3

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HERES APARTAT ‘EAT UR EA Bull Fighter; Fair Se- aorita; Irate Father; Thrill- | ing Escape; Bliss. WHAT'S ONE; THE OTHER: Gallant Soldier; Lost in Jungle; Saved; Fever; Another Se- ‘Worita; Recovery ; More Bliss, ( ‘In 1901, Capt. Farrar, in Mindanao, set with a small detachment after @ of bushmen. The heavy tropical and the fierce heat of the noon caught the captain ard he went typ) with an attack of fever. During night he rose and started away, [prashing through the jungle, raving and jus of his plight. How many ye he wandered at the point of death he was spled by Senorita Carmen from the porch of her summer he will never know, His uniform torn in ribbons and hie face and nds were scratched and bleeding. WAS NURSED BY BEAUTIFUL SENORITA. Two weeks the captain b) unconscious and was @ month ‘ded, nursed by the girl, before he Was able to walk. Then there came evenings, spent after the cor- ect fashion of duennas and Spanish . Defore the captain was able to this detachment. He found it easy ove the post near the Pavia man- for trouble was everywhere, and (was as well to attack it from one @s another. A year ago there wae a wedding with the Spanish delle and belles tmag- odbeg Shortly afterward Mrs. Pavia, Bhe bride's mother, went to Bai fund died, and it te from there the cap- tain returns to duty, with his bride in mourning. He had been so long in the Philippines that he lapses into Spanish ancaneciously. ‘The other romance concerns @ buil- fighter and a Spanish dancer—a most perfect combination and a plot not copy- righted. Here it 4s. Dapper little An- tonto Massentine, twenty-five years old, the youngest bull-fighter of prominence fn Spain, loves Matilde Palacios, elgh- toon, and a dancer of note. They love most truly, but there are no surrepti- tious kisses after the fashion of lovers, for stern Senor Palactos is watchful as @ father should be, and Antonio sighs his soul to the moon and plays his note of passion on a guitar hung with rib- bons. Almost feminine 1s Antonio in ap- pearance, and {f his courage were not @ttested by the lucrative offer he hae pted to fight the bull in Mexico this , one might pass him by without gecond look. But he ts a pupil of the “Ra Mahacito, who 1 Seville and rid what Marquard is to New York today. Just @ year ago the grand stands at the bull ring in Seville were crowd Antonio was parading about when hi eyes caught the startled flash of th am , who averted her head, An- tonto knew he loved her from thdt min- Such is the way in Spain. Every thereafter Antonio slew his bulls not for the roar of the 1 but for the amile of Matilde. THE FAIR MATILDE SAVES HER LOVER'S LIFE. One Sunday afternoon after a par- ticular feat of daring he turned to re- cetve her smile, Suddenly her expres- ion changed to horror, and Antonio felt the sharp horns of the bull ripping his bright jacket. Ho was tossed several feet and would have been gored before the picadors could reach him had not Matilde leaped over the barrier and @creamed at the bull, whereat, like a 00d bull, Me went away from long enough for the men on the horses to shoot a few barbs Into his foolish, tortured hide—and the day was saved. ver Was bull so neatly slaughtered Antonio killed that one, Ah, such a heat thrust and side step! Jace rose and thre onio to keep for lis very own, an Yatilde was very proud of him, for bowed to her alone of all the ladies tn the assemblage and caught a rose she threw to him. So w inyitea to fight the tilde sought a plac there also. Dig pile Felent and there ye a wedding, >—— IN JAIL FOR LACK OF $1. Bamuel Shagin, a bicycle dealer, of No, 28 East Th -ninth street, spent ix days more in Ludlow Street Jail than he would have spent had he possessed one dollar, He got that sum yesterday, deposited it in the Sherift's office, and was freed. Shagin was sued by Mollie Libin $2,000 for alleged breach of promise « jer for his s , but he could not supply {: and went to Jail July 2%. On Oct. torney, Henry Mitchel!, inducer nef Judge wyer of th to reduce the ball to $1, could Shag'n raise even nat vote. Rents g A. M, ond close af 19 LIKE LOVE TALES? | "|Good Looks May Carry a Girl a Little Way on SIXTH ARTICLE OF A SERIES bs THE GIRL WHO MAKES GOOD The Time Spent in Looking for Villains Is Wasted by Young Women in Busines — Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). the Road to Success at First, but It Is Brains, Good Humor, Willingness and, Above All, Patience That Win in the Long Run,” Writes “B. B.S.” CRICKET ON THE HEARTH |GIANT VICTORY BRINGS WAS ALL RIGHT TILL HE ) GIRL FAN BACK FROM GOTIN THE CE CREAM) THE LAND OF DREAMS And When He (100 of Him) |}She Became Unconscious in BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. While the Government ts interost- ing itself in the conservation of for- ests and the Audubon Society is eav- ing the birds; while the anti-vivisec- tionists dedicate themselves to the preservation of the guinea pig, and protected buffaloes and seals defy gun and spear; while fish flaunt themselves before the angler’s eye, in the closed season, the rarest and most interesting object in the ani- mate world is passing rapidly into obsolescence, and all because nu Society for the Preservation of Villains has organized and gotten |** down to work. se Buzzed About the Girls’ Hair, Fun Stopped. Boston When Speaker Tied the Score Wednesday. If the cricket, or crickets, had only} The @ianis won @ game, and Miss yed on the hearth in Miss Helen Deet-| Margaret Rooney promptly recoverd home at No, 189 Park street, Mont-| suMciently at Boston to return to her clair, last night everything would have| home, No, 1690 Broadway, to-day, She Fe the ated f eared ae been very poetic and Dickensian. But| had been in a state of coma in City the cute little bugs wouldn't stay on the| Hospital since Speaker made his groat hunted the poor, receding villein,| hearth, you see, and though that was an|siide and tied the score in the tenth have ¢racked him to his lair andj awfully bright idea of Miss Deetjen's,| inning of the Boston game Wednesday. killed him off till hardly a thousand | having crickets sing at her party, some-| Miss Rooney lives with Mrs. E. H. bona fide specimens of a once num- how or other a cricket in @ plate of ice] Gilmore at the Broadway address and berless tribe survive.. Undoubtedly a contributing cause to the disappear- | cream seems out of keeping. 1s an enthusiastic Glant rooter. She went ¢0 Boston to see the game, and appeared to be in great spirits uniil the eventful tenth inning. She sank limply into her seat when the ecore was tled, and when the Giants falled to score in shetr half of the eleventh appeared to break down, As ghe fans left the park she was found tn a daze and was taken to the hospital as nystery." She could not tell her name until yesterday, when one of the nurses sald to another “Too bad, the Giants won!" tlent came to with a start. “Good work, boys," she murmured The lwht of intelligence returned to her eyes and she remembered who she was. Mrs, Glimore received a telegvam last night saying Miss Rooney ha ered after the Giant victory. ance of the deep, dark, desperate villain from the United States is the| Jt was this way: fashion of clean-shaven men which has prevailed for the last ten or fifteen | et ae aid dear Hise ine rae years. For in the good old days of villainy every villain worthy of the |Ce, Virsinia Skinner, daughter of Hor Dame sported a heavy black mustache, the sable emblem of the moral | rer F- Skinner of Montclair, je acon to Pirate which the most unsophisticated And when I say « modest, dig- [delphia. So Miss Deetjen and Miss Mar- heroine could not mistake, nified girl X don't mean those mar- | jorie Hinck thought it would be just too I for one wouldn't recognize a villain tial Bellonas who carry their self- (dandy for anything to give the happy without the black flag flaunted from the| Fespect like a chip om the shoulder | engaged couple a snug little party et the y un . party it would be, in anticipation of the we pes valet to proclaim paren pag bevcont ysis Sosennte vat new home which would von be estab- What can « poor villain eign Nshed. ow is he to live at all unless at twenty and absolutely unpar lay Miss Deetjen, Miss Hinck dasa * Bo yesterday 5 ‘We get together in a Society i You poodle P tater ily ee the Newiy-|0% & party of thelr young friends went the srroces roenles vane 8 wear vey had gtabbenea the ewly~| up on the mountain and got many arm- podgaslis é pene logcdeg supplement for two years or more, with | £¥/# * havo Pea ules aie Humillating as the admission is, 1am|°@!y one incisor breaking the pink) Mise saan tected cdl okas: O16 | OKe 4 Yr i wan to write to The World| life. Yet viil- e oe #0 Ban ay ee one of na{!2alsting that in the interests of ‘cou. |!n @ shoe box. The autumn leaves were The pa- reeoy- knows halt a dozen young women who|teey Snookums ehould cut another | Munk | igs ape vee i oeseled fen | an ae tooth. Baye treoked ‘him to his lain, whdy i was built in the library and then just! "Ps of girls’ algrettes; they made fly- fact, have been compelied to give up the} SOME GIRLS NEED A WISDOM [ior... the sirat guest arrived last night |!9* trapede leaps trom the wall to spirk- TOOTH. I confess to a similar passion for realism, and when a woman passes the dozen have written me that they have|age of twenty and atill keeps up the been unable to make good in the busi- | bal tare, the playful tendency to ruf- ness world because of the disturbing|fe the masculine coiffure or pat th most advantageous employment because of his sinister pursuit. Since this dis- cussion began not one girl but half a lng lavalilere. {t was dreadful! But, honest dearte, the mit reached when one of the girls sudden! stopped dancing, grabbed at the bacs of her decollette gown with t the crickets were put on the hearth. Ob, goodness gracious, But the horrid old things Just wouldn't stay there! Of course it was lots of fun for the first few minutes when girls would sud- denly jump and shriek, “What's that!" was th hands effect of thelr personal charms upon] Masculine hand by way of conversa-|\ 0) A cricket tuned his fiddle under| Nd hurried to the dressing room, Sie employers or fellow employees. Novel ae Fila tener 1 say. 10 her chair, ‘Then one would reply, “Why, | Wasn't the same the rest of the evening. Is THE 3 oo et 8 slimy dear, that’s the ericket on the! And, when you come .o think about 4, | ALL THAT IS NEEDED IS don’t you think {t's about time you cut you know." the Deetjens are golng to have a s another tooth? For if you don't, oh, Iit- tle Miss Snookums, you're bound to encounter villains and more villains and most villains and somehow or other you will never mention them to any- body until you have to explain why you havo been discharged or why an- other woman was promoted over your head.” When @ young girl working in « down- town office pads her hair and frizzes it; when her lips and cheeks betray that she has looked upon the rouge box and the lipstick when they were very red | indeed; when her gown seems to be @ HISSING WORDS. These young women seem very much In earnest. There is no doubt that they belleve what they say, and that in thelr imaginations all the New York business man needs to complete the picture of desperate villainy is a black mustache and @ trick of hissing his words. It appears to be a pecullartty of vill- ains that they never rain but they po} IT have known innumerable women who have never met any villain of any de- scription, but I have yet to meet a sirl who knew one villain, and one villa! only. He—the villain—seems to time clearing those cricket) house. They'll have a er radiator about all winter; a: least, Miss Helen sald to-day ' , when the mustc atarted and folks began to dance, the crickets got! lively. ‘They darted across the floor lik pleck lgtning; they chirped from th: "aveiiing in| reluctant concession to @ puritanical horribly gregarious animal, travelling in i lice, need she be astonished or de @ the buffalo, economical | Police, hordes, like the buffalo, the ¢ pene Gpae gee ee baa tourist and the prettiest young women of Tennessee Now, it should be permitted to every man to see one ghost, to every woman to encgunter one villain, The only ob- jection 1 have to those young women who devote their energies to life, liberty and the pursult of villains is that it leaves them so little time for the work which js so absolutely essential to mak- ing good, Villain-tracking may be @ ore or less legitimate sport for the who has leis and talent for it. But the girl who wants to make good at self-support cannot be counted of this lass. Undoubtedly foolish old periences? And in such cases is {t al- ways easy to find the villain? I realize that these remarks may be narrow and unjust? If you think #0, will you write and tell me why? Meantime I prefer to consider seriously the letter of isirl who gives the following recipe “for making 6004." Sho eays GOOD LOOKS DON'T TAKE A GIRL VERY FAR. Desr Madam: It has been my experience that good looks may carry @ girl » little way om the Toad to success at fret, but that it 19 brains, good humor, willing- ness and, above aD, patience that win in the long run. It is not al- a SS a : §) Colonial, there are mashers and nty in New York— but villains? ell, 1 will leave it to the young women to say whether the irl who works downtown, dresses mod- estly and bears herself with dignity is at all likely to meet even the unasseme bled makings of @ villain, Ways the sise of the pay envelope thet shows « girl that she has made good. If she does her work well the boss will always find it out and let her know that he ap- preoiates it. At least, I have found this to be so, B. BB. specially low prices. Is solid Mahogany throughout with a top 42 inches | wide, with handsome Colonial design standards. exhibited throughout our six-story building. ‘oming the best dressed woman in the world. HER FIRST RVIEW, with original dress designs—TO-MORROW'S ]} ING WORLD, ! ‘ ~~ Harlem Furniture We Are Showing— Reproductions of furniture designed Sheraton, Chippendale, Mission, Early English, Louis XV., Louis XVI., Jacobean, William and Mary, and other Period styles, all made of the best woods by the finest manufacturers, and sold at This Library Table pieces for the Parlor, Library and Bedroom equally as good value 147-149 West 125th Street, Near Seventh Ave. HEL NEVER GO THERE AY MORE, SCS ROMANSKY “The Bowery, the Bowery, They Do Such Things and They Say Such Things.” IT COST ADAM $1,140. Bellport Man Wanted to Save, but He Paid High Price for His Shoes. 4 5 ‘They still do atrange things on the Howery, and Adam Romanaky of Bell port, I. 1, will never go there any more, Adam came in from Bellport yesterday to buy @ pair of shoes, The shoes cost him $1,140, which is a record price to pay for a pair of shows even in these days of the high cost of living. To explain how Adam Romanaky came to be set back $1,140 for @ pair of shoes it is necessary to begin with a relation of the troubles of Abe Kauss- ky, dealer in new and second-hand shoes in the basement at No. 13 Bow at 3 o'clock ery, Abe's cash capital yesterday afternoon was exactly $26.13, Along came Mra, Kaussky, Abe's wife, and Abe took her to a frult store and bought her @ basket of grapes, which cost him 13 cents, Mrs. Kaussky went home with the «rapes, and Abe, who had sunk a twenty-dol- liar bill in one of his socks, for that | nt money, carefully de vest pocket and made his way back to his basement store. On the way some smooth plekpocket mot to Abe's pe tand stole the five doll bill, Abe knew it was gone aw as it departed, He raised loud Jamentath ) butt e was no tra of the thief. As Abe opened up for business he reflected that $6.13 waa a lot Jo pay for a basket of grapes, He could have had hothouse grapes with a lot of other things thrown in for 3 While engaged in lugubrious bemoaning Abe saw a shadow on the stairway and looked up, Adam Romansky of Bell- port, L. 1, was descending. Adam ta an elderly man and not strong. Cloae ments. Romansky sald buy @ pair of shoes for a dollar, e wanted Romansky with a pair of dollar shoes, ment resurrected from large roll of mon fully peeled a $5 lated Kaussky was absoly money #a) for the $20 in his sock, so he had to Volunteer to take the bill up to the moving picture show on the ground foor and have tt changed. ‘This was satist wy to Ad Ro- mansky wh as ping his new shoes, Abe moving picture show, got the blll change ed and started back to his basement shop. from which he care- As previously re- ul orles proceeded therefrom, ppanying th Ace fes came a well-drer “1 young ™ nding up the steps jfour at a tl id stuffing something ‘into his coat pocket. He knocked Kaus. sky flat on the sidewalk and sped up | the Bowery. Kauseky descended to his shop. There he found Adam Romansky half Insenst- ne from the on the heal, but to remember that the y man had forcibly relleved him of $11, Abe Kaussky called @ poll acd the was reported to came Police Headquarters. And Just to show how luck pursued Abe Kaussky, he 1 back five dolars in change to eo! Adam Romansky and Adam Romansky walked away with t shoes. 0 by Heppelwhite, also long and 28 inches Many other odd 29 dollar BI in his tnatde | behind him came a young, husky, well dressed man of singularly alert move- ee Mannish,. college-style coats in young man said the shoes he had on were tight and he wanted them atretened, Double-faced materials and sturdy, “Wait on the old guy first,” said the smartly colored diagonals. Gar- young man to Abe Kaussky. “I ain't ments for the smartest outdoor Laie ee service in country or town, which Abe Kaussky soon fitted out Adam ry t Romansky, when It came to make pay- his raiment a bereft of Kaussky went to the cashier of the AS STUNG” FOR $10,000 IN FOREIGN PORCELAIN. Chicago Millionaire Bought as Priceless Antiques Modern Stuff Spoiled in Burning. CHICAGO, Oct. 11.—Who fe the Cm. cago millionaire who paid $10,000 for 100 Pieces of porcelain epolled by overbura- ing in @ modern kiln, under the impres ion was purohasing priceless an- Uques from @ royal table? George P. Davis, chief examiner of the Ohicago Appraiser's Stores, to-day MAN OF 74 HAS STARVED EIGHT DAYS, HE DECLARES. Found Unconscious in With Old Crust of Bread in His Pocket. bof ‘An aged, poorly dressed man wae found unconscious in a hallway at One ftundred and Forty-ninth street qn@ Melrose avenue early to-day by Patret- man Dugan. Dr. Eckstein took him @® Lebanon Hospital, where he wae re vived. Ie said he {s frank Kapsman, seventy-four years old, borer, of Me, 8% Ninth street, Williamabridge, where he lives with his daughter Mrs, Mary Novotsky, He said he had had no food for elght days. Kapaman eaid ho was out of work and trad been unable to find employment. He had not been to his “Most of our trouble is over art an- tiquities, Only about 10 per cent. of the European antiques brought into Chicage Gre real.” Of the millionaire he said: ‘What he paid $10,000 for was the work ot @ modern pottery in Austria, and it ‘Was not even good modern work. The whole batch bad been ruined by unsuo-| ight days because he had no money and coastul burning. was unable to pay for his keep. He had “Who wae stung?’ Mr, Davie was| been sleeping, he said, in hallways and eaked. ements, He had nothing in his pool wk’ anewer that wouldn't be fair,” he | ets but « small c tale bread, In Flight From Vo! GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, habitants of towns in the vicie volcano, Sangay, were fleeing for aa! to-day. The peak showed Increasing signs of act.vity and a violent eruption wan feared. Ellen ckay Improving. PARIS, Oct. 11.—Miss Ellen Mackay, daughter of Clarence H. Mackay, was to-day reported rallying strongly from ‘an operation for appendicitis She was considered practically out of danger, Saturday Style Sale! 3,000 Charming Dressy Fall Waists $3.50, $4 & $7 .98 $5 Values One Like Picture. One of the favorite Bedell meth- ods of securing additional attention to its fashion offerings—presenting 25 beautiful models at once at a price which defies competition, Exquisite Chiffons, Messalines and Lingeries—in costumes and even- ing styles. Some velvet trimmed —others with satin-faced vestees. Smart, new effects. bs Swagger English > Great Coats Regular $18 Values the heavy mixtures which make this season's long coats distinctive. Pa may be worn with a comfortable knowledge of correctness. Stunning Sports’ Coats Traveler Cutaway Effects Big Patch Pocket Models These coats are all remarkable it their softness of igh stele tailoring, permitting long drap- ing lines of lapels and folds which prevent them from becoming “‘set” or more worn in one spot than another. The Bedell Line of $25 Suits Challenges Comparison Anywhere in the World Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES 14 and 16 West 14th Street—-New York 460 and 462 Fulton Street—Breehlyn 645-651 Broad Street Newark, N. J. | 12th and Market Streets —Philadel phia LRIFYS IFAS" P An English Last Aman’s shoe that laces close; made in French \ICalf with flat sole, reced- ing toe and broad low heel. 1A smart shoe, well-made and looks it. $7 Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street 548 Fifth Avenue above Forty-iitth St. —————— CRANDALL’S Esrany ul Hf IED 1ags in New Toe at lower pri charged at dep’t stores wntier_ $93 3d Av. Catatoe HE Sunday World's Want Directory makes more “Offers of Poet- tions’ than any other two mediums in the universe, PeR $ 1 wt the lowest prices. Clothing Manhattan Clothing Co. e ox Credit Hus AND ete (COATS 1248 8d AVE., Cor. 72d St., N.Y. Evenings.

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