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e JACK'S LADY FRIEND ROTBLL NAD Made Jack Break His “Bach- | elor”’ Vow and Started Up an Awful Row! WIFIE GETS A DIVORCE, And Now, Alas, Poor Bill, Per-, { force, Must Live Alone With His Remorse! , @e John F. Meader and Wittam B. *@herman, brokers at No. 60 Broad ‘@tvest, and pais of long years, life tor Years had been @ull of tranqu!l re- and ideal privacy in their bach- hail, at No. 6% West One Hundred i Forty-seventh street, until one t in October, 1911, whem Bill heard in Jack's section of the apart+ As if in the throes of a horrible dream, }BM rubbed his eyes, sat up in bed, his hollow hands, shell ftash- back of his ears and—waited. Oc- ly, miki outbursts of iaughter led with the clinking of glasses. Gradually through the transom in dong blue streamer came the aroma of tee—something the ‘bachelors’ tabooed. At last, Bill's hideous sus- 8 got etrong circumstantial oor- beration, for Bil distinctly made out feminine voice. And, woe for their hip, Jack was there, too, for his Fesonant voice and hearty, regular could aot be mistaken. PRORB! A WOMAN APARTMENT. On the witness atand in Justice aa part of the Supreme Court, (Where Bill recited the incidents of the iS to-day, he admitted he was jolerably shocked,” for until that no woman had crossed the of their “hall” for nigh onto we years, Thus in contemplation, Wl waid, he turned off the button, the blankets over his head so couldn't hear, and fell asleep, hop- the morrow would prove it all a it waen't, fer next morning Bill, (fizqugh 4 half open door, saw an ethe- myenphiike creature racing through tall. The reality of the incident ie IN THE Seck’s wite, Mre. Maude Wiswe'l i jery @ttractive young woman, " with one of the old Staten ‘ families. Mrs, Meader heard, in way, how Jack and Bill broke up after the incident, and upen Bill to tell whet had oc- ‘BM wouldn't tell Mrs. Meader, #0 she him end poor Bill, in a halt- bed Bill's slumbers, testified, frequently came to see Jack during the short time ‘Bill and Jack remained together after- ward, was not disclosed. {am 80 THE FLAT WAS ABAN. \ DONED Jack and Bill sought out their retreat fy when Jack's first troubles with his wife ‘rose. They decided to live as recluses. No woman was to cross the threshold and cigarettes and pipes were barred. A violation of their agreement meant the aban’ ning of the flat. Neither had ever tran: "ressed. Jomm C. Wiswell, Mra, Meader's father, @ septuagenarian, but epry and alert, hie recreant son-in-law with the Papers in the Cotton Exchange, ifwhile Jack was selling some consign: ‘| | I t gments of cotton. Jack murmured som @hing like: ‘Thanks, dad; give my love Wo Maude and the boys. I'm very sorry ‘@bout st all.” The boys are three and are in the justody of Mre, Meader, at Mr. Wis- elie Staten Island home at St. George. an agreement, Meader 1s to pro- for the support and education of children and Mre. Meader asked wtice Glegerich to award her SV a eek for her support. VPID'S PUPIL ASKS $25,000 WHEN SHE FAILS TO GRADUATE Miss Yorz Alleges Mr. Moses, | Fellow Student, “Flunked” at “Commencement.” While Miss Rva Yora was teaching in Moses summer at Schroon ke, she was al ng lessons her- She learning all about the school » ta pelt. maye of Cupid, according to her sult flea to the Supreme Court, to-day, esks $2.00 damages from Sh He Moses, whose papa is at the tthe school. ‘Tee { plaint allezes that on June ‘pe last young Mr. Moses asked Miss fYors to marry him and she agreed. | They arranged, says the complaint, that | the happy event was to take place Sept. | 6& But, Miss Yors d Mr, Moses would not marry’ t day, and Bhe says, he Is still obdurate and ot go with her despite her coaxing. The plaintiff is represented by Ben- famin L. Brandner, whose law office ts pt No. 15 Wi He sald to- @ay he did not t Moses could ay a $25,000 but that Ming ‘ore had fi! ng a vine ication of her py Judiclal lecision Eas: to Take and Stop the Shake. bry + Cough Drops, 6c, per bos, | appliqued dot of ve | yell Is tied over the hat the dot Is made THE EVENING WORLD, THSTALF'SSOSMDIZ* You Don’t Wear a Fido Muff , SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1912 IF YOURE HUNTING And Double-Decker Hat— You’re Not IT |\\FE, DONT APPLY a) AE DOUBLE AYISITI or es The Teddy Bear Muff Is Succeeded by the Fido —Beauty Spot Veil Is the Correct Wrinkle— Double Decker Hats Are an Autumn Sensation —The Lines of the New Draped Costumes Are Loose. The Fido muff has taken the place of Teddy Rear as a pot and one will meet dozens of these new pets in Fifth ave- nue soon in the arms of thelr devoted owners, Not all the muffs are alike and is not an arbl- trary one—"Sport igo” or any other suitable canine pseudonym would answer equally well, The black astra~ chan ang Persian lamb doggies are the favorites, for they ha’ 4 most wonder- ful resemblance to @ fore he has been shaved. The outer side of Fido unbroken furry coat site side are two pockets into which the hands may be thrust as Into a big muff, The little dogface is surprisingly natu- ral with its bright eyes, white teeth and red tongue hanging out at one side and @ metal collar and ribbon bow make the resemblance to a real dog all the more vivid. NOW THE BEAUTY SPOT I8 ON THE VEIL. The Beauty-Spot Vell is the v est fashion whimse On the leng breath of a whi flesh tinted § Jand silk vell there is just one dot— et—and an presents but on the oppo- y late ete n to come in that particular locality wher @ court Plaster beauty spot would o dinarily be worn. This may be at the of the chin, on the cheek, at one | er of the mouth in any other plauant and becoming situation In the photograph tho beauty spot comes near the corner of the mouth and | the effect of this big black dot In the transparent mesh of the veil is striking, to say the least. In olden times, when ches were the rage, court ladies ex- sed their political sentiments by |the shapes of the bits of black court thelr cheeks. Whigs wore | 5 , Tory ladies anoth: it was not at all unusual to eee a court-plaster coach and four driving across a tty cheek, Why not carry out this pleasing idea in the fas! ble new beauty spot yell? The suffragette maid might have her velvet beauty spot cut in—say the form of a tiny elephant or a diminutive bull moose, instead of a mere round dot # nothing b which expres: quetry DOUBLE DECKER HATS THE AUTUMN STYLES. Another sartorial sensation of the a tumn Js the double decker hat, This new style of re which is Sme mensely dashing and coquettish, has ben named after the new double decker ars running in Broadway now, but the 1s really Spanish in type and sug- ests the Toreador's rakish turban, worn over a silk head-kerchlef, The double decker nat pictured 1s made uf 1 plush and is entir untrimmed, nd | when the | NG COSTUME, SULPHOR BROW SERGE Siueo TO SHAKE A WIFE; THIS | 10 DEATH AT START Thoug! the rather small seal plush hat being mounted on a bandeau of draped gold The small plush hat 1s tipped at @ perilous angleSover one ear and at lace. the oposite sic the cae & eeue ew et come to be known as ‘the marriage t ce ces A ship.’ and completes the coquetish effect. The 4 hat, as pictured here, was worn with a] It has taken George J. Conrad, a] | f 4 THEY'RE ALL READY TO TIE simple dark b! » suit of the con-| wealthy cloak manufacturer, eleven} Coroner's mya Siac one THE KNOTS. ventional type trim new walkin sake 07 eek Tid. oF ink at the body of blonde Ethel Davis to-| at cane tell ye 5 TET AE HATERE Tombster” QriCl buitrotod | ZeRre 10) Wek. Pid. OF le) former wits, |RE Ne ee ee ene a Bean I can't tell you, my dear, how many tops of dull kid, Reine Conrad wn to the highlights] FID SORT IAORY. :¢ ‘s, Emma} maidens and widows have been married The autumn girl ts fastidiously par-| of vaudeville and the cafes of Paris ay} @llmore, No. 16% Bre Oe es cle eee en | ticular about her boots, for a great deal! “Queen Julle And after the third de- ‘oo much opium ee tsea lia Het Mine an tities of thought is spent just now on this de-| cision by the Appellate Division, handed] But there was no need of an oMelal | Suen fh Uniinily Und | ual On te nan, tail of the costume—and espec! ‘ his ‘ »pinton te o1 Mrs. Gilmore : 3 the atrect comlume, Tan oP dui ese| COWn to-day in his favor, Mr. Conrad] opinion to inform Mrs. Gilmore and) ene Rev, C. C. Champlin of gan Fran- boots with 1 trimmings sn’t sure at all but that “Queen Juite bothers who had nown the cisco, as one of the crew. His services buttoned tone of the will bob up again serenely with another | Mt chaotte halt y of her are free, Warn Ai dhe mornin nage him tn doubt as A year and a halt ago “There are elehte bachelors on boots are almost invariably of patent still married to the vaude- {came from her home in Qu board now, and whe reach Villa eather with buttoned tops of dull calf to his p with music, Her parents and fr Franohe at least a hu ndred more rof cloth There are still more dressy {whom he in the Apart-{8he had a wonderful voice, which in us, Most these will b boots of the » materlals, but having | ments, at Riverside Drive and One Hun.|needed only the magic of New York en with titles and some wit the thin turned sole, dainty, pointed toe | dred and Fiftieth str to beoome flawless, Ethel was twenty | thelr own fortunes. There ts no rea- and high heel which distinguiah the cat Tin psy. wien ce Jthen. A young man fell in love with{#" why 4 woman of your beauty riage hoot used with a fe The Hon, Albina Broderick, daughte of the late Viscount Middleton of Kerr was a second passenger on t Baltic arriving to-day. The Hon, A bina has given up all her ritan except a Iittle plot of ground in Iincoona, where she has established hospital of twenty-five beds, She devoting herself to a plan to aid t Irish industrial movement bs providis a sctfool for nursing and sickroom eant for 4 ud. The Hon. is to take a course at Co vanced hygiene and the sanitation, Sie months. ‘The young woman was clad In a heavy | @ coarse material; the skirt | was short and stowed she wore coars Her shocs blue dress o gray knit vy-soled and cl mous bow « ormal gown. » visit to this country plumbla in a chemistry of | will remain only @ few) auily shaped, Ri of req a “ill | b Me Conrad Isn’t Sure He’s FIDO MIUPE, SOMETIMES I'S HARD | OPIUM DRAGS GIRL MAN'S TRIED TT YEARS) OF CAREER AS SINGER h Divorced Four Times, When She Wouldn’t Howe ta) : id of “Queen Julie, “Dare’’ on Slumming Party. Conrad was student { salesman, he eloped with | he pretty He had p Y Of] “Mrs, Reed might have sald more, but LINES OF THE NEW DRAPED) Jule” in Lyons, Kan, The|!noney to spend, One night he took | pee ae eee ciaasaa Hod COSTUMES ARE LOOSE. [Vaudeville star decided to go to Paris) "er te Chinatown, ‘Ada len was shattered. She The woman gotten up in trim and !for study for years she alternates | By that time she had learned to| fed er sulte and put up the bar- trig tailored style looks just a bit stiff|between George and an institution of | “rink. She was in a mood to|ricades, and she sald wouldn't take these days, #0 loose and graceful are jjearning which is known as the “Cafe | “take @ dare” w some one in the| them down for the one hundred and ten OE ye Oa LC eC Rat Tho cloak salesman had eatae: | slumming party sald she was not ce ge hig “oe thane cae pci ipeeAtt bea la Bal Lay Race lished @ business and when the vaude-| brave enough to smoke oplum. She} ey Wiqowa on the “marriage ship, different from a buttoned-up, be ville star refused to return, began pro-| Proved she was; then found she wae! sn. Young and pretty, some nota tailored trimness of effect. The suit of ngs for divorce in Cleveland not brave enough to stop, young and not éo pretty, They man- sulphur brown silk serge is by Callot| Then Jullo came home and took Abe| The vocal lessons were over, Drugs, |itested keen interest in the embarking and shows the abnormally long watst-|Huminel out to Cleveland with her. | drink and the white Hghts did not mix} of Mr. and Mra, George J. Berman, who Hen and low belt observable in many | Under Ohio law, three years muyt| Well with study. Soon she became an|were married yesterday. A crowd of of the Callot models of late, The skirt lelapse between the filing of the pe stl habituee of the « and her men| friends brought several tons of rice and draped up in front and within the land the granting of the divoree. @.,,| friends Were many, Shé dressed ex-| much enthuslasm to help them see the coatfronts is a graceful vest fastened |rad gave his queen %,0 tn eu or | ceeds gly well ve three or four days| Bermans off. at the top mika on lar fane button alimony, but Abe Hummel wan peeve Sree Te eaulaldren froin: aeht | ax nder the loose, easily fitting coat Is @/and Mr. Conrad found hime yut | and come k pale, wild-eyed and be- bloune of ecru eyelet embroidery over ja receipt, When the divorce wan grants | ATSH iad” been away for| You Can't Cure an I pe sot silk. Tho silk valve in 001, Mr read nearly @ sk when she walked into hat with {ts drooping plume shows the | tegen | Dr. Henri Iskowits, No Smelling Breath same graceful softness of line and the ‘4 tn New a | igiith street, yesterday, | by perfuming the mouth— only trim, neatly fitting part 0 Vela wits’ ae: Ge reantonan| ut her in a cab and sent her to her tume {s the smart buttoned } times since the case has been | room at Mrs. Gilmore's, A half hour ent leather and dy aa ti hap tacar t lower coun {after she Kot there she was dead PAE 1 Pe | reversed by the A Court and] _ > — | |THE HON. ALBINA BRODERICK} ': 1s taken eleven | sPtoater” Found tm iy ge [action to the present day | The body of @ man about fi five IS HERE TO STUDY HYGIENE, | re | ve ara old was fol floating in the} will cleanse the stomach and sweeten : : Is HOnerye GRi4OR NED, | North River at foot of Cortlandt| the breath, It is a convenient Laxa- (Daughter of the Late Viscount Mid- nt of the actual condition | street to-da body was poorly| tive Blood Purifier that does not cause a Arrive Baltic, After | aring House banks and ttired and a | sewed in the blue] painorgriping, Put upin neat boxes dleton Arrives on Ie, iw nies for the week shows er showed the man to be @ deck- fendy to have with you, Giving Up Inheritance hold $408,050 reserve In exces. stea lo of the At- uirements: is is a decre from last week, , ANEW REMEDY for ANOLD COMPLAINT Different from any—better than all. At last after years of experiment, Medical Skill has produced a perfect laxative, J or 2 Pillsat night. Hunyadi Jancs Pills For CONSTIPATION AND TORPID LIVER It’s New! It’s Sure! It’s Safe! in Handy Vest Pocket Vials, At Up-to-Date Druggists. 25 Cents. i Learned to Smoke the Drug Take e body was TOMS ENERSO She’s Beautiful, Rich and a Widow, But She’s Not for i You—Oh, No! i Mre. Orra Fokerson, whose charms | @re quite suMctent to make her «| matrimonial prixe, regardless of the million-dollar bequest that became here when ehe put on witow’s weeds, & year ago, was locked securely in her $3,500 suite, with @ chair againat the door and the key on the inside, when the Hamburg-American MNner Cleveland | started to-day on a round-the-world voyage. She received only one visitor before the Cleveland sutled, and she wouldn't | let him tn until he had vowed on his honor as a ship news reporter that he | would not propose marriage. Then she took away the barriers, opened the door and josed it again swiftly, snapped the key in the lock and as breathlewsly: “Well, what on earth Is it you want, | if not to marry me? He careful, I'm & desperate woman and you must keep your word!" Before the astonished interviewer | could reply Mrs, Keckerson demanded: | “Have you seer him? Tell me, ta he on the pier? A man who looks like an artist, I mean, and haa a very square jaw. He said he wouldn't let me go. And now I'm aorry 1 have started No, no; not because of him, He's #0 persistent that I am afraid of him. Hut this ship isn't what [ supposed it would be. Why, there are oighteen bachelors aboard, Oh, dear, can't you advise mo what to do? MRS. ECKERSON SEEKS AN ADAMLESS EDEN. Whereupon it came out that Kekerson was fleeing not from but from MEN. In her home city they had flocked around her-—fortune hunt- ers and genuine admirers—-almost be- fore she ad buried her husband, Among the group of sultors was an artist, whose name she did not mention. When ahe ceased to smile upon him, having decided he took her sulles a» encouragement to his sult, he ened to kill her and himself, she sald She feared he might follow her on board the ship. But that was not the reason she had locked herself tn the $5,600 gulte—the finest on bourd, Some woman friend, to whom Mrs Kekerson explained her predicament, advised her to Ko on @ trip around the world, personally conducted. She said one's companions were elther ebterly married couples, honeymooners or epin- sters no longer young. So Mrs, Eck- erson engaged the best accomodations n the Clyveland and didn't come to New York until the last minute, She was taken in hand at once by Landon Reed, the social director of the round-the-worlders. Il be sure sald Mra, Reed. to enjoy yourself, “On the Cleveland you and beaides, one Is brought into contact with the most eligible sort of men. nen, too, there are fewer formalities: We have been #0 successful socially on other voyages that the Cleveland has should be lonely.” all druggists, 2! it ofl druasiots, 850, and$1.00ebex, | ‘or free sami book write jartol: IF YOU WANT YOUR BUSINESS TO BECOME THE TALK threat: | Mrs. | Ket every soctal advantage of the shore, | WITH $80.35 ON HIM, “STARVING MAN” ASKED SLEUTHS FOR A MEAL Out of Panhandler’s Clothes Tumble Empty Purses When He’s Searched. John Connors, a neatly if not stylishly dressed middle-aged man, stepped in front of Detectives Gleanson and Reilly of the West Forty-seventh street station at 4 o'clock this morning and told a sorry tale of starvation “I'm a picture framer,” he said. “My home is in Rochester, I have a wife and nine children, seven of them girls. 1 took all the money there was in the house—and it wasn't much—and came down here looking for a job. It ts all gone and 1 haven't had @ bite to eat for two days. Will you give me ten cents for a cup of tha “Now, mister,” said Gleason, “we want to be on the level with you. We are Police officers and, speaking strictly, we ought to arrest you, But you do not look Uke @ bum or talk Ike a regular vanhandier, We are Just going to an all-night restaurant; come along and eat all you lke.” Connors burst into tears, He dug a handkerchief from his pocket to wipe his ©; With it came a pocketbook, which Kellly picked up. It was empty Reilly and Gleasun looked at each other. Connors started away, but they held hun. “I we find that you ha any Honey,” sald Gleason, “we shall arrest you any “Thirty-five cents,” faltered ¢ “Hy which token you are a Mar any- way," said Gleason and they took him to the station. Searched there, two more empty pocketbooks and eighty dota and thirty-five cents were found on him, ‘The detectives saw him to a cell and then went out on the street and ki each other, Magistrate Kern held Connors until Monday in W Side Court to-day to give the police an opportunity to find out more about him. ow on the level, have you gut — FIVE GOLDEN RULES FOR HEALTH GIVEN BY YOUNGSTER OF 81 These are the five golden rules |] of health given by Frederic Har- | won, English author, critic, bib- |] Hophile, ex-professor, bi his. n, traveller and amateur gar- dener, on his eighty-first birthday }] at his home at Hawkhurst, Kent: (1) Abstain from tobacco, spir- its, made dishes, and all such Greadful things. Z am satisfied ee @ little bit of mutton and | pudding. |] (2) Rise from a meal with an appetite. I believe people eat too | ‘Walk every |] letters and telegrams from Flo: Rome. I am too old to play tennis and golf and too slow. (4) Sleep eight hours. People cannot sleep who smoke them- Diack in the face, eat too and have not walked | | | it yo got. Take things quietly. WOMEN'S DRESSES & BLOUSES oF sATIN AND BLACK PIECES AND COMMENCING MONDAY, OF THE TOWN, TELL ABOUT IT THROUGH A WORLD “WANT” AD. Filth Avene, 34th aud 35th a 0, CRUEL BALKAN WAR, LOOK PLEASANT! YOUR PICTURE'S T0 BE TANEN Jamon Hi. Hare, known affectionately as “Jimmy” by newspaper men and wer correspondents from the Rio Grande to the Shaho River tn Manchuria, safled on the American liner, St. Paul to-day hound for the seat of war in the Bale kann to take photographs of the howtil tles for Collier's Weekly and the Lem don Sphere. The veteran campaigner with a com ora, first of @ new craft of “war gho- tographers,” had his old war kit with him, relic of Santiago and the eam- paigns in ‘This was reine forced by ind sleeping begs, for Hare had been “tipped off" that wintering in the mountains of Albania ts no soft delight. He aid be was g0- Ing direct to Sofia, and that he sup- poned the business of getting from that city to the front would be as bad as it was moving from Tokio to Manghu- ria, elght y (o—-too much censor- abip. Jimmy” Hare haa taken snapshots of shells exploding and infantry volleying from trenches; he sailed over hoatile Mexico in an weroplane, during the Madero revolution of @ year ago, was marooned in a house in Juares all day by the rain of bullets that fell during the desperate fighting there. He ts prepared for almoat any contti ency he may encounter tn the Balkane. ‘RASH SEEMED TO (TCH ALL THE TIME Red All Over. Would Scratch and Dig the Skin Till It Bled, Kept Spreading. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. All Well, : i i ag i £ EEsge =F z 3 3 if silts if as i: i if i rE Ha iE 3 Li ia! il TT | i t i i F i f i hi ij & t il TO REMOVE DANDRUFF Prevent dry, thin and falling bair, allay ftehing and Irritation, and promote te growth and beauty of the hair, frequene ‘shampoos with Cuticura Soap, assisted by occasional dresaings with Cuticura Ointment, afford @ most effective and economical treat out the world. matlled free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address Dost-card “‘Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston. @@ Tender-faced men should use Cutiewre Boap Shaving Stick, 25°. sample free ‘B. Altman & Ca. ANNOUNCE FOR MONDAY, OCT. 21st, THE ' FOLLOWING EXCPETIONAL SALES: TAILOR-MADE SUITS AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES AND BROCADED METEOR BLACK CRESS AND COAT VELVETS CHARMEUSE ALSO IMPORTED DECORATED LACE PIECES _ INCLUDING SCARFS, PILLOW SLIPS, CENTER- CHAIR BACKS. jee ‘B. Altman & Cal i OCT. 2lst, WILL HOLD AN IMPORTANT SPECIAL SALE OF CHOICE ORIENTAL RUGS AT EXTRAORDINARILY LOW PRICES Ve - 4