The evening world. Newspaper, December 3, 1912, Page 3

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WOMAN DANGLE ww Yr FINEGY OF THRE, BABY ASTORGETS | HIGH AMID FLAME | Seecesevcevesssessesessvesssesceeey evo negvsussesenceousseseuesenseneD oxeesvessoesesonS cxsesoRNeSORONIOS IN HERO'S CLUTCH Husband Clings to Nightgown at Fourth Floor Window Halfbrother Is Ceremon- | Fatima—the Enough Backbone,” Came Back ‘ | ack. iously Christened. | “distinctively Till Help Comes. Writes “D. N. E.,” and | dasa pele sees individual” Adds: “I Have Known | Bomehody's darting, sunny faced, with hi . ONE DEAD, SIX HURT.| Couples Who Would! brown inair and ses, wnt only three] Jan nner ene icon of col sone | Turkish-blend ci- Have Been Ideal as Man years old, awaits a parent's claim at) christened John Jacob Astor, He is the rette — delight- d Wife, but Were Kept! the home of the Society for the Preven: | sixth of the family to bear that name, ully mild. A Many Thrilling Rescues Mark| @"%@ Wife, but Were Kept third treet and. Fourth avenues tye | Which his father, by his service in war uality about from Marrying by Con-| was a. Thankagiving offering, to ane| toler public acts and more then bo smoke that a i a art- h ¥ T eaiv a ‘i over by hls heroic death in the Titanic Blaze in Harlem Apart ventionalities.” doting father or mother, ‘The ttle erpe aiiria en tip. Was tn the Bite als. More ment. Te WA GER Bares Teale ne a ae 12 [eton at No, 80 Fifth avenue. The baby's as sold than 1 “A Woman Who Has entered on the books aa "John Doe sx" | Mother, Mrs, Mad ei ae any other brand in oii [At 6.90 o'clock last Thuraaay morning |B her son in her arms during the vy » Many thrilling rescues were mato] Worked for a Living a wail dremed man, with, the babe| ceremony, at which the Rev, Ernest early to-day during @ fire that cost one life at No. 2 Hast One Hundred and In High School a Girl May Learn Everything She Will Be Required to Know as a Wife “American Men Have Not Knows at First Hand the Value of Money; She Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publi jshing Co., (The New-York World.) LOST OR CAST OFF, Well been Wher Man Left Him in a Restaurant and Never side, No. 7 mtared Kleinbe: | toddting at hi Park Row. Th restaurant at - ARIDDLE TO POLICE FAMILY NAME; HE'S STH JOHN JACOB Saunders, rector of the Episcopal Chureh at Rhinebeck, officiated, Col. Astor was one of Mr. Saunders’s parishioners and | wore a blue coat trimmed with white Twettth atreet. Several persons were ; braid, tan leggings anc black button | it was Mr. Saunders who conducted the Has Always Waited on ehoes and a gray hat trimmed with | funeral services over Col. Astor's body Gee reser ec uneearnn ecen . yellow, ‘The man sat the little fellow| after It was recovered from the sea, Tt was a blaze unusual for its remark-| Herself and Appreciates |down tn a chair and tol! the nignt| ‘The baby's godmother ie Mrs, Marshall ole es i waiter that he would return i Orme Wilson, @ sister of Col. lor, HR ORAD Things that a Man Does! intel: "That was the last nocn of the | Phe kodrathers are Marshall Orme Wi: ABB r ie | man. fon fry @ Cc RABBI Louis uEvy, sisty-tive| for Her as the Butter. | The baby, a bright little chap, putterad | Dodge, 8 o Abide fly Does Not.” and chattered, then got fussy, Thoy| The ceremony in the drawing- THE INJURED, \mave him wame milk and toast and | room yesterday afternoon, and when the MAX SCHEREZ: twenty-nine, | everybody who entered the restaurant|membors of the Astor and Force fam- bnened on back, inhaled smoke, Harlem up to 10 o'clock had a word for the en-|{lles present had expressed love and Aospital ‘OLA GREELEY-SMITH. gaging walf. Policeman Taindbong waa| sympathy as they crowded about the Policeman PHILIP BERNSTEIN, Is a girl trained and maintained at home until she marries better fitted twonty-nine, injured in stomach and for wifehood than her sister who goes forth to earn a living and is brought notified and he itook the child to t proud young mother and baby, refresh- society's home. No tnquiry has eince | ments tat Aba the ‘enetabans conte to ~ Supt ‘Those who atten ¢ christening head. Attended at Rospital and went | thereby in direct contact with the sertous problems of lite? A young De Weta et the catoty’ tested nine |wesiges Mra, Wileom, her son and Mr, hom: 7 G@nORGE GoLD, ated scalp. SADIE ASTRER, twenty-four, burned on hands and face. ANNIE FRIEDMAR, sixty-five, cuts on head. Policoman JOSEPH 8. HAYS, about the head and hand The dutlding 1s a five-story tenement on the southeast corner of Fifth avenue. The entrance 1s on One Hundred and Twelfth street, and there are fire es- capes on that side of the building and on the side opening on a amall areaway between it and the adjoining building There are four stores on the ground floor. , The fi rted about 1 o'clock and ts helieved to have been caused by a cigar- ette or cigar stub carelessly dropped into one of the several baby carriages under the first floor stairway, The blaze had gone up the stairway ang dumb waiter shaft before it was discovered by citizens, Policemen and persons who happenet to be passing tried to get in and arouse the twelve families, but the fire had too much headway and the smoke was so thick they couldn't breathe in {t, so they made for the fire-escapes. POLICEMAN BENT ON RESCUE I8 FIRST VICTIM. The first to meet with misfortune was Policeman Bernstein. He had gone up tg the third floor on the fire-escape on the alleyway and was looking up when twenty-two, lac- dmshe dimmed ont at a winabe ce baby, And she has leisure and Op- 4 jot she can't seck at all, which she| © World of conventionality and dere i i sV fourth mists raed landed on the pollcs-| Portunity to apply what she leerms | ust pretend she doesn't t and has| mot stray from the path that cir- perlative Politeness When cumstance has laid out for them. I have known couples who would have been ideal as man and wife, but conventionality kept them apart. man's stomach, At the same time some- one threw a demijotin of wine out and struck him on the head, He was found unconscious on the fire-escape a few “ vim and vital seconds later by Policeman Gibney, who | Knowledge. What the mother lacks) iy oo0 4. teaineg, mndirectly, Im each case the man was wealthy Because August Miller, a chauffeur i carried him to the etreet the public school supplies. by artes, wiles, snares, &0., she may while the girl, who would have [¢,. tne Singer Sewing Machine Com- gS and | When Hook and Ladder Company|A GIRL NOW HAS A CHANCE TO! lance some young man to give her suited him, was portioniess end had whol Heda a buat 1 West One ve, what te "ten “use ite sill have ist oie el No, 26 arrived a woman could be seen STANDARDIZE HERSELF. 8 Job ae a wife, But she can't say mot been brought up in the social pee and Seventh street, said FUL Meath Ait 0 A Bot oe, } suspended from @ fourth floor win-| Now she has the chance to acquire ‘that she is looking fer that Hundred and € Ci wnte 5 d ] at mys’ (sneuipent, Nate dow. Before the horses stopped the essential equipment for a ponsible| oDerey sues tne te looking fox Stas Sala RRL es ely als evita or every ay UXUTLY | [eo Peis and Een it Capt. Ruckholdt was sending up the} future job as a wife before she ts six. school diploma, &o., to prove her Magist . i lnddayh ehouent /dlnrae Delighted men aud women living near and far 66-foot extension ladder, and before| teen years of age. From that time ualifications. She can't propose. follows feverishly every new fad ap- | Market (gurt, to . | “\ fi t t are blenwing ETON Speen eee v0 it had been put against the wall Fire- | until she marries she cannot do better Pg never will be able to propose,| Proved by fashion, but is always apport forthe oie ty Lees nie ~_ an comfort a vase Ht 1 Pe > 1 | Kiition to a fine o nic mt -Ald “rest or, Walter, Feder, tee Petri | or harmed cad fet nee Sure Une Coupe mover ahotle bo ble to prepeon | SOM? (and comeaioes tmaiiy) [1s ston to 2 fine ce Oe, wie hee “ seh ae, ne aan Sinith were going te t uf ° acre “ 8. fad out w Be i bate ie hoay eecnuke worAn's passive part in court: od. Prom her baby days she has Kn See Rain bla AGHOoOHTIs ~ economica. cost fehce sind made ths hy inboer ‘ond ‘better ea he wamen wae Mrs. Hassle Fehon | ce ho wtays ot heme never [SHIP Is phystologival and basic. Unlike | Dee® eccustomed to having her Miller wae arrested by Policeman Coy Ce ; twenty-three years old, who lost Sige oaea 7 ome never [her political handicaps, it resulta not | ¢V@rY whim gratified; she has been eet Met Stee arama oniee C pe ee aie tied to jump] scomomlo. value. What is she | ftom the law of man but from the law | SvStZwnere seen [Ag Bi ave from the window but her hustand| WORTH? Whatever she can get quently, by the time she reaches her | yesterday afternoon, When he was ar- caught her nightgown and held her| from her father—later from her |OUUNG WOMEN BEGINNING TO| carly twenties she has fallen into |raigned. Magistrate Krotel fined tim a %. suspended. ‘The minute the ladder Nempont riot meee. oF Taer eneeg- “WHERE THEY ARE AT.” euch @ state of boredom that appar- | ¢i¢. ieee ‘that fair?, crt treatment. Moe was clone enough Feder caught the| able services. ently nothing oan rescue her. She | “Thank you," said Miller, still in the et your CERTONE TRBA ENT at once, woman and passed her down to John| overwhelming efvantage of being aire: nee ete eee eed the | 18 60 eelf-contred and egotistio that | witness chair saree the esac ba Ld Broderick, @ fireman, off duty, who| able to refuse to marry for @ sup- | realnine the foolleh Aniblguity of the | she ts absolutely incapable of “Place that man under arrest at Se orale will tal tan ot Pee sae: ending. #: helping “bande OR TN e/a If. employed during she seven years be.| Senuine feeling for others. Wh once,” ead Magistrate Krotel, ‘and pad ie thd i! ati ah v ground, Many times, of course, the sel reer pony tes ery i Lg a this type of woman marries she im- {make a charge of disonterly conduct T with your ea ree SAP ‘The husband, Max, disappeared as| porting wo does marry from the| tween g1 marriage. More! sings for a time that she is happy, | revinat him.” roam mall, jruntage ot | the firemen rescued the woman, Fire-|same mixture of motives that may|and more of them are secking to eetab-| S54 40 all appearances ts very much | RA ey taken out to the complaint PHOENIX DOUBLE-KNIT SILK HOSE utoNt EAT man Smith went through the window | take the stay-at-home girl to the altar. | lish their economio value through work.| {m love with her husband. ‘Bar thie cps her ¢ ‘An ontizel ble Ik h literal he nt found Scheruer unconscious trom|Perhaps she gota tired or disheart-| ‘The greater number of employed | tm eve Soka sy ‘aeant, BBt thie |room and a charge of disorderly oon fl i ly new idea—you can now wear silk hose in winter—all the and found Sche: D uct drawn up. Ho was then rear- st 1 smoke and burned about the back.|ened by the stru Perhaps she women, ef course, work for the same! sete of matwen fo one of the few | cctened hofore the Magistrate, paleo baes ademerog HWE erthread al led with bee hake | OE RC a San be tae ork enperireet, Me | wevnat did you mean by saying ME Your dealer has Pheenis Alle Hose or eon ext It fer con er mee nightgown as she swung from the |. . 01 through @ burned balustrade, fall-| whatever else they could borrow| husband is & new kind of toy, of Jerpink vou’ just now when I final you | se 70 Gt ones, completely ex- us PHOENIX KNITTING WORKS—Phone, Stuyvesant) 790-45 East (7th St window had left him completely ing all the way to the bottom, The hose | from neighbors, which she soon tires. And them— [eign asked Magistrate Krotel of the shed hausted and he had been unable to} ree or eng the halls broke his fall| The people in the neighborhood res-| the old indifference and boredom. praoner save hlinself. 7 vy, bartender |#%d he landed without @ bruise, hurry-| Ponded to the demanda on thetr hospl- | RICH MAN NOT BRAVE ENOUGH vtt mieant my whole week's ealary, About this time Jullus Levy, bartender) i) iene pack to take up his work| ‘lity magnificently. They provided as © MARRY A POOR GIRL, Judge, and I wax somewhat aaken aback in the Pastime Cafe, on the ground floor, many as they could with shelter, cloth- q ff id hel ing and food, while the firemen and po- On the other hand, s woman wi plied M meekly, ran to the street to ave If he could NeD | "patrick Martin and his wife, who have|jicemen were treated to hot coft has worked for a living knows your conduct disorderly, 1 | itis coat, containing the night's recelD' | urge of the house, were caught on the| ‘Two alarms were sent in, the second | fret hand the value and purchasing | suppose you don't know any better, but att oe oa era no coat,|#econd floor by the fire, Mra, Martin| bringing Chfet Kenlon. The fire went| power of money, he has always {1 stall not extenuate your act one inch returned ¢ . He was treated by ambulance surgeons and went home. BLIND WOMAN OF 200 CARRIED DOWN BY POLICEMAN, Mrs, Annte Friedman, forty, @ blind woman weighing 200 pounds, was not missed for some time after others had been rescued, Then Policeman Joseph 8. Hays was told about her and carried NIXOLA GREELEY: SMITH remained in parasitic dependence uw! hundred years ago was a complicated which it has undergone since our great-grandmother’s time, the care and Management of a home can be learned by any intelligent child in a fow months, Cooking and sewing are taught im the public schools. Im the high schools a girl may leara every- ‘thing it will be needful for her to know as a wife—from how to use the “left overs” from Sunday din- ner to the right way to bathe the @t school in her own home, If her mother can teach her those things so much the better. But she is no longer dependent upon her mother’s where he left it off. was in more of a hurry than her hus- band and jumped from the second floor to the street, but was uninjured, Sam Goldstein, a paralytic living on the second floor, was carried down by firemen. Mrs. Sarah Bertowitz and her three children were carried down the fire escape from the third floor by po- Hcemen and firemen, woman reader in Arkansas raised this point in the letter with which this discussion of a wife and her job began, She expressed the belief that girls who earn their own living ben- efit their parents but not themselves, and devote, to pulling telephone plugs, hammering typewriter keys or making change in shops and restau- rants, time which should be given to preparing themselves for wifehood. In my opinion, this reader's con- clusions are absolutely wron; In the first place, even if these young women worked outside the home from choice instead of from absolute necessity, is generally the case, they would be doing far better for themselves, their future husbands and children than if they pon their families. Housekeeping a art. But with all the simplifications And childhood is the time in which {t should be learned. yearns for shelter and protection and is willing to do without love to ob- tain them. But at any rate she hava choice. The girl who staye at home until she marries is in the very trying post- tion of being Atted or of aspiring to w never thought of until {t goes out of the way to seek her. She cannot openly look for work as a wife—the occoupation for of nature. through to the roof, eating its way into many of the apartments and destroying much of the furniture, The damage is estimated at $15,000, CHICAGO MAN BUYS WINE, ZIP! HIS MONEY IS GONE! So Noah Cornell Causes Arrest of reason, because they have to work in order to live, But what of their occupation, its independence give them @ value and a dignity as human beings that cannot Possibly belong to the parasitic daugh- ter, however charming and accomplished the may be. Before we consider what the wife’ Job really is when it finds her, let us read what another Evening World reader has to say about the “society butterfly” in marriage. She writes: Dear Madam: American men have Rot enongh backbone. They live in has lived for herself alone, Oonse- ‘waited upon herself and appreciates that @ man does for her as COSTS CHAUFFEUR $5 TO SAY ‘THANK YOU' 10 MAGISTRATE KROTEL, | aelf, sent out his own detectives had those of Headquartera working the case, but without result. Yesterday John Doo 9 was taken he- fore Justice Mayo in the Children's Court and remanded to the care of the soctety, with an open date, This means that {f the parents are found within two weeks they may have him without further recourse to the Court. If at the end of that time no claimant ap- pears the boy will be placed in somo institution, “It's one of the etrangeat cases we have ever had," Secretary Hoeckly this morning, course is unable to «ive us any clue, indicate that he comes of a well-to-do iy. We may have been deserted or ther, or whoever left him in the Testaurant, may have been the victim at that hour of the morning and one can tell what may have happened The boy pratties and chatters with the matron and nurses In the home and in a favorit tim with everybody. he crtes and cal Some. “The boy, of ‘but his clothas and general appearance of fout play. Park Row ta pretty fonely for somebody Dodge were: Vincent Astor, halfbrother of the baby and since his father's death head of the Astor family In this country; Mar- shall Orme Wilson, Mrs, Marshall Orme Wilson jr R. Thornton Wilson, Mr. and Mra, Willlam H. Force, parents of Mra, Astor; Mise Katherine Force, Mra. Astor's sister; Mrs. Dodge, Mr. and Mre, R, Fulton Cutting, Mr. and Mre. Augus- tua Jay, James Roosevelt Roosevelt, who of Col. Astor; Mr, and William. Phillips, of Boston, the Kane and Henry Coleman Dray. ephew of Col. Astor, whose caresses he mi Sometimes he calls a name, But the only sounde that can be distinguished are goo" and Toots.” The people of the home think ho may have a nickname like “Tootsle" or something of the sort. Meanwhile the society Is making every fort to locate his parents, the police re looking for the myatertous man who ro mysteriously disappeared, ind John Doo 98, all unconactous of the commotion he has raised, cheerfully awalts what- te has ti for hi | Vincent Present When Little; Court 'Doesn’t Want Any Su- Fines Are Assessed. , at Fifth avenue and Fourteenth street People must show proper respect when they are before this court. I fine you the butter@y cannot do, since she takes all services for = Miller pala $15 to the Court Clerk and went out. dames McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street RABBI FOUND BURNED TO | A special char, by awn “ Larges mania) Aster DEATH IN HIS ROOMS, Two Young Women He ‘BROKAW BRO I | if RS | account be urrying bac When the fire was under control a twenty-four, and Annie Friedman, twen- -four, on the upper floors, and was noking for Sadie and Annie Orgll, sev- of a Victrola, | euteen and atte 5 reepectively, when the Sedy of © man ras found, burned enines. peared ton y aa complainant We have spared neither time nor effort in | | they appeare t owe ° . in the Harlem Court against Gri vil ‘ ‘ ; : nisters of Mra, Scherger, the woman who | called and recomnived the suppers 88) son ang May Lyons, ee car caine making this Winter's Suits and Overcoats | ‘ a \ c h-story win- | those worn by Rab! Wevy. x f . tried to jump from & fourt anny HY ‘Ambulances were on the ecene from women whom he charged with robbing erfect in ever detail. Victrolas dow, aud sald they manaied to 6k) se mrariem and Feception Hospitals | Mm of 06 IV down the tive ape before the flames | the riem en +L The Chi uf 1 td that ‘ . nates Style > $15.00 It off thelr aleter and brothereia.Jaw, wily a corpa of surgeons, Fire Chaplaira Rear phen ecenuseciutes A084 that Their excellent style, fit, tailoring and ma- P faaet ae reed ere aided on reaching the lower |MoGean and Ivy also did good wor ; mee 4 i dng : & Ant’. «soto aoe ere ane icemen Miller and Wit {among the injured. Many who were fr eet coammeane fan nea Thee terials indicate the advantages of successful | re PER He serenans + Re Se dela : treated in the streets for minor injurtes Lali i fj i ( .” 75.00 Mie: eee ve Cap tne ewawaseNerore ahale ‘akman covia ta haxingion avenue and was separated experience and real skilled workmanship ey) ta ler and his wite, May. LT ee dangerous at | BOth Young women were held in $1,009 which you will find in all our Clothes; at iM xiv + | 150.00 ate roms AN Pereira aay Poi 4 e fire looked 8 i , + | 6 200: varied -ONE8 hd Moor landing {one tlme that all the tenants tn the! all for further examination to-morrow. tices that are uniformly moderate. MANHATTAN ‘euoTaing 00. floor landing had reached the second tom ow ints | bulldings adjoining both on Fifth|* YOUNs man who called te see the 1248 Nd Ava cor. T2d St, Open wh sho it window in % Mase Saige ANOLE ® avenue and One Hundred and Twelfth] Zoume omen in the Tarlem Court pen Sack Suits $18 to $50 E Vi I Nive Kindler Jumped into a fire net the | street were ordered to the strest by|end hed in his poasession « package Wi Ov $18 to $75 very Victor Instrument anes tretched and was un- | Feserves from the Haat One Hundred] Syieg ag he was about te deliver the ‘inter Overcoats ‘oO dR 1 aera Pyare PRES athe net and |#nd Fourth atreat station. | Many of | duckage | an ecord pels mie them did not have time to dress, and A es 1 landed in the street, but the fifteen-foot J He also was held tn $1,000 ball for a A F c . until they were allowed to return to 4 H.008 bal] for Le aa Gees te ual theyre sinned, fate te] nar re wane nas onne| AStor,Place & Fourth Avenue iy te beer Reaehy’ chen: Added to the miraculous happenings was the experience of Fireman William J. Pickle of Engine Company No, 38 He was working on the third door when search was made of the house, On the top floor in @ bed of a middle apartment running about in quilti blankets and |, Met on Street. ‘Noah Cornell of No, &15 Wabash ave- mue, Chicago, a manufacturer of fire aft or Young or Old, C Cough or Cold. Mee prisoners MENS & BOYS CLOTHING. HATS & FURNISHINGS Sth Floor—23rd Street susway aT’ THE DOOR-ONE BLOCK FROM sroaowavl be arranged for the purchase ‘raw it will delight. vol friends ‘od loved their complimenta on your improve 7th Floor—34th Street Poudre Blanche MAKES Beauty More Beautitul ee

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