The evening world. Newspaper, December 21, 1912, Page 12

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Husband Likened MURDER OF MAN, “I Married a Pretty Little Ninny," Writes “Never Again’’—“When I Of- fered to Kise Her She Called Me Mashy; She Got a Support and Ie Getting It Yet in the Form of Alimony.” “What a Bunch of Fluffa Woman Ie!—What Does She Suppose a Man Mar- ries Her For? I Wanted Sweetness and Love and 1 Didn't Get Them, and She Saye a Man Ie to Blame.” BY NIXOLA GREBLEY-SMITH. ‘There 1s only one thing which rivals in kind or degree # young man‘s| Propensity to discourse upon the perfections of the adored one and that 1s a/ husband's aversion to all discussion of the same topic. After the wedding ceremony a heavy veil of prrprae | descends between a man’s emotional | fe and the world which formerly | he bored with his confidences. What {s there behind this curtain? Why is the too talbative man in love initiated by the wedding ceremony into that discreet order of married Trappists, the silent brotherhood of husbands? Does this great curtain of silence vell a tragedy of disiitu-| sion or a comedy of delight? ee Ere jf 2° a3 <= to be known as Edna Collyer. Gentified woman said to be a relative of Mrs. oJhnaon. Police those behind it know. It 1s unfortunate that persons who, have failed in marriage should be! so-much fonder of telling the story of defeat than the victors are of tell-| ing their tale of happiness. But it! is readily comprehensible. There is one delightful, sympathetic, charm- {ng abused person who never fails under any circumstances or conditions! Of coarse you know that person. In ‘act, you are his or her most intimats| friend, most discriminate admirer. I refer, needless to: say, to you, dear madam or dear sir, to You. It {8 60 much easier and more soo:hing to say Marriage is a failure than “lam a failure!” Just as it is 80 much more Dalatable to believe that the Face was crooked than that yon backed the wrong horse, so much more consoling to think that the je was bribed than to admit that the best dog won, WILL HUSBAND THE SECOND PLEASE WRITE. thoughts. I have much more inter- clubs, She had never known rudiments of housekeeping and she the This reader made a rather extraor- i Selling; three-year-olJs a preme dinary declaration that a husband may| gidn't want to lear Finally we had “Pig skin grafted on man's body.” If it takes he will be a good man for the i eens. }2 ‘mend have ter worse. failings’ than the one] to board, She declined to have chil- | Produce commission business. iy auike: th ee epplication made by Mrs. Fannle| which gjyos his wife the right to divorce| cre. She suld it was so “old fash- ‘Track ‘fast, Klein, wite of a well-to-do shoe dealer. toned," When I offered to kiss her WV. @peliman of No. 1 she would shrug her shoulders say: ‘I wish you wouldn't be silly!" sometimes varying the phr: to the extent of calling me “mushy. Now, what did I get out of marriage? She got a support in exchange for dutics she refused to fulfil, She's | getting It yet in the form of alimony, because, naturally, where for thi capable of fee a divorce. It in such cases, him. That depends on the point of view. Oats {ip by names you ef-s woman the things of the spirit and heart to these utilitarian adjuncta of . phys! well being. But I can think of nu better way to express the feeltng that normal The law gav ys a man is to blame But—is he? NEVS&R AGAIN. apne oe uaaiargertr eo THE SVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1912. > And the Same Might Be True of Wives Capyright, 112, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). AT THE CENTER OF THE INVISIBLE NET SHE RECEIVES THE Shocks THE News OUsH FLIES Oddities Suould @ young Spug be called a Spughetul? General pay-day and yet to-day is the shortest of the year. bark at a sixteen h.-p, mule, of resort owners who wish to violate the “Probers find gambling on Stock Exchanj 1 | @re confronted with such startling information. “Bhock felt in Washington originated in Alaska. Ues believe that the shock originated in Oyster Bay, law. Bachelors should worry again. “Oklahoma Kate" has called off the mar- Comment is impossible when we It seems that the duty of a Police Inspector is to inspect the bank accounts There in talk of engaging a celebrated private detective agency to ferret out the 26-cent eggs of the Housewives’ League. "* Some of the best authori- An English tourist who has successfully scaled the Matterhorn got lost inspecting a new Broadway hotel and fell in the Turkish bath pool, Pog Arcor AVIATOR DROPS T SEA AND CALMLY MENDSHS PLANE Chemet With Passenger, in a Round Trip Flight Over Ad- tlatic, Proves His Nerve. ‘VENICE, italy, Dec. 21.—A remarkable filght in a hydro-seroplane across the Adriatic Sea from Venice to Trieste and back again to Venice was ¢arried out to-day by the French aviator, Georges Chemet. He took with him as a pas senger Major Ginnocchio of the Italian army, The total distance of the flight ‘was 2 kilometres (about 159 mi On the returii voyage from the Austri- ‘an to the Italian coast trouble with the motor of the hydro-aeroplane obliged ‘Chemet to descend to the surface of the sea when twenty-five miles away from the shore. The daring aviator succeeded in re- pairing his motor while floating on a{ ightly rough sea. He then reascended 4 terminated the trip to Venice at a speed of seventy-five miles an hour. Chemet and his companion were en- thustastically greeted when they de- scended here. ———— TWO AEROPLANES CRASH TOGETHER IN FLIGHT. Son of French Minister of Marine! and Two Other Men Injured in Air Collision. PARIS, Dec. 21,—An aeroplane collision in ‘midair to-day imperrilled the life of the son of Theophile Delcasse, French Minister of Marine, and two’ aviators at Villacoublay, near Paris. Young Del- caase was making a fiigirt as a passen- ger on @ monoplane piloted by Georges |tracting freight agent of the Erle | President's son. Collardeau, when another machine as- cended the two acropianes started manoeuvering. around the aerodrome ‘The false movement of a lever caused them to come violently Into collision and the two wrecked machines Inter- locked and crashed to earth. One of young Delcass 3 was frac- tured and Collardeau was badly brulsed, while the pllot of the other aeroplane was seriously injured, probably fatally. The collision occurred at a low altitude. — JUAREZ ENTRIES. The entries for to-morrow are as fol- lows GIV-FLEDT SULZER'S BROTHER-IN-LAW HELD FOR EMBEZZLEMENT William ‘L. Rodetheim Arrested in Philadelphia and Put Under $1,000 Bail. (pectal to The Evening World.) PHILADBLPHDA, Pa., Dec. was arrested here to-day on @ warrant sworn out by George H. Paiste, formerly | the tarvard officials have had to deat secretary-treasurer of the Historical | Publishing Company, this city, charging | him with the embezzlement of $13,000. At a hearing before Magistrate Harris Rodethelm was held tn $1,000 bail for a further hearing on Jan. % Although the warrant upon which he was arrested charged Rodeliieim with embessiing $13,000, it was learned, fol- lowing the hearing, that the sum ac- tually involved is larger by many thousands. Rodelheim, who was formerly in the printing paper business, is sald to have | been under contract with the Historical Publishing Company to supply it with i} Paper. pany, is said to have been induced by} | Rodethelm to advance money and sign notes for large sums when the deliveries of paper ordered by the publishing house, had not yet been made. | i ——— + /GYM MAHER, RAILROAD MAN, | MISSING, TURNS UP HERE. ! 1 Break- | i |Suffering From Nervous down Caused His Mysterious Disappearance. | CINCINNATI, Dec, 21.—Mise Anna! {M. Maher of 328 Overton street, New- port, Ky., received to-day a telegra’ from her brother, a Maher, Railroad, who has been missing my teriously since Nov. 28, saying that he was# at the Hotel Aldine, Twent jninth street and Fourth avenue, \York City, where the telegram was} jdated, and that he had suffered a nervous breakdown telling ‘his friends that he was golug |away for a much needed mental rei | He was supposed to have gone to Mobile, | although search was made there without avail, a telegram from Mr. Maher siat- ed that he was in bad shape, but that g00d physicians were in attendance, Mr. Maher f one of the best known of the younger railroad men of the coun + two-year-olds; fire ard| try. He is prominently identified with a fal Telonge saat as be Rorgiaty “le. the Knignts of Columbus, His accounts tog; Betis, 102; “Kiva, 1 Tate, 15; “| are said to be correct at the Erie offices 1 a —SelMag; three-year-olls and on PON Dh ball furiomes Oakland, 101) * ioe, nt. 104; Rosey Dosey, 100; Tomny “Moonshine" oleomargarine up the State has been discovered. Medee, 100; Balronia, 16" Uae iba re ‘THIRD RACE.— Selling; three.year-chie and uo; _ L. 104; Camas Cornell's “perfect girl,” it ts noted; @otes on beefsteak and not fudge. tire a Bd ‘jane ine ba; Pons, 100; o _— Bali 08 5 ‘ @ian't marry her to listen to her igh i Osi ln, aig Ha Hence we have much letters as the} (qui ‘houshts of my own, When { deh on i ag er ie. i eltec ognea li Boas vue printed yesterday trom “A Man|. om ual stimulus 5 got it “In w divorced woman a widow?" Certainly. A man who has lost his wife Wootten Me" Lady," Lieut, ‘Prince: Mire, Klein, Adjudged' Insane, Then} 1.4, of witty” im waicn the writer was tether wanted In wie [te the same as dead. Homer es clam Ba. Cap “ , sweetness, do .! Sane, Says Husband and Daugh- |decisrry thet * sa merely a! and Love. Did I cca f dia not, rap apnsrmancen Selling: tees. soar-elds omy ‘ter Persecute’Her. tty tr etna! J thought 1 was laying up a happy Protest has been made against hobble skirts on account of their tendency HE vnch, JUtT Hutter’ Bal : bait’? Communications trom we iws| future for myself by marrying a |‘? baw at tho knees. wr 6 OF; oroater, 110; ih IMistande of this jaa: ht tol a d.f.| Pretty little alnpy. But three years . Pacey song SIXTH RACE—Sling ;three-year-olds and up; Deiat isda, sfeiinadl oth Sine a. Gere teaedtan bao Reaketo Government threatens to jail trust magnates.” We have also seen a lapdog| five and. & jalf furlongs Auto, Gish, 104s Hi 4; Pn, Ok: La Pedro, 100; Tallow Dip, 100; Hidden hand, here. At the Aldine it was said that Mr, Maher was not stopping there but had called this morning. He said that he expected a message and would return this afternoon. He left his card so that there might not be any doubt as to his Identity. -- Arbuckle-Beecher Memort Plans for the Arbuckle-Beecher Mem- orial Building, to be used as a pariah for the Plymouth Congregational with the Bureau of Buildings. The structure, which ts to be built at Orange and Hicks streets, near the Jehurch, will cost $100,000. This amount | was willed by the late John Arbuckle, who intended the building for a com: bined memorial of Henry Ward Beecher and himself. self-respecting women have on this aub- —_____-— And, speaking of technicalities, a lawyer has discovered that a divorce may Observations . PAPA KNICKERBOCKER be obtained if a word was imispronounced during the marriage ceremony. Bo-called' unselfishness in love may be TO EAT $4,000,000 on Christmas fust another name for uncleaniiness /UUY,| To save a woman's pet kitten a man plunged through the ice in the ‘The worst roue in the world prefers that FEAST ON CHRISTMAS | Detroit river. te saved tho kitten but Is likely to die himself of exposure. by Herbert Harlem Court sent ber tothe | hie wife should belleve him a mode! = | —_— | (Kaufman, ‘ward at Bellevue Hospital, | husband, That is why the complacently And now the Governor of South Carolina y wie deceived wife cannot afford to admit to ¥ one that she knows she Is deceived, Her self- is gone in any event, but 0 long as she shuts her eyes she retains the respect of her husband. CAUSES OF MANY OF THE DIVORCES PLACED, “A Man Hater of Fifty” observed that young women are apt to overestimato the virtue of constancy, I doubt If !t/ can be overestimated, But one thing is certain, that many a divorce ts obtained bw women as a result of masculine in- oretions which were an effect, not a ie of unhappiness, for nearly every man ts a born worshipper of the great 0d Routine. If Fato sets his face to the north or south and gives him a push he is pretty apt to keep right on in that came before Justice Davis ther. The claim upon which her hus- ‘had her brought into court was j she had charged him with infidelity having evidence. Justice tater signed an order declar- Delicacies of what has tn wisdom teet! Trade est! Food and 4 Prevents given. All Milled up to beet" the way of direction till the crack of doom unless somebody throws the ewitch to derali him. A great French writer makes an ob- servation about husbands which |» even yesterday to a stinging arraignment of Man it seems only fair to print the following communication from a disillusioned husband: ONE MARRIAGE ENOUGH FOR TH A Dear Mada: Was much amused, and I'll admit considerably roiled, by than at Thi to % cents 2 cents a pound in the last twent hours, and pound. Chickens and dui Frogs’ pound, pound and and cl Potatoes: than for several years, Practically fi and meats are c Thanksgiving, ness to those who need to mal —_—— Democrats The present headquarters of the Dem- ic National Committee in the Fifth That Is Estimate of ‘Trade on Food| and Drink—Will Spend Fifty Millions of a thousand carloads, to say nothing jew York for the Christmas holida: and the Yuletide will be one of the m riest since Father Knickerbocker cut his keepers sald yesterday, Christmas in the metropoiltan district a the cold" nd Christmas overything el turkeys are odming from Most of the rm lama are & cent aplec ys to the Governor of North | the Constitution and go where it is a long time be- Carolina that he can ta! | tween drinks, et in Presents. | | “Trust owners will respect court decisions.” But a man may and luxuries to the amount spend his lite} trying to be a law-abiding citizen, and when the Supreme Court rev. itself he | will find himself « criminal, come in ships, have arrived | | “Life insurance refused to mill workers." What would be more appropriate is death Insurance, Then if the workers should chance te live after the mill is through with them they could collect from the insurance company | et h, #0 market men and shop- |CHAPIN-MONTANT WEDDING |PASTOR, THOUGHT DYING, WILL TAKE PLACE ON JAN. 6. GAIN IN THE PULPIT. Prominent Clubman Will Wed the |Lost Both Legs and an Arm in Acci- | Widow of Charles L. Montant dent, but Will Preach a | at Home of Bride’s Cousins, Christmas Sermon, | Formal announcement, of the engage-| ‘The Rev. 8, Ross MacClements, pastor ment of Mrs, Charlotte Storrs Montant|of the First Presbyterian Church, As- to Alfred C, Chapin, a prominent club-| bury Park, expects to occupy his pulpit man, will be made Christmas Day and! to-morrow at the Christmas service of the wedding will take place Jan, 6 at/the church for the first time h No, 31 Fifth avenue, the home of Mr, | preached since last July, when he had and Mrs, 1, Walter Wood, cousins of | both feet and one arm cut off in a rail- the bride-t be, | road accident. Mrs, Mor tant, widow of Charles L,/ It was long thought that the accident | Montant, 1 a member of an old| Would prove fatal, A superb physique New York ‘amily, Her husband was| enabled Mr, MacCtements to survive the A member of a prominent French’ terrible ordeal, Now, provided with ar- family, a brother of Jules A, Montant, | tificlal feet, he has learned to walk so now living in Paris, and of Alphonse | successfully that he does nog require Montant of this city, Auguste P, Mon-/ even the ald of a cane. tant, who had a fine summer home in| After the accident Mr, MadClements Oyster Bay, and who died recently, was | {nalsted on resigning, but his parishion- a third brother, jers wore so devoted to him that they Mr, Chapin has been for s.scral years | Yeted unanimously he should remain @ widower; iy former wife was Miss | thelr shepherd. So they would ndt Iistun imates as to the cost of Emory J. Haynes. consumed. + storage Wareh the lnlt with “Chri food, The moderate priced the West, re being sent trom et ki nkegiving, ranging from 2% @ pound. Geese have risen lege fetch %% cen lobsters 35 cents, Oysters Prison, and almost all gr jove Quarters, Three Famous Pictures, Printed in Colors, All Teady The Pretty New York Orphan Girl Who Is Idealized as a Saint. “What Christmas Means,” by “The Men Who Cornered Chirist- nas"—A page of Verses by Paul “A Christmas Mystery,” the Story of the Three Wise Men, by W. J. Locke. “Larry's Christmas Anthem,” Played in the Death Cell on a Mouth Organ at Sing Sing “The Washington Thorn,” Bloomed at Christmas Time for 1900 Years. “THE WORLD’S CHRISTMAS PEACE SYMPOSIUM,” Contributed to by Many Famous Men at Home and Abroad. Avnue Bullding will be closed Jan, 1, Permanent headquarters will not be dé: elded upon until) the committee ni in Washington about the middie of month. They will probably be In Wa ington. John Hammond will be in cha: Grace Stebbins, He has one sughter, Mrs. W. Beverly Roge: He is a mem- ber of the Union, Metropolitan, the New York Yacht and other clubs. Mgr. MoMackin, form sly attached to St. Patrick's Cathedral, will perform the wedding cereinony, Only the immediate . t eo eo of such headquarters as the comaiitt may maintain pending’ the meeting. relatives of the bride and groom will be | present. to the proposal. reward, Now they have their ——. Herricks Comtag Hi CLEVELAND, Dec, 21.--Ambassador roa 'T, Herrick and Mra, Herrick have rted for New York, remain until Tuesday, eail for France, here they when they FIT FOR ANY ONE’S CHRISTMAS STOCKING “Twas the Night Before Christmas,” Two Pages of Verse “Bible Pictures to Frame. “FUN — A Whole Barrel of {tin an Un-to-the-Minute 16-Page Joke Book. A 20 Xmas Stories, Finely Illus- trated, in a which Has “(CHRISTMAS EXPOSED,”’ by Roy McCardell, Special Feature of the Metropolitan Section. IN SUNDAY WORLD TO-MORROW a1—win-| ,, fem L. Rodelheim, brother-in-law of | aormitory on Harvard’ Gov.-elect William Sulzer of New reat} te, a8 secretary of the com. > Jnearly $10,000 have iM | cuff links and a jewelr 3, after | Brooklyn, were filed yesterday | HARVARD “RAFFLES” HUNTED BY POLICE: TTS SM ROBE, Burns Men Called in After Series of Robberies in University Dormitories. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Dec. 91.—dn- estigation to-day of a rotbery tn « yesterday devi theft was one of a series with which in the last few months, Because uni- versity oMoials believe that the rob- ‘berles have been committed by a “rats fles" enrolled at the inetitution, and it would bring undue notoriety upon Har- vard, great secrecy has been observed in dealing with the matter. It was only when che supposed “raf. fles” ransacked the rooms of sucii prominent students as Robert Tati, son of the President of the United States, and others who insisted on re- porting it to the police, that the tale of the frequent thieving leaked out. Even then the police tried to keep tie facts from the puvite, but it came ouc through the students, As @ result, {t was learned on good auth that the Boston branch of the William J. Burns Detective Agency has been detalied to put six men on the case, Cullege authorities refused to-day to discuss the matter. A poll of almost a hundred students whose rooms have been ransacked, however, showed that approximately jewelry, clothing and books said to have deen worth Im alt veen stolen in the past iwo months, Robert Taft was one of the heaviest rs, Several seart p.ns, cuff links and luable clothing to the amount of about were taken from the rooms of the Paul M, Holl eleven, a se h., lost six scart p studs and other jewelry. W. C. Striev- ling of St. Louls was another loner. but that he was! improving in a hospital, | Mr. Mayer left Newport Nov, 2 Entrance {is thought to have been }®ained while the students were at es, with false s. Craigte Hall, [the dormitory in which Robert Taft | lived, was ransacked. Hardly a suite of rooms in the entire building was over- looked by the thieves, Robert Taft is a senior student in the Marvard Law Sctrool, eels | KILLED BY SAND CAVE-IN, Firemen of Winfleld Called te Dig for Buried M: The clanging of the big fire bell and jthe subsequent rush through the | streets of Winfleld, L. two miles ‘east of Long Island City, by the vol- unteer firemen and a pparat jarmed ‘residents of that suburb to-day, but there was no fire. The firemen were wanted to ald in the frantic scramble | to dig William Klein, a laborer, from ; the bottom of a ninc-foot trench, the | sandy sides of which had caved tn, burying him. Boards fingers served as impro- vised shovels, but it was an hour be- | fore Klein's body was reached, and by jthat time as great a crowd had coi- lected as a real fire would heve ‘brought out. Ernest C. Lang, Klein's j employer, a plumber of Elmhurst, wi | arrested on a charge of criminal neg- | Mgence. and Striking Illustrations, Astonishing Religious Drawings, Reproduced in Colors, Made by a Girl of Thirteen. Really and Truly Girl Detective. “Out of a Moving Picture to Fame, Dream of Success that Comes True at Christmastide, Lullaby from “Sing Song”— by Christina Rossetti, by a Child.” A Group of vr True Christmas Episode by a »” a Young Girl Actress’s et “Official” Costume Colors for Women’s Spring Wear. et “The Story of Little Snow Drop;"’ a Fairy Tale for the Little Folks,

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