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soma Poh a Dalasi anil . WODENFRE . THAT BURNS HOUSE: Revengeful Women Will Never Forget, Although They May Say They Forgive IN WEST ORANGE Police Try in Vain to Reach Sheehan Brothers in Their Bachelor Quarters. ONE DIED SAVING CASH. Had Made Way to Ground Floor and Fallen Beside His ! Cash Register. [ g : i i t | ed a e#aloon at No. 11 White ‘West Orange, iH In i ATG a § i HT FB i La i i g> I E [ é PS z 5 z i “I Have Seen More Happy: Homes Wrecked Through a Woman’s ej? Hi i i | i ‘They long tod agro was| Love for Vengeance Genar seks srcnee Seen en, wat| Than Through AllOther : Causes Put Togethe: Writes “A Forgiven Husband,” Who Cites a tt i EE! I i eg bia if i g it G@ritently hed tmade an effort to get ene | 7 ragedy asan) Example. 0. His body was partially consumed. | Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Prenk's body was found upstairs. He “Of the seven deadly sins of women the worst ami dendiiest is revenge,” de- “A ‘Forgiven’ Husband” tn one Of the letters primted to-day. He adds that the dest and gentlest women are ti é uu 4G fit i ctf tl ene rere frequently guilty of this ein, and naive: supposed have ten admits “ inives wie” marie Sy 4 large wove, ceed not only bid Laide slbidhy Nar dhede heat the barroom furnish heat ‘the After nearly two thousand years of re- love her enemy | : s 7 o> < z z z m fed g Bt Three Are Rescued From | tor lieved to Be Dead. The Deo. 3.—Over 100 Jepanese i #3 BER flesh Mewhty ae glut- the firat two sina in feminine ertme, Nor t once connote itself in afinds with the creeping, cringing tndissolubly connected with bE pis edad News Oddities Bt tt doesn’t rain on Christmas it will now. The weather man ws a Spus. Prot, Garner wilt resume hie study of the monkey language and he is going erway into the interior of Africa to do It. ‘Why @tan’t they start that parcels post a week before Christmas? ‘Wisconsin hee a cheese trust, Result may be an increase of several scents a pound. Washington Heights husband is under arrest for calling this wife “Dearie” tm: public. Het-rack attendant in a St. Louis hotel saved his tips for elght years and wow he hes bought the hotel. ia Christmas celebration has started tn early at San Binito, Tex. Local corre- 4 ependens wires that he has just seen @ jack-rabbit with antlers like a buck deer, Having broken the eggs the Housewives’ League will now pare the apples. Boies have been placed in the dressing rooms of the ‘Chicago theatres. chorus gitla in the Jamesville (Wis.) doctor advertised for a soul-mate and found her. Among his specifications werd that she must not have a hollow back, prominent shoukler : tages, short legs or lop ears. He also required that her head around the base i ‘of the brain must measure twenty-one and @ half inches, NO PROTEST ON THIS DANCE.—So many train loads of Christmas turkeys are on their way to New York it looks like the butchers would be forced to do the turkey drop. Harlem seloonkeeper went into his icebox to commit suickle. Jersey jury has done it again, Damage verdict for @ boy's death was six | BB és recorded that after a three-hour conference between Mr. Wileon and Mr, Bryan the oniy clue to the Colonel's postion with the new administration was his edly wilted collar 10M tax records in Hoboken show that in 1849 bachelors there (Gal a year. Boy soprano wiih the face of an angel is in jail in Philadelphia charged with wodking 2 safe. Bu the periodical police raid on the On Leon Mbety-Ave pounds of shooting trons were con {Gay Gor raids, either were taxed one’s Private Chinatown arsenal od, and it wasn't @ red letter Game superstitious office seekers felt gloomy over yesterday's report that Prest- @hertf Harburger insists on being Boswell to Dr, Johnson Murphy. | TL ATT ASMA Ser RF eS rye! —— CCAwd TAE BREACH OF PROMISE SUIT thirt’ melodramas we instinctively as- sociate revenge with Byron's wonder- ful metrical glorifications of it or with some subtly fascinating demon of his- tory ke the great Lucrezia, Once upon a time @ gentleman mak- ian of to-day revengeful?/ing a journey was considered to fail {in true courtesy and manliness if he didn't knock down some oe! or seven other travellers per diem. He need have no quarrel with them; in fac they were usually perfect stranger to him. But the laws of chivalry de- manded that knights on the road whould “break @ lance” .at every pos- ible oportunity. WOULD BE ARRESTED FOR Dis- ORDERLY CONDUCT. To-day good Sr Launcelot himself would land in the police station be- fore he'd travelled two blocks. He weuld unquestionably be a disorderly bashed And I'm afraid the revenge- 1 heroines of history would fare much worse, Then, since the sin of revenge in its most natural manifesta- Physical injury upon one’s enemy— has gone out of fashion, why cherish mean, sordid little imitations? tion. She cannot forget tlon—t. e., the inflection of death or The woman who nags is personified revenge in the nth des: of deteriora- ‘ingle affront and she cannot let anybody else forget it, Ghe has her kitches of every twenty-four hours, but she neve continually ‘higher and more odorifer: ous, and it is raked over daily by the owner. desori| rhage disposed thinks of throwing out the gar. bage of her mind. The pile of it grow: My metaphor may seem unpleasant, but #0 is the personality I am trying to . I don't by any means stipulate for sainthood on earth. I think that the Person who acce} ery injury with- out protest Ukely to have a good Many to accept. Only, why not make one's protest and then subside? Why keep harping on the same maltreatment or injustice for the rest of one's lite? The old form of revenge, the spasmodic sort, certainly has its points when we compare tt with the chronic varlety #0 Popular with certain women to-day. There is @ Uittle verse which rather completely expresses the disadvantages of this type of vengeance, to the one who cherishes {t even m than to those upon whom tt 5 Oft with th met, i He forgives, renembering, | Has killed (hie bee, but not the stivg, Here is @ letter from @ man who has evidently had some experience with this “sting,” and two other communications, VENGEANCE THE WEAPON USED TO COMMIT MURDER, Dear Madam: Of the seven sins of woman you have Included in your list, and of the numerous others which you have not men- tioned, I believe that the worst and deadliest 1a revenge, % have seen more happy homes Wreoked through « woman's love I knew marriea a charming little girl and for a year they were ideally happy. Then somebody sent the wife an amonymous letter. It contained §=serious § acousations against the husband and came from ® woman whom he had formerly known. Me easily disproved what was said against him, but his girl- wife never recovered from the shock and died a few months later. In this case vengeance was taken ‘vy @ vindictive woman for am in- Pame-dect Witson had slept thirteen hours the night before. hia Academy of Natural Sciences bas sent a man to Hawali to hunt snails. Ridge houscholder #a%s he bas found a plumber who completeny tts the man t Brockiya. on a Charge of stealing an eirehip was issued fore 5 ‘ jury ts caisted in ber imagi- The trouble with moat women ts that their forzetiery isn't 4n proper Working ordor, J’hey treasure up the Femembrance of sone real or fan- oled affront—often the latter—-amd it THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, DEO if, SEVEN DEADLY SINS OF WOMEN "Kc" eae « | | » OF MS. EDDY CALL OMS. STETSON | Remarkable Demonstration in Honor of the Deposed Chris- tian Science Leader. SHE REFUSES TO TALK. Pw A First Reader of Ninety-sixth) Street Church Says It’s of “No Significance.” | More than aix hundred “students,” friends and spiritual followers of Mrs, Augusta E. Stetson, the ex-commun-) feated leader of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, at Ninety-sixth street and Central Park West,| thronged her apactous residence |directly behind the church on Satur- day night. The occasion was a recep- tion tendered to the deposed disciple of Mrs. Eddy, spontaneously given by thoae devoted to her. Two-thirds of those who had at- tended the reception to the woman whose teachings have been branded as heretical by the supreme authorities of the Christian Science Church in Bos- ton—the Board of Directors of the Mother Church—were in their pews yesterday in the big church next door to Mrs. Stetson's home, worshipping in the edifle which Mrs. Stetson bullt years ago. NO SIGNIFICANCE IN IT, SAYS FIRST READER VERRALL. Though West Ninety-sixth stree was choked on Saturday night with the | diutomodties of wealthy gdmirers and| “atudents” of the woman from whom} the mantel of Mrs, Eddy was snatched by the Boston directors, and those same automobiles were drawn up before the | doors of the church around the corner | at the hour of serice the following day, | “there was no significance in the inci- dent of Saturday night,” Richard Ver- rall, First Reader of the First Church, who is unfriendly to Mrs Stetson, de- olared to-day, “This should not be taken to inillc: any revival of Mrs. Stetsonfs pre’ sions to recover her position as } of the First Church,” continued Verrail. "I did not even know that the reception had been tendered Mrs. Stetson, and I must believe that figure given as of those in aifendani {s greatly exaggerated. Instead of there being a renewal of Mrs. Stetson’s campaign for the leadership from which she was justly deposed, every indication points to an opposite con‘li- tion,” Mrs, Stetson refused to make any; comment upon the reception and :ts) significance. Her only reply to a query, delivered through the medium of one of her students, was that ‘‘the| affair was purely a personal tribute of affection given by dear friends and students.” PROMINENT MEN AMONG THOSE AT THE RECEPTION, j Among those who came to fill the beautifully furnished parlors in tho big house in which the deposed leader lives and the deed to which she holds {ft of her former congregation A “FORGIVEN” HUSBAND. ‘en of dhe eight directors who SOME OF THE SINS OF MAN SET |had been under her when she was in FORTH. - command of the big church in Ninety- Dear Madam: Why doesn't some- |#xth street; prominent men in the body have something to say about the seven sins of man? Of course they really number seventy times seven, but here's my list of them, cut down to the smallest dimen- TA 1, Ram! tal a RrTtactions ae wie TED te | < mol 1 fal wrong done her a woman will atrike back. Even if she says she forgives, she doesn't forget, and what is forgiveness when @ relent- less memory keeps fresh one's crime? If a wife in some way in- jures her husband he will have. it Out with her once for all. Either he will cast her off entirely or he will take her back and never mention the matter again. Not so with # woman, Nine times out of ten the husband who once gives his wife @ handle against him will find it used against him for the rest of his na- tural Hfe. There will be one or more gentle recriminations dally, one or more plaintive reminders that a sin has been pardoned, “but of course it’s hard to feel just the same." ‘The best and gentlest woman has this revengeful streak in her, and it sete @ man wild, financial world, who have never re- turned to the fold since Mrs. Stetson's R 28, 1912 Y [ BOOFOLLOWERS © [SEES {tinue their memberehip in crown and monogram of Count J. and from which she was expelled three | 4, *! Starr Miller and™Miss Starr Miller and ¢ It was said to-day that other in- fluential men, who are in Sure posses- Chureh and who are not suspected of | the tain Mrs, Stet#on's variety of metaphy were among those pres: ent on Saturday night. Saturday night's reception, which wa: ned entirely by son's atu nts, ie admitted in Christian Solence circles to have been ‘the most serious demonstration of the excommunicated leader's atrength since je assuined her attitude of passive resistance to the powerful board of the mother chureh in Boston, It i# well known t Mrs Stetson encourages her students to con- the First | twenty of pl Church, though more than her closest adherents we Xpelled with her in November, 190% The voting | strength of those who are of Mrs, Stet- son's following, but who still maintain membership in the First Church ts @ ry tangtble a in combatting thi aliclous animal magnetis: of the} Boston @rectors. ‘Though mute to all interviewers, Mrs, Stetson has been carrying on a vigorous campaign of pamphleteering, wherein she answers every assault. pe die nami MRS. ROBERT W. GEOLET BURIED AT WOODLAWN. Many Society Notables Atiend the| Services in St. Thomas's | Church, The funeral of Mrs, Robert W. Goetet, | who died in Paris, and whore body was! brought to this city yesterday by her| son, Robert W. Goelet, took place to-) day tn St. ‘Thomas's Church, Fifty-thira street and Fifth avenue. The service was conducted by Rev. E. M. Stires, rector of St, Thomas's, ansiated by Rev. | Mr, Babcock.. ‘The body was taken in a special train to Woodlawn, accom- | panied only by the family. A Although the chancel was filled with | wreathes and flowers from Mrs.. Goe- let's friends and relatives, only those | nt by the famil companied th A of the the German colors, HW the German Ambassa- | white and ri valley, and with von Bernstorff, jor, Among’ the scores of soctety people at the chroh were: J. P. Morgan, R. W. 3oelet, Mr. and Mrs. Geonge Henry, Warren, brother and sister-in-law; W. | Mr, and Mrs. Whitney Warren.. So concentrated is the essence of this perfume that less than a drop suffices haf . * CP =ALNLSS, Djer-Kiss is made in Paris. Kerkoff produces this wonderful French odor in all the luxuries of the toilet table. Dier-Kiss Perfume Dier-Kiss Face Powder ALFRED H. SMITH CO., NEW YORK, sions: I accuse man of Cruolty, Stupidity, Insolence, Stinginess, Falthlessness, Weak Will and Con- ceit. I could preach a whole sermon Yon each one of these failings and Mlustrate with stereopticon slides of certain men I know. But there's one general truth about the sins of man—no man will afimit them; in fact, he will twist them into virtues in his own mind, L. BN. JEALOUSY 1§ WORSE THAN A CRIME; ITSABLUNDER. Dear Madam: The only person who can really appreciate the Harm jealousy does ts the person who has een jealous and suffered from it 1 think my disposition was naturally that way, and two years ago I made myself and a certain young man very 34th Street MANY unhappy because | kept belleving + that he turned to other girls. He CHIEFS, NECKWEAR was very kind and gentle with me, In spite of the sufferin I caused Merchandise Certific him. that love + i" is a faulty and imperf. hing with out trust, useless misery fs both the most miserable and the for any amount. most foolish thing in the world, Now I have convinced myself that my lover will keep faith with me Jus I keep faith with him, and have out out the weekly acen and recriminations whic used to liven (2) our friendship, I bell Jealousy 1s worse than a crime, a blunder! 8. 'NO MORE TORTURE FROM RHEUMATISM Partola Removes the Cause,, * Real Lace , Real Irish Crochet Lace Real Carrick-ma-Cross Real Cluny Lace Collars. ‘This delicious candy laxative blood puri fler removes the poisons that come from jestion and constipation by purity. ing the blood and keeping the bowels oven and the stom P trimmed. . GQ to your drugetat get @ box—250, 500 or $1—or @ trial else for 100, PARTOLA CO. 160 nd Ave,, Ne @cems to fester in thelr minds. Mopthe, maybe years, after tbe ong: ‘WORLD WANTS WORK wonpuna, dames MeGreery & Co. HOLIDAY SUGGESTIONS ATTRACTIVE LEATHER GOODS, STATIO FRAMES, TOILET ARTICLES, HANDKER- lection of the gift to the recipient, may be obtained Real Point Venise Lace Collars..4.95 “ 22.50 Stocks and Jabots Plain Jabots of Net and Fapproidery lace Stocks with Jabots attached, effectively trim- med with shadow and Valenciennes laces. values 7c, 1.00, 1.85 50c, 75c, 95c 23rd Street NOVELTIES IN SRY, JEWELRY, AND DESK SETS. cates, which leave the se- Neckwear Collars. .2.25 to 3.75 Lace Collars........... 7.50 to 30.00 Nines 95c “ 3.95 Se to 1.95 - burners, 75c and $1.50, 2.4 Formerly A. ‘T. Stewart & Co., i Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street. iY Leather! dictionaries—you can get five of them in a set, any one of which can be slipped in the pocket. P | Handbags of the new ¢ ions—nearly all women like two or three bags these days. Opera bags from .Paris, Bead bags for people who like quaint things. Scissor sets, shaving sets, ° pocket knives. Thousands of last minute suggestions here for the ask- ing, at 25c to 850. Main floor, Ofd Building. Near Carriage Entrance at Ninth 8t. Gifts of Things suitable for every person yet on your list. , Shirt-holders for the man who travels, perhaps, or the collapsible collar box with box for studs. Sealing wax outfits for the girl who likes the new little ac- cessories. Diaries for the people who have time to write down what they think. Motor books for the giel who is running her own car. Thermos bottles in leather cases—everybody uses them. English and foreign language A Good Practical Fur to Give is pointed fox. Our collection of this is particularly fine. The fur is deep, of good color (sitka or black), and very.expertly pointed in beautiful simulation of the priceless silver fox. A large muif from #40 up, and a large scarf from $35 up. Our collection of black fox also is exceptional. , ; Fine two-skin muffs (not taped) are offered at $30, and gif large two-skin scarfs with heads and tails at $28. y Fur Salons, Second floor, Old Building, Christmas Sale of Blankets and Comforters which may provide just the sensible present you want to send at a considerable saving in price. Comforters $12, formerly $16, wool-filled com- $5.75 per pair, formerly $8, pure Australian lamb's-wool filling, on @ by Y- spool cotton warp. Single bed size. + forters in plain Goris Japanese sille $7.75 per pair, formerly $9.50, pure Covers, cut 74578 cupett fiteg Australian lami’s-woo! filling, om a $11.75, formerly | $15, 2 ‘spool cotton warp, are cut and@ bound comforters, figured Prench siren top. se arstely with three-inch taffeta altle | if $8.25, formerly $10, reversible sateen down-filled comforters, sie finding Pik, blue and lavender top and borders. f $4.75 per pair, formerly $7, a goo® | blanket, all-wool filling on a spool cots , ton warp. Cut and bound separately, Medium weight, 70x82 inches. $5.75 per pair, formerly $8.50, the + same blanket in a larger: size. Cual A great variety of cotton-filled com- forters as follows: $1, $1.90, $2, $2.50, $2.75 and $3 up. Blankets $8.75 each, formerly $12, all-wool, ploin-colored blankets, silk bound and bound separately, 78x84 inches. 60x90 inches. In pink, blue and lav- On sale today ender. Seventh Gallery, New Building. The Christmas Remembrance __ Which is a little less than a gift and a little mor@ 44 than a Christmas card. : ; : A Fruit Basket of smoked bamboo such as one may buy inp‘ the Oriental Store for $1, may be filled with fruit and sent on Christmas morning. Fourth floor, Old Building. A Single Carnation, so cleverly made that it even feels real, is but 20c or 30c—and makes a smart looking boutonniere. These in the Camee Candy Shop.+ — Main and Second floors, Old Building. Bayberry Candles, which if ‘on Christmas night be burned to the socket bring health to the house, food to the larder and gold to the ket” —are very pretty remembrance gifts. Two packed in a holly box tied with ribbon are 25c. Second Gallery, New Building, Bottles of toilet water, excellent in themselves—ere packed in pretty holiday boxes of imitation leather, You choose from rose, Lily-of-the-valley, Directoire and violet odors, All Essence Concrete Wahna. Priced 50c. Main floor, Old Building. Utility boxes covered with dainty crctonnes, have soft padded tops and cretonne linings. They are not small and will hold lots of ribbons, veils, gloves, Pric Art Ni hiefs, etc, dllework Store, First {loor, Old Building. A box of Japanese incense with a Japancse incense '| holder makes an odd, but very acceptable remembrance. Incenge. Fourth floor, Old Building, Victrola Christmas Offer A complete Wanamaker Victrola ( Type X.) Outfig for Christmas delivery for $75, or $5 a Month There are only forty-four of this type of Victrola in our Salon and no more are expected from the gactory thi: holidays to add good music to the season of good cheer, it would be advisable to place your order at once. We have a few left—vers *\ w— of Type XVI. Victrola (#200) for Christmas fv livery. The demand ror Victrolas exceeds the output o: the manufacturers, and the Wanamaker Victrola Salons are fortunate to be enabled to offer any Victrola for immediate Christmas delivery. Viret Gallery, New Building,