The evening world. Newspaper, March 18, 1913, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| WOMAN GN LINER CLAIMS MARQUIS ASHER BROTHER ‘‘J4ost Men Let Me Know They’re Willing | Beunds on Stateroom Door of Spencer-Turner and Pro- claims Relationship. WAVES A CERTIFICATE. Mrs. John Astor Sails on Big Kaiser to Godspeed From Many Society Leaders, On the North German-Lioyd steamer Kalser Wilholm 11 sailed to-day the Marauis Spencer-Turner, whose comings And goings have occupied much new: Paper space in recent ycars. ‘The father | of the Marquis was John Spencer. | Turner, a wealthy cotton manufacturer, who lived in this city. He was the or inal Marquis, his title having been con- terred by the Pope. When the old man dled he left ius title and fortune to his'| kon But there was a string to the fortune. | ‘The son, now forty-two years old, was to draw the income only from the $500,000 bequeathed to him up to the time of his marriage, when he was to receive the principal. So tie young | marquis went on a worldwide hunt for a wife. Me found her in Rome. Ilis| father died tn 15, but It was only last year that soulmate was found, She was Mrs, Helen Doty Compton and she “as seventy-five years old. Marquis Spencer-Turner had known her several years. They were married last July and | five months later the wife died \ WOMAN RUSHES ABOARD,| CLAIMS HIM AS BROTHER. The Marquis came over here from| Rome to aco about the bulk of his for- tune but the matter Is not yet settled. He was formerly an Episcopallan min- inter in Brooklyn and had a faehiona- Me congregation. He had ideas which | Gidn't euit some of the pillars of the church and he resigned. Afterward he) became converted to Catholicism and now he is in the Vatican in Rome. | Just before the steamer sailed a! much exeited woman rushed aboa Inquiring where the stateroom of thi @larquis was she ran to it and pounded | a the door, The door was opened pang then promptly close and bdolt- | “Jokn Turner, are you not my| ®eother?’ the woman shouted. “Here fo @ marriage certificate to prove you are my brother.” | ‘To reporters tle woman would vouch- eafe no further statement than that tho Marquis was her brother. She was asked what the marriage certificate had to do with the matter. She eaid that it Sroved the Marquis was her brother, but would say nothing further than that. John Spencer Turner loft a widow, three sons and a daughter. He had married a second timo, The woman who @aused the commotion on the steamer, it was learned, Was Mrs. Marle Spair, forty years old and lives at No. 702 Grand street, Hoboken. MRS. JOHN ASTOR ALSO SAILS ON LINER. Mra, Ava Willing Astor, who now calls herself Mre, John Astor, with her daughter Muriel, was a passenger on the Kaiser Wilhelm 1. Many friends were down to bid her Godspeed. Her state- room was banked with beautiful flow- ors. Mrs, Astér wore a bunch of orchids at her bosom and carried a bouquet of reses, She looked stunning in her black traveling gown, and one could hardly pleture het mother of big, husky Vincent Astor, She said that she was going to London and did not know how long she might % Asked if she were coming back to a® sume the leadership of the 40, she! amiled sweetly and gaid that she did not | know. Many of the #0, with whom she lg most popular, wi it the steamer to ooo her TREATED RUNAWAY GIRLS. Yeuns Garage Helper Held After Exjoying Harlem “Movies.” ehanic, was arrested early to-day by) Detectives Kerr and Thompson of the Yanox aveniie station, charged with! trying to impair the morals of Florence ‘Wallace of No, 3014 Seventh avenue and dread and Twenty-fourth street, each thirteen years ol, who disappeared trem their homes Saturday night. The parents of the girls asked the palice to @ustave Porry, a young garage me-! Rether White of No. 233 West One Hun-/ ott nintelelolotoinim To Assist Me Along the Downward Path’’ *1 HAVE FOUND THE BUSINESS MAN Fain AND SQUARE’ Waites “ADELE” WEADS**THATS ANOTHER STORY “The $5 Period of a Girl’s Life Is a Hard Battle—It Is the Time When Temptation Displays Her- | self in All Her Pomp and Tries toShow Us the Easy Way,” Writes “‘M. B.’’— | “Adele” Blames Managers. $100—IN PRIZES FOR LETTERS BY REAL WORKING GIRLS—$100 Cash prized amounting to $100 will be given for the most help- ful letters from REAL WORKING GIRLS on the subject dealt with in this series. The money will be divided as follows: ‘Two prizes of $25 each. Five other prizes of $10 each. The seven letiers which, in Nixola Greeley-Smith's judgment, are best ancl most helpful will receive these awards. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “I sat down and carefully analyzed the matter. in the office earning better salaries? more efficient. Why were other girls| The answer was simple—they were) I immediately made up my mind that I was going to work and win.” “I hate to admit it, but what trou- ble I did have dn business was due to women who forgot that they were once young, and disliked to see mo “I have won, but it has been no easy matter, because the majority of men I meet let me know in one way or another that thoy are willing to assist me along the downward path. There are men who have absolutely no power of discrimination.” It 1s interesting to contrast the point of view of the young woman who believes that her success was hampered dy the jealousy of her own sex and the opinion of the girl who feels that she has succeeded despite the men with whom she has come in WIXOLA GREELEY SBOTH ACTA GREELEY SUoTEEY the men with whom she has come in THE GIRL WHO WORKS AN who earns her own living justification may be found for both beliefs, though in the end she will have to realise that despite the opposition of women, or the easy moral code of men, it is Efficiency—the capacity to do the work Detter than any one else who can be hired to do it—that {s bound to triumph over every other consideration. Therefore, whether you think men or women are endeavoring to impede your progress, remember that both men and women will be powerless to injure you {f you possess the twin factors of success, efficiency and confidence in your efficiency. No woman can cnter any competitive field without encountering the sneers and stabs of other women, but, on the whole, these sneers and stabs are to be preferred to the society of the type of man she te sure also to meet—the man who tells her she is the most beautiful woman in the world and that he is med about her—-WITH HIS HAT ON ! If she is honest with herself, no the potter—and what he turns out te girl need look any further than her [5° from a moral standpoint deperis own heart to find the source and | more upon the potter-the woman—than excuse of the Jealousy of the other (upon himself. women. Men try to pretend that The letters of two young women they are not subject to the sane | follow: BECOME EFFICIENT AND GET OUT OF THE $5 CLASS. Dear Madam: ‘Three years ag0 through death and reverse of fortune 1 was compelled to leave school and earn my own living, 1 held my head very high as T entered a down- town office for the first time in the capacity of a clerk. At the end of the woek I felt still more elevated on receiving my first pay envelope you find a man or woman In any competitive fleld who is supremely courteous to every one, it means merely that the Individual is serenely sure of his or her ability to meet and defeat the jeok for them Sunday. Fee detectives learned that they had een hanging around garages on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and obtained an acknowledgment from Per- ry that he had been giving the girls nail presenta and taking them to mov- tme picture shows. The girls were found em the street and retumed to their parents. ———— | WILSON TO KEEP HOLY WEEK. Makes Fact Kaown im Declining ‘Theatre lavitation, WASHINGTON, Murch 18,- President Watson will not attend theatres this week ‘because it is Holy Week and he is inclined to defer custom of many people who especially devote this week to the more serious concerns of religion, Dhis became n today ta the Presidens's declinatic an invit tien fron @ friend to attend the theatre, ——»—. clurne Gifts, March 18,—The Pros!+ dent ts recur y gifts sent to him by persons throughout the couns Woo are not known to han perso ally, Some of these were sent by office @eekers, others for advertising and & daage cumbeg ous of socdness of heist to the field. containing $5. After paying my WHERE THE GOLDEN RULE MAY| week's expens however, I recog- NOT WORK. nized how very little of my $5 re- Sometimes thie confidence may be mis-| mained, Then, for the first time, I | placed, But we must not expect a strict came face to face with LL How adhorence to the Golden Rule in lines of endeavor which prosper most by de- was I going to get along on % a ; Week? I carefuly analyzed the mat- |flance of it. ‘The rising sun may not| ter. I thought of other girls tn the | sive very much thought to the stars he| office with me who were earning puts out, but it ig natural for the stars,| far better salaries, and 1 wondered Why the answer was simple—they were more,efMicient, T immediately made up my mind taat 1 was golny to work and win, | continued in my clerical! capacity, closely observ- ing every detail and at the same ume pursuing a course in the evening commercial echool, In #ix months’ time I hed fitted myself for a better position and felt free to demand a however philosophical, to think about and to resent that upstart luminary, | Men generaly profess to think that the! motto of every woman in business ts “My sword knows no sister.” ‘Thelr | most cherished tradition is that women in any competitive Meld regard each other with jealousy and petty spite, In this cespect women are no better and no worse than men, So long as there | ia competition there will be disitke,| better salary, This I readily suc- there will be f ere will be petty | ceeded in, and to-day J am proud Anding, One thing! to relate the success of my years, L can lft a man or woman beyond | do not dress in silk or satin, nor do gu-| 1 for | who} | and above quence, and that | preme Effletency, a thing to striv and a thing to keep, And those kvep it are much fewer than thoxe year gay plu 0 dress ne we, but always atly and well % period of existence of @ girl's life te New York Hv ne OUT “THE OVER-2EALOUS DEPARTMENT “WHEN. TEMPTATION DISPLAYS NERSELF WITH ALL: NER POMAS YOU CAN HAVE THE'SAME BY HONEST LABOR" weires “eB honest labor. Seek employment with @ 4 growth in it, atrive for the goal of efficiency and set @ standard for women tollers, Are we not ashamed to hear mon of business cry out for eMctency while we live in @ city where every educational opportunity is offered to us free. Do we want to work and win? Then, tf we do, let us have the courage of our convio- tions, go to evening school and equip ourselves with the requirements to Teach this one great goal. M. B. OVER-ZEALOUS DEPARTMENT HEADS ARE TO BLAME. Dear Madam: From my own ob- servation I believe half the poor Salaries paid are due to over-zeal- ous department heads, office mana- gers, and the like, who prefer to keep expenses at a minimum when a concern is Inclined to be liberal and fair. Tho principals of the firm Know the work is done satisfactorily, are themselves too busy personally to supervise things, and in this way many a man is called an unjust em- ployer when he really does not know the actual conditions existing in his establishment. T hate to admit tt, but what trouble I did have in business was due to women, women who forgot they were once young, and disliked to see me advance, I was the youngest araduate of our business college; unfortunately the youngest stenog- rapher by ten years of my co-work- ers in my first position, Bofore Many days I found they resented my “Intrusion tnto their office. “Tf the firm wished to employ @ child,”” I overheard them say, “we will let her severely alone, and let her deliver the goods if she can, but certainly not with our assistance.” I was heartbroken over thiy at first. thouglt business was going to be so nice! My pride came to the jowever, and I determined to make myself so perfect and reliant that I would not need thelr help un- der any condittons. turally my speed in typewriting was not much to boast of, but I did accurate work and was really interested tn it, and therefore turned out letters which contrasted favorably with the dy"’ work of my companions, who felt too secure in thelr positions to observe neatness. I read consid- erably, and when I was with the @ little while was chosen concern te work because of my assorted knowledge. Con- y associates, the confl- ‘01 know, career solfivn I should mati ourselves, lieve a kind housandfold, — ¥ » at the # wecorded quently atiain i, [ don’t think there ts very| is a hard battle, This is tne tune much to be sald about the men “who| when temptation dlaplays herself ndicate thele willtugness to help downs, with alt and tries to siuw wa At not upwa They exist, ¢ sie e We see around us ourst, bUL the average man is not 6f, our gaud, uiarvel at thel: thelr number; he is at bis worst merely | the raw material of morelity or im- moraliy—merely olay, iu ihe Range of \ variety of dress, &c, fale alateca, can have the came by, But this ta the | time to conquer, Iemember that you, | nex not to be f she leaves the drudger all for leas t is sor at hatefulnews of it methods of livelihood, and ones, _%HE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAROH 18, 1918, So a Dk D WIN Sobetetatnteialatede tntetnintebetatotate Seventh Article — of a Scries. it | | PATIENT WIFE SAYS SHE WAITED 38 YEARS FOR HUBBY TO REFORM Now She Is Beginning to Lose | Hope and So Begins Suit | for Separation. | | For thirty-eight years Mra, Golite R. Goldesman has borne her husband's orue elties, she says, in the hope that he would retorin, Now, that he ts seventy- four years old and exhibits no indica tions of improvement, the indulgent wife, in her sixty-fitth year, applied to the court for separation and mainte nance, The husband 4s Nachson GoMes- | | man @ retired photo manufactures, of No, 83 Canal atreet. | ‘They were married tn Minsk, Russla, | and lived in London for many years. | Twenty-six years ago they came to! | New York, the husband devoting htm- | | reward ago he retired to manage fevers! houses | he had purchased out of his profits, “I stood his abuse all these years,” swears the wife, ‘in the lingering hope | that he would reform; but, slag! he has} | not mended his ways. For a number of | |yeara he has given me but alxty or) {seventy cents a day for my wants. He has struck me frequently and haa threatened while in @ violent moo@ to | kit me. Once he exhibited a dagger | and pronounced sentence on me and my | poor daughter, Dorothy, who is now in n insane asylum because of nervous. | | ness brought on by hia acta” | | ephe Goldeamans lived in a new apart- | ment house, which the husband owns, at No, 19§ Madison avenue, until four weeks ago, when the aged wife went to live with a brother at Fur Rockaway. | After filing her suit through her law- | vera May nnd Jacobson, Mra. Goides- | | man submitted to Jumice Davia an }temized account of her husband's | wealth. ‘This etatement he contradicted jy another tabulation, ‘he Court | | awarded her $16 a week until the trial of the case. Numerous affidavits are attached to Mra, Goldeaman's paper which are Submitted to support her charges, | | aaneenndiae | FROM CUTLERY TO CABBAGE. Corporation lardware Prov! Garden for 1,000 Employees, NEW BRITAIN proposes to 1,000 of its employers The company announced to-day that will place @ plot of ground at the dix tt posal of every man who desires tt and | nd without cost M The v Jarvis, Moration and of the nne uitural loty, He | a big farm in Berlin, this State, and | works on it mornings before he gues " geeds will be the oMum, doubtedly {str lit, and after si PARENTS OF ACTRESS WHO DIED ON LINER SAY NO “FOUL PLAY” soil United States Consul Cables It Was “Undoubtedly Due to Natural Causes.” Mr. ant Mra, Henry N. Schmita, parents of Frances Leslie, the chorus girl who Mod suddenly last Saturday on the White Star liner Oceanic near Southampton, England, sald to-day they were now convinced that their daughter died of natural causos. Their first suspicions were a: a by Inti+ mations from anonymous sources that the girl had been killed by @ man aboard the ship. United States Consul Swaim at Southampton has investigated the cas thoroughly and has advised the girl's parenta that there were no su clroumstances connected with t death. The Schm! family received a eablegram from the Consul thia morn- ing reciting the facts as to the autopsy and the beginning of the tnau which has been adjourned until April 14. “Death,” cabled the Consul, “was un- 16 to natural causes. ‘The body of Miss Loalle has been em- dalmed. It will be shipped to New York jon The American lincr St. Paul, @atlin, from Southampton next Saturday and the funeral will be held on a date to de determined later from the Schmitz home at No, 17% West Ninety-seventh It appears that as soon as the news of the death of Miss Leslie reached |New York a woman called up newspaper offices and advised an {avestigation, stating that the girl had deen murdered. ‘Theso intimationa brought about the in- veatt 5 A girl namo Wilson, who lives at No, 200 Went Seventieth street, had been engaged for the theatrical com- pany which sailed for London on the Oceanic a week ago lant Saturday. few hours vefore the b was advised that her contract been cancelled. Her place was taken by Mise Leslie, and it ts sald in the- atrical circles that ‘the change was made at the request of Arthur Deagon, vomnedian of the company, who had played with Miss Leslie in the “Fol- Hen of 1912." Deagon sailed on the Oceanic and was called as a witness in the inquest at Southampton yenter- day. DOGS RACE OVER SNOW TRAIL Winners Cover 100 Miles in Leas ‘Than Thirteen HW NOME, Alaska, March 18.—The 100- mile dog team race over the snow trail | trom Solomon to Councl! was won yea- terday by the Gabriel dogs in 12 hours @ minutes and 30 seconds. Christian- nen wae second and Akuguk, @ native Griver, third. The race was close, the three teams running together all the way. The 4i2-mile all-Alaska sweepeti dog team race, the classic event of the North, probably will be run April 3 ‘The purse will be 94,000, COMMON SENSE REPLACES OLD ETHICAL IDEAS Publicity Methods Used For Tona Vita Have Meant Health to Many. ANTON BOUCHER SAYS: “I Was Completely Run-Down But Am Now Feeling Like A Different Man.” F many all to continue owing to a mis- guided notion that ical Bropeieties were offended if medical discoveries were exploited through the medium of the press. ‘imes have changed and sentiment now must yield to common sense. This is why the proprietors and discoverers of ‘Tona Vita decided that they would adopt the quickest and shortest means by letting every one who suffered from nervous debility in any form know that a chance had come for them to regain their health. "They knew that T. ordinary merits and was si it right that any time should be wasted in letting the public know about it. That the path they decided to follow one, has been demon- many thousands of peo- Godsend to ple who bave gladly testified to the] wonderful results obtained, — Among is Anton Boucher of No, 691 Ridgewood, New York who stated: was completely run-down and the slightest work w ould neither eat nor sleep; finally hearing of Tona Vita, I decided to us « [found that th wonderful med King qui achange. 1 work much | better, my sleep is coming back agai thanks to Tona Vita, 1 feel like w di ferent man.” Nervous debility can be known by many varied symptoms, among which are: loss of weight and appetite; being eusily tired; becoming dizzy after anyu aceustomed exertion; ambition; belching of wi or a general run-down e d after eating; | ndition Tonw Vita can be obtained at any eis ie Yaost of al first class drug store in New York] uvat the clive Wek mm ork, Dam't "yo | ‘that the old New York M, C think ‘ar’ e mt pias was @ good |} yo Advt. {ue years much sickness was |s had extra-| ly people, and they did not think| ‘oo hard for me. 1] fe of vigor and|! to the lungs. WHY IT } To Have Clogged Nostrils. The air you take should pass through |@ perfect set of filters in your nostrils. The air filters separate the dust and dirt as a water filter strains germs from your drinking water, The germs that are caught by your nostrils are held by the Secretions and are gotten rid of by blow- ing your nose. not free them In the natural way, by do this by drawing the germs and dis. charges from your nostrils back into your throat. If you will look at the picture you will see a growth which is called Adenoids. Now, Just below where the nostrils and throat come together, there is a little structure called the tonsli of Luschka. When germs are drawn back- ward from the nostrils they settle in this little tonsil, cause It to enlarge and produces what Is called Adenolds. Aden- olds make it difficult to take air through the nostrils and block up the tubes which lead from the throat to the ear. In this way deafness, head nolses and dis- charging ears are brought about, by © \ drawing disease germs backward from the nostrils and closing the ear tubes. When the filters in the nostrils are clogged up germs are often taken into sand when dusted in It, or there will be discharge forms which keeps you clear- ing your throat. When germs are not caught and held in the nostrils, and blown out tm the natural way, they may pass on to the tonsils and set up Ton- silitis, The tonsils try to prevent the germs from entering your Larynx. If the disease germs enter the Larynx they bring on Laryngitis. With Laryn- throat, It is painful to swallow; the voice becomes husky and hoarse. When germs have entered the Larynx and cause hoarseness disease Is on its way to the lungs. Hoarseness may indicate iinat the | germs of Tuberculosis have set up throat consumption. Curing Shortness of Breath. | varia that tia cough has down agd sleep all night at a Li Clogged Nostrils Cured. Mr, Bra roldl first coneuited we be n0 | When ait) re bothern ms fur five years, my cloned taht th that | Greatest Doctors in New York | Good Enough for You ? tie Mecoy Ni Amenta pital the Ve Drove tn the Thite ty welect / teudtad a one ints | 1 . atte in the andi | liave. dropnedd, Mr and disease germs from the air the same | doctor tells you that Dr. J. C. above | Proves that no three specialists you will see the filtering apparatus in| line In New York have a record as ‘one nostril , and Just back of the nostril] 4S his. Read below whet Prof. 4 tickling sensation in the throat, like a|$f,4 sadent. horse hair had lodged In It. After a time} do away with cutting out the bones gitis there Is soreness deep down in the | wanily, and when I did | me ut. My left nosti ae ane " Drawing showing the air filters in one nestril, together with the car and the tube that leads from the throat to the ear. Adenoids, one Tonsil and the Larynx with the vecal cords, the entrances There is alse chown DOES ADVERTISING IS RISKY) MAKE A DOCTOR A QUACK? When a friend of yours or your i : & quack Just hand him the Mttle you will find at the bottom of the column. Then ask your friend or doctor what he thinks of Dr. MoCoy’s record If your nostrils are clogged you can- and training. That little article ts under the heading blowing your nose, The annoyance of| “Is Not the Judgment of the Greatest clogged nostrils is so great that you feel] Doctors in New York Good Enough for you must get relief, You find you can) your’ This article proves thet not one doctor or surgeon in New York has record superior to Doctor MoCoy. =e New York's greatest physictan, Dr. McCoy. The only grounds any one has Dr. McCoy a quack are that and he charges small fees. toe advertising can take you—Just stay away from his If you think that the only can do good work is the one who you more than you can efford to then stso stay away from Dr. McCoy. Elbert Hubbard, writing of doctors sd- vertising, says “The only man who should not séver- tise Is the one who hes nothinf to offer z the throat, where they set up disease.|in the way of services or who cammot This Is told by the throat feeling dry, like] make good.” Dr, MeOoy prints his iy ‘ f on ve i ne ie [ti ti [was very muen antioved by sounds tm my mere the cracketa obieping.”* treating Rev fumed Tis ian wind what rn trast peor of Sparta Presby- hnaton is the teria Church, Sparta, The following interview with Prof, Laomde wht emlain what he though: of me (New Yor: Wort! Seot. 2, 1804.) “Prof, Loomis, of the University of New York, the rent spectulist, sald tm altuding to medical men whe advertise: ‘De, Me- for instance, is an able man well educated, # thorough ecleatict and @ firet- lags phy; + He is » graduate of Belle- vue Hospital, He advertises, dees am im- a ee het i witl be mense business and te delng mech geed.’” yout visit my office, It will coat wv ao eXauvoalion and advice, ide of the otty, C. MeCOY, 213 Flatiron Building, Broadway and 33d St., New York, Hour jaavod to ha ving ue eoudith ing ——————

Other pages from this issue: