The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1913, Page 12

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)

a ee es tong E aon eas | i | 12 POLICE ON GUARD AT EATON HOME; ~ —MUEHTER ANG Mrs. Keyes Denounces Treat- ment of Family and Criti- cises Autopsy Action. ADMIRAL “NOT RIGHT.” His Brain, She Claims, Should Have Been Examined—Mrs. Eaton’s Strange Letter. ROCHA! The ventas wert) 1D, Mass, March 22.—Mre. June Keyes, daughter of Mrs, Maton, came here from the Paton home In Asstnnippl this forenoon and visited a, re. She then went to the rall- » Where whe stayed for a time. She was mot by i 3 ; ti Rewspaper men and she told them had beon summoned as a wit-| eppear next Monday before the) at Plymouth, which will a ut i hs . “the way we have been treated. ‘They should have taken the brain of Admiral Eaton to find out whethor the man was Insane or not as well as tv ex- amine him for traces of poison, “They should at least, I think, have “‘Makin THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAROH 22, 1913. Copyright, 1918 by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World), f and Adelina were both still blinking when the door of their dressing-room tcate oval of her face ip left quite pale, but @ small patch of carmine in the corner of each eye gives Iifely color. M" prosecute his family. When the Admiral was in the navy one of the largest guns went off right near him and te had| never been the same man after. He had been queer, I mean, ever cince the hap- pening.” POLICE ON GUARD AT THE EATON HOME. Additional officers were assigned to-| day to ald in the search for the place | where the poison that caused the death of Rear-Admiral Joseph G. Katon was obtained. Drug stores and laboratorics in many cities and towns were visl:ed The late home of the Admiral in Nor well, where his stepdaughters, Mra. dune Keyes and Miss Dorothy Aine widow's mother, Mrs. are living, was guard- @@ by an officer to-day and no visitors ‘were permitted. A rumor was current to-day that some time before to-night a corps of State police officers will thoroughly search the Eaton house. The ashes in the rear of the barn will be sifted; the her yard will be dug up and the entire! Place ransacked completely. The exavt| object of the search is not known. | The oMcials are following every clue that might lead to the solution of the mystery surrounding the death of Ad- antral Eaton, even though it be aver no| slight. To-day they are expected to! question Thomas Tom, a neighbor of the Eatons, wh, ft ily well, | a hat | 64 | and who is sai lec Admiral Eaton used poison. ment in line with the entirely new at the Admiral was an arsenic eater and may have taken an over: done. | One of the most singular the case is the fact that both Eaton and his wife apparently deadly fear of being poisoned. Admiral Eaton, according to Jaimen Admiral were | Prouty, a neighbor, said. “You're u lucky man, Jim, You don't have to b afraid of anybody trying to polsor y Mra. Baton in a letter to a Chicago attorney sald: “He (Admiral Eaton) wit kill me and poor Iittle Innocent Dorothy, and he will do it and then w where we are, Ho ts the mont rous man you could meet Marshall Gallian, the Chicago lawyer, waid the letter declared Eaton had a fascination for poisons. ‘ON, Mass., March 22.-—8till an other twist in the Eaton murder mase was added when District-Attorney Ba: ker visited Chief Justice Aiken her ted by persons connect with the District-Attorney thar the aultation w coedingn, the Attorney, it was believed that hi to-day will result in the jon of Adiniral Joseph = FIRSYT-AIDS Fo ——— —— In the Magazine: Coupon The Be with “An Angel's | peep : | TM ge —cholr snger ih a PD yp | Good for Two More 1 Nev yore Caursh, Y, Beautiful Pictures Man, Too Busy to Go Abroad, |] - in Color, Suita- Weds by Proxy. “Simple Life’ tor Princes ar Princesses of To-Day. The Kemarkable of Light enten “Servi Cam Extraordinary Success in Ide litying ON Offenders WI Had ioried the Police, ho Met with Meteoric cess as an Operatic Star. AW Wi features of ‘takes some of this very uneful blue \ ai\\ in Calvary Church, }}\} The New York Girl with “The ” Who Has Had ne / 10 Interesting Story of a Salesgirl 7 Opened. They had Just ‘been napping between performances. It is easy to imagine how tired they must be after The lips made very red and, folowing ural lines of her mouth, autiful, @ performance (especially Adelina, she very act the beautifully vivid has such a heavy part.) and vividly beautiful mouth, ther blase Who is Adelina? expression around the eyes, the white Well, then, to bein from the begin-| powder which covers Miss Keane's nat- Ang--the first heard of Adelina was in|urally rosy complexion, and even the name only as Cavallini's pet on the! eauty spot, have all to be put on anew Manuscript pages of “Romance. —for € When rehearsals began it was nec: | all off. essary to have w material Adelina. 80] When the curtain falls on ¢ «small, bright-eyed monkey waa bought | what remains of the “make-up” is taken for tho pa Miss Doris Keane plays] of with KEROSENE, Fancy that! No, Cavallini, and now Adelina with her| chat pretty curly black hair is not « cunning, pettish ways is not only the! wig—that is, not a real wig. If it were pet of Cavallini but of Miss Doris|it would not ft the head so well: Miss Keane as well. Keane realized this, and atraightway in- She elite huddied up upon the dressing | vented “something new and interesting” table as her mistress starts her make-/|in the wig line, which is just a eoft up with an abundance of cold cream. | flap of long black curly hair with strings Then Mise Keane uscs an amiber-colored | atached with which to tie it under the lotion on her face just to refresh ber-| skull in the back. ecit, Giant hair pins fasten the curis to her As Cavallini Miss Keane portrays|own hair, which is vigorously brushed @n Italian wo:nan older than herscif| with a whalebone hair brush, a variety and very sophisticated, Putting a bit| of hair brush entirely unknown to Am- of biu@ in the paim of the left hand | erican women—uniess they have lived in and working it until it 46 smooth so} England. there is no danger of it making a| If Miss Keane happens to be « dit Amudge or being too dark, Miss Keane| fatigued Adelina is chained to the foot uses it In broad eweep from the upper | Of the couch, but otherwise, while Miss edge of lashes right up to the brows in| Keane “makes up,” she sits upon the tho corners of che eyes toward the nose, | dressing table toying with this and that ‘This serves to emphasise thelr depth, |@Md sometimes upsetting things, awalt- A woodly quantity of blue is also used | 1s her turn to be made up. under the eyes for the same purpone,| Why jen't she an actress, too? Of allini's salt tears wash them Yast act ae lengthened “by. commene | course Adelina “makes up." But, oh! bl Rei ¥ soametic | now differently. Mf a woman had Unlike moat actressen, ‘Mion Keane} WFinkies in her forehead she would paint them out! But a monkey has them painted in, for therein les her beauty! Doris Keane is not a woman who cares for or wears a lot of Jewelry, but— Cavallini liked the glitter of gems. So, as Cavallini, Miss Keane wears long strings of pearls with huge pendants dangling from the: Long earrings, many bracelets and toads of rings and costumes of the period all help to make does not bead her lashes, but simply between her thumm and forefinger and puts it on her eyelashes in quite gener- ‘ous lumps. Very often some of the blue, strays inside the rim of the lashes, but this ie easily remed by painting it out with a tiny soft paint brush and some jbukish kreaxe-paint, and besides It! peretect Cavalint, Malian opera singer {makes the eyex look larger and wide | or issu, jopen = Mix# Keane haw broad, soft eyevrows ial b a al SALEM, joven, lending @ thoughtful expression | ane inhubitants of Jerusalem are be- to her face, Unfortunately they have ; feel severely the general ine |to be entirely obliterated, ‘Tits ix accom. |1NME® te pty bid BER STRL tH crease In the cost of living. The present scale of Wages and salaries Is low, and, as elsewhere, it adjusts ftself very. slowly to the advance in the prices of plished by the use of # stick of flesh. colored grease-palnt, Some black con- metic on a small wooden palette Is heat- Jed above a candle fame, and with a the necessariow of Ife. For foreigners | Brush dipped in the commetics painted a] wig desire to live comfortably in the ee eee eee treerows. tha) way they would at home, Jerusalem ts sime arched high above Sell. dad certainly not much cheaper than the ducing the blaxe expression necessary | OV TY ity of the mame to the part. United States. It 4s esttm And while the black brush Is usable | general increase In the ne paints a dainty round beauty spot! 'n Jerusalem in the past ten years has ‘on the left side of her chin. The del- | heen least 50 per cent size in th ble for Fram- nd ‘ ing. f ‘ CHARLESTON WINNERS. FIRST RACE—Dhree-year-olds and up- | ward; six furlongs.—Gagnant, U3 Gnyder), 2 to 1, 1 to 2 and out, first Fairy Godmother, % 1-2 (Montour), ev nd; Veneta Strom 16 (Mondon), 5 to 2, 7 to 10 and out, | third. Time—1.171-5, Stavano, Wild | Weed, Edith Inez and Masglaam also | ran, ' SECOND RACE—Two-vear-olds; four furlongs.—Harwood, 115 (J. Hanover), 4 to 1, 3 to 2 and 3 to 6, first; San Jon, 110 | (Goose), 6 to n and 1 to 2, second; Single, 110 (7: in), 4to 1, Sto 2 to 2 (coupled with walters), third, Time, | , 1-5, Salvadora, Edna Leska, Walters, Charles Cannell, Free Trade, Miss Char- | cot and Ada also ran and finished as named, THIRD RACE—Phe Battery Park Sell- ing Stakes of $1,000; three-year-olds and | upward; six furlongs,—Grosvenor, 6 | (Wolfe), 10 to 1, 3 to 1 and rst; Tarts, @ (Snyder), 6 to} second; Sherwood, 1 ant), 9 to 10, 1 to 4 and out, thire Time—1.15 1-5, cherryola Font also ran, i eRe, queens | CHARLESTON ENTRIES. RACE TRACK, Charleston, 9. C,, March 22,-— and 1), Ce ye go Up’’ With Stage Stars—IIT. DORIS KEAN By Eleanor Schorer. WO AEH 102; Wiley’ B. Hweet Time, 107; Cliff Top M, Sabath, and up; selling fim Jona, 106; 108; Inspired, 100; Mins Nett, ner, 110: Bl Fra Caaque, 113; New Star, jones six furl it tie, 1 THIRD RACE—Purs M1 Bodkin, CLAUDE ALLEN APPEALS | TO U. S. SUPREME COURT. na ‘Claire, Somat, 0 104 168: Goo, 108: H.) Last Attempt to Save Clansman 110; Kenneth D., jank, 108; Old Hank, 110, | SECOND RACE—Purse $300; four yearolds Blitzer jr. M4y From Electric Chair for Court House Murders. |! WASHINGTON, March %. neys for Claude Swanson Allen made a last attempt to- to save him from the electric chair on March 28 for his court house 114 part In the Hillsville, Uroseuon, Abs Htonal” Meaaget ios) shucklewa,| murders, ‘They applied to Chief Justice 110; Samuel BR, Meyer, 111; Monacay, 111;) White of the Supreme Court of the Carlton G., 11 United States for a writ of error by Founrit 2 Frame, $50; threesearolls) which Allen's conviction in Virginia 100; Noble Grand, 101; Veuteorye, would be reviewed. They also asked 108; (ay Armor, M; (a) Joln Furs] for a supersedeas to delay the execu- 108; Miant, 105 *Apprentice allo Track lary, — Suicide by Ga N BORDENTOWN, James English, Florence but who had of late iSoain Ot aoutines. ‘committed auteldte| lsh a State commission for the improve. in his home to-day by inhaling gas. is survived by a widow his act is not k.own Good Reading Should Fail to Read and Keep. J ! Cuttyhunk, 11. ce-of five pounds who formerly tion until the Supreme Court disposes of the case, Chief Justice White took the matter under consideration with a promise to communicate his decision to the at- torneys later. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia yesterday refuse! to grant a similar application, The identical plea was made that Allen had been twice placed in Jeopardy for the same offense, laimed, . Approves ind. ALBANY, Mar —The Senate Finance Committee has reported favor- ably the Malone bill designed to estab- arch 22.— lived on The cause of measure carries 000, an appropriation of Spscia! A 16-Page Laster isdition of “FUN,” the Sunday World's Great Weekly Joke Book of Wit, Humor, Trick;, Puzzles, ite, He | ment of the condition of the blind, The | oa — Attor- For Public Schoo! Children, Good {c Admission to th Travel and Vacation | Show at Grand | ARE HEAVY TRAINS Before Martin Teets ieft Orange, N. J., twenty-nine sears ayo, he “nicked? the ear of his brother, George, in a fight. Yesterday George, an architect fm Orange, was stopped on the street by a stranger, who said: “Hello, George Teste! i know you by your ears." It was Martin, who now lives in Nebraska, George Pltson, only survivor of John Brown's raldgrs, and the hero of two smallpox epidemics th inspector in Yonkers, has been retired on half pay under a special law permitting the city to pension employees after fitty’ years service. a . who despite a badly bowed pair of legs Is eeven Philadelphia yesterday. He is on his way to @ s8 straightened and expects the operation to e44@ Jules Laubach, a Berlin gi feet two inches tall, janded Chicago specialist to have hi four inches to his height, John Haviland, aged seventy-four, with sixteen children and twenty @rande children in tow, has asked the railroad officials at Huntington, W. Va., for @ Jeb. He says fifteen of them are able to do a pretty fair day's work at anything, “Pve t thirty-seven more grandchildren back in the mountains,” he sald. “They're jookin’ after the farms, while we uns get work to buy tools and seed.” It pays to kill rats wholesale. Will of Ephraim §, Wells, an inventor of a Aumous rodent poison, just filed in Trenton, disposes of an estate of more than $100,000, John Lewis Toner, aged forty-seven, of Paulsboro, N. J., is wearing his fest collar and looking for a wife. When told he was heir to a S00-acre estate an@ $10,000, left by an uncle in Germany, he announced that a linen collar and a bride were the first luxuries he would get and started for the haberdasher’s, = A brood of leghorn chicks guarded jealously by a white Angora tomeat, In« terest patrons of Sam Allen, a Flatbush barber, The chicks are motherless and the cat will let none approach them except Allen himself, . ’ Five hundred girls in Brenan Coll year, ville, Ga, kept a secret for ‘ove and Miss Malissa Davis, girls not to tell and they didn’t. Musgrove It was the his pupils, Sh now makes the announcement r of the Hackens Richard Yearance, a meml to an official “fy swat order declar fies to the end of time, no matter how much tl ¥ fool ordinances in Hackensack now. of town, k Board of Health, in objecting made flies and thefe will be ‘swat ‘There are too re driving the people out e Markham, who has tray nd Interlaken, Mass, tkes the twely and has driven the same horag sintec ny 186,000 iniles as mail carrier be clved a contract for four years, mile trip six days a week at $1 a day s, has id Ruth Salvina fell in front of Patchogue, L. 1 A local de Ks nor hearing will be injured, an auto and had one of her vector sewed it on aguin and belleves SAFE? FEDERAL INQUIRY URGED. WASHINGTON, Mare 2.—Invest!- sation of the effect on track condi- tions of running heavy trains at sigh speed was recommended by H. W, Bel- $$ @s the breaking of a plate that sup- ted a girder of the bridge at the 1 of 4a supporting column. The break allowed the rail to drop eighteen Inches and derailed the train, “This plate was in a defectt dition previous to the the report, “and, although the bridge nap, Chief Inspector of Safety Appli-|was inspected twice within less. than ances, in lis report to-day to the In-|ten days prior to the accident, neither terstate Commerce Commission on the| inspection developed itn defective con- wreck on the Pennsylvania Ratlroad at| dition, rs ary te gg the eon Glen Loch, Pa. last ember, Pour}|Frence of such accidents examination |were killed and eighty-four injured ]S8OUld be made of all bridges for the purpose of structural overstra increase rmining whether their members exposed to ds under the present shts of equipment.” when the New York-St. Louis express was derafled at Glen Loch bridge. ‘The cause of the wreck is set forth A Dime will stop the agony and torture: Don’t submit to torment when a few ste away lies a quick, guaranteed relief, to the drug store and say: PIERCES CORN PLASTERS _ Then hurry back home and commence to get rid of the ache and torture. The box gives simple directions—you can follow. uickly. You're foolish to suffer” e gare the good tim How Human Thoughis Are Photographed by Means ot a New Discover) ui Confession of ‘Yzzy the Firebug.” Coupon Famous Paintings of New York! Society Women, Second Instalment of “The Day of Days,” the Thrilling Ro- mance of New York, by Louis 14 Joseph Vance, Central Palace. homer \ “Perfect Dinner” Formulated by a Committee of Most Eminent Chefs, Words and Music American Girl,” a ¢ March by Sousa, of “The tt Song. rms tient iremterer-mer meee tte nae onsen ernie stasis

Other pages from this issue: