The evening world. Newspaper, April 9, 1913, Page 3

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SR Foto tated tot tatetatetetetatotnta totaled tede toto ttotottot totes potatotatatatatoatated- THE GIRL WHO WORKS AND WINS “isc elobetotatetatutetetntetetntotataletatetetatetabatett STAGE CARPENTER SAYS ACTOR STOLE *~~ HS ACTRESS WIFE. ‘On Your Way,’ Said ‘Goldie’ fo Hubby When He Found Her in Room With Rival. TBAM ‘A HIT ON STAGE. So Van and Rinehart ‘Thought Tt Would Go Well Off, Is Divorce Suit Allegation. ‘Te .you've read atories about stage @elks you have probably ‘been informed that the ®e-cotiful actress and tne) @@onair Thespian Lothario who embrace | se @redently on the stage are often the bitterest of enemies the moment they in- v the shelter of the wings. Now if Goldie Rinehart, known to theatre-goers “Zeke,” bad only lived wp to this traditioa of the Riatto—as set forth by well informed authors who have never been farther East than Kaa- keakea, Iil—+when she became a member hart, to-day an humble stage carpenter, Ardia B. Cine by name, would not have Been forced to crave a oon in the form of a divorce from Supreme Court Justice Glegerich. Tt eraneptred in the course of the evi- @ence in the case of Ctthe vs. Ciiné- mmuch to the gigling amusement of a ‘vaker's dozen of feminine members of ‘the profession who had edged their way tmte. the courtroom—that Goldie had thoughtiessly asumed the bonds of mat- rimony with Carpenter Cline way back tm 900, although she seldom made men- tien of this entanglement among her as- woaintes, avoided the subject in fact. @he managed to play the part of Oirs. Cline, however, on and off, for about aight years until Jimmy Van happened along in 198 and the team of Van and Rinehart was formed. Goldie thereupon decided that, as the team ‘went eo big” on the stage It ought to “zo well” off. Hence detectives for Mr. Cline toM this story to the Court to-day: On the morning of Jan. 28 last they, by CHne, knocked on the door of a room at the Hotel Edgewa- ter'in West One Hundred and Twenty- minth street. A feminine voice cried out: “Get up, Van, you lazy lummuz, and let thoue people in.” A man opened the door. Cline ami the detectives walked tm. Cried Mr. Van: “Now, you get up, will you, Goldie, and regpive these guests!” “Not. on your life, replied Goldie; an just my husban: Then to announced: “Well, deddy, Jae got it on me all right. Now om your way.” Justice Glegerich added the finish- ing touchgs thie morning when he re- marked to David May of No. 12 Park Row, counsel for Mr. Cline: “One might almost imagine, Mr. May, that ydur client is entitled to a Aiverce decree.” TWO SENTENCES, MAYBE THREE, FOR YOUNG BURGLAR Nearly Five Years as Thief, as Much More for Shooting, and Indict- ment as Gun-Toter. Judge Rosaisky in General Sessions te-day sentenced John Lyons, iia emtered ‘the house No, 441 East One| Hundred and Forty-third atreet with revolver in his hand, and tried to steal! property. Lyons pleaded guilty to the) charge of burglary and was sent to Sing Sing Prison for four years and ten montis, “Do you kgow ahything elst about the defendant?” the Judge asked Policeman Dunn and Tiernew who arrested him. “He tried to kill the people in the house,” replied Tierney, “and when we arrested him he togk a shot at us.” The Grarid Jury;had indicted 1; for assaulf on thé policemen, and to thie indicfment Lyona also pleaded guilty, “You are a menace to the communi- ty," Judge Rosalsky said to Lyons, “and I intend to have the Grand Ju ile another indictment against you carrying @ revolver, I will sentence you to serve an additional term of four| years and ten months, to begin at the expiration of your first term, on the assault charge. It depends upon your} conduct whether or not » vill have to werve a third term fo rying af revolver.” —_——_— HOLD-UP AnD. TURKEY TROT. Iver Wigures tm Hrooke | lym Curfew Mystery, Aleoa years avenne, Jonn old, of Brooklyn, Comiskey, No. Atlent deflied the Mayor's order an@ held a cabaret show all-by hineelt! after 1A, M, to-day, Ue was \ trotting along Broadw. yeyolver iu one hand and a golr the other, when Detective eredved iim. T was just twenty-two two ne upon by Ko! e told the detective, “and they took two sit me. 1 closed on them, took away their, revolver and chaged them down the siveet, Here ix the revolver, and see the blood on iny hand.” Detective Byrnes took hin to th station house and liter Magistrate Mec Giro held him for examination ti! Belday. H the age of forty-tno. He wan | Pa., and entered the + clan, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, tofatntntetatetadate Can an $8 Intellect Hold a Man’s Love? eli bidletoietelettob Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The York Worta). | tetmbete: oes Is a Problem Evolved by a Show Girl SUMMER THEY MUST ‘occuPr rs PaRK BeNc! wee Clectee~massAGeD DANORS FLOAT ‘AbOUE”. Ares oe “‘As Between Hard Work and Eight Years of Silks gnd Satins and Then the Morgue Even the Abnormal Girl Will Choose Work and Life,’ Writes Dr. B. S. Talmey. $100—IN PRIZES FOR LETTERS BY REAL WORKING GIRLS—$100 Cash prizes 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 letters which, in Nixola Greeley-Smith’s judgment, are best and most helpful will receive these awards. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITR. In a letter which begins a sympathetic brief for the girl deserter, setting forth the narrowness of her life and the strength and number of her temptations, I find a sentence which should deter any woman who has reached the forking roads of life from taking a turn to the left. It 1s this: Vhatever her temptations, a sirl| may be sure that if sho is not suft- | clently gifted to earn more than $3! a week she will not be clever enough | to interest men who have been sur-| rounded with intellect and talent all) their lives. You can't shold a man’s! love with an $8 intellect | This ts true unless you are dealing | {th anotber $8 intellect. But an un-| fortunate thing is that a great con-| fusion of thought exists as to which men have $8 intellects. It is impos-| sible to gauge intellect by earning} capacity, although this error is 80 od and so widespread among us that it may fairly be considered one of) our most cherished traditions. A/ man may have an $8 brain and be able to amass millions, or he may have! a million-dollar brain and have difficulty in earning money enough to keep | him alive, If you doubt this, contrast the intellects of John D. Rockefeller | or Andrew Carnegie with those of Emerson or Thoreau or Bronson Alcott. BLIND TOM, THE IDIOT PIANIST, | AN EXAMPLE. A well-known American physician once compared the abnormal develop- ment of the money-making faculty in certain men to the prodigious musical goulus of the {diot negro pianist, Blind i h the social evil, I was naturally interested in the letters of what you eumhemisticaly are pleased to call the wirl deserters, T was particularly struck by trivlality of the reasons, T could not find one redeeming feature, as the support of an Invalid i ofa Tom, who would turn from his instr we ment and join enthusiastically in the{ Sick child, &e, It im alwaya the applause excited by his playing, egotistical Ineentive, as the desire Me said that the French phrase of pretty things, nice clothes, &c, ‘yatot-savant” exactly described if this Js the 1 minimum wage many of our rich men, In another a 5 a would not ma- conse it might clear many bis | (erially’ chanye mutters, There will always be ft silks and satins torical sirens who possessed 8 1 which cannot be lind even with $15 tellects, but who were able neve! A week theless to subjugate Kings and he- Foes. | It seems to me hat even sootal Doubtless the same peculiar shrew: | MOPKAFA, F01 y murmive the real rea- ness which gives the millionaire his If he girl's ignorance of h For money is required to. get it away Soin the’ lost. thirty j him, And many a woman who wold) were Kept to s be overpaid with $8 a week forany| tat it hax be work she might do tax this shrewdness. | nature, ‘Phe woman. w ‘Yo the inguiry, “Cat you name one reason Ie, won who succeeded in getting more ar lean unnatural wealth t was not nm and taleute a Such an abnormal el?! Lanust reply that! could nan tt Ha kent lack fain juzen very stupid modern oil nything else except py put that they are not worth naming uilar to the entire ‘Whatever the temptations of the dom, girl who fails, they do mot differ in ? vidual. kind or degree from those faced of. Blaaske, than whom ed by the girl who is no greater authority on | ma Po bolkeve with Balaae that rime | n con springs from a defect of and | nso. tae Women Who succeed ‘are those | in the first few months of whose good instinct are supported and | 1 Hi aud That vane few ex. pheld by good ideas. Yet they are the | [AP® n during ‘he first year, upneldsby sand. Wana, S95 tay a He further found that they are ail women who have faced the same hard- hips, lived in the same cramped rooms, eaten the same !nadequate food as the girl deserters. In this connection .1 | have received a very interesting letter | from a well-known New York physi- He writes IGNORANCE, PURE AND SIMPLE, | 18 THE CAUSE, | Dear Madam: Having written | three bogie, dealing more or lees {| more or less addicted to the exces- | sive use of alcohol, This addiction to the alcoholic poison, together with poison of the pestilencial dis- and the nerve-wrecking occu- pation, ave (ne causes that the aver- age life of the deserter in her \ccu- pation is about eight years. Bow, if the girls knew those things, there is no question in my Pains shot. oven, the elmommal_stzl, h pure and simple. Gas Rypetes of gieaselts at toe bottom of the whole trouble. B.S. TALMBY. Now for the defense. WHEN THE CLEVER MAN GETS TO WORK Deas Madam: If a girl in the country were asked to spend her evenings perpetually in her mother's smallest room, the cramped space and monotonous surroundings’ would swoon upset her nerves. ‘That is what the small salaried girl in a clty Is compelled to do. ‘The minute #! puts her feet outside she has to cartare. Where can sho go? the home of a girl triend no better off, where both talk of what they would like to do if they could afford it or ineffectively console each other for the lack of all to which real women aspire? In sumn occupy @ bench in the park, with unclean vagrants lounging on all sides, and electric massagod dandies floating about always willing to lift the burden from tied shoulders, Here, perhaps, is the turning point Just a little flirtation to break tie awful monotony; Just one good din- T ‘o ner of unadulterated food; just a reat from care; then the clever man gets to work the fa wears @ tired expression; he syin- pi supports the fwilin strength as no one elxe hay tale pains to do—because lie has an axe to grind, Later he tikes an un advantage of the sald about the Ne much has ty ambitious girl who works in the day and studies at night. Surely this ts the girl who hus ben vearet prend and coffees, sleeping in one room with five # and overworked » ehe was old enow vive! It in waid the girl deserte: through love of finery. The who value clothes ad natural er from #heer av preference we when virds plume th \ in some spe at mating season s certain beautiful plumes only appea when the virds are woaing, and that the wdrld is decorated in beautiful that an under t teins wa wy suficient! han & reenough to it men who have been surrounded itellect and talent all their. lives Can you name one notorious woman who succeeded In getting wealth tha ‘er and talented, sometimes not beautiful, but always interesting? You can't hold 4 man’s love with am 8 intellect. God help the girl who comes into this world to fight from infancy, it] sustained and unloved! Don't (alk to her of God, but show her H mercy, + THE LEP ORBOMIS ORL. ( was not both ¢ KICK HUBBY FROM BED? Nt MRS, DUDLEY I$ NOT ~THATND OF WOMAN She Says So Hind When Lawyer in Divorce Suit Questions Her. | acd The counter divorce suits of Hdward Dudley and Marie Dudley were on trial before Vice-Chancellor Stevenson in Jersey City today, The case has been before the court since last November and Jn previous Ntigation in this State for many months, Mrs, Dudley has engaged at variotis times the of twenty-four lawyers. counsel are Martin Conboy . York and J. D, Carpenter of the New Jersey bar. Mrs, Dudley was put on the stand to continue her testimony of several weeks ago. “Te ft true’? asked Mr. Carpenter, ever at any time kloked your of bed, so that he fell to Dusband o} the floor?” not.” sald Mra. Dudtey. an not that kind of a I never ktoked anybody In my and went to work f beth BR. Vanderpoel 0: has ed by my agains ment to ¢ many mi send leate with couasel and testify against Mrs, tles, who wife in her suit He were from her employ. 4 and 1 have received from him that if 1 dia} rs he would come| the other} | on APRIL | ;Complete New Inside Hull to) | White Star ‘started up the Bay | object Dudley, aw 1 by own | counsel, Alan 1. declared he was the victim of a blackmailing plot “When 1 was Ilving with Mra, Dud-| { ley" he sald, "To had a George Bchaefer, He liter left n @, 1913. OLYMPIC 1S HERE WITH INNER-SKIN AND UNSINKABLE a | White Star Liner Arrives After Six Months Undergoing Al- terations for Safety. _” | | NOW ICEBERG PROOF. Keep Her Afloat in Case | of Collision. 7% | | Bearing no outward evidence of the} changes in conetruction which have | made her practically non-vinkable, the | Mner Olympic made her firat appearance in over six months tn| tho port of New York to-day. Tne} sister ship of the fil-starred ‘Titanic | brought over 1.063) passengers, 1,09 of | whom were fn the steerag: ‘Whe Olympic after an uneventful from Southampton arrived y Hook late last nigh first ship cleared at ‘ail Quar She had} when the revenue} alongside and the customs as she neared the hafter etmrise this morning cutter la Inspectors boarded hes he Statue of Liberty Chauncey M. Depew Church Osborn and Vinie Daly, the actress and singer, divided diotinetion as some of the notables aboard. Miss Daly left New York on Jan, °3 for the German baths with the avowed | of reducing her weight. She ceeded, When sho went away she confessed that perfectly scales recorded 168 pounda when * [stepped on the platform, ‘To-day she | | welghs but 127 pounds. “Diet, exercise and said Miss I for welght r jr, William has no Haquld with | “That !s my uction, Tam golng into vaudeville and’ keep my avoirdupots down hard work, As a@ prima donna tn opera I got fat and T aim no longer ambitious to be a prima | donna vecause all prima donnas get | fat. Jano F, Blood of this city, the daugh- ter of @ coal nicrchant, waa the befle of the voyage. She is evidently as popular at home as #he was aboard ship, for 1 tug load of young folk went down t bay to meet her, and their tug trailed along behind the big Olymple from Quarantine to the White Star dock, Mien Blood, her fcNow-voyagers said, wore a beauty spot whenever she appeared on deck in the saloon, and the spot posi- tion shifted so frequently as to cause comment, Only yesterday, serted, did the passengers learn that the position of the beauty apot wan a signal to one or another of a devoted coterie f young men who acted the contin. ual escorts of Miss Blood in her con- stitutionals along the promenades of tho vessels, The stokers of the Olymple Med out on tho forecastle deck an the ship docked and gave @ concert through th mediuin of their “Foo-Foo Band,” James Kelly is leader oa in organs and other in tw of torture, puch has been sald and written watertight inner-#kin and | ts have been made of ti ine for permission tu Inspect the | she was lant tn this harbor the her hall butit! skin, Te tx Ithough she might fank thi main altoat WAVED LOADED REVOLVER AND OVERLOADED WORDS. “ia it not true? asked My Conboy in} amination, ‘that you pald r to eo to California and have Money with [ae purpose of m fyom toatifys ead today huban sper could « Whether or not t an appl testimony om. FIRST SUIT OF W. V. ASTOR. DeMnnds Waser Rates and be as fa 1 » MISS TAFT LOSES MESH BAG. BALPIME silver mesh bag. her by her wri £ White House, was lost by or atolen! from Miss Helen Taft, daughter of ex | Prenident ‘I in the Emmanuel Epis vijeu ob Sunday morning. Taft waa the @uest here last ( Mivs Emerson Lamb, daughter J. I te of Miss | women, we Damenue “Churen. itor ‘Tells Magistrate He! Attack by Subjects ot Article He Wrote, a Syrian news| HW Maxistrate Marmi | Syrian BE Feared Hot sip ara editor ase he tour: | und -Ofth wtree 4 4 prisoner be sid revolver at Ladd Naxtle of No, SS Wert Lif Greenwich street yesterday ant shouted strange words wiley « pol! inan thought sounded like Unveaty Karan declared the trouble arose f rtlcle ho printed last week, He ired the Magistrate |¢ would tale long to @ ristory af thix article. | Yeu one called me on tie telephe ad told me T would be kill M1 Karan, exelted So when t the offfee 1 put a revolver brothers near the Bowling Green sunwa to No. 173 Cou Mars 4. but held. Karn varge of violation aw and Of assault prefer Nagiie Magiatiate srathy cack For .. Constipation 500 Fifth A The elielons Lasative Cheoetete | w BELLE ON OLYMPIC WHO WORE BEAUTY SPOTS FOR ADMIRERS. LONDON, sir MISSI FBLOOD. DEATH THREAT SENT TO WUOGE BY MILITANTS : Charles Lush, Who Sen-| tenced Mrs. Pankhurst, Is Now Guarded by Detectives. April was received priron, as ore today by on when he was ¢ ra TINE CUS es LADY ut Nt Wy af oy %—An by ler, Seotiand Yard. tmmediately {nveatigation, Justice to three years Dr Bal Sp: 16WEST 460-462 Fulton Street 645-651 Broad Street comer 4 ceed anonymous letter, threatening him with death tos day, arles Montague Lush, the Magistrate! Who on Inst Friday at Old Balley sen- | tenced Mra. Finmeline Pankhurst, mill- tant suffragette le Bir began an it was not doubted that the letter came from the militants, Charles was accompanied a& husky every- bodymuard the bench the guardian was but a few feet away. Spring's Crowning Gems ot Fashion Thought in Smart New Suits Usual $30 Values At this price we show suits that have attained the very zenith of s' individuality and a charm in This is the final verdict of the fashion directory to the styles of 1913. The tailoring, trimmin, tinctiveness of effects pleasing to women who prefer usiveness. SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES “HELLO GIRLS” BACK STRIKE AF MAYOR'S RS REQUEST | Boston Operators Threater- to’ Break Truce on Arrivalvof 1,000 Strike Breakers. ¢: ‘i i: ra * v4 $3,650 A DAY COST —_; OF “HELLO GIRLS” 70 ' BREAK BOSTON STRIKE. : HOSTON, April %—Indignant at wha: they claim was a violation of the truce | company) in. flooding | the city with expert operators to act ae atrikebreakers, the 2.000 “hello girls oF eady to-day to go ot ment the company. giver, thelr demande before ¢ the telephone | Boston | trike were the in [State Hoard of Arbt [answer be unsatisfactory, - The fact that more than 1,600 operators had been brought in Le Philadelphia and New ‘land and sed in the dee | hotels, ready for the emergency, Wm | communicated to the operators at, theli” inidnigot meeting, and a vote for ar! Immediate strike was averted only by the action Mayor Fitzgerald. The Mayor rushed to the meeting hal and induced the erator to stick te the terms of the truce, even thougt they believed the company haa vio" lated the agreement to wait until thir! afternoon before sane any} action. SET FREE, THEN, ‘ARRESTED. ‘Thempeon, : Henry 8. Thompson, whose life waat | saved after he and his wife had trie@ 114 j carry out a suicide pact last month anty who was held for his wife's a ? was released to-day by Coroner Felw verw. He was rearrested immediately and held by Magistrate Marah, in Cew, vireet Court, for the Grand Jury or, a charge of attempted suicide. Thompson sald he and his wife hat agreed to die together because thes were poverty stricken and he could not! work. They turned ie was ite th flat at No, 63 West One Hundred! and Eighth atreet, and went to bed’! Neighbors found them and Thompson's’ life was eaved by the pulmotor. Mre ‘Thompron died tn J. Hood Wright How pital March 17, Models - ¢ Effects 20 ime popularity. There is an jan departure from the mediocre is especially pleasing. Beautiful Vigercaux Eponges- Serges Striking New Mixtures assembters --- the approved Every charming new street shade and black nd individual line offer Alterations FREE "STREET NEW YORK Brooklyn Newark, N. J. et and 12th St:

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