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_ " \ » i\ \ ‘The campaign and ‘the mark originally set for the} fund was $200, FHOYOUNG GIRLS SIVE GRANDMAAT EST SDE BLAZE Carry Helpless Old Woman own Four Flights Through 2 Smoke. ‘three children have already gone to the country for the summer, awakened to find the kitchen full of smoke. He ran out for help leaving the door open. he returned with Patroimen Reilly and Bartnick the rooms aplaze. The three started to rouse ee coral Marriage Should Be a Life Policy of Happiness, Is a The policemen turned the tenants to the front and rear fire-escapes, but the fremt one was quickly crowded and del, and, as thick sm-ke was pour-| ‘ag through it, many of the tenants) huey onto the rails, and, shouting for/ het, threatened to jump. They wero! gee down by the men of Truck No. §) 4laq the Doctor Asserts that a Person Who Has on her bed on the third floor, {@ which she has lain stricken for four | months lay Mrs. Dinah Feinberg, eighty years old, daughter, Anna Fried- MOAB, wes away at her Passover devo- tlom@. Her grandchildren, Sarah Fried- men, fourteen, and Lena, elghteen, | her into the hall. Iinding they could) not reach the escapes they made a, i down the smoke-filled stairway to the ;etreet, where the old lady was found to be overcome with fright. @moke entering through the open win- dows of the Cancer Hospital filled the patients with alarm and the night nerpe, Mias Donalds, had to oall for the asmistance of four doctors and three mureses to quiet them. Several in- on eein@ dressed so as to be to escape. NUARM ALONG RIVER Wetch for “Arson Squads” in’ New Line of Destruction, Started Near Birmingham. © (ange. quantity of equipment were the opening of the boating sea- attempts to destroy skiffe and shells most ef the riv- ‘watoh ie kept by eGede), patrols night and day for suf- in posr saiou of @ revolver, with which v1 “Mf any men had interfered with mv I would have shot him,” was sentenced today to three weeks im- pron cnt. She refused to be bound over to keep the peace for @ year and tod the Magistrat not of any use at =. $228,000 FOR HOSPITAL. for the Moun- 1» Your advice is ‘The campaign to raise funds for Mountainside Hospital at Montolair, N. J, Chesed last night with @ total of 428,000 @ubsoribed. ‘Yesterday's subscriptions were 965,000. started twelve days ago ‘Among the pledges made yesterday was one for $15, one for $10,000, and nether for $5,000. 1 with a pensation of Strffiness ims of Andigrat ion, Discomfort After Meals, igus ieguat of Food, s utt ot Shot " in Rag for eras Ae ane Y finan, Teme, ng Siuldan“Wraties’ of Heats "A ow “doses ot adway's R Pills | ‘ | their opinions, On the other hand, there/| drowned. ers husl! G3 sou’ Vor? “Ui | are those who hold that marriage was us know which fate they prefer aad | that WHY IS YOUR MARRIAGE A SUCCESS? WHY IS IT A FAILURE? Copyright, 188, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). Nothing Ages Folk Like Marital Nagging; Keep on Falling in Love, Is Scientist’s Remedy WO TWN AGES ONG SO MUCH AS, MATRIMONIAL NAGGING SAUs BE JOSAN LDF! Reasonable Deduction That Success or Failure Depends Upon Courtship Contin Never Beén in Love Be Should Be Drowned—What Do You Think of Dr. Oldfield’s Theory ued After Wedlock. and Never Wants to About That? BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITAR. “Keep on falling in love,” adjured Dr. Josiah Oldfield in a lecture in London the other day, and then lest his words be misinterpreted by the | RUNAWAY BEAUT ! | ight-minded, he added: “If you are married, fall im love all over again| drink is fatal to those who would 1 aged seer has informed us whether quality attributed to it by Dr. Oldfiel with your husband or wife. If you do this you will never have time to adopt the nagging habit. Nothing ages one like nagging. As for the bach- elors and spinsters, they should not waste time. A person who has never been in love and never wants to be ought to be drowned. Longevity as the jon or excuse for loving bas for me at least the aspect of novelty. If Dr, Oldfield'’s theory is correct, how many Romeos must be housed in the Old Man's Home, and how all our centena- rians must have loved. Every now| } and then some man or woman who has crossed the century mark takes us into the secret of his great age.| From some we learn that whiskey and tobacco are sure preservatives of youth, from others that strong ive long and prosper. But as yet no love has indeed the life preserving | a. Only those who are married know whether they feel that their days have been lengthened or shortened by double harness. The happily mar- ried will indorse Dr. Oldfield’s opinion undoubtedly. Bo, if the majority of persons In New Jersey recently youths who announced themselves as collectors of the ‘church census" followed the {usual inquiries as to the age and middle initial of every member of the household with the plump ques- and ae they de their tours in the afterivon the result of their reseaches, when tt ap- pears, may seem alarmingly suffra- gette, EVENING WORLD READERG6 CAN SHED LIGHT. If it 1» feasible to make a house to house canvass in the interests of de- termining the headship of the home, it Is not unreasonable to hope that ul- timately men and women will be asked to supply data on their personal happiness or misery for the wi good of the greatest numbel Im the mean time it will be possi- le for the read of The Bvening ‘World to shed some light om the relation of lovego longevity by dis- cussing such problems as range themselves under the general in- quiry! “Why {s your marriage o success? Why is it » failure?” As the most determining act of Ife, which summarizes the past and foreomains the future—for a few years anyhow, even for the most emancipated —marriage should be a Sife policy of happiness. if yours actually t# 80, to | what trait gr combination of traits tn yourself and your mate do you attribute your good fortune? If it is not, do you blame yourself, your husband or wife, or the inatitution of marriage itself, ‘for the failure? There are persons who be- Meve that the modern marriage in less happy than that of @ century ago be- cause it in igss final. They view divorce from what@ver cause as an evil, and they have weight and authority behind ete ie. naman eartalaly hewey wall tin eandionr ‘ et aaa est | ance was made more or leas voluntary; in other words, that the only bird that is surely contented in captivity is the | one that refuses to leave ita gilded cai | even after the door has slid open, leav- |ing the way to freedom clear. So in | considering the success or failure of marriage we cannot eliminate divorce as & factor, When, if ever, is divorce justt- fable? WHO SHOULD BE THE THE HOME? ‘The other day In a conversation with |@ young married man he remarked; "I jknow half a dozen households wherein the husband {s the wife's superior and the woman is content to he gulded him, @ households are happy. I kno’ means certain that the wife 1s aifperior, she rules absolutely. The man accepts all her decistona for the sake of peace. They are not happy, because both feel that ft 1# unnatural for the woman to 88 OF To me ‘1t is perhaps needless to say, this seemed an extraordinary point of view, Another man, married also, as- Seris that in all the unhappy house- xtremely sorry overcritical, and delight in the public humiliation of thetr husbands, On the other hand, whenever I feel particularly sorry for any one it 1s generally a woman and most frequently a wife. Yet this may be merely because every woman in a profession where men predominate numertoally learns to know the’seamy alde of the masculine nature and seeing few women ideallzes her own fex as sho! could not possibly do is if she follows the customary ferntnine programme of “a youth of folly, old age of cards” on second thou T should have re- versed the quota as we take our cards carller and our folly later than the good old times, In considering the question of what makes marriage happy or unhappy, 1 shall be interested to have the views and the philosophy us well as the per- sonal experience of those readers whom the subject interests. Aw bachelors and spinaters, according to Dr. Oldfeld’s opinion, should either marry or b I think they too should let wherein though It 1s by no | Ber stepmother, in hia point | ened sie was in a daze and apparently ms i fivaxied™ es rumspaY, er SEEKING “CAREER” RETURNS TOHOME Marion Wylly Finds “Self-Sup- porting” Life Isn’t What It’s Cracked Up to Be. Disappointed In her ideas regarding the glad, free life of a self aupporting | girl in the great city, Marion J. Wylly, | nineteen years old, who ran away from her home at No, 128 Frelinghuysen road, Brighton Heights, Staten Island, | returned to-day after twenty-four | hours’ absence, She appeared at the home of her father's best friend, Henry W. Hodge, No, 51 East Kighty-second street, a little before 10 o'clock this morning, felt on Mra, Hodge's neck and sked her If she thought her father and stepmother would ever forgive her. Miss Wylly is noted* for her beauty and is a violinist of remarkable talents, @hoe has felt for a year or more that the enthuslasm of her famtly and friends for her playing entitled her to appear in public. Her father, who is in the lumber business at No. 2 Broadway, could not eee the need for his daugh- & public performer for could her stepmother. ‘The young woman felt to the deep bot- tom of her artistic soul that she was misunderstood.’ Yesterday, after her father had started on a business trip to the North- went, Miss Wylly wrote two notes. One was for her father and the other for in going away to make @ career,” they n, “Do not worry, I am Ured of the humdrum of things.” When the notes were found there was & busy telephoning to the homes of friends of the family, An all-night search waa made and every gtrl friend of Mise Wylly was vinited without any! trace of her being found. When the girl appeared this morning at the Hodge home she was #o fright-| on the verge of hysteria, had gone to the home of her uncle, F. F. | gaia, “onty about four dollars, and I spent some of that walking about town, Bo I went to uncle's to get same money, But he was out of town and the apart- ment was closed, A woman in the hall saw 1 was tn trouble and told me she rented rooms and I gave her all the money I had except five cents and she lave me a room to sleep in. But T didn't sleep a wink. 1 was seared and 1 wished 1 were home.” You see, 1 thought that if 1 wanted to have ® real careor | | through the ordeal of earning my own diving @# poor girls do, so [ went to a jot of department stores. ‘They would not any of them take me. ‘They sald I looked too frail and nervoy Of course Thad apent a lot of my money on care fare and my dinver and ving a littl , shopping, and T 4 rdly an Mra, Hodge bundled the airi into an automobile and sent her to sta land, where sie was freeted by amE NE OUBNE Letes POUGHICEPPSIE, Inabello Hawley, fifteen been returned to her he eirl had been jn hiding ten days, after ‘taking a twenty-lve-mile walk to elope. ‘The long tramp cured her of a desire to elope, the girl said, and, ashamed to| J. Franklyn, and had walk had arrar She could ing a night in the open, she sought en ployment with Mrs, Marks, ‘The police are looking for a young man who they belleve enticed the girl |youthful face was wreathed in a smile. from home. He ls believed to be in | DION'T BUY THE DRESSES FOR Connecticut. Eddie Banks, colored, J, was crossing Esvex street there yex- terday when # big auto knocked him down and the wheels passed over hla. Dr. Frank Freeland of Maywood wok the lad to the Banks home, without autoist wa! First Article of a Series. 1 NMDEMONEYFLY WITHOUT A PENNY, ROWED M SEE Docior, Lawyer and Even! Ashes of Two Little Victims in fe |25-MILE WALK CURED GIRL OF HER DESIRE TO ELOPE. Also She Missed-the Man, Slept in the Open and Finally Got a Job. N.Y © Millerton ot find him, an ——_—_——— AUTOIST KILLS BOY; FLEES. |; Not twelve, stopped, Fdward Hasbrouck Helghts, N. J. down the Basex street Nil am an autoiat sped along First st ‘The lad swung around to avoid # but he forced the nuto ove the carb and Into a telegraph pole, badly Jarred and bruised. the a few small contusions and « APRIL 93, QULD BE DROWNED? where ate d to meet the young man. son of William of Rochelle Park, N./ regaining consclousnes a bieyele to rhe its were 1918, THIS SPENDTHRIFT Dressmaker Get After J. Franklin Meyers. GOT AUTO ON CREDIT.) Millionaire Daddy Pays, He Says, When He Needs Actual Money. J. Franktyn Myere, the twenty-three year-old aon of Marcus A, Myere, mill. | fonaire prealdemt of the Juliue Kayeer and Company glove house, has eome- thing on “Death Valley Scotty,” the date Irving W. Childs, Rich, et al, who all gained fame as discoverera of | Broadway, Not that Scotty and his prodigal rivals did not outspend J, Franklyn, but J, Franklyn appears te have had the game end the name with- out actually distributing cash, CREMATE CHILDREN OF ISDORA DUNCAN Auto Accident Given to Dancer in Golden Urs. PARTS, April 9.~The bodies of Patrick and Doody, the children of Isadora Dunean, the American dancer, who were drowned Saturday im the Seine when an auto in whioh they were rid- ing plunged from @ bridge, were cre mated early to-day. The work was supervised by the brothers of the dan- Cor, who herselt was otiil too i from Grief to attend the disposition of the dodles, Cremation was employed at Mre Dun- af her children be burned, so thet she might always keep their ‘Why ere you so careful to have the How J, Franklyn Myere accomplished this well nigh impossible feat te told | Madison avenue, who gave young My- | ers $600 worth of perfectly good pa to ald J. Franklyn to obtain an auto- modile—an essential asset of well equipped men about town. Myers got the car, blew In $200 for) theatre tickets, ran up bille for fash- fonabdle go modiste’s, indulged hin lady friends to $200 worth of taxicab rides, had their photographs taken and furnished the | bird and pottle without tt costing htm | visible nickel, DRESSMAKER GOT A JUDGMENT } AGAINST HIM. | Frances, the dressmaker; the White Studio, Tyson & the New York Taxica Company Frank Spingo have judgments against J, Franklyn, ‘Dewides the one obtained by Dr, May. Dad comes across “whenever re- quired,” Myers biithesomely informed Mr. Myer, his inquinitor, Ifts friends | are “stuck for lunch; he has a busl- | nose cam reading “Of H. H, Walker, ‘0 Fifth avenue,” and his ing debts and restaurant expenans Inc., No. kam’ sold, has | have bean Nquidated by father, so that The | J. Franklyn wrinkles—NOT. “Entertain any ladies after the the- atre this week?” asket Mr. Meyer of shoukl get financial return and face her people, she sought} “Yep, two or three tumes, various refuge with a family near Millerton, — | ladies," Miss Hawley sald that she intended | “Do you object to give thelr names?" to elope with a young man whom ehe] “I do, and thelr addresses, too. had met in this She had no funda} “Were they show girls, professional ladies or chorus girlie?” ‘sometimes," wan J. Franklyn's an- t Hoth yon of ue ances Judgment is tor dresses nd delivered to yout” uite righto, sir,” and J, Beanktyn'’s | HIMSELF. “But you didn't want the dresses for +» did you “Well hardly." and again @ bland Stop te| grin indicated the defendant's amuse-| kowns delivered to young Mr. Myers during October, November and Decem- ver, 1912. The photgraph, taxicab and theatre ticket bills were run up during vo months. All the jewelry own In three scarf pins, two pair of cuff links and @ gold plated The autoist who killed the boy never | wateh, he sald, Mr. Meyers, the boy's father, testified he does net know how Debenheusser, fourteen, of much J. Nranklyn gets out of HH | Walker, Ine. ne WASHING that Secretary to the President Joseph P. Tumulty would be @ candidate for the nomination for Governor of New was characterized as untrue by umulty to-day, Te sald he was ing to stay with President Wileon, The tab on the shirt Lox- it-on to the drawer jn his examination as a Judament. | tering Mid debtor Aled in the City Court to-day | breathe! by Maurlco Meyer, attorney for Dr. from taking the germs with water there Charies H, May, a phyatctan at No, 69s | afe fifty who ns at m popular stage | fect set of filters, which, when in work- The Frances judgment 1s for $97 for germs fikered out of your drinkini water and yet pay no attention to fil- germs out of the air you For every person who dies die from taking germs | from the air. Those diseases which de- | stroy the senses of smell nd faste and j hearing, which destroy the voice and lungs and heart, are caused by germs that have not been strained out of the air. Nature fitted your nostrils with a per- ing order, separate the germs from the air as thoroughly as a water filter strains germs out of drinking water, When the air ‘cers in your nostrils catch the germs they are tangled in the | natural secretions of the nose. You get | rid of the germs that have been caught by blowing ur nose. When your nostrils are clogged germs are caught, | but as you cannot blow them out in the | natural way the germs remain and set up a disease which is called Catarrh. Now, Catarrh causes a discharge to form and this discharge is loaded with germs | and further clogs the nostrils. | Clogged nostrils cause so much an- noyance that you feel you must free them in any way you can. You find you can relief by a full in-breath through the nose; this draws the dis- charge backward into ine throat. This is called gotta | or the catarrh snufile, and |g a very risky practice, The dis- charges once drawn backward from the nostrils are liable to enter the air tubes, causing deafness, head noises or running ears. They set up disease In the throat, the throat feels dry as if sand had been dusted on it, or it will tickle like a horse hair had lodged in it. After a time slime collects in such 2 throat and keeps you constantly clearing it. Your volce may become hoarse and you may have a cough with pains In the chest, soreness behind the breast bone, stitches in the side or a dull pain under. the | shoulder blades. You may raise a lot of tough, grayish material, a yellow sub- stance, or a dark, brown, rusty material, Why risk the danger of the germs In the air when by having your clogged nostrils freed of disease the air filters in your nose will catch and hold the germs and so prevent them from reach- ing your ears, throat and lungs? fost and germa out of the ait, CLOGGED NOSTRILS CURED ee Anca tee monet ther and 4 that his nowtrile ar his mouth closed, et vp. tn the morning ree hy iy an i tel rewidee Oakland at, Breesiyn for rst consulted me he 7 when go 1 thought Since treating ‘poatril er ti You'll admit shoe shoe in the world, has an inner sole that is springy, velvety softness, the foot, Supports the arch. soles. All Styles. For Mea and DR. A. REED CUSHION 36th St, and Broadway 240 Broadway dealer it's rg somone ot | ‘a . Bhe ea that hy ‘oat shes near her. Deot. W, ‘but it’s much more—it’s the most comfortable This zee Shoe Moulds itself to every curve of Prevents friction of your feet against uppers or Gives physical and mental ease. ‘The ashes of che file once wore siaced Physicians attending Miss Duncan sti are fearful that her health may permanently umiermined by the of the tragedy. OF OLIVE OIL fon as Ney tnetal upon a wine of @ pat tenn aad vintage, “CHIRIS Pronounced She-ris .~ OLIVE OfL CHIRIS te the product of the tiret = ing ef, solect. olives—the. purest Clive <Al that can be made. euch Spi vas ta ANTOINE fy Piatt Street, New York, ARE YOUR NOSTRILS CLOGGED? s Why Dr. McCoy Advertises An incident which happened tn Dr. McCoy's early life was responsible for two things, One was his taking up as a+ specialty deafness, head noises, cl nostrils and diseases of the throat. second was his decision to advertl: specialty. ‘ When Dr. McCoy graduated he bes 4 the Loomis prize that was given f the best examination on diagnosts and treatment of diseases. ‘Besides this, Dr. McCoy won, after competitive nation, the position of physician. to Bellevue Hospital. By winning the Loomis prize and by winning the ap- pointment to Bellevue Hospital, which was open to the doctors of the world he proved himself the equal of aay doctor in America. When Or, Me graduated, his. mother visited him to witness t > gradue ation exercises, While in New York, she contracted a severe ear trouble, Dr, McCoy took her to a specialist on dis- eases of the ear, and this man charged her $20.00 tor the exazination. ' McCoy explained to the spectalist of the small means of his parents, but the specialist sald that made no difference; his fee was $20.00 for an excmination, Remember, this speciatist did not treat his mother, only examined her. 4 Right then and there, Dr. McCoy made a resolution that he would take up a specialty, and when he began to Practice that he would not charge for examination and that he would make his fees for treatment low 0. that all could obtain skilful services af~ a price that they could afford’ to pay.” decided that if he was to cue no fees for examination, and keep hia fees for treatment low, he must see anf treat a great many people. Ip order ta get the necessary number of people, he must advertise in the newspapers, telt who he was, what he had done and whag he was prepared to co. This Is the history of Dr. McCoy's practice, the emuses which led to the selection of his snecialty of the diseases of the nose, throat and ears, and the reason why he advertises. ARE YOU GOING DEAF? 1 have made a discovery in the 4 nutse and deafness {important one, My discovery i the necenalty oF navstng in tuber npiel ugasin are. faintul, that ‘caiman’ deat fag tn sa bbe shown i the, When Mr, Rdmant J. Dunn flit eowat id ‘cold five years ia set fa'eat sare | tak antel os sounded ike steam bed that while 7 ys, were _ “at By, the trai eh’ an "well ee onan aa? wath tick when, if open Niiuh"sveane New" York et ca diseased hn) & . J.C. MeCOY, Broadway and 23d Street, New York. noon. to ti this is a stylish pliable and of ‘Women, SHOE CO, « a