The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1913, Page 3

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PB ' WIFEFROM TAKING. -— HS BOYToeUROF ; \ Mas. Ducas Blocked by Rich, Hubby When She Is All - Ready to Sail. HER TRUNKS AT PIER.; But Instead of Going on ‘ ¥ Oceanic Siig Must Appear in Court Monday. Dresttent of hait © dozen chemical and | Perdume manufactories, adupted heroic G@reasures to-day <o prevent bis young ‘Wite, Rachel N. Ducas, from whom ho fue been estranged for seven years, from taking their qweive-year-old son, i tt t 1 rf fy : I [ 5 t i | | I fy WH fr Hl if i i hil tl HH ; ft gk if ctl gke | ty fr ii i ge : pi f I FE i fF ij it i i a FE 8 7? i b g AS j if a i : agp aati ker ay J U e the irate paremt that the bey had left for “nome place in New Jer- \eay, where be would spend a week.” Was provided thet the boy should visit him every Sunday, the lad's visits eud- Genly stopped altogether last November. ‘“% have heard,” Mr. Ducas'e petition t Pears with the boy Monday, she be ordered not to take the boy out of the country until permitted to do so by the separation agreement, and that she be required to have the boy at phe father’s home every Sunday hereafter, A month ago Mr. Ducas brought an|t! action in the Supreme Court before Jus- tiee Gavexan to compel Mra, Ducas to live up to the terms of the agreement, Court togk a mass of testimony on aides and then dismissed Mr. jne'a complaint. During the trial hustice Gavegan sharply rebuked Mrs, ‘Ducas for displaying too great an ex- panse of sheer gray silk hose to hin Jue dieial eye. Mra, Ducas has pe n action for a lemal separation Dueas on the grounds of cruelty and non-support i —_ Widow Ends Life With Gas. Mrs. Margaret: McKeuzle, a widow | + kitehen of her apartment, No, 946 Bteinway avenue, Long Island City, at T g’clock this 1 og. A tube, one! ¢ fend of which wax connected with the| (wae range, war in le mouth, Her son, | JAlexander, with whom she had been ‘Aiving, is in Washington, , oe ‘Tas Bu The tug Harold, ow Btenson of Lexingten avenue, City, was burned to the. wat early. to-day at Packer's Doc! \foot ‘of Hudaon strect, Jersey City. Th lorew left the boat about 7 o'clock Inst ‘evening, and how the fire atarted is not BASHRTTOSTIP Meg Vid coat. Straw hat are sneaking into fever we, affair, there is no doubt, but in spite of as T am to the French thronge—to be very few people Wot, I dare say that ‘f betting wae abolished in France not one-tenth of the folks would turn up, however, if they tried to atop it there would be some revolution T ean tell you; but, anyway, Booths belong Government, there ie no question of; ever stopping the “Pari Mutuel,” as it nixty years old, was found dead in the | qe pauvres fool—or an old one for ® matter of tnat+-is parted with bis money it does some good 1? his unfortuna’ and aslaters plan, te it? per cent. tag ts levied on all theatre; form you have to pay hat the teket agent people would tribute! Thinks the Splendid Park 0! Good Material. jin France the Ir.field Swarms With the Crowd the Gow ernment Controls the Betting, and 10 Per Cent. o1 | the Profits Gces to the Poor. By Meg Villars HIS fe the great land of Itberty, isn’t it, dear New York? Un- fortunately it sseme—to a otranger—ae if the wrong ones get ft Sohool children appear to be free to go on strike, and are not spanked for their pains, while really-truly, supposed-to-re | re, #0 to speak, taken by the hand and tctated to: “You may run around Benjamin P. Ducas, elderly millionaire | and look at the pretty gee-gees, but you mustn't bet!” Never having done any betting myseif, | thought I didn’t care much either way, but when I visited Belmont Park the other day I speedily dis- @overed that horse-racing without the betting is about as gay as a funeral Sompared to an Irish wake! And, to quote the man who is etermal:y trudging behind the water wagon, “it's as great a sensation as getting drunk on beer when you might be doing it on champagne.” Of course, beer is better than no drink at all, and half a loaf ts better than no bread; but half @ loaf tent particularly satisfying when you remember that every other country is enjoying plum cake! naa he traditions! “tepper” and “mosning” It's true that the lounge eult aad hat there seemed to me—accustomed: It's surely the non-betting that does it?! # nce the betting to the is called, (don't know about all the intricacies plain-sailin, r it is—of ne French bettin| but what I know ts thal of the he country), young brothers Which fan't ‘@ half bad By the way, the same 10 toke' Eveng@f you witness ti h | evil re allowed in, If the game thing done in this country But perden this lars Pays Tousical comedy chorus races here. In Paris the cette holds her court on the lawn; all the noted beauties are there, and, as I @aid before, the gowns are wonderfully gorgeous, Society turns out in ite huaéreds, too, and the werld rubs el- bows with the half world as tt goes in neo other elty but Paris. Here there seems to be a few acciety women @elightfully, no doubt, but not do dress when they go to Paris. Scattered over the vast grandstand I aw masculine, cranky looking woman sit- ting in solitary grandeur—oh, they horse lovers, but no other type of woman did I see, my unlucky day! American woman behaves much better than her Freneh sister, as far as pay- an usually powd Face is being run. her purpose very well by holding her empty, and without the swaying masses ef populace we see in Europe. They arm Ifke ants, and when they rush around to different points of the course to see the horses paes they appear ex- actly, as you look down on them from of those tiny, scurry along. ‘That empty infleld at Belmont Park made me have already remarked, whet a waste of space and good material! the infleld was opened free to the pub- He at Piping Rock, Belmont Park, yen- terday, but I'll bet you what you like dollar up in a@ perfectly open and legit- imate manner at the Government "Parl Why should horse racing be, for some , People, synonymous with all that !s It may be that I'm oversensitive, but T really think the policeman who showed jot} me my way to the track was terribly shocked at my wanting to go there! He looked et me THE Without Betting a Waste} - irl type at the rived” actri- half a dosen quite elderly, rather Dlenty of room—probably keen Perhaps it was I must eay that the sets forth, ‘that Kobert in afraid I will} and are Being worn, with apologies, by|'"S e@ttention to the actual racing gunteh him or that ¢ will send a police- | lovers of mere comfert, but oti!! most | soee! man after him. This is wrong, for we|smast men stick to the garb worn by|ten never look at a horse on the race have etways been on the best of terme,| King Eéwerd when be wae Prince of |Course; they go there to aee each when he was with me. On May 36, lest, | Whles® ‘ other's frocks, to gossip, to take tea, T addressed a letter to my wife, respect-| Here I 4t@n't ose a single “shiny td"! | to~—ash, say it in a whisper, to flirt folly requesting her to have Robert at|No, eet even on the lawn outside the!® little under the spreading chestnut my epartment on the following Sunday, | clubhouse, where the men were all che! trees, and the racing—uniess its ajcitement and but she paid no heed to my request and| flower of American chivairy em? the{ Military steeplechase, is quite a neglit-| seems such a pity. 1 mre not yet seen the boy.” women biossome of a perfect bouquet—| sible quantity. The American wom- 1". Ducas concludes his petition with| all looleing aa Wf they certain-sure had|@n seems to watch the horses with @ prayer that, when Mrs, Ducas ap-|come over on the Mayfower. keen enthusiasm, but the French wom- her nose while the er all, it answe: escort’s attention ahe beautifies. #0 queer to see the “infleld’’ they call it im French) elsewhere plex: Ma: feel posttively nad; as I I believe 0, T muste’t! I forgot—that, even it waan't filled the pelouse is in France, ‘@ the trance once inside, you t anything from a fraction of a ao lt hed be Wed Gave afiwel me 0 | bag tract all about the “Road to Ruin!" “And yet horse racing (# a clean, upen- For man it gurely beats sit- in a stuffy emoky room watching a billiard championship being Diayed off, Why is it woree to Let on a horse than on billiards, or daseball, or Golf or the number of highbells a man can swallow in half an hour, or the number of rivets used in building the ‘Woolworth marvel? It's a0 natural for a man to bet. Why not let him do it openly since he's bound to do it eome way or other? Tf a man wants to risk money hel! do it any ok} way—horse-racing isn't the only chance he gets to throw it away. T feel thet it is about as happy an {dea to say to a lone, lorn man who wants a holidey and to get hie mind off his work, “You may go to the races, but you mustn't bet,” as to say to a fan, “You may go te the ball game, but you mustn't shout!"’ You have everything that goes to make fine race meetings—aplendid horses, Good jockeys, excellent tracks, patrons and owners who know all there is to know about the “sport of kings’—and yet the tiniest little affair in Belgium Gir sport! ting round daughter, 8 ——— I ST beats this country hollow as far as ex- “atmosphere” goes. It ps ee ATTORNEY DROPS DEAD. joumbs te Apoplezy Philip Marz, a lawyer, had just fin- ished a hearty breakfast in a restaurant 2 No, 6% Hast One Hundred and Bignti- eth street early to-day and was rising from the table when he staggered and fell to the Goor, tempted to minister to him, but in a few minutes he was dead. Dr. Cooloso of the Fordham Hospital, who was sum- moneda, sald death was due to apo- Other customers at- e sixty-one yeare old, lived at No, 041 Washington avenue, the Bronx, and was well known there, having been locally prominent for sixteen yea had an office at No, 183 Nasnau street. He |e survived by & widow, ® son anda Coroner Healy ordered his body removed to Bis late residence, nee lh LADY CHURSTON MISSING. LONDON, June 1.—The Citisen, the dabor Gaily newspaper, prints one of the latest West End society sensations whieh !s connected with the mysterious | @isappearance of Lady Churston, better known as Denise Orme, comedy actress. It le reported that she Jett home recently and has not since Deen heard of. Bhe has been posted as 1 were a bold, bad! missing at Scotland Yard wri exhaumy one, Ij tive efforts have beep made to find her, waboes ceseaas,"t He the musical TEST AUTO KILLS BOY, Remarkable Chain of Acci- died to-day, of No, ‘Thirty-third street dead from his in- juries and the chauffeur and general sales manager of the company also in- jured, William H. Wea employ, and Charles Welch, thi manager, started with the Ward’ VERING. WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 19138. ri ok ae 8 ; a Visit to Belmont Park Ye and Compares It With French Tracks| FOR MRS HEYEWHO| ASCOLLECTOR, NT | LURED AWAY 85. Surprised at the Lack of a Crowd in the infield and INIURES FOUR RIDERS, WRECKS MONORAIL CAR dents in Demonstration Ride to New Rochelle. The prospect of the sale of a motor car to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph KE. Ward of No, 2% Manhattan street by the Re- public Motorcar Company of Fifty-sev- enth street and Seventh avenue dwin- with the prospective c tomers nursing severe bruises and lace even-year-old Peter Dobbs jr. 52 West One Hundred and big touring car to run out to Welch's home in New Rochelle. The Wards Mked the car and needed only this jaunt to clinch purchase, ‘The demonstrators were taking the car up the avenue, just above Maniiattal of the best testing places for a car's hilleclimbing ability. their intention to jeep @rade at Amsterdam treet, They were Griving not more than fifteen miles an hour when the little Dobbs boy ran directly in the path of the machine. West tried to swing out, but It was too tat ‘The injured lad was taken to the J. Hood Wright Hospital, where he dicd an hour later. The police did not hold the motorists, as the accident was ob- viously unavoidable, and the pa: giving their names, drove on toward ‘New Rochell The accident road he sent mugt , after have affected Weat's nerve, for while running down Pelham Parkway near the City Island the machine head on against one of the monorail care cross- in, ig the parkway. hurled to the street, worst hurt, suffering a broken arm and possible internal injuries. bile was wrecked beyond repair. Every one in the motor car was thrown out ani! several passengers in the monorail car were West was the iia AGED COUPLE SOLVES PROBLEM BY LIVING ON FOUR CENTS A DAY Mass, Four cents a day is the sum WORCESTER, lotted to table expenses by cus M. Wood and Webster. Mr. three years old. three months, has improved in that period. have to eat The expenditures have been tion In the Wood household for Mr. Wood says he health during Here is what they his wife of Wood in seventy- ‘estricted n opera BREAKFAST. Doughnuts and Bread, Frie@ Cornmeal Mush, Pudding, Butter and Grape Jelly. Tomato Soup, Grape Jelly, Breed and Butter, Donghan’s, Cracked Wheat and Mus. SUPPER. Buckwheat Oakes and Gravy, Butter, Plum Jeuly, Cracked Wheat and Tea. To lve on the four-cent basta, it Is necessary to have a bit of land, on which Mr, Wood says, to raise vegetables. this and 4 house to live in, he $1,000 is sufficient declares, maintain him f If one Mfetime. June 7. The automo- has $15,000 ALIMONY IMITCHELSWORN GAY LFEOF GY = WANTED $78,000) UT OF CITY RAGE WIFE, SAYS BATTOG to “For the People to Say,” He]Whitestane Society WasTéd Says When Questioned’ | Dull for Her, Asserts Hii About Mayoralty. SAYS John Purroy Mitchel, self-styled an A woman, belleved to be Mra, Rie “accident tn polities amd a municipal ard Battin, of Whitestone, La J, 6a &, storm centre almost from the day he! man believed to be “Ralph Browne” Git became President of the Board of Akier-| co-respondent named by young Beste’ men four years age, was sworn tn as| a euit for absolute divorce, med i Ge” Collector of the Port of New York to- ‘Qte @ay—the most powerful Federal of-| morni fee sritatn Presiaes t Wilson's gift to &| house at No. 20 West Twentynine. jew Yorker. Venerable U; 8. Commis- stoner John A. Shields administered the | **Teet: After repeated knocking at Gp’ Dresence of two| 400r, the man stuck out his hese ena! hundred city oMeiale, Federal officers | demanded the caller's business. © id Government employees in the big] On learning it was @ reporter rem ante-room. ‘ ‘The Evening World the man shoute@:. Collector Mitchel's Induction into of-| “Why don't you get the h—i out. tte oe Futee tan. Karger d here and let us alone? We have nothing Cotestor sent bred is! coigr to wy and won't see anybody. Gat ald It would be his alm te continue the | %t E eplendi@ administration of Mr. Loeb.| The proprietor of the rooming howls Both posed for a dosen cameras and| sald he had just learned who the, geet, then the swarm of custome officigls| pants of the room were and that he ied. filed in and shook the hand of their ordered them to vacate the room tp: new superior. noon to-day. Before the long line was half ex- Ralp! Dera! with the haveted Mr. ‘Mitchet'e erstwhile cul-| pinvertona called et The ihveaing Wart leagues on the Boi of Egtimate, with Borough Presidente MeAneny and| Mice to<iay. The papers in Battia'y, Gteers and a dosen or more Aldermen, |Sult and the previous newspaper’ Be’ © |) crowded in to offer congratulations | Counts had given him the ‘The ceremony over, the new Collector, | that he was the man meant by the youngest to attain such distinction, | Browne” named as corespondent. —. .«) escaped into this executive chamber,| “I never met Mrs. Battin or Battin dm - ‘where assistants : ” wtuah peben Pregalhg — vege ft! my life" sald Browne “I tive with Collector wrote hie signature to the|™Y mother at No, 1 Manhattan axenae Papers with another group of friends | #"d I have had nothing to do with this waiting to further fellcitate him. case, How my name got mixed upiie’ “These are not appointments,” eain| it I can't Imagine, It hae hort meta IT’S SUFFICIE Will Support ‘Her and Children “in Manner to Which They’re Entitled,” Says Court. , tn teat room of sleet Ae he forecasted = fow weeks ago in a tart and pithy address from the bench upon the subject of woman's extrava- wance and @ wife's inclination to ‘work 4 good thing,” Justice Aspinall refused, in his Gecieton handed down ‘n the Brooklyn Supreme Court to-day, to wrant Mra, George Gustav Heye the $78,- 000 alimony ehe asks fur, pending the settlement of her divorce suit sgainst her millionaire husband A niggardly $15,000 a year, Instead of $78,000, and counsel foes of $2,600, instead of the $1600) prayéd for by Mre. Heye's attorneys, was what Justice Aspinall set down as “sufficient for the maintenance of the plaintiff and her two ehildren in the manner to which they are entitled” and @ just recompense for the arduous labors of Mra. He advisers. HEYE 18 NO LONGER A MILL- 1ONAIRE. “The plaintiff in this case asks $6,000 ® month alimony,” saya Justice As pinall in hin decision, “But the! Mr. Mitohel, glancing up at the anxious | my profession, and my efforts to get tf! ~ award of atimony 1d be ateictly | {cee before him. “I will not make any |touch with Battin or his \attermepy: (ienited to the wants at of | SPpointmente or changes for some time | Clarence Fox, have been in enin. There! life and the plainuft hi the Court that the wants and necessi- tlee of the life she is entitled to enjoy | the ceremont and while @ portion of| The divorce action of young should demand any such income. the crowd of Federal offee holdere—| ‘ook the social colony of Whitestone @y) ‘The plaintiff alleges her husband en-|"!! Republicans—realised that it 1s| surprise yeaterday. The couple wees pret Joye an income of $140, a| Within the new Collector's province to; sumed to be happlly married and @e' Weed them all out, thelr welcome to| voted to one another. Mrs, Battin, how Mitchel wae generous. In his pri-| ever, was of making trips pers Me) haga Collector was close] to New York several times a Weelte atant Secretary of State | shopp! zcursions, she sonal accounte, shows that Dudiey Field: Malong, who, Mr. Mitchel | On one o yoremptir Aasets now amount only to $393,000 and|Mce sald, would make an ideal Collec- that his income during the past three | tor. a years has been only $30,000, The new Collector is not yet thirty- with her two children left Whitestqpa, ‘Under these circumstances the Court| four years old. ‘He lea frank opponent | and disappeared. a {s of the opinion that $1,260 a month witl| Of Tammany Hal, proferzing to accent! ‘The two children, a boy and. gtrl, = be suMicient for the maintenance of the) the progressive creed of Deuceracy as|were by Mrs, Battin's marriage plaintif? and those dependent upon her | Mis political faith,» > toe to one Homann of Broeklyn, who. In the manner to which they are an- SS SESSESSESES lmitted her to get a divorce titled." sliuw $73,000 uiimony to any woman. {years ago. After taking the childfem During the course of the lengthy cases New York society women live too/to York Mra, Battin eent theeoy gument arising out of Mr. Heye's! high. Y go to fashionable hotels, | resistance to the unusual amount of| drink highballs and emoke cigarettes in: eae sen ane oe allmony demanded by wite, it was] Send of aiaving at home and trying to! weiends of Battin ew “Browne” ond. ke their husbands happy. They ride brought out’ that, though Mr. Heye en-|™ her together, it is alleged, reported Joyed considerably moi oP hate ioe oak’ Chips heey anemee: Sone ct " on than a million |in their laps and when they are marriea | the fact to the husband, Detectives were: when he married ten years ago, bi8/to a poor man unfortunate enough to| engaged and trailed the couple te a wife's expenditures, including automo-/have a million dollars, they come into| rooming house on Thirty-fourth street. bilea, jewels, country houses and other | court and say their ‘soclal pobifion’ re- In an ‘ appurtenances of social life, had cut his | ‘ulres exorbitant altmony, the couple moved to the T “This woman has a noft thing and wh an extent that he watlane has lost him. She'll never get | Miret, Reved, where. Mire. Rue t Browne.” On May 3 the your metren _ ing $78,000 from me, She has been work-| located and served Tuesday with the of $2,000 a month | fy, man like « nd haa| papers in her husband's divorce actien. eye had bought &/ succeeded tn getting Battin, who is secretary of the tts for her parents! him fo: These| wood Company, manufacturers of them $300 @ month | young hold of rich men | ware at No. 16 Reade street, refused 2 ow on which to live. and with them as long as they discuss the caso at any JUDGE DECLARES SHE HAS BEEN|°A set money ‘out of them, wut as| 44y 10 hn to. ons F y that there ti (28 “WORKING” HEVYE ALIMONY. |{hem, they are done with him.” "| any possfullity of a reonciiiation;” be said. ‘“There'is no chance for t them, they are done with him.” Aspinall} Justice Aspinall is « bechelor, by the can never forgive her. The Thing ig gone too far, The papers are served, have all the evidence I need and that with what appeared to| W&7: Sndeavor te vcink tha| Mrs. Heye, in her appilgation for i financial harpoon as far as possible| Ore’, naines Myrtle Vinoen as co-re all there is to It. For my wife, I only say that ehe often com: the duliness of Whitestone and Into her husband's bank account, After |Svondent. alleges her husband has been the gayer life of the city.” “I merely Mine Vi hearing the arguments of her counsel aged "helt rriage. aoa tek ‘that day, he broke out: taken the co-respondent on voyages to “You can be absolutely certain I won't Ithe Went Indies and Panama with him. vy In the Still Waters of the Hudson at the Foot of 79th Street and Riverside Drive Lies the Old- est and Most Remarkable Ship in the World } The Old British “a Convict Ship | This Wonderful Vesecl Has Made History| Throagh, Throo Centuries, She Marked the Beginning and the huu of Ragiaad's Meseirous tena! System. tite In the Oldest Bhip in the World and the enviet Bhip Left Afient Out of That Dread whee, Balled the Seven eas tn 1700 A. D. wien ° tal Fleet of Mette Abe Ie Uneh After All These Years, Nething r |] Crucitics aad Barbarities Practiced Upon Them, Aboard Her Avo Now Shown, im Their Original State, All the Airless Death Chambers ‘ondemned the Whipping Post Mongcles, the Tranding Irene: the Punishment Balle, ihe LeadencTioped Poors «rm pay ~ 3 tality f * Being Omitted but Her Muman Freight and Their sufferings trom (> it ty Coffin Bath and the Other Fiendish Inventions of Man's 0 His Felluw Man, She Has Held Lurid Horror and Dreadful lee Bealde Which Even the Terrible Stories o euttea apd the Spanish Inquisition Pal ignificame, From K mast She Crice Aloud the Greatest Lessun the World Has Ever Kaowa im the Mistery | @ Bleck Mele of Cale ie ihe f \]]| Wregress and Civilisation, i] The Regular Price of Admission is fixed firmly at 50 Cents, but If. EVENING WORLD READERS can save half price on all tickets f 13 ! Emperors, Kings, G \[] vou, Too, Will Be eth Wealthy Amoric Ing O14 Uriso: Cantles and Their Dungeons, Con: Cartare Brings You to the Very Anchorage @f the \ and Xan Noto! Floating Known, When Bhe Hap Gone She Will Never Return, Will Then Always Regret Your Missed Opportunity, Roaily Golng ty Mise ‘This Profound Iilustration of or of the Hotterment of the Age? ‘ou Owe You was che Study of This Lemon in Human’ Progr ri« Throughout the Civiltsed World re the Heon Opened for Insp jas Received ‘of tho Clergy of All: Denominations, chad FROM IO Ara TO 18 Pe The Conries one ' Writers Found Her of treordinary Survival of a Age. Clip this Coupon. It is Worth 25e¢ COUPON TWENTY-FIVE CENT # pend Millions Annually in Burope, Vielt- To-Day a Hive O'eat™ Prison the World Has ver You Are You viet 17 the Buppo Now OF CONVICT

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