Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Sisth Article of a Sere | SIFFPING BEAUTY |ROVALTY AND COURT | ANAT Fr ) mollis DREN STATE TO} peeore per. ‘‘Unattractive Women Should Never Marry; pele SEE ASCOT'S RAGES piel. “t 3 They Are Better Off Single,’’ Says a Reade potas Bay wen me, i WS A STencanaeHeR, Bur Way WOT SPEND The CAM CE CS AAD YO Ce of sence 0 te 2 _ After Talk With Friend From Washington. going back to my prison of wnbditions, Probably I'll sail jay or Saturday for London. It’s my wieh, but I'm going.” . Olga Golitsine, who came to rica to be an actress but was in- to go home by the Czar, flashed ‘Drief interview to an Evening World wr at the Holland, No, @ West ty-sizth street. She was going to more but a meddling ‘phone operator ized ithe line out. kK hen the runaway Princess reached Holland at 10 o'clock Monday night whence no one acquainted with her venture to say, two me bly detectives, were dogsin: eps. young woman left a taxicab which Ww up in front of the walked in. She carried her gri hie morning at what he saw en one of the benches on the north side, near Univer- Ht H & i ti i ; E a8} i “While Women Are Pro- gressing They Are Los- ae 0 : ing Their Charms, and| |) ay) i . Vi Whi When They Fail to : Si tr i ifm Agtectives walked into the Charm Men— Look i A | | other went out and camped onal Who Signs Herself ‘ ie ' 0 1 mag aor me rn, wen mere] «Past Sixty.” ce, ie a jpn ry fastened on the Holland entrance. 1 i ' he other man had left. = fe ta admitted that the two men were| Mira. “P. R. F.”” Makes Zipne ected in the losty last nisnt| Herself Attractive by sertnim cv. ant ue eu et| Gioing Her Husband a Powder the Morning After He Has Had a Drop Too Much. nf i | fe t > aA =e the mystery of her appearance in euch ® place, and he returned in ten min- utes. . VIAL FALLS FROM SKIRT; RE- VEALS 6UICIDE ATTEMPT. The woman had slipped from the bench to the ground, and as Brannigan bent over her @ vial fell from the folds of her skirt to the ground. dt had con- piv a 6 per cent. solution of carbolie acid. Brannigan sent one leborer for @ po- Nceman and another to send in an am- bulance call to Bt. Vincent's Hospital. He himself ran for a milk wagon which he eaw jum outside the park. He grabbed two bottles of milk. Without ceremony, he opened the mouth of the unconscious woman and poured milk Gown her thmat. He had expended neairy all the contents of both botties when Policeman Rich of the Mercer street police station arrived and at his heola came Dr. Riley with the am- bulance from St, Vincent's Hospital. ‘The woman was taken to the hospital, erear= I eS uti) Special Clearance Sale | Washable Dress Fabrics in White and not wish to see. According to a guest in the house ho became acquaintted with the rov- ng princess, eluded her guardians Monday ning and went out Ban old acquaintance, who had the Atlantic with Princess Olga, RIEND ARRIVES AND RECON- CILIATION FOLLOWS. From the told by this newly- ° acquaintance the Princess heard her old friend had come to New 7 from Washington on Sunday right, [Raving learned through the Ruselan bassy that the royal wanderer's TT 18 SURPMSING YO SEB The AMOUNT y OF SIGE Mem Uno — FRIEDMANN SAILS FOR BERLIN AFTER By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “I am an old lady, and while I believe that the world is getting better and women are progressing, still they are losing their charms. And when women fail to charm men—look out! When a man agrees to pay & Woman's board for life he must get men by their charms, but they do not let men know it. PAST SIXTY. MAKES HERSELF ATTRACTIVE Dear Madam: If you care to hear SSSe tntity and hiding place in this city been discovered. ‘The friend stayed at the Astor Hotel jay afternoon and night, and it there that the Princess went in taxicab, A reconciliation, it is was effected between the two. h had quarreled when the princess forced to leave Washington and to New York in search of em- mt on the stag morning about 10 o'clock the old @ middle-aged woman, whose "mame could not be learned, called up the princess from the Astor Hotel and f) said gaodby to her. The chancery of the Russian Consulate, et No, 82 Washington Square North, was to-day. It was stated by attaches they were leaving the offices that the jeting Consul had been called out to at- 4 a reception in his official capacity would not return for the day. It was etated that the Russian Govern- ent usually return its destit jubjects Russia from the United States over North German-Lioyd or Hamburg: merican Mnes, Tuere is a salling on ureaday and one on Saturday. George A. Campbell, ‘examiner for State Medical Board, which deports insane and indigent aliens, said to- that there was no question but that princess was a real princess, as the called him up in explaining that MILITANTS BAT 10 PRIN FR COASPRAC ss Annie Kenney Gets 18 Months and Mrs, Saunders 15 Months, & This "4 FALONDON, June 17.—8tz of the most minent leaders of the militant Suf- jettes organization and one of their @upportere were to-day fuund st the Central Criminal Court of to comit malicious damase ty. The trial had lasted se 1 o @ women wore -efficials of the ’e Gocia} and Political Union and of Mrs, Pankhurst, They were Harriet Kerr, Miss Agnes Lake, Rachel Barrett, Mra, Beatrice Miss Annie Kenney and Miss Lennox while the man was Edwy ton an analytical chemist. Phillimore passed sentence temperate weather and decree that out and hustle, and a woman shoul: be lovable, charming and his ‘pal. Unattractive women should never marry. They are cold, unemotional, deficient in charm. This applies par- ticularly to those of the mental tem- Deraments. They are better off single.” . I trust the old lady who signs “Past Sixty” to the views I have quoted is unduly pessimistic to woman's waning attractiveness, And I think she is, “When the sun grows cold and the cease to be charming to men and men will cease to monopolize woman's attention. Neither can I agree with the view that cold, une- motional persons should never marry. One might as well abolish the whole year should sizzle with {te present fervor as to insist upon a race without cold and unemotional members. They are needed to strike a balance. But if our very inter- esting old lady really believes that Patible; she should study the lives of women most distinguished in the! brain power and charm are incom- arts and in history, and I think she Will change her mind. Five hundred years ago there were, 98 the: © to-day, some charming w elligent women and some wom intelligent and charmi were the women who made history. Those who were simply charm- ing lived and loved their little day and were fgrgotten. Those who were simply intelligent, e# a rule achieve the vicarious immortality that I believe there are more of such women alive to-day than ever before, because charming women no longer find it unnecessary to be intelligent, and in- telligent women no longer disdain to be charming. WHY ARE THEY BETTER O SINGLE? Moult to understand the point of @ person who says “women ntal temperaments are better " The brilliant man who mar- his children, and the mascull en to prefer brains to beauty when both are not attainable in @ wife has of course & deprecatory effect on the intellectual ra There ts @ good old tradition, of course, that woman is merely the after- math of creation; that euch brain as she has should serve merely as a sort of in- tellectual chaser for the heavier, more stimulating mind of the male, Our in- teresting Vice-President put this view An old question is revived by the letter of another reader, a widower, who d has lost as his ideal attractiveness and who pr belief that “teue love comes only once in w lifetim T really don't know whether this is true or From oe frequency with which ber: and women remarry, presley ‘% one is led to But om the other hen@, love seems essentially a youthful feel- img, and it may be that persons Who have passed out of the trem- ulous twenties never experience again an exaltation equal to that of first oF early love, There Seems to be @ widespread ana well- founded belief that a woman never loves any one else so much as bir first love, but men, om the con- trary, are scoused of an abiding preference for the last love, The letters of Evening World readers to which I Fred follow: VIEWS OF A WOMAN WHO 13 SIXTY YEARS YOUNG, Dear Madam: I am an old lady, and while I be¥ve that the world ie getting better and women are atl they are losing When women to charm —look out! man agrees to pay board for life he must get out and hustle, and @ woman should be lovable, charming and his “pal.” Women ahould cultivate charm, for it is woman's greatest weapon, It is surprising to see the amount of single m who ere confirmed bachelors, Some unattractive ‘women should never marry any- how. They are cold, unemotional, Geficient in charm; this applies particularly to those of the men- tal temperaments, ‘ They are ber- ter off single. Cloves women cam aiwaye rule ved inen| the opinion of @ happily marri:d woman on how to be atcract:ve, you may peruse my offering. I have been married finances—meaning that I income and how it is epent, The amount I spend on clothei never questions, and I hi beautiful home, with nothing to do but what I choose, Now, here is what I choose to do: I devote my tirfe to my hus- band and our home, I underwear, cook ot attend to the buying of ell his with the exception of his sive business, I asked him to send a typewriter to our hofne that I might have the pleasue of his company on days when the only demand on his time was the writ- ing of letters, Yen, he has a stenographer in hin office, but why not spend the day with me, and dictate to me, since I have a good education, and am only too glad to be of service to nim? In rer turn, he has banked all our sav: ings in my name, thereby proving hia confidence in me, He ts « golf fiend if ever there was one, but [ do not begrudge him, his pleasure, and when he comes rome at $20 P, M. instead of 6 P. M., I have @inner ordered and waiting for him. If he has had one highball | too many I give him a powder the following morning, W' e happy beyond words. . F. ATTRACTIVE A TRUE WIFE. Dear Madam: I nad the good fortune to be happily married to fg woman who knew how to be at- tractive. I have not known before nor will again experience per- fect happiness, except during the five years she was left with me, Though only a few years in tho country, #he made $25 9 week as an expert on Infants’ wear, fic., which position she gave up to be my bride, although I was not mak- ing near that amount at the time, 5 combined all the best quall- thes of her race, with none of their failings. A true wife and devoted mother, The longer she is dead the more I miss her, and the more I realize that 1t would be Impossl- ble to replace her, as true love, I be! ‘only comes once in life; and ither one of the lovers die the living one should bear his or her cross during the remainder ‘of lite, no matter how hard cross {8 to be Devotion, “the last love of wo! )" I had on her @eatnoed. What more can any man ask for? So long as the world produces such women there is no fear for the race, Awivowen, Out of Work, He Ends His Life, Despondent over his futile three ;months’ search for work as a knitte: Morris Gottesman, twenty-six years of No, 116 Attorney streot, shot him | through the heart early to-day. He wie found by Mrs. Philip Cohen, with who he lo@ged, when she went to vee why tle gee wes burning. é AN EXPLANATION He Contends Claims Which He Never Made Were Attributed to Him. Dr, Fi ich Frans Friedmann, who came to this country in January to ex- ploit hie method of treating tubercu- losie with a vaccine compounded from cultures taken from a turtle, sailed on his way to his home in Berlin to-day on the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse of the North German Lioyd ling He gave @ut to reportera » typewritten atate- ment which was tn part as follows: “I originally intended to leave thie country much earlier, but circumstances kept me here, A great many exagger- ated and extravagant claims have been imputed to me which I" never made. *| The actual claims I make for my rem- edy and treatment are contained in a report submitted by President Taft to the Senate of the United States (Wash- ington Government Printing Office, Jan. 13, 1913.), “I repeat thone claims word for word and I have no doubt t the medical fraternity will acknowledge and recog- nize them. “I am thankful for the courtesies shown to me here, and am only sorry that when I frat arrived, not knowing the language and customs of the coun- try, I came into bad hands, but I am pleased to state that I leave my treat- ment here in the best of hands, in the he de of those who will follow the work from a sclentitic standpoint, “There has not been time to prove all my clatms, und, of course, I do not consider any of the cases I have treated in this country closed, the statements of certain mombers of the medical profession notwithstanding.” Dr. Friedmann said that Dr, Mann- helmer’s report of the patients treated unger his supervision—though he said he did not care to mention the physi- clan by nage—Was of no value. The Mannheimer patients, ho sald, had only one treatment out of the two or many mote which were essential, He as- serted that every patient who had been inoculated wo treated on applica tion by phy s here who had been instructed in the ¥riedmann method, io BF ae FATAL BOMB SENT BY MAIL. SHERBROOKE, Que June 1. Mrs, Theodore Bilodeau was killed and Miss Bilodeau, her sister-in-law was wounded to-day bya bomb recelved through the mails. The was wrecked, Tie package arrived the two wo ying th strings, wh Mrs, Bilodeau was @ Bilodeau, a contractor. house out noon and The po, , | are trying to trace the parkage through | letter which had inside the package containing the bomb, The writing upon these pieces te in Freach. where they worked aver her for two hours before there was a gleam of con- acioushess, With a weary little sigh and a wan smile she opened her eyes. A little later they asked her name end she told the doctors and the policeman that she was Margaret Noonan, twenty- nine yturs old, and lived at No, S14 West Ninety-fourth atreet. She added that if they rang up Riverside 7282 and called for Miss Ward they would get all the information they desired, Then she emiled again and closed her eyes. WALKED STREETS ALL NIGHT, DECIDED ON SUICIDE. ‘There was no Miss Ward at the ad- dress given, but In answer to the phone a Mra, Cooper said that she did not now any Miss Noonan, Then they gave her @ description of the would-be sul- cide, saying that sho was 6 foot 7 inchos, with blue eyes and light hair, and told her how she was dresse!. Mrs. Cooper grew excited, and eatd that the descrip- tion answered that of Miss Ward, who had been living there, Couper, after a short talk with thought that her right ni Noonan. “{ have known her for four years,” salad Mrs. Cooper, “but I much of her history bef New York. I have ai ‘wa; ambitious for success on the stage, and that ehe was niding from her family because they opposed her, “For several weeks until last Satur- day she was my guest. She left then, saying she wanted to live at a place nearer to the theatres. She had been studying manicuring, believing that could earn money that way uni had gained a standing on the which would pay hi xpenses, As soon an the hospital pe will let her go I shall take her back to my home and ve now that her y house waw that was penniloss and wanted to econ- ceal her need from me—Wwhich was very foolish of her. od ce Gift to Germany. BERL June 17.—Andrew Carnegle to-day gaye $25,000 to the G an Peace Boclety, is to p on Great whose prinel good relations The Guavanteed Remedy fo; Vomen if sud women who acounter eth. of stomach packuche and nes know that) Crecnpine gives quick ond sure res LAs thepreseri inev: ef w promiact N (eS SSS — 436440-442 WEST SIG ST. RUG*°CARPET CLEANSING s it pera! Be uf B Remnants of Imported Novelties, Linens, Shirtings, etc., in White mostly in dress lengths, greatly close out. ' James McCutcheon & Co., 5th Ave., 38d & 34th Sts. al An exceptional parchase of Women’s Tub Silk Shirts of the $3 variety tomorrow $2 This is just another example Sow opitiots new lues in owerenr regular three jar value, but thanks to the on which we bought them, will be special price of two dollars di tomorrow. made of fine tub silk, in smart stripes, excellent assortment of modish colorings. A perfectly plain tub waist, with flat sailor collar, patch pocket, three- quarter slecves and French cuffs, ‘Yet made 2o well that its plainness is a thing of beauty. Mala Fleer. Saks & Company Broadway at 34th Street. Parte ia 5 # i