The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1913, Page 3

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4 MERCURY TABLETS | AS HEADACHE CURE Maude Butler Mistakes Medi- cine in Dark, but May Recover. “The Best Kisses Come From Smith College,’ Asserts M. Emile Des- champs Like a Blow, and Grad- uates of Bryn Mawr Kiss Without Batting an Eye.” “Ravishing Kissof Mount Holyoke Girle Can Only SWALLOWS 22 GRAINS. Girl Found by Mother Awak- “Kiss of a Vassar Girl Ie | THE EVENING WORLD, A BEAUTY OF THE SMaRT SET WAS BEEN SEEN 7O SELL NER MISSES AT A CHARITY BAZAARS MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, GIRL OF 13 TAKES | American Girls as We Don’t Know Them, Seen by Frenchrian Who Thinks He Does' 1918.° COBB COMES BACK WITH SAD NEWS OF IMULVANEY'S DEATH Humorist Fed a Phe a Pleasant Day, Nevertheless, With Rud- yard Kipling. CHICAGO HAS THE ASgPTIC IriSS HE GOT\“ATMOSPHERE.” Got It in London, Paris, Vienna, Berlin and in lt to keep your canes off the paint. The next stopping place is only the beginning of another Jaunt to somo | other sightsecing spot. The tourists J continually ask: ‘What was that last | place ¢ stopped att “Some day I'm going to make @ real trip timugh Burope, but {f anybody; | wants to take @ touriet trip through nee, Germany, Auatela, Italy and mgiand, (here ie a cheaper way of do-~ | ing It than sailing across the ocean, Go jdown there near the Hattery and buy @ thousand labels and have them pasted on your trunks, They will allege that lhe trunks have travelled from Munich to Moscow, from the North Sea to the | Alps, or any other place that your fancy SHOPPING EARLY FOR XMAS, BOYS ROUSE A “COP” may wart to take you. You seo Just as Wit, at 2 A. M., Through much woking at your labels as on one of tho personally conducted trips that a Cellar. I took,” Two school boys who had decided to 4o their Christmas shopping early, and ‘by the light of the moon, were seen coming out of the cellar at No, 23 Amaterdam avenue at 2A. M. to-day b; Policeman Rosenburm who was crossing the avenue at One Hundred and Sizty- Afth street —___— 4 WILL-('-THE WISP CHARLES B. STOVER They Shopped Too Early, To ened by Groans and Be Compared to a Vol- Prompt Aid Given. cano.” Si Be American Girl Bus- ; ie ited Mitosae years old, of tles About, Makes Her- ss my 5 posal self Known, Offers Her- &t Ninety-seventh street and Amster-| self,’ dam avenue and is a singer and pianist of ability, was taken to the Reception Hospital early to-day suffering trom dichloride of mercury poisoning. The Bolice report she took twenty-two grains of the poison by mistake At 230 A. M. Policeman Pessoni of the West One Hundredth street station was on fixed post at Ninetieth street and Columbus avenue when a woman in nightgowa and slippers ren up and asked him to get her a doctor. , “Don't get excited,” he replied. ‘Tell me what's the matter and I'll call an ambulance if it’s necessary.” “I don't want an ambulance,” ghe re plied. “I want @ doctor, Hurry and wot one.” When one in the neighborhood was roused the woman explained that her daughter bad taken some sort of poison, thinking it was headache tablets. A grocer was awakened and milk, flour and eggs wore bought. Dr. De Passa was later called f-om Polyclinic Hospl- tal and took the girl to Reception Hos- pital, Mrs. Butler said Maude played and sang for company last night and went to bed at 9 o'clock. Early to-day the mother was awakened by groans from the bath room and found her on the floor, deathly etck. She could not ex- plain what had happened. Mre. Butler said she had dichloride “tablets, bought when there was a case of typhotd fever in the family, and some headache tablets in her trunk. The girl . aWoke with @ violent headache, accord- ing to the mother, and got the wrong tablets. It is believed she was relieved of most of the poison and will recover. ———___ HIS RIG IS ALL WHITE, STILL AUTO BUMPS IT ‘Motorfst, ‘Arrested, Leaves Car in Front of Station House for Bail, John Sullivan, twenty-four, of No. 276 West One Hundred and Seventeenth street, was driving a Borden's milk wagon along Cathedral Parkway, near Bt. John the Divine’s, early to-day, whistling to his horse. His wagon was white and visible for a block, while to United States. take your choice. Not football, nor even baseball, but kissing te the national Professors of the gentle art abound even in Boston. girls’ college has its own style of osculation—you pay your money and you Emile Deschamps tells you all about it in his new book, “Lea Femmes d'Oncle Sam" (Uncle Sam's Women), which assuredly proves him to be the legitimate successor to Maz O'Rell. achievements as traveller and Ktterateur, M. Deschamps must qualify as the greatest Uving authority on the nature and habits of the American Kissing-bug. After you have read the following description you will prob- ort in the ably find that he knowe much more about it than you do. Translated By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. CHAPTER I. The Great american Sport of Being the country where they talk Most of love, the United States ought to be tlhe land where they talk most of kisses, One often sees. where one would scarcely ex- pect to meet it this manifestation o ¢ human affection, which ally fei the white light of publicity, In the Police Court a 4 duty very seriously order a hus- band to kiss his his wife twice daily. Even in politics a Governor of Kansas m 196 falled of renomination because he was accused of having sought to kiss the wife of his predeceasor. ‘The American woman, a practical soul, knows how to extract a profit from everything, a all from ber beauty. her power, or rather the weakness, of men, and she uses and abuses it, As a practical woman, she uses it often in a very unexpected fash- fon, A kiss has for her rtain valuation, in coin of the realm or checks, and taken without authorization, it has often been paid for very dearly. A lover in Chi- cago met his sweetheart of yesterday on the street and kissed her—from old habit—against her will, Four thousand dollars damnges, decided a Judge be- fore whom he was brought, having been arrested like a pickpocket. OTHER DANGERS ATTENOANS UPON KISSING. A hundred thousand dollare is de- manded for a single kiss, and three cents or ten thousand dollars is rr celved. The courts in the United States are the places where a lounger can best amuse himscif. A young woman in New York attempted to commit suicide the tailboard swung a lighted lantern. Nevertheless a big automobile belted the wagon from the hear and turned it over, and the next Sullivan knew his horse was on its back with its feet kicking in midair, milk was scattered everywhere and a policeman was help- ing bim up. be:ause her husband did not kiss her. He was taken to the Knickerbocker | Arrested, since suicide is a misdemeanor, Hospital suffering from internal in-}ghv was about to be sentenced when a juries and @ broken leg. ‘The owner afd driver of the auto said he was Frederick Hobby of No. 17 Lincoln avenue, Greenwich, Conn, He had two friends in the oar, but none of them happened to #ee the milk wagon On Sullivan's complaint Hobby was is from her husband saved her from prison. A young «irl has her fiance arrested because he kisses her too often and Is the cause of th: dinner burning on the stove. The judge, after a written prom- fn Boston a series of conferences on ‘the kiss. It had some success, but his @ppeal for demonstrations on himeelf remaine@ without eoho. That was too much. Besides, the lecturer had just shown that the “nectar of Venus,” as he defined {t, demanded solitude and darkness. On the subject of the stu dents in women's colleges he sald: COLLEGE GIRLS ARE KNOWN BY “One may tell by the way in which ® young girl receives or gives a kiss (I am talking here of the kiss that is given on the lips, the American kixs) from which college she has graduated. The best kissera come from Smith Col- lege, although girls from the Har- Annex pi r kileses to bonbor ‘The ground falls from under their feet, and if they do not touch the stars It is because their weight prevents. The kiss of Vassar girls is like a blow. The graduates.of Bryn Mawr kiss without batting an eye, The ravishing kiss of Mount Holyoke girls can only be com- Pared to a volcano” In the newapapers may be read inter- minable discussion as to the length of @ kiss, the kiss of Jove, the kiss of friendship, and the different ways of giving them, with suggestive illustra- thons, and there has even been estab- Mshed the record of time made by a new champion of this American sport. re even police regulations limit. ing the time which two lovers may to this public expression of their aff tion. ~ A bishop, following a discussion of the matter, preached a sermon against the “ministerial kisa"—the habit pastors have of kissing on the forehead, eyes, cheeks or lips the young women of their parish, He also opposed the dream kiss, the forty-second kiss, the soul kiss, the waltz kiss and some others less im- portant. This “ministerial kiss” has Each Tn addition to hia other for end and aim, take piace ‘Marriag open! Marriage, which brings to the Buro- Pean woman, except in England, an @ccession of Uberty, means for American woman a certain constraint, @ sort of dependence, She is absolutely free when she is a young girl She begins to feel the fetters at firat during the engagement period, later, in mar- riage. She knows it, but her passion for novelty, change, the unknown, pleasure and, above all, the desire of freeing herself from work are sufficient compensations. Married, she will no longer work, her husband will toll for her, and it is in her opinion his finest quality, almost his only reason for be- gines MAYOR WILL SIGN NEW LAW 10 CURB MAIL AUTO TRUCKS This Will Conga The Eve- ning World’s Victory Over Juggernauts. Mayor Kline will aign the ordinance amendment which takes United States mail trucks out of the class of fire en- and ambulances and compels the Neck, Too. Irvin 8. Cobb, humorist, bon vivant, IS IN NEW ORLEANS Ail around entertainer, traveller ana] ©X°Head of Park Department now globe trotter, returned on the) Seen There by a Friend— North German Lioyd steamer Berlin Resignation Made Public. to-day from a two montha' tour of Enrope ‘as Americans get tt.” Ho re-| turned minus twenty pounds of avoir. dupois which he carried away with him, | Latest news of Charles B. Stover, who He didn't say that he was glad to|has been giving an imitation of a t iback, be we an author of hif| healthy wilt-o'- ~the-wisp since last Oc- standing can’t ‘afford to deal in bro- mides. Thers were lines on his face, tober 16, fixes the hatitat of the former however, and wrinkles in Ms waletcoat| Park Commissionor as New Orleans, which no brush could paint away. But| He ls reported to have been seen there Maton to hin tale of wor, by @ friend. Mr. Cobb went away with a miasion,| On each of his various “appearances,” He wanted to learn how Americana|{n witely separated parte of the United go through Burope on the jump and] States, Mr, Stover hms expressed eur> portray what they sce while going over | prise that any comment was caused the hurdies. He had to take the| his method of going on @ vacation. He jumps himself to got the atmorphero, | neoma equally surprised now, according Ho had atmosphere with him all dur-|to report, though he might have twen ing the trip. He mot It in la belle} expected to get used to it. Paria He got it on the Adriatic, “I hadn't had @ vaodtion in seven fot it on the Rhine, He mot it in the} or eight years.” he in reported an say- peck. He had it for breakfast, lunch | ing, Juat thought I'd take one, and dimer. The only day of peace|and I dtd.” and rest he had was hie firat day in| Whatever fuse might have been oc- England, when he ran down into Sua-|casioned in the Pank Commisstoners @x to seo hin old friend, Rudyard] office by his wbsence Mr. Stover sald Kipling. He brings back the aad news |he had settled by sending hia vestene- of the death of Mulvaney, tion to Mayor Kline and the Mayor “Kipling haa achieved the ambition of | made {t public to-day. It Im strictly every Englishman,” said Mr. Cobb, “He | formal and reads: haa become a country gentieman. Not that my friend Kipling wasn't always & gentleman, But there ia a distinction between @ gentleman and a» country ntioman in England. The latter car- ries with it a farm—s nice, beautiful farm. Rolling green land, well kept hedges, trimmed trees and Inwns, gable roots and dove cotea—that's the atuff. AND R MULVANEY HAS ‘The letter of resignation waa written PASSED AWAY IN INDIA. ‘on the official stationery of the New “‘Buaeex te all that it has been painted, | York Department of Parks Tt in beavtitul in appearance and it| Atthough Louls F. La Roche Mr. is Deautiful in legend. It has been a| Stover’s a@uccemsor, wonderful battlesround. At night the | from Stover Wednesday morning telling treea seem to whisper the loves and | of hin resignation, Mayer Kline ex- exploite of valiant knights, It was| plained to-day that he did mot receive there that they had the “War of the|the Stover resignation until late Roses," and—but why try to improve | Wednesday afternoon. on wetory? Let the dead and the beau-| “Even after having recetved the tiful rest. Kipling ts a live wire and | Stover resignation,” said Mayor Kitna, enjoys himself to the utmost, I asked | “I tried hard to find him, in the hope him why we hadn't heard from Mul- | that I would be able to induce him to vaney, and he told me sadly that Mul- | change his mind. I did not want any vaney was dead. He eaw him die and | radical changes in the administration, was at his funeral in Northern India, | which is just drawing to a clone. he sald, and asked me to be the bearer! +, suppose I might have given out of the aad news to Amerton. the news of the receipt of the Stover We had & lovely day's shooting.| resignation late Wednesday. Falling to ‘They shoot pheasants over there, You| reach Mr. Stover, I had nothing to have to atir the birds up and then kick \Nov.%, 1913, Hon. Ardoiph L, Kline: I hereby respectfully ten@ar my resignation from the office of Park Commiaaioner, to take effest on the earliest date on which Your Honor ean apoint my successor. Very re- spectfully, CHARLES B STOVER. received a letter Samuel Levy had just stored « large quantity of toys for the Christmas trade in the cellar, which ts underneath Bis store, and when the youthful “shop Dera” saw the policeman looking sus- Piclously at tho well-filled burlap begs they carried, dropped th and ran. Policeman Rosenbdurg ‘went after them, and by the time they had rounded inte, One Hundred and Sixty-sixth street wan saying uncomphimentary about the modern acheo! athigtie eon- tests that make such sq00@ aprinters out if the young idea, He finally caught ome of the boys, who said he was Alb ort irahan, twelve yeara old, of No, 604 West One Hundred and Aixty-sixth stfeet, At the Bt. Nicholas avenue at:stion the youngster aid his small comp amion who got sway was Patrick O'Neill, mine years old, also ‘of No, 604 Went One ‘Hundred and Slzsy- sixth street. tive Foley wat sent to the ad- dress and first caj.ied on the Brahans He wan told that Albert left to go to @ theatre and had not returned, Yes, they knew the O*Neilis who lived up- ataire, Mra. O'Neill told the detective Mescenger Is Caught Between Mev- ‘Twenty-seventh street, He was making ing. She keeps, nevertheless, always in them out of your way to get a fair ahot given rise to the expreasion “kissing Parson,” for waom men have not the least respect, but against whom they do not dare to rebel. | The Health Bureau of Chicago has published sanitary warning which ad- vines that before osculation the lips should be made aseptic by means of a olution of sulphate of copper or of boric acid, which amateur kissers might carry about with them in @ vial, Parents protested becauso the rector of @ church in West Hoboken, near New York, allowed young men and young women to kiss at leisure within the precincts of the church. The min- inter defended his lovers from the pulpit. erty, —SEE AFTER VOOD00 BAND Demand in Cuba That Ne; Protected by Politicians B Punished. HAVANA, Cuba, Dec, view the preservation of her entire lib- WHO SACRIFICED CHILO 1—A sensa- them to move through tho city's streets at a moderate rate of speed. This com- pletes the victory of The Evening World, which began the agitatio! net the gasoline Juggernauts which ahot through the bighways and by- ways, killing and maiming right and left and bidding defiance to the police. Mayor Kline will eign the amendment TORS to the speed ordinance some time late this afternoon or this evening. Uecause fe of preas of official business it has not | yet come to him, ‘Thirty days will elapse after the Mayor affixes his sig- nature before the new amendment be at them. 4 shotgun on the Ki “The hon {8 appalling. clan tick fean doing ti baggage in ar t? They handle t shape over the: Shooting pheasants In Eng- land is ike shooting ferrymcnte with sevond class, al- though there is nothing to atop him from going into @ first-class apartment. Tf the tleket collector ten’t in sight] © when you get to your destination you go and look him up and hand him your ticket. That is, you do if you're an Wnelishman, Can you imagine an Amer- your too, ‘They throw It out on the platform and delivertes and found the elevator with- He atart do but accept the resignation and name Mr, La Roche.” out by Policeman Dickey of the West , ‘Thirtleth street station end an embu- lance surgeon from New York Hospital. 1), when be comen tn tell him it son-in-law is dead. I'm his sone! but not the one that’s dead E. M. GATTLE & CO. Jewelers arrested and taken to the West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street station on @ charge of reckless driving and re- Jeased on leaving his machine in front of the station as ball for his appearance in Harlem Court to-day, 4+. Wagon Kills Old Man. An unidentified man was run over and killed shortly after 10 o'clock tis morning by a horse and wagon owned by the Brooklyn Napkin Supply Co, and driven by Herman Rosenblaum of No, 368 Miller’ avenue, The accident oocurred at Broadway and Myrtle ave- nue, Willlameburg, which ts a very crowded corner, The dead man was @bout seventy years old and 6 feet & inches in height. A key ring found tn nia pocket bore the name of J. EK. tse by the accused “not to kiss his fiancee More than ten times daily,” dis- mi:ses both, This last incident hap- pened in Jersey City, near ‘A young man who tried to pay without being formally authorized saw himself sentenced to four months in prison! ‘A beauty of the smart set haa been seen to sell her Kisses at a charity WAAARy for the benefit of the work, ‘They were even quoted at too high a price, more than they were worth— nothing but the aimple and Indifferent touch of rosy Ips on parchment-like eseors teach the best method for Kissing beloved lips, or simply the Ups of friends, with all the aerlousness of those in charge of conferences at the Sorbonne. Kelly and the initials L. L RR. One of these professors gave one day QUIT MEAT IF YOUR BACK HURTS, FLUSH YOUR KIDNEYS WITH SALTS ’] have rheumatic twinges. The uri Meat forms uric scid, which jou ar ial scfimrettsbanses sine clogs Kidneys, irritates get sore, water scalds pad youare ou ed to abe relief two or three times durin, Bladder or causes ihe id Rheumatism. (hey consult # good, reliable physi: at once or get from im your Pharmacist bout four ounces of Salts; take 8 tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kid- neys will then act fine. neu famous salts is made from the ac’ rt and lemon juice, Penal ish fie, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutral ida in the urine go it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is a life saver for regular * linea sehen mH is xia canpot jure an co 8 jerves- cont lithia-water drink, When you wake uP with backache and dull misery in the kid: gion it gene erally means you have been eating too reg meat, says a well-known authority, Meat forms uric acid which overwor! the kidneys in their effort to filter it {rom the blood and they become sort of pi pia aed andl Ip gy. When your kidneys slug clog you must relieve them eer tals your bowels, re- fe it all ier body's urinous sone! * else you have he, sic! diszy spells; your macaeh ih sours, ta le coated, and when the . essa ia DO YOUR OWN KISSING AND; HAVE IT OVER WITH. “My friends,” said he, “if you do not kins each other here you will kiss else- where, If you do not kiss among your- welves you will seek others to kiss you or to kiss, I am entirely in favor of this practice, and T hope it will bring you to the altar, where I shall be able) to marry you.” After this declaration of principles eminently tempting to his young lambs the indulgent and waggish rector should have had posted on the door of his church: “Here young lovers are allowed to kiss freely.” ‘The love of independence, of pleasure and the preoccupation of finding a hus- band dominate the entire existence of the young girl, This preoccupation i greater and shows itself differently than | in other countries. The French girl thinks of it perhaps as much, but she fe too dignified to talk about it, surveys the horizon and waits, patient or impatient, but alwa: fident. The Am seeks, searches, asks, inquires, busties about, makes herself known, offers herself. While in France the young girl pre- Berves an absolutely passive attitude and 1s sought by the men, in America the contrary i generally the case, So, in speaking of marriage, the expression “to catch a husband” is sacred and Is almost alwaye used. And there ts a reason for this attitude on the part of the woman, which reminds one of country where the birds hunt the hunter. The American is generally re- served in his attitude toward young Girls as soon as he begins tu work, He is suspicious, he fears the consequences, sometimes, of @ simple lift of the hat of # word, of a glance. In « word, he holds himself always on the defensive until he, in full independence, nus made his choice, So all the burning manifestations made by the women, They devote th selves to this openly, with the fullest confidence of their rights, All their attempts, end otruggion, with tion has heen caused here by the dix- | comes effective, covery of an alleged extensive organ- {zation among the negroes of Cuba for the practice of witchcraft or “voodoo- fem” and it is eald the negro wizards constitute a powerful trust. Tho reve jason was mado as @ sequel to the | recent murder of a white «irl atx years old in connection with a mys- torious method of healing a alck negro woman to whom the child's blood was | said to have been administered. Tt is generally reported that the ‘‘voo doolsts’ have relations with politicians, of the amendment. every contention who control thelr votes and protect them against the infliction of puntah- ment, Several crimes of a similar nature to the one which led to the discovery of the "voodoos" have been and editorial columna. Mayor Kline has more than once ex- pressed the opinion that the lit of casualties attributable to the mail autos te appalling, and he has announced in emphatic tama that even Govemment, motors are not vested with the right Although Mayor Kine haa not apoken for publication concerning his views on speeding auto mail wagons, te nevertheless known just what he thinks |COBB ADMITS HE HAS A MISGION. Mayor Kline bas closely followed the fight made by The Evening World to curb the sped of the| through the tourist's eyes. I suw it mati autos, He is thoroughly comver- sant with the argument and he approves made in the news| parties. you go and pick out your own baggage and tell your driver to cart it off. Wouldn't that syatem make @ great hit in this country? ‘ing only your own bagwage—what? Platinumemiths IN LIFE—AND EUROPE. “My mission was to see Burope or missed {t—you pay your money and take your choice. I joined several T had to—to see or not to see Burope, a# the average American secs or doeen't wee it. The guides are won- dere, They can answer fourteen ques- tions wt the same time. If you don't Get your answer, it ian’t the guides’ fault, They take you through Europe like they take you through the tube under the Hudson, Yo're on the to- Goldsanithe DISTINCTIVELY A JEWELRY HOUSE Comparison of Values Invited. FIFTH AVENUE AT 38TH STREET She | '/ TO ADVANCE SALARY CHECKS, Waldo Asks Comptroller te Pay Police in Time for Xmas, That the 11,000 men and women on the Police Department pay rol! may take part in the Christmas festivities Police Commissioner Waldo to-day sent a letter to Comptroller Prendergast ask- ing that the pay roll of the department for December be divided into two |parts so there will be a pay day on Dec. 16. Last year the Commissioner made « similar re@iest, which was granted, as this will probably be. Wood C Life, Paui Baraghi, a young wood carver who nad been here from Italy only a few snonthe, shot himself through t heart aud willed himself to-day la pe home of Mrs, Louise Baugnotott, Ni at Fiftyefirst street, with seg)ty Ex-Lax. ho boarded. He owed @ cousin 975 and/ Was not prospering, This, tezerhar with the fact that he worked hard by day lana susie well into the night, is Ueved to have caused bis euicide, jeamenlitea Teoantly in Oe iwiand, and}io Kill women and children. in most cases the criminals have gone pat The general public now| TH? Uaied Gases Government has ngress to tind a remedy not communica’ —>——_. Mayor or the Board of Aldermen with reference to the ection taken against mail wagons. ” 1, jcoated tongue, fee! If your stomach isn’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the mouth, | f fad FISHER BROS Th bodily and strengthen the nervous system. You will appetite boggan, all the time. “They take you into the Louvre. One with either the) man says: ‘Who's picture's that? and the guide says: That's Napoleon.’ Ani it may be at that. Then he's over on the other elde of the gullery telling lied One Ten Cent Box of EX-LAX The Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries of Constipation istressed after eating and have » just is will tone up your stomach, aid d surprised to see how your energy, ambition and will come to you, is Sie and a 0 em, 08 Along Bee, Purchase of Oe WEEKLY 6 ores “ACERUNT $50.00 to $500 COLUMBUS AVE Ber 103 3104 ST pose Sr Sum ns BibeN

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