The evening world. Newspaper, December 12, 1913, Page 3

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ITS NO CRIM TO KISS MARY OWVDRONK STREETS Magistrate Breen So Rule | ot) Even If the Osculation Does Delay Street Cars, SEES NO HARM IN IT.} Policeman Thought Conduct Improper, but Gets a Lit- tle Lesson. John Fachner, one of Commissioner ‘Waldo's new young cops, was given his first lesson in gallantry thie morning by Magistrate Breen, that fine old gen- tleman of the old school, in the Mor- risania Police Court. When John was srowing up he never was lassoed by a fair, plump arm and held @ willing prisoner to the rhythm of heavenly osculation. ‘There ara some things in Mfe which John seems to have missed. Early thie morning, hoe sald tn court, he had seen Ado'ph Ahr, thirty-one ra old, @ salesman, living at No, #8 t One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street, hugging and kissing Mra, Mary Daly of Harlem right in the middle of} the cartracks at One Hundred and) Forty-ninth street and Third nue. | ‘This is a busy transfer point, and the osculating couple were in danger of de- Jaying traffic with their busses. He told them to move on, and they didn't. Then he moved them to the police station, and charged them with disorderly con- duct. “Have you never heard of Romeo?” verled His Honor, ou mean Romeo Ragglo, biacks boots" — ‘The Magistrate waved him down \ “I thought thelr conduct was very tm- proper.” continued the Waldo ingenue ot the force. ‘Is that so? returned his Honon, with that thrilled. “Is that 80? now of no law against kiss- I believe there was such a law Massachunetts, but the people arose nd repealed it. And rightly ao, in my inion. Have you never been kissed, who} handsome cop biushed and hung ead. Mr. Ahr said that he vas crossing the street when Mrs, Daly, whom he had ve fallen, had he not caught her In rms, No, he did not kiss her, Yes st—no, sne did not Daly of Harlem smi The gentleman has the truth. He assisted me, and I would have fallen he ni ght me in his arms, said. “Well, I shall give you both the bene- fit of the doubt, I see no harm in kissing, anyhow,” declared the Magis- trate. They departed, golng their different ways. Fachner, the young cop, paused to make a new note in his book, then ekedaddied for home and belated sleep, ‘His slumbers will never again be dis- turbed by kissing, pains SHOT BY WOMAN HE COURTED Man, Jeaivus of His Soi Killed tn Qu (Bpectal to The Erening World.) LANCASTER, Pa,, Dec, 12.—Because Joseph Anderson, Afty-four years old, was jealous of the attention of his son, ‘Howard, to Miss Mamie Lindsay, thirty years old, he quarreiied with the woman early to-day and attempted to strike ber, The son stepped in and received the blow and afterward took his father away from the woman's house, Later the elder Anderson returned, but ‘as he was about entering the place Miss Ltedeay shot him and he died in a whort time. The woman was arrested. —_—-. tor Higher Prices. Wis, Dec, 12.—Four YY potato cars ‘were counted on railroad tracks here today. The condition resulted from a determination by Wisconsin growers not to ship until prices advanced. Word ‘that the Southern crop is suffering from scab is sald to have caused the growers to ibelieve potatoes will sell soon for $1 a bushel. ee Cat Hote in W w to Get Jew ROME, N. ¥., Dec. 12 —Burglars earl torday cut a hole ten Inches in diamet fg the plateslass show window of M. Foloman's jeweiry store on one of the main streets in the business district and wot away with two trays of rings, TAKE SALTS IF YOUR - SAYS DRUGS Salts harmless to flush Kid- neys and neutralize uric acid, thus ending dder trouble, When. your kidney back feels sore, don't ¢ ceed to load drugs that excite the k the entire urinary tri noys cli clean, by harintess salts whi ruinous waste and their normal activity, ‘Che fu the kidneys is to filter the blood. hours they strain fr 500 id and waste, a stand the vital importance of the kidneys active, hurt and your and pro- h with a lot of yews and irritate Keep 3 mE VEST -WAIST —_———— It Is TwoPanniers Merged Into One and Put at the Back of the Gown Instead of at the Sides. AVest Buttons Down Over It Several Inches Be- low the Waist, Giving! the Wearer a Hind-side-| afore Effect of Coming Toward You When She Is Really Walking Away From You. Skirts Next Spring Will Not Be Slit and This Applies Even to Tango Dresses. . The bustle ts back, But it was an etherealized, glorified bustle which I saw at the advance ver seen before, tripped and would | showing of spring fashions in the rooms of the Dry Goods Economist, No. 239 West Thirty-ninth street. Do you remember the odiously vulgar affair so many women were wearing a dozen years ago’ of wire network, with curled hair. The bustle to & plece of full gathered drapery, extend- | ing In a semi-circular curve from the | Waist line at the back to the knees, and | held down by weights. In some models | @ vest buttons down over it for several Inches below the waiat, giving the wearer | @ curious hind-side-afore effect of com: | ing toward you when she is really walking away from you, It's as treak- ‘sh as you pleasy tut there's ‘really nothing scandalous about it, THERE WILL BE SLIT IN THE SKIRT NEXT SPRING. Apropos of scandal, the one about the slit skirt will soon have to die the death, The skirts next spring will be narrow around the bottom, but nowhere will they be slit, This applies even to tango dresse: a should result in @ shortening of the dip" steps, The one concession of the costumer to Terps!- chore 1s that the tango skirt is out bit shorter in the back than in front, Have you ever noticed that each year Fashion picks out some one feature of the toilet and calmly proceeds to play hob with it? It has been skirts, but it's going to be collars, The most di Unctively new thing in the spring w: robe will be the collar. One charming bodice which I saw to-— [the te absolutely untrimmed except for the colar, The material {s yellow crept, with a V-shaped opening in front, | Over the shoulders and follow.ng the |ine of the opening in the bodice is laid a large square of biack net, the | corners weighted down with jet tas-| BACK HURTS, EXCITE THE KIDNEYS Drink lots of water—you can't drink | too much; also get from any pharmacist | about four ounces of Jad Salts; take plespoonful in a glass of water befor breakfast each morn for a few da, and your kidneys will act fine. ‘TI ;fumous salts is made from the acid of lgrapes and lemon juice, combined with ithia, and has been used for [to clean and stimulate clogged kie ‘also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness, | Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- makes htful efferveseent ithia-water drink which everyone should e now and then to keep their kidneys | o keep up| bt you @ and ne trouble and bac! f keeping) will wonder what became of your kidney attention is kache, 'y Marguerite Mooere Marshall. sometimes—oh, horror!—the strings untied themselves, and sometimes—almost as tragic—they twisted around to one side so that the bustle sat blatantly on one hip. If only this particular abomination need never be revived! Mus mermansnact really a logical development of the minaret or the pan- nier, whichever you choose. It {8 the minaret with the front and side breadths omitted, and the wire taken out, or {t 1s two panniers one and put at the back of the gown instead of at the sides. |the Dry Goods Eco . ? In some instances it was a bulge In others it was a cloth pad stuffed Always it tied with strings, and de worn mext Spring, however, is merged into Tt consists of | sels. It {8 a nove! development of the | sailor collar, Then nearly every auit shown, what- ever the material, has @ narrow white Jawn or organdie collar, rolling away from the neck, but so tiff that it stands up slightly. Another new collar is simply the ‘Blzabethan rug tn pattige i An- Other, on @ street 5 it, is ike o small, fattened monk's cowl, or the hood attached to the old-fashioned Bolf-cr2e, fat ed ® different collar, om an afterndon frock, shoula be named “the cowboy,” for it is an exact imitation of # bandana hand- Kerohief, folde@ diagonally and Pinned around the throat. 1 The new sleeve is also a variable} quantity. There ts the long glove sleeve, which fits the arm as tightly as a shoulder-length white kid glove and at the wrist extends over the hand In a beli-shape, with evening gowns, as well as with) afternoon frocks, RETURN OF THE OLD-TIME BISHOP SLEEVE. which {ite closely at the arm's eye but has a the wrist, will There ts @ modification is only to the and gives the effect of being shorter on one side than on the other because of the puft of fulness which falis over elbow-joint. waist-line is still am inch or two above the normal, except when deep girdles are worn. ‘Then it Seems to extend well over the hips. de worn again. of this sleeve which exten " COMBINATION This sleeve will be usel| |The Bustle Is to Come Back Next Sprirg; | _ Not Wires or Pads, but Drapery Effect HIDES NAME, DIES. 4 QUNG MRS. MANTEL GETS A SEPARATION FROM ACTOR'S SON the dustie draperey. This drapery ts|Husband Answered Her Pa- longer on one side than one the other, and the longer fold ends in @ heavy tamsel. The bodice is arranged in three triangular pieces, over a white lace gulmpe, The apexes of the three tri- angles meet about two inches below the collarbone, and there the points of the two pleces forming the shoulders of the bodice are passed through an ey let hole in the point of the third t angle, the baseline of which follows the ‘ine of tho girdle, If my description sounds mixed up, It isn't any more #0 than the garment in question! The other bustle is used on tango frock of pale green silk and is edged with the fluffiest of ruffles ‘The corsage of this dress is partially draped with green chiffon and trimmed with cut steel buttons, Button are almost as popular a trimming as tassels, I saw a tan street sult with two parallel rows £ white ivory buttons, an inch In dlam- eter, running down the back of the coat from the collar to well below the walst- Une. The sweet pea shades are the “very latest” in the color line. But the day of violent combinations is not yet past. I was shown @ Poiret model with the sleeves and draped skirt of cherry col- ored wilk, the bodice of dark blue, and @ gold cord with tamsels around tie waist. Spring bats will be even littler 4nd closer @tting than the ones they're wearing this winter. One advance model is mothing in the world but @ Turkish fes of red straw, @ black pompon on either wide, Another is made of hair lace, which rises in @ sort of fence at the left side of the crowz. The Princess Eugenie hat, the favorit modei of the lady of that name, ie round and fat amd small, with @ shower of ostrich plumes on one side. A hat of jetted cloth bas an aigrette msde out —not feathers, but the straw thet grows on the Bussian steppes and which seems to be about the oonsistency of horechaiz, Jet sequins and ca- Dochons are exceedingly popular as millinery trimming. A bizarre novelty is @ brassiere of black velvet, lined and laced with flesi: colored silk, to be worn under thin, light colored muslin dresses. Yes, of course It is supposed to show! And if you want tho last-cry ornament for your evening gown, buy an artificial pond Illy with rhinestone stems, rhinc- stone ribbed leaves and rhinestone dew- drops inside the flower, Bas Temaim popular, many tho hows being tied in front, bat | the very latest trimming is tassels, | ‘They are on everything, from hats to skirt drapery. A new material .# “golfine," which | looks Uke a fuzzy corduroy, Some of | it comes with conventional designa in| colors woven Into it, and it ts used both for suite and for shirt-wat One of the quaintest mode! shown at mist rooms looks as If {¢ dated from 1822. It ts a costume of watered gray taffeta, cut on very | simple lines, The coat ends at the waist- Nine, ut in the bacis {t t¥ prolonged tn A trim little square panel about eignt| inches jong. The only trimming con-| s of @ few small cut steel buttons, A white lace fichu {# arranged Quaker fashion under the coat, and there ts moderately wide girdle of dull blue silk, va the bow in front and the ends hanging down the skirt nearly to the bottom, BUSTLE MODEL WITH A PE- CULIAR VEST EFFECT. model which attracts much mult of dark blue with t effect over the top of Ab the peculiar v pa Se RECOVERED HER CHILD. Decker Saw Daughter Who Kloped With band. Mra, Catherine Decker of Elmhurst Heights, Queens Borogh, whore second husband eloped with Lillian Herbert, her daughter by her first husband, told the pollve this morning that she had found her three-year-old daughter, Eve lyn, who had been carried off by the runaway couple. Mra Decker went to Phtiaetpnis terday in response to a letter from her husband, which said that she could have the child if would not prosecute, Accompanted by her six year-old son, she made the trip. saw her runaway daugh fyed that she would tak inst her, She did not see band. She Hot Wi would divor ~~ ———-- Mra, Rousevelt Satin for Home. COLON, Deo, iMrs, Theodore day on the steamer Santa Marta, t and her niece, Miss Margaret | § t, sailed for New York yeaster- | paid , thetic Letter by Declaring Her Quarrelsome. ‘The husoand's version of the Mantel! case, recounted by Jack Mantell, the actor's athistlo eo0, to a crowded court room to-day, was at odds with the pa- thetio narrative of the child wife, aban- Goned on the eve of becoming @ mother, told by Mrs, Helen F. Mantell yesterday in her mit for separation. Mantel mwore that his young wife was quarrelsome and violent and often @ra- He tested against becoming a mother. told of reconciliations and ren Apats and home Jeavings, ‘He outlined a “programme of conduct” which he had drawn up for his wife, as follow Ho was to be allowed to go out and remain out evenings when he felt like ft. Sho must refrain from fighting and quarreling and disturbing his men- tal equtpoine. She must cook the meals in proper shape xo as to conserve his health, All these conditions he said Mra. Mantell violated @ day or so after a reconoiliation, Mantell'a attorney pro- duced letters written by Mantell One of them read: Ploase, please forgive me, I am coming back to be your boyish boy again, Helen, my darling, do for- give me for my cruelties. You will never love any one but me.” Mrs, Mantel eeturned to the witness stand and swore that sho agreed to the set of rules even to the extent of allow- | ing him to run @round with ladies” ‘other as driven to it by desperation,” she said. “I wanted him to be with me when the child wae born." Justice Lehman gave judgment for the wife on the ground of abandonment. “I'm sorry,” ho said, “there can be no reconciliation here. These two are pleasure loving youngsters who entered Into marriage Ught heartedly without consMeration of the gravity of the r tionship. Neither side has proved cruelty. The wife has proved abandon ment. ran to abandon ® woman." ‘The Court deferred fixing the amount of alimony, Lee See NO COMFORT FOR HER. Mrs, Comfort, Suing, Saye He Wrote Her He'd “Get Even." Horace Comfort, a lawyer of No. Naseau street, wants “get with two people in this wide world, according to his wife Georgiana, who ts suing him ¢ ration in the &u preme Court, One, ae The otehr object of his xeance she does not kn wo even sie waye, he wrote her there were two, of ich ahe was one Comfort wyer, har 1 farm ne sks aftor mie ays wian physician, Niagara Falls ine Hundred left home last 4 torn ade --4 riday, ufter losing a@ ent to stay with « friend jef over losing the ring had vous, ber |name and address on a piece of paper ‘That certainly 18 no hour for a} ‘HE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1913. MINISTER'S INA SANITARIUA a Mrs. Donald Sage Mackay Feared Cancer, but Didn’t Tell Family. | SOUGHT NEW DOCTOR.) Expired on Operating Table | Just After Chloroform Had Been Administered. Although she had gone to a strange physician under an assumed name for en examination to determine whether she was suffering from cancer, and she was desirous of keeping her identity Mra, Donald Sage Mackay, widow of the pastor of the Fifth Avenue Colle- giate Reformed Church, to write her Just before she went to her death yes: terday afternoon on the oporating ta- ble In an east slide pri sanitarium, It wan this slip of paper that furnished the Information which led to the iden- tiftcation of her body In the Morgue at a time when membere of her family were frantically searching the city for lant night. By direction of Coroner Holzhaum Coroner’a Physiclan Schultz performed! an autopsy on the body of Mrs. Mackay to-day. He found that she died from the effects of chloroform administered as body that had been admitted yesterday | Jevening as that of “Mra, J. H. A, Stone of Boston" was that of Mrs, Helen 1. | Mackay, and an undertaker employed | by the Mackay family took it to her late home at N86, 471 Wark avenue, OTHER, WOMEN TAKE FALSE NAMES IN HOSPITALS. The death of Mrs, Mackay under an assumed identity brought to light the fact that many women of wealth and social standing in New York take names other than the'r own and place them- selves under the care of physicians or furgeona unknown to their familles, Bometimes the reason fa that the patient fe desirous of keeping a suspected or actual condition of health secret from the family physician. Often the patient seeks, by putting on old clothes and tak- ing @ false (dentity, to escape the pay- ment of @ fee proportionate to her mgens. In the case of Mre. Mackay it appoara that ehe was actuated by a double mo- tive when she went to consult Dr. Henry Well uf No, 78 Went End avenue on Wednesday aftemoon and told him ashe was Mre, J. H. Stone of tha Copley, Square Hotel. Boston, Firat, she feared | that she was suffering from cancer and desired to satisfy her mind as to tha! truth of falsity of her suspicion without | letting her four children or her rela- | tives know, Secondly, she had been in- formed by one of Dr, Well's patients that he was a skilied practitioner in diseases of women. She had been associated in charitable work with Mra, Andrew Carnegie, Mrs. | Finley J. Shepard, who was Helen Gould; Mra, James A, Burden, Mra. J, Hood Wright, Mra, J. J. MeCook and other leaders in society and phil- anthropy, Sho was tha founder of the Speedwell Society, an organization ae- signed to help children in charitable’ institutions, WENT IN SECRET TO SEE THE DOCTOR. ‘On Wednesday afternoon Mra, Mackay ordered her chauffeur to drive her to Ninety-eighth street and West End ave- nue, She left the car on the corner and Secret, some intuitive tmpulse bade) ‘ ARAN ABN ° f 3 Pee detd te Te immediately began restorative meas- ures. With Dr, Bender, Mra. Minzeshelmer and e@everal nurses, Dr, Well worked over Mra. Mackay for two hours, Re- luctantly he gave up the task, con- Vinced that she had died as soon as the chloroform had been administered. Tn accordance with the law Dr. Wall ree ported the case to the Coroner and the body was removed to the Morgue. HER FAMILY HAD ALREADY BEGUN A SEARCH. Ut Was not until the police began to tnvestigate late last might hat hame and address of Mrs, Mackay were found tn her handbag. In the meantime Donald Mackay, Mra, Mackay's eldest son, Annette Mackay, her daughter, and Wilder Goodwin, the family lawyer, had been searching for her, and Mr. Good win had visited Vollce and roported that Mrs. Mackay had been missing since noon. Wilder Goodwin of the law firm of ntreet, attorneya for the Inte Mra. Maokay, gave out the following state- ment, crediting It to a friend of the family “For more than a year Mra. Mack- ay had been troubled at intervals with @ severe pain in her side, She had kept #o actively engaged in char- {table and social work that she de- ferred attending to it Avout two weeks ago she remarked to an intl- mate friend that she expected to be treated by wa physician who had been highly recommended, She was ine sistent that her children be kept in ignofance of her suffering, that their holidays would not be marred by worry, EXPECTED TO GO TO MAINE WITH CHILDREN. “A house party at the Mackay summer residenc: was to have days, and a Mackay, who Maine with (meaning Mriday), must find time to cian before making the trip, she Inwisted that her children be kept in ignorance of her lnens, “If, as reported, she gave the name of Mrs. Stune when consulting in Blue Hil, Me, » held over the holl- Mra. few days ag nved to star children to-day said that she entered at apartment house, remaining About an hour, This wan the occasion of her frat visit to Dr. Weil. “She fold me she was Mrs, Stone of Boston." sald the doctor to-day, “and | id sheyhad been recommended to me | by one of my patients whowe name she | | gave. Although she complained of so- | | vere pains and said she feared she was seriously III, whe was apparently quite | cheerful, She sald she had consulted | a professor in Boston.” | Dr. Weil, after # cursory examination, Mackay {t would be necessary to submit to an examination under anaesthesla, She consented to this, and he instructed her to go to the Lexington Sanitarium, at No. 1 Kast Sixty-firet street, which 1s conducted by | the widow of C, lL, Minzeshelmer, who | was superintendent of Mount Sinal Hos- | pital for eighteen years, Dr. Well gave | Mrs, Mackay a letter to Mra, Minses- hetmer, The usual tests were followed and Mra, Mackay was found to be appar-| ently sound as to heart action, But within two minutes after the first ad- ministration of chloroform Dr, Wel | noted that the patient had not relaxe: Ex-Lax Will Stop Dr, Weil it was solely for the pure pone of not permitting any of her friends to know that she was not ling well enough to give the house party and of not alarming her chil- dren by permitting them to hear that she was even contemplating an operation,” Mrs. Mackay was Helen L. Smith, the daughter of J. Gregory Smith, the war Governor of Vermont. She married Dr. Donald Sage Mackay in St. Albats in 184 willie Dr. Mackay was pastor of the First Congregational Courch there. Dr. Mackay came to the Collegiate Re- formed Church in Fifth avenue in 1598 and soon became one of the noted preachers of New York, He died on Aug. %7, 199, on a sleeping car in the railroad yards in Portiand, Me. whi! on his way from this city to his summer home at Blue Hill, Me Ilia wife was with him when he died Queen Leave Parts PARIS, Dec. King Alfonso and Queen Victoria of Spain left to-day on thelr return journey to Madrid, Preat- dent Poincare, Premier Doumergue and Stephen Mehon, former Forelgn Min- ister, with other dignitaries going to the ation to see them off, 32, ‘Your Constipation No Gripe, F ain or Purging From This, Gentle, Chocolate Laxa ive. Works Nature’s Way. eathartios clogged, Ex Las without leaving js mild and | when your bowels (will relieve you quickly, you eit weak and strated, ts a stinpie choee eweat vowels ne phys! piedeant asp aiiing tn ite . from chor yet moving work. i headache, torpid liver and o Mt ride you of dillousnese an: yo vieatisg, It without discomfort or pain. Get your with Fx-Lax and you'll rheaded all day, You will never | entoy rea © you're cyquered | by cons ctidren love to take EX-Las, because It tastes like chocole candy, and aduics soon learn to prefer it WIDOW | Widow of Celebrated Preacher | Who Died Suddenly in Hosp PEDDIE DEDEDE SDE HOE COHREME MRS.DONALD SAGE MACKAM LEED PEDDIE OF ODO D TTPO ED PED RIES VOD the; Motorman, Headquarters! for hi Reynolds & Goodwin of No, 2 Wali] famity | | was al | homelike Boarding House to the haren tles, Ex Fellet of cont ite-price, 10, 4 oathar: ® MISSING YOUTH FOUND; BACK TO SICK FATHER Arthur Glenman Left Home to > Lighten Parents’ Burden, He Explains. er Arthur Glennan, missing from the home of his father, Paul Giennan, & No. 218 Bast One Iban and) Twenty-sixth t, since June, has been found in Dr. Cox's erinary horpit restored to his father. last The ‘nan has deen ti in Fordham H vspita! for a week and has constantly asked n. The son explained that he h home because he wanted to ligh burden of his father, who had @ ie:¢e to support. He sald he hed worked at various placus tn the &tnie | xince hin departure, ployed by Dr. Cok mince Oct. 1. man took a train for this city, saying he would go directly to the hospital ——— ur and Car Drop Into Ule- vator Shaf Pierre Manon, chauffeur, of No. * Went Sixty-ninth atreet, drove his car so violently into the elevator on the fourth floor nding of the Willlams & Morford garage at No, 205 West lind avenue this noon that the catch hold- ing the elevator bro! and the car fell to the bott f the shaft. Employees + the garage ran to the shaft In time see Manon come out smiling, with= out a serateh, The $6,000 touring ear t completely wrecked. This, America’s Favorite Tea, is good, strong, and uniform. FLose CEYLON TEA White Reve Caffe, Nowe Better His Name Must Have Been Mr. Wise i There was a young man from Bologne Who was tired of living alon So World ads, he read And ere time for bed He said; “No more will 1 roam:” You see, he was guided directly to a where the rooms were warm and cozy, where you didn't have to put comforters over the radiators to keep them warm at night, and where there were plenty of good things to eat at a modest cost. Perhaps you would like to find such a place yourself, If so READ WORLD fer | “BOARDERS WANTED” ADS. TO.DAYt ’

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