The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1914, Page 3

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‘ ¥ g 3s “at the club a as THE EVENING WORLD, BATURDAY, © T0060 ft FicHT ‘zost Art of Love-Making Revived With Paprika FALSE CHARGE, HE TAKES ACID, DIES Harlem Druggist Exonerated of Any Wrongful Act by Three Young Girls. FRIEND TO CHILDREN. ote Left Asserts Innocence; But Says That Suicide Is Best Way Out. Eroneration came too late for John | A. Boyken, oldest druggist in Hariem | 806 sald to be worth half a millten! @ellars, who lies to-day a suicide in ‘| Fear reom of his drug store, No, 3297 | Bae ce avente, becnuse Be could net i nie i Hl | E of the girls, He was held in trial in Speolal Sessions, said the first the girls’ parents of the affair was when sub- to appear Tuesday in Special were corved late yesterday i fl on. them, ALL DENY THAT BOYKEN EVER HARMED THEM. Bo they suid nothing until last night, whew they all dented that Boyken had! ned them or been guilty of any ¢ misconduct toward them, But vas after the old man had killed 1.4@,f In demperati {Poenperving of th notice: en-him ¢ iu the gfternoon seemed ty have aotined him. He sent Joba Morris, on an errand and, retiring ff o bis sleeping quarters in the rear of » drank hydrocyanic acid. Whe. atorris returned he found him and cailed @ policeman, but Boyken| Was dead. On a bureau were four| notes. One, addressed to his eon and daughter, was in part: something that will further embar- ress you. I regret the act of suicide, | am compelled to do it because & § bel i : iit e H i al was in my power, that Boyken has | killed himself. However, this affair hag been turned over by me to the! ‘Children's Society. It was my hope | that I would not have to appear in the case. I'm sérry that I bave been | dfawn into it.” +4 + FUNERAL OF M. W. HOUCK, | dest Over Body of Va Held at Elke’ Club, Foneral services over the Mentrone Vy. Houck, for thi médore of the New Rooheil ad one of the most enth ere of the New York Athletic Club, were Fike’ Club, body of | sterday and died a few minutes late: ‘The burial will be at ¢ » Where he was born :" ara OKO. Linck, who lived with bia wite nin New Roohe'le, had been for prominent figure in the grocery By Lou- Tellegen---Romeo With Scorching Kisses \ —_—_>— His Recipe, He Says, Is “Hollandaise Sauce a la Greque,”’ and Accounts for His Intense and Ar- tistic Temperament. By HELEN ROWLAND. 1 have seen Venice—and I have seen Lou-Tellegen!. Bring on the Hemlock! 1 have floated in a gondola on the Grand Canal under a full moon when the serenaders were singing and the violins sighing and the man- dolins tinkling—AND (with fingers crossed) I have touched Lou-Telle- gen’s brown-gold hair to see'if it was real. Shades of Romeo and Maurice Barrymore! That we should live to see once again, In these days of sticky, syncopated Viennese operas, machine-made s' and papler-mache heroes, an IDEAL stage lover— a stage lover who makes one’s long-cherished memory of Maurice Barrymore's Armand Duval fade like a pale pink strawberry-ice beside a Turner sunset and causes one to call for, the paprika at the mere thought of a Robert Chambers hero! ‘There are just three brands of love-making—platonie, which is love without kisses; plutonic, which is kisses without love—and the “Lou-Tellegen” variety, which is kisses WITH love—a brand which, ke buffalo, we had begun to think was almost extinct. How has Lou-Tellegen in the brief run of “Maria Rosa” managed to revive the lost art of stage love-making? What is the secret quality, or art, or method, or trick, by which he has hypnotized the blaseiNew York matinee girl and her mother—and her grandmother? What is a woman's “ideal lover,” anyway? MAKES NO DIFEERENCE ABOUT HIS AGE. Don’t ask a MAN. lI asked one of them and he answered promptly, “A strajght nose, @ good figure and a foreign accent.” Pout! It would not make the slightest lota of difference if Lou- Tellegen were forty-eight instead of twenty-eight, if he had a squint instead of a pair of compelling blue eyes that flash fire one moment and melt into a caress the next, if his nose & pug instead of a Gre- clan, if he had a hare-lip instead of a dazaling tooth-powder amile, ¥ ho were fat inatead of tall and slender, He would still be the ideal stage lover, because in “Maria Rosa” he plays all man's winning cards in the love game! He has studied the feminine nature until he can play upon it like a Swiss bell-ringer. He never misses a single note, nor a single “stunt,” por a single trick, ‘Throughout the role of Ramon ho is all things to all women—a brute at one moment and an angel the next, a tyrant one moment and a baby the next, a villain one moment and a penitent the next, In short, he is the elemental man, appealing boldly to the elemental nature which still slumbere in every feminine breast. And WHAT woman could resist a combination like that? His recipe? Well, he calls it “Hollandaise Sauce a la Greque.” He is half Greek, half Dutoh, and he blames his intense and artistic tem- perament entirely on this combination of parentage. Therefore, gentle- men, if you would be an artistic lover first choose your parents care- fully. To bavo been all Greek would have made him too pliant, too gentle, too plastic. It took a Dutch father to endow him with the strong, human, masterful elements which instinctively tol® him that every woman LOVES A SAVAGE! That every woman yearns to be taken by storm and must be conquered and be KEPT conquered by sheer brute force. There! I didn’t mean to say it so soon, I hate to do it. But once in a while one must tell the TRUTH. | LOVER MUST HAVE HEART OF LION. Every woman's ideal lover is a man with the heart of a lion, the will of a tyrant, the emotions of a woman and the soul of a little child! This is the vision of the perfect Prince Charming, which every woman has cherished since the days of Eve. And she goes right on cherish- ing it, even after she has married some nice gentlemanly Iittle ship- ping clerk or some pompous bank president, who hav come along in a claw-hammer coat and casually proposed to her between the puffs of his cigar, while he lolled self-complaceatly om her best pink satin sofa cushions, Why else does she continue to read Jack London and to go te see Lon-Tellegen act? But there {s not the slightest cause for a tremor of jealously in the heart of any nice average husband, An ideal husband and an ideal lover ane two totally different things, as different as a mackintosh and chiffon ball gown. Let your wife go and be “thrilled” every afternoon by a matinee {dol if it works off her superfluous emotions, Life in a Harlem flat with a man in gray tweeds who goes to sleep surreptitious- ly behind his newspaper every evening may not be very exciting, but Ife with the sort of man that Lou-Tellégen depicts in his Ramon would be the noarest thing to eternal punishment that one can imag- ine. You never would know when you awoke in the morning whether he was going to fling himself at your feet and kiss your finger-tips or going to hurl a table at you; whether he was going to weep on your shoulder and beg to be petted like a child or to drag you around by the back hair, All of which is very thrilling on the stage, but apt to become a trifle nerve-wracking after six or eight years of practical demonstration. Nevertheless, a8 I sat there im my second row orehestra chair, f yrondering if AYes Donnelly accepted REAL money for the privilege of | | | THE LOVATELLE GEN STUNT Wo} BRAND. = Kidses % Ma with Bove, y < (c tavcano!! A c a ¥. c ‘¥) STUNT Wed q reve To Rue PRAWKALY, DESPERAT: PASSIONATE AY >] Fo deRayes STUNT We 3. “T'Lu SNOW You WHO Hh THR PASTE Re” Helen the Three Varieties. being made love to in that way every evening and calculating just how much Mr. Tellegen received per kiss, I secretly wished that every blase New York bachelor and every staid, will-broken husband could be present and study the tricks of the gentle—or ungentle—art of win- ning a woman. What a lot of things they would learn about women that they never suspected before! THREE ELEMENTS IN WOMAN'S NATURE. First of all, they would learn that there are just three elements in every woman's nature to which a lover must appeal if he would hold her in the hollow of his hand like a sleepy kitten—the baby, the mother and the savage, There are just three “stunts” which Mr. Tellegen has worked ort, consciously of unconsciously, until he has them down to Reedle-point fineness, right at the end of bis artistic finger-tips, Stunt number o: the “masterful,” the “protecting,” the “I'll- take-care-of-you-Little-One” attitude, which no woman has been able to resist since the serpent spoke to Eve that way in the Garden of Hden. “My child! . My child!” says Ramon in a voice of silver, which seems to caress the unhappy Maria Rosa like a soft hand—and the hypnotism begins working right there. When s man starts that “Little woman,” “Little Girl” and “My child” business it is time for a susceptible woman to shut her eyes and run. It is not a new trick. It has been practised ‘dy all-the successful Lotharios since the world began; but no matter how old a woman may be, nor how many pounds avoirdupois she may weigh, it always goes down. No matter what she may say, the hard- est, grimmest bachelor girl that ever wrote a philippic on “Mere Man” just loves to be “babied”—to be “taken care of,” whether she can take care of herself or not; to be “protected,” even when there {s nothing to ‘ be protected from, It is the “possessive” attitude which appeals to the clinging element in her, like pink sugar candy to a two-year-old baby— to the “eternal child”—which not the new feminism shall ever stamp out of her heart, After marriage, of course, a woman has to do all the “mothering;" but vefore marriage—well, a man might remem- ber that she too likes to be petted. | KNOWS HOW TO PLAY THE BRUTE. Just at this psychological poiat Ramon springs stunt number two, Having lulled Maria Rosa into a comatose state, he proceeds to tell her that he loves her; to tell her not in the modern pink-tea fash- fon of veiled hints and half-hearted innuendoes, but openly, frankly, desperately, passionately. Most men seem to fancy that the last way to let a woman know that she is loved is by TELLING her #0, They will travel all around the subject in a circuitous route running from Cape Horn to Labrador without ever touching on it, They fancy they are playing a clever, skilful little e of cat and mouse, But an honest confession of love is good for any man’s cause. It is 2 form of flattery that places him forever in a little niche in the wall of a woman's imagination and gives him a life ticket of admission to a cozy corner in her heart, Whethor she wants to marry him or not, she can't help admiring his taste, feeling a little sorry for him—and want- {ng to “MOTHER” him. Many a man has lost the girl of his choice by heeding the fatal “don't-lump” in throat, whereas if he had simply gathered ber up in his arms Lou-Tellegen fashion and pleaded with her like a spoiled child he could have had her. But in the play Maria Rosa is obdurate and goes right on refusing her lover long after every woman in the audience is ready to take him at the drop of a hat. This gives Mr. Tellegen an opportunity for his coup d'etat and stunt number three—the “brute will” stunt, And he CAN play the brute—ob, how he can play the brute! All the fin his subtle love-making, all the tenderness of his courtship and car pale into insignificance beside the savagery of bis determination, plays bis last card—and wins! What card? Why, the card that Villa played when he took an American girl by force and married her out of hand; tho card that Richard II]. played when he told Lady Anne be had murdered her hus- band and then led her willy-nilly to the altar; the card that man has played successfully with women ever since the first savage stole the maiden of his choice and then dragged her three times around his tent by the back hair! The “I'll show you who is MASTER!” card, which is the ace-high of the whole pack. “I wanted to TAME you!” explains Ramon afterward, with the smile ofa seraph. “I said to myself, ‘I will MARRY that woman— NOW!’ A man can get ANYTHING if he has the will!" Don’t deny it. A man can win any wi im im the world he wants if he has the pluck, the audacity and the determination, Let the weak- kneed prate of “Greek noses” and “personal magnetism” and all that sort of rubbish, Winning a woman is simply a matter of having the courage to snatch her (figuratively speaking of course) by the back hair and drag her three times around your tent. And when a man Uke that has Anished, the savage, which still sleeps im her breast, will arise and call him “Master!” There you have the key to the euccessful ideal lover, real or stage, and also key to Mr. Tellegen's fascination, Some men may ac- quire s } understanding of women, and « few of them bave it thrust FEBRUARY 31, | He Has Heart of the Lion the Fair Sex Adore— Rowland Says His Brand Is One of 10914. THAW CASE CLOSES BUT NO DECISION FOR TWENTY DAYS Court Gives Lawyers Privilege to File More Briefs in Habeas Corpus Action. CONCORD, N, H., Feb. 21. -- The last hearing in the United States Court for the District of New Hamp- shire, in the matter of Harry K. Thaw, was concluded to-day, William T. Jerome having spoken for an hour and a half in opposition to Thaw's petition for a writ of habeas corpus and for admission to bail. Mr, Jerome asked for permission to file supplementary briefs and was Given ten days to do #0. Thaw's coun- sel will reply ten days thereafter, Judge Aldrich then will render hie do- cision and an appeal will be taken im- mediately by one aide of the other to the Supreme Court of the United States Pending Judge Aldrich’s decision ‘Thaw will remain here in the same loustody as for the past six months. ‘The new briefs will have to du with \the question of the absolute or dis- leretionary right of Thaw to ball and |whether he has lost that right by lelecting to use the process of habeas \corpus, The court also instructed that the further question of the right to ball of a non-dangerous man under habeas corpus proceedings he dis- cussed. The opposition of the State of New York to the habeas corpus petition of Thaw, was presented before Judge Aldrich to-day by William Travers Jerome, Mr. Jerome, .eplying to the arguments made yesterday by coun- wel for the petitioner, insisted that the indictment found in New York and charging Thaw with conspiracy to escape from the insane asylum at Matteawan was entirely adequate for the purpose of extradition, and quoted authorities. It wae returned, he said, on the illegal purpose of the alleged ocon- spiracy and the criminality charge rested in the alleged conspiracy and fot in the means employed to com- plete it. That criminal purpose was clearly and sufficiently described in the indictment, he said. This was in reply to former Gov. Stone of Pennsyivania, who, pleading for Thaw, had eaid that hie client had simply walked from the insane esylym and had not committed aay overt act or crime in so doing. Mr, Jerome went back to the days of the Stuarts in England and to the Aaron Burr conspiracy to find paral- Jels. The Thaw indictment was Grawn he continued, by an authority on the subject, a man who had drawn Indictments for sixteen years without having one quashed on demurrer. PRESS AGENT FINED $10; ACTRESS IS SCORED, TOO Woman, Out on Suspended Sen- tence, Got Ambulance to Break Into Print. Mise DP. Dale, who deacriben her- self as an actress, and Joseph Flynn, who in hired to help hen prove the statement by getting he# namo into the newspapers, were fined $10 each and corchingly reprimanded by Magistrate Nolan in the West Side Court to-day, They were charged with disorderly conduct in that they circulated a false report that a wo- ; man had been murdered at Broadway jand Forty-third street in order to collect an audience for a fake fight between themselves. The fight was wn ambulance had ar- the murder call, Assistant District-Attorney Lock- hart, referring to provious diMeultios of the woman in court, said, in pre- senting the case: “It js almost in- conceivably foolish in a woman who ie now under a suspended sentence after conviction for theft to put her- low and cheap effort to create a sen- sation. There should be a law mak- mmoning of an ambulance ‘lee alarm a felony derstand that the lower strata of vaudeville people have to resort to auch means to advertise themacives, Inasmuch as the prisonere were locked in a cell for several hours yea- terday [ will impose only a fine now.” upon them. But Tellegen was born and through! still in the kinde: cerned! GIVE HIM “CHAIR OF LOVE SHOOTS TWO WOMEN | AT A RESTAURANT: THEN TRES SUICIDE hehehe Siem Salesman Kills One Victim in Philadelphia and May Die Himself. (Bpeciel to The Evening World) PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 21.—Kart Kinlock, an automobile salesman, tn & fit of jonlous rage at breakfast to- day shot up the Hanscom restaurant, No. 744 Market street, He firet directed his weapon toward Ora Griffin, with whom he had been infatuated since last summer, She was wounded in the ade, but te expected to tecover. As Mins Griffin fell Kinlosk began firing promiscuously. Patrons and employets fled in terror, Anna Phil- pe was struck in the back by a bul- Jot and died. Other waitresses rushed screaming for the doors and customers dodged under tables or ducked behind coun- ters to escape tho bullets which were ttering mirrors or imbedding themselves in walls. Kinlock sud- denly turned the revolver upon him- self, “Hore goes,” he yelled. “She got all I bad and I might as well go to bh—.” A bullet penetrated hia body just over the heart. The doctors nay the man will die, To the police he ex- plained that he had seen Ora Griffin with another man last night. She re- fused to talk with him about it. Then he began the shooting. FOREMAN SHOOTS MAN ‘ENA iF” | THE TREATIES WIT BRITAIN AND JA Panama Canal To Tolls and Im. f migration Questions Not Exe, empted in New Agreements:-* UPHOLDS PRES. WILSON: Arbitration Pacts With sit Other Nations Go Througty by Big Majority. WASHINGTON, Feb, 31.— any amendment whatever to thelr scope, the Senate by more ¢ham | a two-thirds vote to-day ratified gem- eral arbitration treaties between, the: United States and Great Britain, pan, Italy, 8 Portugal and 1 Attempts to exempt the Panama, Canal tolle question or questions of immigration and public which were related to the with Great Britain and Japan defeated, and the conventions ge inte. Rew force in the same guncral Corm iy an existed before they expired. ‘ : ‘The vote, while an evidence of the Senate's support of President Wile con's treaty was interpreted exemption, as an indication that sn President will have practically. 9 : same support on that question. HE HAD LAID OFF WORK) ‘o's Panic in Factory When Bullets Fly —Victim Will Probably Die. There were half a dosen employees in Joseph M. Dodd's shoe factory at No, 110 York ‘street, Brooklyn, this morning when Rosisario Cocondagilo of No. 76 Forsythe street entered and stepped toward Tony Lombardi, the Cscediatite wan laid off last week because «f slack work. He thrust his hands in the pockets of his overcoats weapon from his pocket twice, One bullet struck in the ebest and the other im the ab- domen, As he fell to the floor scream- pl Caan employees grabbed Lom- bardl. They called Policemen Wardell and Hass of the Poplar street station who arrested Lombardi and got Dr. Dil- muth who took Covondagiio to the Holy Family Hospital. He may die. Cocondagiio was searched but no revolver was found in his pocket and apparently he had no intention of doing more than speaking to Lom- bardi, The latter was charged with felonious assault and also with vio- lation of the Sullivan law. ——_— FIVE CHILDREN BURNED TO DEATH IN HOME Mother Rescues One in Dash Through Flames, While the Others Perish. ABHLAND, Me., Feb. 31.—Five of the six children of Joseph Smart, a lumber measurer, were burned to death when their house at Eagle Lake Plantation was discovered on fire early to-day, Mra, Smart, who was alone with the children, escaped after rescuing one of them. Mr. Smart was at work in the wood Tho mothe; id a daughter, Elsie, aged cight y who had slept on the ground flo made a desi pera’ effort to save the other children, who oceupied beds on the second floor. Driven from the house by my captors when I light in the flame of the movie stunt, that. “Anyhow, it at an American the | thir flames, Mra. Smart climbed to the| made roof of a shed adjoining and with bare arms broke the glass in the windows of the rooms where fhe other children were, but was unable to reach them Neighbors later found her unconscious from expos- ure and she will probably die. She was badly cut by glass and pro- tected only by a night dress from temperature far below sero, Th children burned were Edward, Ed- widge, Patrick, Bertha and a Ned. Edward, the oldest, was seven, with it, He knows women through And at twenty-eight, mind you, when most men are ten class as far as understanding the sex is con- MAKING.” What an opportunity tor Mr. Carnegie or some other kind million- aire to open his heart and found a “Cheir of Love-Making” in some university for modern men, with Lou-Tellegen as director! Alas, we women, who have for so long had to endure the love-making of the average man, who seems to have acquired the art in a correspondence school, would arise and biess the founder's name and wreathe his brow in bays! Yet when I talked to Mr. Tellegen afterward in his dressing room he explained the whole phenomenon of bis stage love-making in a sen- tence, I speak English only since last August,” ho sald, loaning shyly against his dressing table, {put there is one word in your language that 1 do not like, It is ‘acting.’ I call it ‘LIVING.’ The real actor must live two lives—bis own and that of the character he is Dlaying.” A sort of “double life,” aa it were, eh? » “4 eh ac et wasps, cata ee ee ne RSE SURE ON ETE NP aia Detective Enticed Men by fing te Be Asleep. the elevated pest at Myrtle and Broadway early to-day watching ‘The New York Muntotpal ! Corporation was to-day autboriaad & the Public Service Commiasion to 9 poree 1S 100 new rw eeeney care. do and wil jong and a 10 foot wide a nd wi present care are Bt feet jand 8 ffeet ecate for

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