The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1914, Page 3

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“ASQUITH CLEARS © Society Woman, 1 Who Now a a Vaudeville Star MYSTERY IN IRISH ORDERS TO ARMY Only Promise Given Was That | Officers Stationed in Ulster Might Withdraw. OTHERS TOLD TO OBEY. | one of the founders of the Federation Warmed That Refusal Could 1» now appearing on the vaudeville Only Mean Dismissal ‘ From the Army. LONDON, April 1.—The first act al Premier Asquith in his new capac- ‘ {tpsee Secretary of State for War | Sudlence last night she had kept her was te clear up the mystery aur- founding the instructions given by the War Office to Gen. Sir Arthur Paget, commander-in-chief in Ire- + land. Sir Arthur was summoned to Lon- don to give hia chief a personal ac- count of the orders he had received and tasued, and an a result of the conference Reginald McKenna, the Home Secretary, who is acting ae Jeader of the House, was able to-day fe make the facts public in the Mouse of Commons. “The only question Gen, Paget put er intended to put to the command- | ing officers of the army tn Ireland,” eaid Mr. McKenna, “waa whother they | were ready to put their duty before any other considerations. It was not Bie intention that this or any such Question should be put by thv general to thelr subordinates, “Gen. Paget informed the general oMoers of the promises given by the Secretary for War to officers whose homes were In Ulster to permit them to withdraw temporarily from their Yegiments in the event of operations becoming necessary in Ulster, and he requested the gonvral officers to find out immediately the number of off- | cers who would withdraw account. on tht \ | \ URIC ACID IN MEAT CLOGS THE KIDNEY Take a glass of Salts if your) | pression on her audience. Back hurts or Bladder bothers. e your meat every day, eat i but flush your kidneys with salts cecasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric a — almost pa pine Une kidneys in their ef-| Hotel Remington. ~ forts to from the od. hey | and weaken, then you euffer witn a dull misery in the kidne; region, sharp pains in the back or headache, disziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weathe is bad you have rheumatic twinges urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, Frag you to seek relief two or three luring the night. ‘To neutralise these irrita \s, to the kidneys and flusl “it “the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any mac take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of ish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- and makes a delightful effervescent water drink, Absolute freedom through diaphragm, by large elastic gore at top, Without bust lines, Unboned hip confiner, Eyeletted for lacing below front steel. Coutil. STYLE 424. For well developed «. Yoneless hip; eyeletted vente ‘ever groin, Coutil or batiste. STYLE 40. For well develo; Very low bust; boneless bio d lemon juice, combined with | |to the selected scene. | ways receives, the company gives the THE EVE Formerly Mrs. Dore Lyon Under the Stage Name of! “Mme. Doree’’ Leads a Troupe of Operatic Singere and Makes a Favorable Impression. Mra. Dore Lyon, once one of the | soreenewe clubwomen of this city and of Women's Clubs, rated as @ million- aire with large real estate holdings atage as the leader of a troupe of fourteen singers. iler first appearance in New York was at the Palace Theatre, under the stage name of “Mme. Dores.” Until a friend of her more pros- perous days recognized her from the identity secret. Not even the own- ora of the theatre knew who she was. They supposed she was an opera singer who had taken the name of Doree to conceal her :esorting to the van" Me stage. The woman who once owned the Hotel St, Lorenz and regarded the $16,000 she received from the proper- ty each year as but a trifling part of her income, ts appearing twice a day at the Palace. As vaudevilis acts are appraised, the act is said to he “worth $1,600 a week,” out of which “Mme. Dorec" pays salaries and expenses. Mre. Lyon went into bankruptcy in (1910 after a number of business erses, which she said were due “to too much optimism.” The Wall street squeeze of 1909 caught her without ready money to meet her obligations and all her property holdings were swept away by foreclosures, ‘The act in which she is appearing ‘s thus described in the programm “Mme. Doree presents ner All-Star Company in Great Moments fron NING WORLD, Wealthy, WEDNESDAY, APRI WOMAN WANTED; NOTHING TODO MILL T0- TO-MORROW ‘ | Needs a Housekeeper—-Asks | World’s Aid. IT OUGHT TO BE EASY. |Care for Cows, Make Syrup, Mind Children on Daily Schedule. John Stuart of Peak’a Brook, Dela- | ware County, is in town looking for & housekeeper, “with,” as he sayi | “matrimony in view.” Mr. Stuart ha | stock a8 was in hand at farm em- ployment agencies, but could not find woman who seemed to him to hold out hope of filling his heart's desire, He dropped tn on The Evening World |to-day to ask for help. | Mr. Stuart presented a certificate \eigned by J. R. Honeywell, Prosident jof the Detht National Bank; W. H. Maynard, County Clerk of Delaware! | County, and John T. Shaw, a Dethi j attorney, regarding his material and | moral standing in the community. | It ts eulogistic of Mr, Stuart's repu- tation and of the fertility of hin 120- acre farm and says that any woman who ts engaged by him and is capable of doing the usual work of a woman in a dairy of twerty cows and on a farm attached to such a dairy may be sure of her pay, promised, and @ good home, ° The searcher for capable and sym- MRS DORE LYON Grand Opera, including ‘Carmen,’ ‘Il Trovatore,’ ‘Rigoletto’ and ‘Cavalleria Rusticana. pecially in my own city. | Strangely enough 1 not recognized in Burato, Rochester and ovnet sities th Thore are five of six minutes of | this State, in Detroit, Toronto, Phi selected scenes from the opera sung |delphia and other places where | nown, I had hoped to get throweh by the company after an introduction | iy frat New k engagement as ‘by Mme. Doree, who tells the story | Mme, Dorce, “1 think I max say ver enjoyed wor! Joy my daily app e in vaude- ville, It is an independent life, for you are never broucht into relations with any one vou do not “hoose to meet. The audiences mpathetic and quick to respond to earnest effort, that I have so much as I of the opera sufficiently to lead up Her manner and her charmingly | self-possessed explanation, which 1s just as finished as though made in her own drawing-room in the days of | her prosperity, made a noticeable im- My associates are kind and helpful And, furthermore, 1 am = omaking a@ ter living now than when I ying to get along as an in- For an encore, which the act al- sextet from “Lucia,” the statuesque Mme. Dorce standing in the centre, nd carrying the megso-soprano her- self. Mrs. Lyon was seen by an Evening Among the accomplishments out of which Mrs. Dore Lyon said she in- tended to earn her living when sh became bankrupt were acting, inetru- mental and vocal music, nov story writing and playwriting cl is afternoon at the} had music lessons un hal DARN Ato She established at| Henry Anson Traux « F. Bristol. once that she is a new kind of an artist in vaudeville by requesting that her identity be kept a secret. Only when assured that she would be unable to hide behind a stage name—and one so closely associated with her own—did she consent to talk about her venture into professional entertuinment. She said she had been on the stage since last October. “To begin at the beginning,” she — NEW YORK WOMAN DIES IN THE STREET IN NEWARK On Her Way From Savings Bank, Where She Had Made a Deposit When Stricken. said, “I lost all my real estate in | 1909 as a result of the panic of 1907.) A Mra. Stockwell, who from pap I found myself confronted with the} found ‘with her is believed to absolute necessity of making my own|lived at Ne living and Second street, this cit “The stage did not occur to me asjon the street in front of a depart- fa meuns of Hvellhood at that time. I] ment store in Newark shortly before opened a studio, gave instructions in| noon to-day and died as she was music and managed #mall affairs. But/ being carried into the store. ‘T I found that my income was not com-| body was taken to Mullins's Morgue mensurate with the effgrts I was! The Newark police learned that the putting forth, Gradually I became| woman had just left the Howard impressed with the Idea that there| Savings Institution at No. 768 Broad was a field for the presentation of| street, where she had made a deposit grand opera in a new way to the ne of Laura Stockwell, No. great vaudeville public, t One Hundred and Second) “Previously the extent of grand An Evening World reporter opera presentation om the vaudeville | 1 that address this afternoon stage was the singing of selections In| ‘there was no one in the wkwell costume, My Idea was to present tat, ‘The janitor said a Mrs, Laura scenes from operas, at first confining! Stockwell ‘lived there with her. son | myself to popular works Known tol/and daughter, both of whom are in music lovers everywhere and grad-) business. The city directory. showe ually extending my rapertoire, with Arner the Macaw Ge oenia \explanations, thus adding an educa- “kwell, lives at No West On: | tonal feature to my work. Hundred and) Second 1 “T gained the attention of a vaude- n who died in 3 ville manager, who gave me a trial.| ently about sixty-fiv Aw we say in vaudeville, my act Ls anni Aa AG ‘made good.’ I made my first appear- ance as a professional last October, JURY TIED UP OVER WILL. and since then I have appeared in soe nearly all the large Eastern cities. (acacia) is a oes ne We “| kept. my identity a secret] wri rAIna we teat se I feared that if I let it be N. pril L—At- nT waa going on the atag ter ig locked up all night, a J . ported to Supreme Court Justi would be looked upon— | this morning that they couldn | previous activity In © in the contest over the Will-of the late merely aaa dilettante. 1 wanted to Dr. Walter Bo Delabarre, who left his [win success on my own merits, en: ‘entire estate of $200,000" t his nurse, The Famous Chocolate Laxative EX"LAX | Relieves Constipation Helps Digestion Keeps the Blood Pure Ex-Lax is a delicious chocolate laxative recommended by physicians as a mild yet positive remedy for constipation in all its forms, Ex-Lax has made thousands happy. A 10c box will prove its valye—at all druggists, | When as and if aa pathetic feminine assistance Is a little over forty yeara old; he ts tall and lean, with a weatherbeaten red com- plexion and a luxuriant reddish mus- tache. Though he in deadly earnest in his manger the twinkle of his eyes under the peak of his gray cap showed | COURT FREES SUTTON, ACCUSED OF FORGERY Magistrate Says Young Man’s|that he realized the quaint humor of ; : the situation, His parents were born Arrest V Inspired by Jin Scotland and he looks it. : tvesof Splie FELLOW SCOTCHMAN HELP Motives Db Spite HIM OUT OF DILEMMA. EMingham Sutton, a brother-ine| 7. 1, Lindsay, a Jerseyman of law of John Boyd Gray, a broker,|Scotch descent, found Mr. Stuart whose wife has instituted several | mooning about the West Shore Hotel suits In the Supreme Court—one for paration—was arraigned in Centre |laat night, despairing of success in his search. Moved by the bond of common Street I Court to-day on alancestry, Mr. Lindsay brought hie ac- charge of forgery, He was honor- | quaintance to The Evening World. ply discharged, « Magistrate Levy) “My wife died five years ago,” sald sald the accusation against Sutton, |Mr, Stuart. “She left me with @ girl who is nineteen years old, was un-|who is eighteen now and a boy doubtedly inspired by Gray from | twelve, They need a woman to look motives of spite, {after ‘em, There's twenty-four cows, Sutton has testified in behalf of his but that’s more than L mean to keep. sister, Mrs, Justine Sutton Gray,|I had all the lumber on the ground to about adventures with women in| build on to the barn when my wife which her husband, John Boyd Gray, | took sick and aince then I've been “1. ‘The evidence taken in the, put to It #o hard for help I ain't built. examination of young Sutton showed ; The lumber ts lying there yet.” that he was employed in the office of | “What's the matter with the wom- Fullor and .i¢ ik brokers en of Delaware County?’ Mr, Stuart On the be firm was an of F. A, Coo, Was asked. Yonkers oifice, which, “They're all right,” sald Mr. Stuart, culative purposes; “but tf you lived up there wou'd | know how it ts, They're all old set- no interest, Sutton indorsed k payable Coa in Murch, 113, He was acting| ters and prosperous and everybody for his brother-in-law, who had au-| knows everybody's business and all thority sign € nam The their family history. So if you don't charge 0 y w Ute | Hast. December utter Sutton hag, Sot & woman whose pedigree ts all testified in court in-law ‘inst his brother- | Tight and whose record i» Al, why then the rest of the folks won't have ainalat at heyy hans ais hareing nothing to do with her, There's none Seay whieh itis handled the sme Of that class available just now, 1 interests of William Sul don’t want any serub stock. I want overnor, ducted a@ a real woman, who ts human and not «tir went out of) just a thing around the house, with UU Bld | her skirt sugged down in the back. ees So I thought I'd come down here and find a woman nobody up there knows RAILWAY RATE DECISION inant nm EXPECTED IN A MONTH |2:" actions what class she ts. HIRED HELP” GOT HI8 SER- | i | VANT GIRL EARLY IN GAME, | : | “f had a girl for a year. She was Commerce Board Decides to Take a good worker, good milker, good Final Action Much Earlier cook and handy around the place. But she got sweet on the hired help Than Planned. and got to running around with him, Dueket shop. business three . 5 | 1 told her she better stay to home WASHINGTON, April 1, because he didn't have any use for | fon by the Interatate Comm her except as a feller likes to have mission on the freight rate increawes | a” good looking girl to run around sed by the Kastern raitroads 18 ex | with, | pected much earlier than had been! “wing” phe saya to me, ‘I love bim/ blanned. It inay be handed dewn| «Love? Neat!" says 1 to her. ‘You Recent development has impetted| think you do, that's all. the commission to aside collateral "'No,’ says she to me, ‘I love the - issues and extrancous questions and| ground he walks on. I love him,’ levote practically He entire time te the! “+ “Ait right,’ L suya to her. ‘Go on | It is the purpose of the commission | Ove him and get out.’ Ito expedite In every possible way: fin “She got out, and now they want ldisposition of the case and to that end,|mo to take ber back and £ wouldn't * continuous hearings will be hetd until! tet her in the house. she's just « goi- the testimony shall have been cons | qurned fool cluded, ‘That may occupy several | @Ur , days “So there you are. If thore's @ good _— —~——- woman, strong and handy about | $65, 000,000 NEW CITY epuna(e and a dairy who can make syrup and Is eapuble of looking aftar Jaen Innue at the stock and the children us @ a woman should, with a chance to mar- ry a hard working farmer tnat's do- | ing pretty well, five miles from Dell, th sins ound sient A bond issue of $65 rr ¢ 0 was author= lued to-day by the Sinking Fund Com: . cele ‘ sion. ‘The date of the sale was not | FD. No. t—why, I'm waiting to fix The interest Js to be 41-6 per | bear from the right party.” —__—_- ‘The bonds ar | to take up notes tamu by the city HUDSON OPEN TO ALBANY. $10,000.00) for subways, 62) pete sd nd ® Firat Up-Hive engers of Season The jast bond sof the elty ried From New Vork Are Landed, AVE per cont, interest. It i waid the ALBANY, April rata Jan \cihe difference r ita @ saving of about figdson River. was opened up. this $182,000 In the present issue morning and bright and early the Half an hour after the Sinking Fund steamer Renanelaer, from New York, Commiasion had acted word caine tre hive with tha Oral usereae nee the curb market on Hroad street that u Boats on the | the bonds were selling “at 100 and dol | John Stuart of Peak’s Brook | | apent tio weeks looking over such, jart running prob- L 1, 1914. ‘Men With Whiskers---Bah ! |4) ANT TOVED IER And French Women? They) BECAUSE SHE TANGOES . Don’t Know How to Dress ! | WITH DIMINEST GRACE It F “But One Can't ‘can’ lane a Man Because He Dances Well,” Says Miss Hardrigan Boulevard Is Like Break- ing Your Way Through a Forest,”” Says Mi: Brewster of Elizabeth, | On the French steamer La Prov- ence, sailing to-day for France, was Miss Minerva Harrigan, one of the best known amateur dancers in New York, Miss Hardrigan has brown hair and blue eyes and is beautiful as she in kraceful, She ts going to Europe in company with Mr, and Mrs. F. H. Well of Chicago and their three daughters, the Misses Audrey, Eunice and Dorothy, They said they were going to see Europe and have no end Decie 6 Fi | American men and American wom- | ‘en have a warm champion in Mise Alice Brewster of Elizabeth, N. J. | who after three months in Paria re- | turned home to-day on the steamship PPISTDG-85-3 9948-9566 OH-OS2> Noordam of the Holland-America 2 Badge I ; line. Mins Brewster refutes the ol a in aan ce be it. statements of Mme, Suzanne Joire, gad eyed lot of young men saw the Parla dresamaker, who took a) the bewitching Miss Hardrigan off. They had danced with her, had tan- passing fling at American men the at he other day by liking them to rag- goed and one-stepped, and she had Pickers, Mme, Joire also lauded the quite step, nto the heart of every French whiskers and urged that) one of them. And they all wanted to marry her, Hut she is only cwenty and says thit she is “too think seriously of murrta “E have had forty pr the comely disciple of the tango, @ girl should never be in a hurry in making her choice of a life partner. It is different from selecting a parte ner for the tango, although one can pretty well determine the mental makoup of a man by the way he ances, how he steps, the care he @x- ercises with his partner and the gen- eral manner in which he deports bim- welt. ‘1 must say that t ‘age Amer. an man knows bow to dance. Th American men xo in for whiskers, “The Fench womes not chic | dressers,” sald Miss Brewster, “but | gaudy dressers. They have not the jcarriage of the American girls, Our American girls know how to wear] ¢ jelothes, and the love of outdoor life; makos for our proper carriage 1 4 “Talk about whiskers: To go along 9b OFsGddc (Oe D Ee OHREOTETED a Paris boulevard is like breaking your - way through an almost impassable f Mina Anna &. Sees, The jury, after be- Jest, ‘The mon all look Ike the car. SHE Een ty sto house, Bed if ‘toons we see of Russian nibilists, All arged the Jury, they lack 1s bombs in their hands. | ‘The men are vain us the women, ‘The | women sit in the cafes and paint their faces, not powder them mind you, but + and the casa Ww set itd ‘ume for the trial resulted in the jury Iwill, but the Appellate Di- q tind, Hageman. Delabarre, . © mel are paint. The men ait before looking| the second wif of Dre Delabarre, from | @oSlshmen T have met here are not glasses and’ oll their whiskers and| Whom he was separated in 1902, in) tt with the) Asnerionns, Uae haven't made up my mind whether f want to marry one of my country: men or “That may sound presumptuous in a girl, but you know when one doesn’t want anything it is always thrust in one’s way. I have no thoughts of marriage, and | suppose that is why 1 have received #0 many pro I expect to get at least a hundred pro- posals before making up my mind, and then maybe | will be too late. Just now my ambition is to teaeh English army officers how to danve.” preen themselves like peacocks, De- |liver me from whiskers, [ would have liked to have taken a pair of Jeciasors and trimmed the hedges the jmen wear in Paris.” | Mis Brewster, who was a achool- | mate of Vivien Gould, now Lady De- cies, and a former neighbor of the Goulds at Lakewood, N. J., sald she was all in favor of the American men. “I hope the day will never come when they will disfigure themselves | with whisker MARKS TURNS INSPECTOR AND CLEARS UP WALKS “Pm the Borough President,” He Tells Storekeepers Who Question Authority. Borough President Marks inspected tidewalks to-day between the City Hall and Battery place. He devoted |mont of his time to Nassau, Vesey, | Fulton and other congested streets where sidewalk encumbrances ure moat complained of. “I am inspecting sidewalks for the Borough President's office,” said Mr Marks to one storekeeper, “and I want to give you notice that you'll hav remove that stand outside, It i# an WILL TEACH POLICE TO SWIM AND RESCUE Commissioner to Open School— Public Bath for New Mem- bers of Force, All present and future policemen of New York City will know how to swim and how to reacue people from drowning. Police Commissioner Mec- Kay to-day sent a letter to Borough President Marcus M. Marks asking permission to have the use of the public baths at East Twenty-third street for the purpose of having the present members of the force and Kuere plicants instructed in the art of swimming and life-saving. The Commissioner wants the baths for a few hours each day. “The request is very reasonable and I shall grant it,” said Borough President Marks. believe it a good Idea to make swimming and/|}%! life-naving a part of the examination | feotice, Don f future policemen and I shall aid n thia work every way possible,’ OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & G encumbrance.” “Who are you?” asked the atore- 34th Street—New York keeper. “Um Mr. Marks,” replied the “in- spector.” The storekeeper couldn't under- atand why the Borough President himself should make the tour when) he has a hundred or more inspec for that very purpose. Mr. Marks explained that he wanted to see con- ditions as they really are. He found many incumbrances and ordered them removed immediately, pleco <lelneite MITCHEL TO ASK GLYNN TO HELP BILLS ALONG Will Urge Governor to Include Pet Measures in Call for Special Session. Mayor Mitchel will ask Gov. Glynn to interost himself at the special sos sion of the Legislature in the admin- istration bill—the measure creating » supply purchasing city department- and a bill providing for the disposal of refuse and garbage It is said by the Mayor that the! j central supply bureau would mean begsig to the city of from $2,000,000 0 $4,000,000 @ year. ‘The administra: | Hair Plateau (as illustrated) trimmed with Beauty roses combined with satin ribbon. Also popular shapes in Tagal Hairbraid and Milan Hemp; flower, feather and ribbon trimmed. Regular 15.00 Values. 7.50 On Sale Thursday, April 2nd. | tion bill’ provides for a department fl tuk administration to the plac the Commissioners + counts. ; new department would be under | supervision of the Mayor, throu | Commiasioner of Administration and | two deputjes | “T hapokn to know that the Gov- ernor is interested in me rule for New York and belie will do all he can to help t sald thes Mayor SPRING WEDDINGS Engraved Invitations, Announcements At Home and Calling Cards THE IMPORTED WORCESTERSHIRE HOLBROOK: S Easter Stationery DEMPSEY & CARROLL, 431 FIFTH AVENUE— Between 38th and 39th Sts.—NEW YORK CITY

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