The evening world. Newspaper, May 26, 1914, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

OPES TY gto wt TO ISH WILSON Ai willl “aN Rejects riv ai fay Colors Offered to Him at Raii- road Station. PLANS FOR CAMPAIGN. Tells Pennsylvanians He Will Speak in Pittsburgh on i June 30, Col, Roosevelt went to Washington to-day “feeling as fit as a fiddle” as | he expressed it, to deliver an address to the National Geographical Society . and pay a call on President Wilson At the White House. The Colonel was accompanied by J. K. Cherrie and Leo Miller of the Museum of Natural History, who were with him throughout his explorations in South | America, and Anthony Fiala, who | commanded a supplemental expedi- ‘ Kansas also rode down to Washing- H ton with the Colonel. Col, Roosevelt came in from Oyster By in Bourke Cockran’s automobile. Mr. Cockran delivered him at the Pennsylvania station shortly before | 10 o'clock, With his customary promptneas the Colonel wi head of | the other members of his party, who did not arrive until after he had bought his tickets. While surrounded by a group of reporters in the waiting room the Colonel was approached by a man who introduced himself as “Mr. Springer” and endeavored to force the ex-President to accept one of the ever released from \ tivity. It was red, pink, blue, orange, green and several and tints. The Colonel recoiled when Mr. Sprini unfolded his offering and Mr. Springer regret- fully moved away. Inasmuch as Col. hecpaydderl fa going to tell the Nationa! hhical So- ciety about the nen} discovered it ia worthy of note that the parlor car in which he rode to Washington is named “Darkwa' " Before the train departed at 10.08 the Colonel shook hands with several members of the crew and dictated several letters ee @ stenographer from the Outlook office. ae lecturing and calling on the President, Col. Roosevelt will, ‘t is understood, attend to some practical politics wh! in Washington. ROOSEVELT TO SPEAK IN BYLVANIA CAMPAIGN. PHILADELPHIA, May 26.—Col. Roosevelt's formal compaign for the Allen T. Burns of Pittsburgh met Col. Roosevelt at New York and trav- elied with him to Philadelphia. Will- jam Draper Lewis, dean of the law department of the University of Penn- sylvania, and Progressive candidate for Governor, also travelled from New oYrk to Philadelphia with Col, Roose- velt. A delegation of Pennsylvania Pro- gressives boarded the train and rode through the city with the Colonel. To those Mr. Roosevelt told of his inten- tion to speak at Pittsburgh. ‘lam in Pennsylvania now,” he said, “and I am cqming back, and when I do I will have Dean elwis and Pin- chot with me.” As he said this he slapped Dr. Lewis on the back. “I am taking an enormous Interest in Pennsylvania, and that js why I am going to speak in this State.” Beveral hundred persons greeted Mr. Roosevelt at the station, where he left th train to shak hands with as many as he could before the train started. ‘There was a great shout when some one called for “Three cheers for the old warhorse.” AGED WOMAN IS FOUND SENSELESS FROM GAS. Had Moved Away When Charity | Folk Wanted Son Sent to Hospital. years old and alone in the world, wi be taken care of from now on by the United Charities, They found the “A old lady again to-day after they had lost track of her and searched tor | several weeks, Mrs, Ritter and her son George, who was fifty years obl, lived up- town, but when the charity folk wanted George to go to a hospital he and his mother packed up thelr fow goods and moved to No, 428 West Forty-ninth street. They got along until last week, when George was removed to the Folycltn Hospital and died Satur It was through the report of his} h that the chartty folk learned the whereabouts of Mrs, Ritter and Mrs, Van Hook set out for the house Mrs, Riiter senseles# on the kitchen floor, Gas was escaping fram a stove, Apparently # tube had been loosed accidentally and a doctor from Poly- clinic soon resuscitated the old lady. Now Mrs. Van Hook ts going to take care of her, Wilson Meets won ernor, HINGTON, May 26. — Gov \ pavideon of Newfoundland, and Mrs, Ado) jand Gove were field. tion, Congressman Victor Murdock of | Mrs, Pauline Ritter, who ts vend i to-day. Bhe got there just as Peter Con- | nolly, a Kas ailled, and to- gether they op door and found presented to President | Gacrotary ~ ROOSEVELT e¢ GOES Hopelens E Love Can Be Cured iY Hypnotism, But Victims cial Be Willing Subjects | | \ Dr. John D. Quackenbos Says, Though, That He Does Not Believe Hypnotism Can Ever Change or Destroy the Kind of Love That Ought to Last. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman's fair? It she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?” — particularly if Dr. John D. Quackenbos puts me into a hypnotic sleep and earnestly assures me that I never want to see her again. For a mental suggestion and not a potion or an amulet {s the modern charm against unrequited or unwise passion. The other day a cable came from Par's telling of the achievements of Dr. Bertillon in curing by hypnotism alcoholism and what some have deemed an equally deplorable intoxication, unhappy love. I re- & ry membered that New York has a noted authority on treat- ment by suggestion in the person of Dr. Quackenbos, author of “Hypnotic Therapeutics.” And when I called on him at his office, No. 331 West Twenty-eighth street, he told me that it ‘was nothing unusual for him to prevent divorces and save young women from lifelong unhappiness simply by the power of suggestion. ‘T have had hundreds of such|I have chosen, that of a husband cases,” he said, “and there is hardly | who has been’ dgawn away from his e diMculty in effecting a cure.) wife. Then, if he is asked how he Tho one absolute essential is the con-| feels toward the affinity for whom sent of the patient.” he has been ready to sacrifice every- ream. Progressive party baad year prone “And you have found hundreds of|thing, he will look blank and e: Panta ene oh hia way to Wass |!0Vere who really were willing to be/ claim, ‘Why, “I've forgotten all ington, to speak in Pittsburgh on| cured?” I asked a bit incredulously. | about it!’ yee fa) pees tat tats ath ae NO EFFECT ON REAL S8URE/GIVEN CHOICE OF A CURE OR Spain. | ENOUGH LOVE. A DIVORCE. Rut, as Dr. Quackenbos reminded me, I had forgot that only “star- crossed” lovers come to him, “| do not believe that hyp- notiem can ever change or de- stroy the sort of love that ought to last,” he told me. “The strong, abiding affection between hue- band and wife, or between a young man and woman whe are confidently looking forward to marriage, cannot be affected. It ie only the infatuations which ought to have existed at all whioh | can help to put out of existence. “And even in such instances I must have the consent of the subject. Parents have brought their daugh- ter to me, pleading that 1 divert her | thoughts from some man whom she cannot or ought not to marry. Un- less the girl's appeal is joined to that of her father and mother I can do nothing. “On the other hand, more than one young girl has come to me and told ms frankly that ahe was devoted to some married man, but that she longed to conquer her feelings. In fone such case the affair had gone on for ten yeara, Yet @ cure wae effected, and the girl is now happily “One woman of excellent social po- sition in this fogn became suspicious of her husband, and at length actu- ally found him with a married woman whom they both knew. The abandoned wife made this stipulation to her husband: ‘Go to Dr. Quacken- bos and let him cure you, or I shall get a divorce.’ The husband came to me, I cured him and he and his wife are now ideally happy. “Another young husband conceived ™% ridiculous infatuation for a woman who played the piano in a saloon, but he responded to my treatment. Still another successful case was that of @ man in middle life, well to do and respected, with four children, who fell suddenly in love with a young girl, the daughter of a dear friend, and insieted that he couldn't live without her, jagestion treatment fer the husband whe has strayed is nat- urally conditioned on hie wife's willingness to forgive him. In such a situation some women are relentiess, And it's exceedingly important that the person from whom e ject of love is being taken away should have another te whom te turn. | always cau- tion the wives of the men whom | treat that the past must be for- gotten, that there must be no nagging, no coldness and repul- 1 According to my observation, love only gathers strength from the ob- jptactes in the way of Its fulfilment ‘Two of the greatest lovers of all time, Dante and Petrarch, were fo | ever unsatisfied, in any human sense, ‘And you know that naughty couplet of Byron's: “phink you, if Laura had been Pet- rareh's wits, that might be the case. He would haye written eonvete atl encin’ married ard unmarried his Ife?" women come to me," he went on, “Nevertheless, the method is “phe former are infatuated with an simple,” Dr. Quackenbos replied. See TORRE Bre: Eake uated ANN 3h To oure the wreng sort of love | nusuand's, and though they are disc affair it le ne gusted with themselves they feel that tain the confidence of the pati they cannot conquer their feelings | to hear from him the p: rtioular without help.” circumstances of his case, from “But is your treatment proof which the physician oan 'y | againat association with the person determine what who ia the object of the unwise love?” wrought by a continuance of the | 1 asked. “I should not think that such affair. int is Put | association could always be avoided “But men are not your only pa- tients?” I inqufred. “No, I have many more women," Dr. Quackenbos replied. “Don't you think men are more willing to let nature take ite course?” I suggested, and the doctor admitted into | when the ‘sons move in the same sician ti social cirel ish and imp “1 alwaye advise my love pa- how it will estrange hie wife, de tients and my alcohol patiente stroy his home, cast a shadow on te avoid temptation,’ id the his children, interfere with h doctor. “A man who is submit- business, wreck his whole future. Finally, he is ordered not to feel any attraction toward the ting to suggestion to be cured of @ fancy for his stenographer is very ish if he hie infatuation, new ene, A wo ‘our or five treatments are usu- matinee idel had better stay jelly sufficient in this typical case that away frem hie perfermances. 4. s a THE PATIENT (iS WILLING = wot C~ “RWISE ‘ 1 Love Nevertheless, suggestion is strong enough to withstand any ordi- it. once visited me who was in love with a married man, but had discovered that he was In- terested in several other women be- sides herself. She asked me to sug- gest scorn and contempt for him, and though she met him repeatedly after that she hardly knew him.” “Hut suppose a patient receives from you a powerful suggestion that &@ love affair be discontinued, and from the other party to the affair an equally powerful suggestion that it go on. Who wins?” I asked. | “I lost,” admitted the doctor, “in at least one case of that sort. I had a patient in another city, a married man with several children and a prominent position in the community. His stenographer, a woman of more than doubtful reputation, told me) bluntly, ‘You can’t get that man away from me!" And I couldn't. His wife divorced him finally, and he married the stenographer.” Perhaps he's cured now. Despite this failure, Dr. Quackenbos seems to have achieved remarkable success in destroying the hypothenuse of the eternal triangle, —_~_ - — SEIZE EXPLOSIVES | IN MILITANT RAID Five Women Arrested Also Had Plans of Houses—Picture | Slashers Sentenced, LONDON, May 26.—The suffragette prisoners taken by the police during | @ raid on a West End flat on May 21) were brought before the Magistrate | to-day, and, after seeing the exhibits, | he took such a serious view of the| case that he refused all offers of bail, They were charged with conspiracy. | ‘The five women, who had previously | refused to give their names, to-day | identified themselves in the court as Mrs, H. F, Alice Hall and Misses Em- meline Hall, Grace Roe, Julia Jameson and Ellen Armos. ‘The exhibits seized | in the flat included a uew shrapnel grenade of ingenious manufacture, coils of fuse and plans of houses with instructions how to reach them and as to tho usual movements of the police | in the victnity. The women vandals of the National | Gallery and the Royal Academy and the recent raider who broke many windows in the West Bnd of Londo: were arraigned to-day, Sentenc six months’ imprisonment was pro- nounced on each of the picture « stroyers, while the window smashe in all cases were condemned to terms | of four months, | a Freda Graham, the suffragettes who slashed several yaluable paintings the National Gallery on May 22, was obviously disappointed at the fuct| that her militant sisters were not al- lowed to come into court, She ha-| rangued the jury, declaring that she had attacked the pleture “as a pro- test against King George's illegal | and unconstitutional action in refs: | Ing to recelve a legal deputation of | women." She added: | “What are five pictures compared with 80,000 pictures by the greatest artist of all which are shamefully | defaced, damaged und degraded by men each night.” Mary Spencer, who damaged a picture at the Royal Academy on May 22, told the judge that the only way left for women to express their | views was to dumage property, as they respected human life tao much| to deatroy it, i iF _RYEWOTIEO DOESNT Nol sTena” TREATMENT ~ FIR Cty wen MUBBY If TRYING TO C60 an ws *| standing. | velt, |mark, t | Tenement | "Hero Tal work ANO You TRY THR NaRere MUIT HELP hee GUN FIGHTER TAKEN] | Answering Call of Ca ot Wiel JACOB RIS DIES FOR REFORMS IN CITY Close Friend of Roosevelt, Who Called Him ‘Most Useful Citizen’—Sick Some Time. BARRE, Mass., May 26.—Jacob A. Riis, author and social worker, died| Carmody emptied hia gun at him at his summer home here at 1.80 P, M. to-day, after a lingering ilIness, Mrs. Riis and a son were at Mr. Rils’a bedside when the end came. Mr. Riis was brought here about two weeks ago from a sanitarium at Battle Creek, Mich, where he had been a patient for some time, taking treatment for heart trouble of long The journey proved too great a strain on the weakened heart, and Mr. Riis collapsed tn an automo- bile while on his way here. He ral- Hed the next day, but soon became | weak a At firat he declined | ly, but during the past few | days he rapidly grew worse. “The most useful citizen tn New York" was the way Theodore Roose- then Governor, described Jacob A. Riis in a genera! letter of intro- duction which he gave to the reporter, reformer, lecturer and author when Mr. Rlis went abroad in 190.0 And it was 4 title in which Mr. Riles took | pride, He was a Dane but New York City| was his home, He was bornin 1849 {at Ribe on the River Nibs in Den- » son of 4 achoolmaster who wanted him to be a Iiterary man. In- stead young Riis chose to be a car- penter He was twenty-one when he came to this country because of a tem- porary disappointment in what proved his firat, Inst and only love! affair. He was without means or! friends, He mined coal in Pennsyl- !vania, made bricks in New Jersey, did ‘pentering In Buffalo and day | labor on a railroad up-State. He ped- dled books in New York, and was! wtill at it when he got a job with a news assoclation, He went to Police | | Headquarters, and was a Headquar- | ters reporter from then until he re- | signed in 1901, It was in this post he first met Roosevelt and won hia aid in effecting many of the reforms with which Riis interested himself, He fought for parks for the people and gut He insisted that the old rook ™ eries of tenements be torn down and) they w Inbooksa nd magazine a ticles in the columna of his paper | he fought for decency and cleanit- ness in the slums, Riis drove bake shops out of tene- ment basements; he fought for laws abolishing child Tabor, and | was ly instrumental in getting the of “the briefest, wisest and at atatute on the books of New Tork, laying down the principle that hereafter ‘no school shall be built without an adequate playground, " After twenty-seven years as @ re- porter ils reaigned to continue hin fight by writing and lecturing, Among | the products of his pen are “How the pasa Other Half Lives,” "The Children of the Poor,” “Nhe Making of an Amert can” (his autoblography), “The Bat- tle with the Slum,” "Children of the "The Old Town,” “Theo- velt the Citizen," and from the Far North.” _> - dore Roos \s going to say rry for. e who make @ specialty of r leon. alle seldom have the discern! to be sorry.” | That Starts Second Pusitade—| | whether events will make another | widow and a few more orphans, It AFTER YEARS OF WORK | business, Detectives Stephen W. IN BATTLE: THO DETECTIVES SHOT Comrades, Police Go Under Fire in Dark Cellar. LANTERN HIT BY BULLET. ; Detective Panevino Shot | Through Lungs. ‘There te a chance—not a big one, it is admitted—for the life of Detective mil Penevino, who fell last night in the performance of his duty while try- | ing to arrest @ “bad” negro in a dingy | flat house at No. 227 East Seventy- third street. One of the bullets fired by the negro, Nicholas Hollingsworth, &n ex-convict, plerced both the lungs and liver of the detective, but Chief | Surgeon Palmer of the Police Depart- ment sald at Flower Hospital to- that the general condition of wounded man was so good that he might pull through. Penevino's partner, Detective Peter Carmody, was shot through the arm, but he will be back on duty as soon as the surgeons dig out the bullet and patch up the wound. It was a night of quick action and a) fast gunplay—one of those nights in the life of a New York policeman when it is hard for him to guess » started in a negro fight in front of Hollingeworth's home, The negro, who had served a year in the peniten- tlary for stabbing another of his color, had mo intention of being arrested. He sat in his flat with his pistol in his lap and was ready when Penevino and Carmody entered. The negro was on his feet in a moment, bis gun roaring in the cramped confines of the flat. Pene- vino went down with the first shot as he was leaping toward the negro. Carmody sprang over his fallen com- rade, when a bullet met bim. The negro was singularly fortu for without bringing him down. The negro ran up the astaira to the roof and down the stairs of the adjoining buliding an@ back to the dark cel- lar of the house in which he lived. Carmody, bleeding, gave chase, but Hollingsworth eluded him. Pe! vino, knowing that he was badly hit, staggered to Flower Hospital, his clothes soaked with his blood, Com- missioner Wooda happened to be there at the time, and had him hurried to the operating table and then to a private room, It waa up to Carmody to reload his nun, get help and corner the negro who had put his comrade out of not kill him, ‘The Birmingham, Stanley Gorman, Joe kelley and John J. Fogarty of the East Fifty-seventh atreet station re- sponded to hia call for assistance. Birmingham led the way Into the cellar, which waa pitch black. His hand electric light shot out a white ray, and it showed Hollingsworth ly- |ing flat on his stomach like a great black snake, his elbows holding up his shoulders and the gun glistening in his hand, The artillery began to rip loose once more, and the first shot of the negro was @o near true that it ehat- tered Birmingham’ I The detéctives biased darkness, but luck was still with | Hollingsworth and not a shot felt him | out. He returned the fire, and the such y rol duty, bail will \ black hold was filled with the acrid amoke of the exploded cartridges. the shot na DETECTIVES WHO ‘BRE SHOT AND COMRADE "yO NARROWLY ESCA ug PML PANE VINC The negro had one bullet left, but his weapon was jammed and he «ould not In the piteh black- neas of the cellar he yelled that he would surrender if the use his last shot. He crawled to his feet and Birming- ham and his comrades jumped at him, | tarrh, but that they could not He put up a atiff fight, for he weighs|to pay my fees. Such persons 200 pounds and is in the prime of fe. detectives further mishap. At Headquarters to-day it was sald that both Penevino and Birmingham, who led the way into the men of high reputation for bravery, the latter having partment's commendation for jump- ing into the middle of a gunfight two years ago when he was a patrolman and arresting two euat were engaged in a duol. Penevino was appointed to the de- partment on Oct, an excellent r that he was also promoted from him received the de- » and made record Hollingsworth was by Magistrate Cornell Yorkville Police Court to-day, being grave danger not survive bis injuries, mingham showed a bullet hole in his coat sleeve and 4 seared finger where which smashed his hand electric had grazed it. SON O ' TOWED BENEATH: HS ROVAL RA Prince Oscar Wits Fathe Consent to Marriage Mother’s Lady-in-Waitin BERLIN, May 26,—The Katser 1 given his consent to the ma: Prince Oxcar of’ Prussia, his fifth to the Countess Ina Mai dat of Count Charles von Bat Levetzow, and in order to allay © prejudice of the Hohenaoll against a member of the Im} blood marrying beneath him the v, it ts assumed, wilt elevate: a high rank his son's choice of & The Countess is a woman of ra but she is not of royal’ blood, said that one reason for the consent wi that there were: enough German Princesses to around all the male members family and he did not look favor on his son marrying outside: the empire. After it became known to big father that he was in love with Countess Ina the Prince ex trouble, and for a time got It: sweetheart was a lady in ie! his mother, the Empress, and she waa given the cold shoulder while the | pertal “old folke” talked ove: Prince Oscar is without an | nave that which is given by Emperor's bounty.* Now that great War Lord has given his 6m nent there Is every reason to that the Prince will be looked financially In the future as Ip who love to gossip ces and troubles with delight the sudden and flat Lgfnens that he ¥ everybody looked tor a storm the Throne. Prince Oscar had way age sow himself save, pads hapa, he good handling of a vate sooulla in the Unter ment. th going out of bis rank he jumped inte inence. ‘rhe Countess Ina ts in her ninth yenr and her father the Grand Duchy of in. of his bride to be, The Emperor but two children younger than Prince Joachim and Princess’ ise, now the Duchess of 8 Treatment For $5 During the past six yoars, my office was located in the Building, a great many persons come to me and told me that ectives did} would Mke very much to have treat them for clogged nostrils, @ ness and other manifestations requested that I Leber ‘ee y fact that my tuaites Flatiron Building woul without jar, are I was compelled to they were. Whep lease expired in the Flatiron ng and I moved into my new No. 220 West 424 street, my facilities were so much In the arrangements of the office are much better that I decided to my fees for a limited time to a ice, so that all may afford it. eiders who the frst) “1 take this opportunity of ing all those who require ti held without | for catarrhal troubles that in the| month of May my fees for there| will be a charge of $5.00 for ¢ that Panevino| complete treatments. This fee Bir-/ include all necessary treatment. medicine. In order to take tage of this new offer, it we be essary to visit my of your name on or befoi Acker, Merrall & Condit}... i. EST. Company 1820 Our reputation is back of these quality-economy items. BRANDS “Al” SAUCE Lg. bottle .40 A Thick, Piquant Sauce for Meat, Fish, Soup MARMALADE} Imported. ......... Robertson's Golden Shred SOUP-—R. & R. Tomato Condensed. ... TUNA FISH—Catalina Brand. . of town branches, ; Medium . 15 oz. pots Large tin . Large tin Served as a Salad—Creamed or A la Newburgh ‘TOMATOES—Noreca........ Selected cuality=-Fresh Tomato Flavor PEARS, APRICOTS or PEACHES . Large tin Noreca—California Fruit in Pure Sugar Syrup . Large tin These prices in effect at all our city and out All patients who begin Reid ment before June lst will treatment as long as they without any increase ) in the od germa out ui 1 will be pleased AN cat you Dowling tor an

Other pages from this issue: