The evening world. Newspaper, November 3, 1914, Page 3

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ee Sy eee entire th ais arene: NaF EE ID A Pe Rab as * THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1914 RR BEST REN) [Cold Coffee and Kisses Mar Wedded Bliss, MRS? WHINE ASUICIDE, FEARING) But Good Wife Can Make Both Warm Again SPENDS A FORTUNE . GERMAN SOLDIERS ON WAR HOSPITAL American Consul - General’s Four Noted Doctors Sail With Society Woman Who Gives Hospita And Own Services for War Victims + oy DONT Hick secause Comes SPOTS FFF 29962 3-4-G9GH0-5 O° O Miss Watts intends throwing horself| {nto the work of Belgian relief in this country. All Belgium, she says, is swiftly approaching starvation. j ‘Daughter Tells of Horrors Her To-Morrow to Aid \ She Saw in Belgium. Wounded of Both Sides, RANCE IS A: PRISONER. | SENDs AMBULANCES. Baroness Fallon’s Uncle and Clothing Enough for Thou-|¢ Three Cousins Shot in sands and Medical Supplies Street. Also Shipped Ahead. Py eel Aeged Rid re bere pb! Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, tt was 2 ‘atts, American Consul- | TAne SOMG Maus learned to-day, will sail for Burope bagi Baden) returned alone avo BO Nor Jon the “Lusitania to-morrow with o ard the Holland. Suume Mtnmcur America Lin mship Potsdam to- staff of prominent New York sur- day with bitter memories of the |geons and trained nurses and estab- tragedy she had seen all about her |lish, at her own expense, a large field Ta. during the days when the German hospital behind the firing line in hosts were destroying Belgium. After| Northern France. ehe has rested for a time with friendy in her home city of Philadephia, | Wounded soldiers, German or allies’, will be treated in the inetitutioa, which is to be conducted in co-opera- tion with the American Ambulance Hospital near Paris, now managed by “I served for the first two months war with the Belgian Red said Miss Watts. “Since Rurses under thirty years of age are Not allowed on the field I spent my time in the base hospitals, caring for ‘wounded Germans. In those months T lived a lifetime. My best girl friend ved in Louvain. When the Germans captured that city she committed sul- cide, for she feared falling into the de of the drunken soldiers. From what I have heard I think she did the right thing. “IT am engaged to marry a Belgian nobleman, who is now in German hands in Antwerp. Whether he is alive or dead, wounded or not, I have not been able to learn, for the Ger-| mans would not let me communicate Drs. De Bauchet and Joseph A. Blake. Up to the present time Mrs. Whitney has purchased ten motor ambulances, @ large quantity of medical appur- tenances and enough clothing for 8,000 men, women and children. This batch of equipment and supplies was shipped to France Saturday on the steamship Chicago. Those who sail to-morrow on the Cunard liner with the former Ger- trude Vanderbilt on her errand of mercy ari Dr. Walton Martin, of No. 3 West Million Male Virtues Won’t Keep Home| Happy, For the Wife Makes or Mars Married Life, Declares Sara Jeanette Duncan, Novelist and Playwright, Who Differs With Detroit Wives. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ‘ What are the essentials of a happy married life? Accomiing to a symposium of one hundred Detroit wives, marital felic- ity depends upon how completely the husband conforms to six stringent | stipulations. These are the rules set down for the uldance of the model Michigan married man: 1, He must be as ardent a lover after marriage as before. 2. He must be devoted to his home. T believe that the most successful partnership, in matrimony as in busl- t Ness, existe when the distinctive Fiftieth atroet, attending surgeon at qualities of each partner make up|St- Luke's Hospital. He will bave for a Aeficit in the other. If one ia|chargo of the field organization, . Ageressize and daring, the other! pr, Karl Connell, ciate attend- = should m tactful and cautious, Butlin Dhysictan at Roosevelt Hospital, and passed her girlhood there but) fre ,Woe® not invariably determine) oi ine is at No. 43 West Hitt! «” HARRY” "PAYNE © WHITNEY. her — INGQVALITY 1§ A MATTER OF A DOMINATING TEMPERAMENT ‘ the role, soit } lew Bes, iene 8. Ho must be industrious even to the extent of/since her marriage she has spent| tion ‘usually opsrstes sowainat the (eth atreet. For Kee pitat Caryn Le eae Tete | carina, CoulgctiOn Of, Sacha i 4 hos; ce to France. It in| America, and it was to : ’ “One of my family’s best friends, Tolling up his sleeves and tidying the house. many years on the other side. Linton of two dominant tempera- | pr, Donald Gordon, of No. 128 West | true that she intends sailing on the| inclinations of the vomge “You believe, for example,” I sug- gested, “that if she wants her husband} to remain a lover the wife must take pains to remain lovable?” 4, He must be morally pure, a champion of the| single standard. 6. He must be willing to treat his wife as an equal leaned, Mr. Vanderbilt encouraged har bition. It ts said he was anxious there should be an artist in the “What niet | Fifty-ninth street, formerly a mem-|Lusitania, and that Drs, Martin, eoacntiad fo. Zou Consider, the splot iver of the Roosevelt Hospital staff. | Connell, “Gordon and Drennan are “A rf on the same boat, man mee ot stneakee Fred Dr. W. E. Drennan, of Birmingbam, Whitney im to establish an q the Baroness Fallon, lived in Namur,! She saw her husband killed in the atreet in front of their house, He was a vidier and he died defending ee Ala. auxil hospital in Fi 5 id } Biarous, Hae Suny Oo eae asuss| ee “T mean just that,” sald Mrs, Cotes, | [rartied life & Fitteen hospital nurses. fail {¢ muni in. the ‘Amerionnam-| Cth pissin ging taatone aie i cousins were taken from thelr hou 6. He must be temperate, fe all know that a woman can | idangerous process, Th SURGEONS GIVING THEIR aR. |2UIance hospital service. It will be! than asa débutante she was & Soe ee eT cae tots*ine Gers Ardor, domesticity, industry, purity, respect, temperance—surely they] charm a man if she tries. Why who believes VICES FREE. Id ee cutniete the, fedical | tread with @ studio over the Vi { maordor to throw open thelr house | are sign-posts on the road to connubial bliss. But are they to be heeded by| does she eo often atop trying after he tour surgeons, who are among|sicians who have made great ancri-| "Nest ete went to Parle and” ' at night for: German SrowWrg’ {0 one only? Does a happy married life depend exclusively upon the conduct | much tuking for granted? Curie a tho most noted in America, have re-|#Ce# that they may help the suffer-| tod; alxo to Rome and Spain, Dy family, Count Gaston de Ribocourt 8nd characteristics of the husband, while the wife smugly adopts the role her engagement she wore dainty eingle geodby ki forg fused to accept compensation for Fee Goren men snout yea by her ta ota Ad ‘Wayruist, was wounded in one of the of critic on the hearth? Seiets, ate eae ei rt; gach, pase. Sut of Bisperien: Pdi thels work. HELP as RICH AMERI- fe alse’ bia if ee tg Anes @ r battles with tho Invaders and was) know that's the theory of certain| procuring an Ideal husband Ie to istened’ - sympathetically, on the other 364 days, when coffee | One of Mrs, Whitney's friends sald) wit 15 9 simple, Ne pias ce work, | Slized—hia daughter was an ertigg Ps modern wives, but I take leave to] have at hand an ideal wife. In sought in every way to make and kisses were alike eatisfac- | to-day that not only does she tatend| ang ut ¢ R merit. i * away from his own. There he lin- 4 fered for several days, receiving no doubt it. And so does Mre, Everard food but sour milk, before he died, Cotes (Sara Jeannette Duncan), the same time It le maintaining her first field hospital in- | mous one. it is work, the vei Gefinitely, but that she will open| Pilcity of webich appeals strongly to After her marriage to Harry Whitney in 1896 she continued art work, and in 1909 she self lovable, Once she i: 1. the often refusee to take the trout | BENS ble to be attractive. What won- nine cases out of ten the Ideal wife will make for herself her SENSE OF HUMOR AN ESSEN- and during all the time of his agony hi ideal husband. nine ci the Gner serfsibilities of every Ameri- ‘i is kins- | DOvelist, who has just arrived at the jer that she no longer attracts? TIAL OF MARRIED LIFE. others if circumstances demand it. studio at No, 19 Macdo a ae not alowss to: s8e/ os Cosmopolitan Club to supervise re-| of ten the success or failure of | “Likewise, the first step Mra, Whitney, he sald, ts ready tolare’rich poopie In tia country. woo | Tie, mishest Ronors, based towara| making her husband fond of his hone is to be fond of it herself. If she | Keeps out of it as much as possible, “And heaven help the married who have no sense of humor! You Amert- ans ic fortunate; you all seem to ave It. in this country wbo folk. o be up and dolag,’ “There 1s not a whole house atand-| hearsals of the play she has made for ing between Brussels and Antwerh annie Russell from her recently pub- merit, rewarded h among these was the accep! the Fine Arte Commission last marriage depends upon the woman. it a large share of her fortune into | 4 “Of course, there are occasional in- yas the work of helping the war sufferers, | Also, it : f Belgium, save | Then, Ki eee eae the northeast, has shed book, “His Royal Happiness.” Phprenad ele lana 1s habitually un. hurrying frem bridge table to dance, each tusband and Wee ahaa aati Since the outbreak of hostilities she | not beens wiry oc Mee penne toe te been put to the sword and torch. This romance of a future English ae ‘ul, or a habitual drunkard, and cil ge ec DE ee al ah ts their questions for the: es, with-|has been quietly planning to be of] “Having returned not long slace reer Ae. Sonat ae Girls and women have been outraged king and a daughter of a future| Where his wife cannot be blamed for) tye agmoatic hearth, Man is natucally | cya eenee $0 the best-intentioned | substantial service, And she was not | from France, I can speak authorita- | women passengers might be shot without relatives,” tively of conditions there, They are and \non-combatan’ Presid he United States is only | the shipwreck of their happiness. But the roving animal. Of c I think the onl mber of her family wh Her subject was ti t tragedy of history ident of the Uni ving anti course, ni “Surely a happy marriage isn’ . | the only member ¥ wholterrible. It is needl t i eee ested that. belpless one of the delightful love stories for| Women are so much more subtle, #0) he ouht to care for his home, but if gible unless the husband can tale in. | cherlahed that ambition, Her alster,|the great auffering in france’ in Bel. | Mar standing with arme ou much more complex than men, that |the wife wants to bring about that de- sired result she he If should stay at home and make it a delightful spot.” terostingly?" 1 urged. But If the husband ts a bore it's his wife's fault, declared Mra. Cotes. gium, Every one knows of that. What we need is a furt! of the true American spir! “The true American spirit is one is belng enacted in fina’ Countess Szechenyi, who formerly jwhich Mra, Cotes Js known on both was Gladys Moore Vanderbilt, now is \aldes of the Atlantic. oe GAS KILLS AGED SPINSTER. | pip aw ineat wi a tI which attracted attention marble fountain usually married life is what the wife makes it. The initiative is left toher ie dispiay THE FIRST WIFE DOESN'T WANT HUSBAND! — “If a woman marries a stupid | ding the wounded in Austria, ——— REQUISITE. ny Ca lavernae mkniwhe has marcia IN ACRSHENs man she deserves what she gete, | In her ambition to give substantial |of self-sacrifice, and the tme de-| Rerole figures holding aloft fs Found Dead in Her Home in for love. If she marries a clever man and | aid to the war nufferers on both sides, |™ands that it be shown—eapecially| 2?" th. paris Salon. os ‘When I showed her the recipe for] Mrs, Cotes is a rather slight woman s “Do you really think, however, that Hid Bocemen quiet and fat i. hie Mrs, Whitney was encouraged by her aranng those Who oan Ct ips to g've.| *' Jacus anual the, Pies Brooklyn. 4 -bI y d .|the average wife wants her husband| face in the newspaper, let her as d mericans are doing good work Low yea : @ happy marriage, each ingredient| with sea-blue eyes and a smooth, fo eet im his pipet \¢ herasl? if she ie iar husband, the famous polo player and |in extending a belning hand. Myron been noted for the quiet b Se and help keep opting. and consisting of a husbandly virtue, her ted. No husband will so- | horseman, Relatives of Miss, Caroline Nichols, creamy English complexion framed in ven to men and women h I've heard more] inte Mr, Whitney helped her|T. Herrick has played an important house?" 1 asked, oe j sixty years old and reputed to be delicate lips drew into a straight line, | prematurely white cusis. She haalthan one woman urse her spouse “nat| liloquize indefinitely to a wife who | by superintending the purchase of the |Part in the success of the hospital | 12 thelr studies by lack of Bp wealthy, are being sought by the, «The responsibility for a happy | the low, clear English voice, so much |to come poking into the kitchen.” knows nothing about the sub: {ten ambulances and other raneaely work in France, This extension, | thera’ were ton artists 18 iy Brooklyn police to-day. The aged) jerried life rests upon the wife | pleasanter than the staccato variety,| Mra. Cotes agreed with me. “A| jects that appeal to him, a this broadening of the work now be- | there th “Me spinster was found asphyxiated in her in ty ” London trick of deliberately | Wife has « natural pride in her hus-|_ "Men never grow up," ended the | arranging for passports for the party | ing performed by the band of Ameri. | Were gent there and maint fandrome 014 brownstone home; at Mo,| mere than upen the husband,” ehe jand the London tric eliberately | ponds dignity,” she explained, “It’s | Novelist with a wire ‘little emile.| und attending to the necessary detaiie|can surgeons, ia in response to the| Mr. Whitney. i ft lace, last night. . maintained. “The first steptoward slurred r's. She was born in Canada| ugually of more importance to her! “That's why {t's so easy for a woman| of the expedition, efforts of Mr. Herrick. The work is oe gy 8 Lefferts place, ee . aki bean’ n her own. ‘That's why she in-| With tact and understanding to make} sirg Whit oft important as an international anset.” A PAINFUL RECOLLECTION, ~ bara healt ‘Miss Nichola stinctively protests whon her husband | of her marriage what she will, She| ney refused to talk of her RICH AMERICA! GIRL WHO (Prom the Pitteburgh Pest.) xs GPeased izing on the dining room floor attempts to interest himacif in house. | has only to remember, as some one| Work, and Mr. Whitney, through his “MADE GOOD.” “That young millionaire cays heRelis _ y dead, a gas Jet wide open. She had been e,°° e hold concerns. She would honestly | has beautifully satd, that her husband | counsel, referred all inquirera to Rob- 2 you in the kindest remembranea lie dead’ two days, She lived alone and her rather wash the dishes herself than|!8 the oldest of her children.” ert Bacon, former Ambassad Since childhood Mrs.) Whitney h { neighbors could tell the police little es In Cc ar CW. see him do It. eee eee . : ador tO! teen known as one rich American|*y® {t was at ® party given by. yeu about her. "One thing gnite ena Hake. France. Mr, Bacon returned to New girl “who wanted to work and/ th LM stigeey to his ‘ 2 York from Boston late last evening | umount to something in the world. "The iF has unpleasant take for granted is her husband's moral purity. If he is untrue to her the law will set up a barrier between them, and why should she exact less of him than is ex- Seine by the law of the land?” bo is tre Strassburg reports a mysterious wounded personage who is being cared | eqy t serie hae ine Her an an for at the imperial palace and surrounded by a military guard. The doc- | opposed to the Engitsh plan, isn't it? not alfowed to leave the bullding, through fear they| And the American husband Js apt to He is said to be a near relative of the | consider his wife his superior,” und said to a reporter for The Even- | Wifen she wax hardly more than ten | cer fFme rere Mens the NEW PHILOSOPHY HALL ing World: ly Old her father, the late Cor. | party, and I gave tt FORMALLY PRESENTED, “It {s true that Mrs, Whyney ad hellus Vanderbilt, owned the most ‘my girls” +S Sa It Is Mrs. J. S. Kennedy’s $90,000 Memorial Gift to New York Two artillerymen, Franz Lasalle and ‘ean Delmas, the opera singe and a Red Cross nurse assisted in the mass on All Saints’ Day at Nogent- sur-Marne, SALTS IF BACKACHY LAND MONEYS HURT ? tors in attendance might reveal the man’s identity. You cannot buy as much in quantity at the same price— Stop Eating Meat for a| slser -—— way or the other? sho hinted. tiget greeny Waw-W m preioets po e oul Of persistent effort $ Vhile if Y Bladd lew. be hacatow. oflthen aftan'|® crament bound to| New York 1 ‘versity formally re- aw-Wa to : While if Your Bladder German pipes are useful ro the silley because the slow of them often found in @ man or|eelved the Cornelius Baker Hall of produce the very best in purity, flavor, uniformity of blend : enables the sailors ire. German cavalrymen who thought they were safe were routed by Highlanders who saw their lighted pipes, You can Say that tt better when the husband Is a wife, that you Philosophy at dedication exercises in the building yesterday afternoon It Is a $90,000 gift by John Stewart Ken- | nedy in memory of her father, one of | the founders of the University, rh Is Troubling You. and making. Picked, pa and shipped under absolutely sanitary conditions and surroundings. little taller than the don't like to see a # But 1 wake up with backache and ° The Royal Welsh Regiment tg mourning the loss of its mascot, a goat in the kidaey region it gen- that marched at the head of the troops, led by two drummer boys. It was a ns you have been eating too | smuggled into France and died on the firing line, He and it's cataity ate thelr | The Key. br. Adolphus FF. Schauffler, t, says a well-known authority, ea of fact that some wiven Like the lead (® son-in-law of Str, Baker, made the yf Ment forms utic acid, which overworks Fifty-one of the fifty-five second year men at a Cambridge college |!n the marital partnership, presentation address, Chancellor Brown t! he kidneys in thoir effurt to filter it “Absol equali between h accepted the gift the Rey, Dr. John ! Hallet Pea the : t| have joined the British army. Of the four remaining one 1 deaf, one a|, t " tase | SEPSIS He ae ee aaron 4 fom tlhe b oad and thes reome sort of! Spaniard und two Indians, rand and wife is at least ax rare as | 'syise Charlotte Baker, a granidaush= When your kid- a you must re- lius Baker, unveiled the When a German cyclist passed through Malines, entirely deserted of Hove then, lize you relieve your bowels; deve tie tt the body's urinous waste, | ‘habitants, he was pursued for an hour by starving cats and dogs. tive ve have baekache, sick headache, The first “armed forces” of warring nations to be interned in this country are four men said to be deserters from the German gunboat Geier at Honolulu, who were taken by marines on landing at San Francisco, =: your stomach sours, tongue Be happy in using moderately the good things of life. . | Johnnie Poe, a great-néphew of the poet, and a noted football hero at! Princeton twenty yea go, is now a cannoneer in the British army. He has fought in Cuba, the Philippines, Mexico and in almost every Central | American revolution of recent years, has been sentenced to be shot at sun- rise, and been put on the Atlantic in an open boat to perish, but he never gets enough trouble, water sealdy and you are tolief two or three times “ icht consulta good reliable ph fi ur pharmacist of Jad Salts; take a glass of water before ys and you act fine. ‘This famous the acid of grapes WILSON, a wonderfully mild, mellow Whiskey, is made for the man who is careful of his | drink—who wants the best he can get every time. That’s why we invented the Non-Refillable cor | Condiments Mustard France has eighty new trains of 600 capacity each for carrying wounded | soldiers, who are classified according to gravity of the cases, Each train, has twenty passenger cars, and is complete from kitchen to operating room. | MUSTARD... NIGH OLIVES.. 1 with lithia, —e | A fj f to The Emperor's second son, Prince Fitel Friedrich, anya cable, saved | bottle to protect this exceptional Whiskey— Ketchup ... ported Virgin Olive Oil. tel a th elal : . clean and « the Germans from retreat at Quentin by seizing the dri of a fallen | Wilson Real Wilson That's All Chow Chow.... eet Gherkins soldier, beating it and crying, “Forward, comrades, Forward! Onions Sweet Pickles More Than 6,000 Good Grocers in Greater Naw York Sell Waw-Waw Pure Food Products ids in the urine so it thas ending bladder also to ne FREE CLUB RECIPES—Free booklet of famous club recipes for A German newspaper says @ wounded soldier in a trench saw his mixed drinks. Address Wilson, 316 Fifth Ave., N. ¥Y. That's All! e saver for regular| brother ride By,. They greeted each other affectionately, and the injured inexpensive, cannot asked to to the Red Cross station. “I have a military love,” replied the other as he rode & ae, {

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