The evening world. Newspaper, May 25, 1915, Page 3

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(“WHA : * RE EVE rod T ARE THE MOTHERS OF YOUNG GIRLS SEEN DAILY AND NIGHTLY AT DANCING CABAR ET, DOING? DANCING IN OTHER BROADWAY RESORTS? OR LIVING IN HOMES FOR THE BLIND. InG WORLD, t Pickem TUESDAY, MAY 26, 1915. ’ is a} * wor J De MOTHER TArGS MOR LiTTLe DAUGHTER ovr For THe APTERNOON IN ANSWER TO NOTE Has No Information, but Thinks It May Be Due to Italy’s Action. ‘WASHINGTON, May %.—President ‘Wilson told callers to-day he did not know the causes for the delay of the German reply to the American note on the Lusitania, but he presumed the German Government, for the moment, was absorbed in the new cireumstances arising from Italy's entrance into the war. While Ambassador Gerard has sent several messages bearing on what the German reply may be, no direct in- timation had been received concerning its contents and the American Gov- ernment is really uninformed. The German Embassy here, how- ever, has made suggestions to the German Foreign Office for the reply, and in German quarters it is said the note will be of a character to satisfy American public opinion. While declining to throw any tght on the shipping situation as between Great Britain and the United States, Some = OD RAW BIRO WAITING FOR A CHANCE To CUT OUT YOUNG AWAS PRESIDENT’S VIEW |New York’s ‘Girl- About-Town’ Goes the Pace |CATCHES HIISBAN OF GERMAN DELAY |Azed Sows Wild Oats Under Her Mother’s BROADHURST MAY JOIN JAIL’S ALIMONY CLUB on His Wife Alleges He Hasn’t Paid Her Anything Since Last October. Uniess George Broadhurst, the playwright, shows good cause to the contrary, he will be voted a full membership in Ludlow Street Jail's Alimony Club, the next time he comes into New York State, He will be given an opportunity next Friday before Bupreme Court Justice Green- baum to explain why be has not paid ' several months’ alimony to Mrs. Ida Mrs, Gtella A. Eiberson, a member |®Aymond Broadhurst. If the expie- nation ts not satisfactory, he will of Dr. Julia Seton Sears’s faction of many Ke. Tune, Whe Wil NE the New Thought Church, who, as «| Harry K- Berens " ms does not belong to the Alimony Club, Penistoring angel” helped trail Dr. |i, getting all the benefite of a non- k W. Bears, also a New Thought: | 6 fot stent lat, when Mrs. Sears was hunting tor eet ee enna ne Justion Green- divorce evidence, told Supreme Court sd Junticn Page to-day how she turned | paum that her husband agreed to pay detective and with Dr. Sears’s eon, 0 had failed to make the Warren, raided an apartment in the B |.| Gerard Hotel and found Leon W. Elberson in the company of a petite young blonde. Mra. Elberson's domestic troubles began to grow shortly after Dr. and Mra, Dr, Seara aired their marital diMculties in court, with the result that the New Thought leader was found guilty of misconduct with Miss Pauline Langdon, who abandoned the stage to take up New Thought under the tutelage of Dr. Sears, Mrs, El- berson was a pivotal witness for Mra, Sears, and when it came time for Mra. Sears to do her friend a good turn young Warren Sears planned the de- JUDGE LOCKS UP Cl WN HOTEL WITH ANOTHER WOMAN Mrs. Elbertson a Ministering Angel to Herself This Time. Eye ‘ail me fo, was last seen in Atlantic City by one of her attorneys, The playwright told the lawyer that he would return to New York when the case came up, but tnatead, ie al- legen, he went to Philadelphia and ts supposed to be there now. Mra. Broadhurat sald has been making mone: flat through his two la nocent™ and “The L but, sho alleges, there ia no way to collect alimony from him because his royalties are paid to Thomas Broad- burst, his brother. Recently Broad- hurst’ returned from Europe, before | ferred bh wife alleges , she could not file an at- tachment againat It. tective work, ably assisted by Gor- don O'Keefe, his friend. Young Sears and O'Keefe met Mrs, Elberson at a tango party on the evening of April 24, and planned their coup. Mrs. Elberson accompanied the two young men to Wallick’s Ho- but she remained outside while si and O'Keefe went into the hotel. They saw Elberson meet the young blonde woman, and saw them enter the Hotel Gerard. Elberson signed the register as “Mr. L. White and wife,” and was assigned to Room 82. —> NEWARK SCHOOL GIRL MISSING; BOY GONE, TOO Parents of Florence Dewitt Do Not] tits Belleve, However, She Is With Frank Shapiro, (Special to The Brening World.) NEWARK, N. J., May 26.—Florence Dewitt, a pretty fifteen-year-old atu- dent of the South Side High School, did not return from school to her home yesterday. All night long hos- pitals and morgues were searched,| ‘ig; but no trace of her was found. a Her father said she planned to entertain several girl chuma home last night, and he count for her disappearance. Not long after the Dewitt girl's dis-| # appearance another general alarm was sent out for Frank Shapiro, sev- enteen years old. Neither the police nor relatives of the girl believe they are together. oe - DRUG VICTIMS IN BURGLARY. Twe Youss Me: Scores of the Type Pictured in Eugenia Kelly Case Seen in Broadway Tea Dancing Resorts—Ma- ternal Chaperons Rivals of Daughters for Smiles of Rounders, and Share Cigarettes and Cocktails. the President referred to it os a chronic case, It was learned that he believed any formal note at this time to Great Britain might be construed as & weakening of the American Government's position in its delicate relations with Germany, but as soon as the Berlin reply is received some action may be expected. Pressure is constantly being brought to bear informally on the British Foreign Office and Admiralty to ameliorate conditions with respect to American cargoes and ships, and if not relieved shortly general repre- sentations of a broad character would not be surprising. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. In the centre of the Broadway spotlight there stands to-day a new figure—the girl who goes the pace, the girl whose crop of wild oats is sown under the calcium sun and sprinkled with champagne and highball showers. To Broadway itself, indeed, this girl 4s not alto- gether a new figure. Broadway has been getting ac- quainted with her for months past. But until nineteen- year-old Eugenia Kelly was brought into court the other day by her own mother on a charge of incor- rigibility, most of us would have laughed at the story that a young girl of wealth and social position could be found daily and nightly in the White Way cafes. Yet Miss Kelly is only one of the quota of flappers now to be seen in many of New York's dance-and-drink centres. In one crude sentence, girla who, by all appear son, after three-qui Bears stified, went to Room 323 and by a ruse go tn, Mr. Elberson opening the door, “What did he do?” asked Edward A. His attorney for Mra, Etberson, “Well, he didn’t aot a bit pleased,’ the witness replied. “He awore at us as soon am he saw Mra. Elber~ son, “How the deuce did you get in here?” he said to his wife, but Mra, Elberson said nothing until we asked her if he was her husband. She sald he was, and then she looked at the blonde lady who was 4 (n a kimono and aitting on the bed. “Did the young lady have * tiated may?” the witness was asked, | “She acreamed what she had to nay Sears replied. “Bhe hys- May 25.—Secretary Redfiela to-day reported the trade bal- ange in favor of the United States for the week ending M 22 at approxi- mately $19,000,000. the total balance since last July has been $90,000,000. ances, are not yet out of school visit these resorts dally to drink highbal! smoke cigarettes and dance with ex-chorusmen. Eugenia Kelly is not an exception; she is a type of the girl-about-town, According to Mrs. Kelly, Euenta| moment it was mother’s inning. If It) to began by smuggling young men into| hadn't been, the thought crossed my the Kelly apartments for unchaper-|mind, would she have discovered oned parties which emptied the re-|that the youth was an undesirable | trical and erying, and to Mra, Blber- frigerator. ‘Then, her mother #ays,| associate for her chee-yild? There |"! 51° Meg Elbergon, it le not my! she took to smoking cigarettes and | are queer rivalries at tho Broudway | ¢ault. 1 didn't know he was married! tea dances, since the girls have been | kolng the paco and their mothers! have been unable to stop them. At a table another girl Bene Rear "well and bie emell te hws ene DR. J. C. McCOY¥ Candler Building—220 W. 42d Avfon, door, West of ‘ at fe Plead fer Medical to returning home at 4 A. M., with the excuse that “a girl is no good in New York in theso days unloss she visits at least five cafes every night.” Still following her mother’s account, ice Page reserved decision. Desperate after failing to find any one who would sell them drugs, Bugene Georgen, twenty-nix, the son of a butld- ler living at No. 880 Southern Boule: | Iara, and Henry Drescher, twenty-three, ind the gray-heired ithful escorts with Made by P.” Lorillard Company, the oldest he wore teen - year we read that the young lady made | oie tri guilt of bi whose arm wae ina sling, dan fermerty 9 bank dor friends of gamblors, professional) actually, two atr as frequently as any of the others. | Simpson Street, entered the window of toba :co manufacturers dancers, drug fiends, and that her|schvol books lay beside her on the Not a few of the girls tho drug ot Abram Adler at Tif- tablecloth, She was with a man at ind Southern Boulevard, the money and jewels disappeared with with People in’ the in elmerica. clarity. Sree, Bhey Coors the 2 Mre. Kelly declares she did ~|nee perched on bigh everything restrain 4 Kiggling over ioe: | Nala “in $1.600beil each by Mage Established 1760. her daughter bet ally, I've r be- needn't be @ pro- | in lorrisanta Court court to commit her vil had many friends on | tapi uritan, nor believe that! The men adm they were drug itted et. The Prince of jeaded for medical treat- New York cafes are dens of iniquity, | fends and pl { that they have become ment. shook girls. The life » ugly. re the mothers of these a} in other Broadway ving in hemes tion where she may be separ from improper friends and cured of harmful habits, But Dick ‘oadway men Nre. Kelly professes bjections, Kelly” her troduced him known Ma Kelly he says. “I met Eugenia through | her, | have been very fond of them both, and | thought Mra, Kelly w fond of me as | was of her, She knew all—or most— of these men whom she men- + o4 Room. man about forty yea: inches In height, and Warner, one of th to whom ide king about Kumenta | nigh, afon between dances or * with @ tow haired, eed young man who had oll G ar repared the twe for KID LIKED . This seome be & Hroadwayite's piinetive que anewer 'y, THE Franklin Simon & Co. that fret T mor What can the mother of the HER LEARNG. iil are uid Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets A FRAGRANT wT aay te peaveben , Juicy CHEW The | SATISFYING SMOKE | 5 CENT Semi-Annual Clearing Sale Wednesday, May 26th bowen, Mother was enleriainiog her nag it jaughiore youn u and 4 thet 4 om wuccenaty: The Package betnaas whith asoabiy ahared « laly Thing, me dvidedi In All Thie Season's Desirable Models NO PREMIUMS, SO We CAN Give You MOTHER AND DAUGHTER fi. cslelose to vty "yi! lug t' Outing and Sport Coats Of gebardines, Lagish cordurvys, vieuns, plaids, checks and coverts MORE AND BETTER TOBACCO-2'/, OZ. MECHANICSDELIGHT ‘28? TOBACCO 10,00 Meretotore 616.60 lo 630.40 15.00 Meretotore $30.60 to 666.00 Dress, Street and Travel Coats Of Engioh coverts, gabardines, eordurvys, woul checks and plaids, velvets ond varivus silks. stepped on fe proved ‘ those of « profemsionel dancer ' | Mother end daughter were tremky contending for bia omiies, ood at the CUT

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