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POVERTY AND PRE DROVE ATT 1 FNDDEATHINSEA William Walton Was Down and Out and Too Proud to Beg of Rich Friends. ‘After he had faced dire want for any monthe and with a cheerful @ountenance met wealthy friends who fever suspected his embarrassment, the body of William Walton, an ar- tist and writer on art, in to-day being eared for by them. If in life he had Permitted them to know that he was tm need aid would have been quickly extended, but the only one who knew ‘was the aged lady who had cared for this studio room at No, 0 Went “Gets-It” for Corns, SURE as Sunrise! Any Corn, With “Gets-It” on It, Is an Absolute “Goner!” Corns just to see them come off with “Gets-It."" It just loosena the eorn from ‘the true fle, easily, and then makes it fome “clean off.” hours ends corns for koops. It makes the use of tape. corn- erate, nantoaee, levitating | ssives, sclneors and resors really look gp ‘ef those wee ehiy. gure! — just ensl with warts and buniona, too. ‘Twenty-second Street. His friends’ firet knowledge of bis poverty came when his body was identified In the morgue after having been picked up im the water off Rockaway Point. “He waa too proud to let his friends know that be was in need, too proud to appeal to them,” said the woman who shared his secret, to-day, “For & long time I have seen how things were. He was down and out, but be would not let me even mention uch a thing. To the few friends who came here he was very cheerful and smiling, Three weeks ago, when he went away, he left @ note for me say- ing: ‘Don't disturb my room until I return.’ For two weeks friends who called for him were told of the note the elderly artist had left and they camo to believe he was visiting friends. Carroll Beckwith, the artist, and W H. Watrous, Secretary of the National Academy of Design, finaliy decided all was not well and when they heard from the studio attendant of the troubles he had kept secret from them they appealed to the police to look for their friend. Dr. William Hoag, a dentist, at No. 431 Madivon Avenue, and an intimate friend of Mr. Walton, Joined in the search, and yesterday at the Flatbush Morgue he came upon the body, It had been there ten days, having beon picked up three and a half miles off the Rockaway Point buoy by Capt. Eastman of tho Sheepshead Ferry. In @ few days it would have been on the way to an unmarked grave in Potter'a Field, but Dr. Hoag, Mr. | Beckwith and other friends will caro for it and he will be given an honored burial. Until just before he disappeared Mr, Watton had been a frequent visitor to the Century Association and to the National Arts Club on Gramercy Square, of which he was a member. Younger artists came to him for criti- | elem of their work, and the older men sought his company, Ali believe he {had saved a competency from his writings and paintings, and he never allowed them to suspect otherwise, “It was one of Mr. Waitun's keenest regrets,” Mr. Beckwith aaid to-day in his studio at No, 69 West Forty-fifth Street, “that his fame as a critic and writer overshadowed his fame as an artist, He was a dreamer and painted beautiful conceptions, but Americans are only paying high prices for the work of foreigners, and so perhaps his paintings did not sell. He was moel- ancholy of late, but I never suspected the reason for it.” Mr, Walton was seventy-two yeara old and early in life was knuwn for his French translations, He was born in Philadelphia and studied at the Penn- sylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and at the National Academy of Design. In Paris he was a pupil of Carolus Duran, His first Nterary work was the translation of the works of Victor Hugo for the firm of George Barrie @ Bon, of Philadelphia, Several years or. be published a “History of Ban ‘* which met with some success. He wrote inany treatises on art. He devoted himself in his painting to landscape work’ largely, and was noted for his palnt- ie on wood, ‘or more than twenty-five years he had lived in his studio room on the top floor of the studio bullding on West Twenty-aecond Street, With the changing of the neighborhoot many of artist friends moved away, but he remained an} was a in the neighbor- ———.——— MABEL’S ATTITUDE, (Brom the Detroit Freee Press.) h on ‘or “I don't know. She seems to be ob- serving & strict noutrality,” Music Lessons in Your _ _ Own Home> Now Rag Rathod. Write for pe Free ion Offer. All You For Is the Music. What Pupils postage and the mean much you under no “Wish 1 had known of thing is 20 t icity, and my | pli on? Say: “Bince I've been taking A wonderful offer to every lover of music, whether a beginner ean cred bases " Ninety-six lessons (or a less number if desire) for either Piano, Organ, Violin, rit tar, Banjo, Comet, Spe ing, Mandolin or ‘Cello will be given oa habs can beers study courses for these instruments known Sul. sol par uses oe tee tes weekly, your expense during time you take the lessons will be the cost of music you use, Write at once. It will you to get our free booklet. It will place tever to us if you never write You and your friends should know of this work. of our pupils writes your achool before.” ‘m in my home with your weekly |. prvvate teachers and at and ¢ minister writes: am more and more fully pers d ie and nore ty ded I made no mistake in Established | thousands of pupils trom seven ra of age to seventy, "t say you cannot learn music, but send for our free booklet and tuition offer, Mail this coupon or write aletter. t by return mail free, Address U, S, School . E. W,, 225 Fifth Ave., New York City, Tear Along This Line and Mail To-day. to “Have learned S.School of Music, Dept. E.W. 225 Fifth Avenue, New York City, Bend me your Free Booklet and Tuition Gentjomen: ba Femied In learning to play the Inatrument St. [j Pisne T] Oreen J) Violin T] Guitar TBs jo Cornet J] Sight Singing |] Mandolin ["| 'Cello the inatrument you want Put an X tn the square beto to pla S WHERE ‘THe PATHER TYRANT We OLD Brock’ CL, we the Selfish Tyrant Who Mothers a Failure an and Poisons 1S A QUARRELSOME Twe CHILDREN ARE CHINY OF mes More Hard Knocks for the American Father; He Is Makes Some American d Spoils the Children Their Lives. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. by the American father, That is the opinion of a number also appear to be convinced that in How he hurts and destroys the effort several of the letters published below. erous citizens. And when be is stin cially the girls, recetve so unhappy an are likely to avoid It for themselves. What's wrong with the American discussion of her. argues, she cannot bring up the children to be courteous, considerate, The American mother of to-day cannot succeed if she te handicapped of Evening World readers, and they many instances father is a failure. ‘8 of the American mother is told in If he is a selfish tyrant, one writer gon- sy about money the children, impreseion of married life that they father? He Is so closely associated when she does fail? What do Evening World readers think about it? Do they believe that the mother of to-day must make herself look like Painted dol to retain the ‘ove and admiration of her husband and the father of her children? Is he to blame for the diminishing size of the American family? Does he refuse to help the mother in caring for and con- trolling the children? Is it true that these children suffer from being brought up in a home where there are disputes about money and other quar- rela, and that the father le to blame more than the mother for this un- happy atate of affaira? I should like to receive some lettera about the American father and his share in the success or failure of the American mother. “Dear Madam: You are now ask- ing: Is the mother of to-day a fail- ure? Is the father of to-day a failure? a“ in y thie: Where a woman persists in living with a tyrant or quarrelsome man and has children who are brought to see such an example for a father, the children are ohips of the old block, selfish, domineer- ing, ill-tempered, cruel. The mother is a decided failure in such a family, for she is not forming future good citizens. ‘The father, of course, is abomin- al a menace to everybody. Yet how many women and children shiver before the father and hus- band, and live in abject fear of him. “Lat me tell you of my own exper! ence, I have been married eight years, three years with my first hus- band and five years with my present husband. I had one son during my first marriage, and a little boy has come to bless my second union, My first husband was the typleal tyrant, It was an impossibility to please him, do what one would. He always found fault, He had to be consulted about everything, no matter how trivial, orytning was thrashed out and quarrelied over, and every- thing cost too much, “If baby wasn't feeling well I had Ends D Pain ry, Hoarse or ul Coughs ickly A Aimple, Home-Made Remedy, Inexpensive, but Unequalled. 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Wayne, ud.—Advt, ly supply—of the most ¢f- a ‘ont of only 34 to try all kinds of homemade stuff while his father would quarrel for|all. She did not i hours about his medical knowledge doctor. thing, He was the boss and had the authority. I thank God that I had the brains to leave that tyrant. After- ward I met my present husband, In one short year we were married. “The difference in my home life 1s | Amer: #0 great. We are ao happy. My ¢u-|and that is why cgay +4 . tles toward the home are not Intcr- fered with; in fact, I can do as I see fit and need not consult my huaband. He ts considered pleasant and cheer- ful. He loves my first boy the same as his own, He never is unkind to the children and never even speaks about my unfortunate first marriage, We talk over things and plan together, Love and consideration reign supreme in our home, Our children are being brought up in the right surroundings, They don't sce disputes, quarrels and orderly and quiet, brothers Like himself, his wife, three times. happy or properly brought up, no home where there is discord. Love Golden Rule should be practised by every mother and father. “C, Le” “Dear Madam: | have tried to be @ good mother to my children, but the fact that their father is selfish miser, that he has never h ted to sacrific my comfort or that of th children to his own all their ideals of My ol must lieves that to protect m ughters have had o to marry, but they sa een too much o home, I wonder if any Evening World reader can tell me how a mother can succeed under t! which | shall describe. “My twenty-fifth wedding anniver- sary will be in December, I have been married to a smart, active man, and have borne him nine children, eeven conditions woys and two girs, the first place, this man has always been of a jeal- ous, morose disposition, The fi nine months we were married he gave me his wages, $25, which at that time (1890) was a‘nice wage. Then some man in his place of business sald he gave his wife $9 a week. Then he | same from that day, 1 at my majority and in- herited money from my dead parents and I signed it over to him, My money was goon used up, and as we were tred of pa: rent we deolded | to move to the suburbs. He said, | ‘We will buy a home deed to be made out to you and m Thad such faith in him that I did not read the deed, and never knew until much later that it made him the sole owner of our home, For a year and a half at & time my husband would not speak to me, except to abuse me, “Lhe tuck to my post fi kc h must not st concert halls or “When | have a little fair for them, ii makes them grow up into cynical jiandel, Beethoven, Schubert, Loewe, *t Come RAST = You LAST” Tris Patuer, Sars — ACCORDING TO &s- bachelors and old maids. mother had a |i until his fever went up high. Mean-/ and honest, and to see any one of ns. and authority and about calling tn a| qmuyrcan, jnoiher, no mat ‘y my moth up to be respectable members of so- glety. I bell! there are many 1ean homes such as oure waa, @ nation. in o n hard, MOTHERS. “Dear Madam: “MRS. FE. 8." with the American mother that she should be ready to let him enter any| AMERICA’S GREATNESS DUE TO spoon's all-too-generous programme, And is she justified in attributing to him her fatlure— defense of the family, all sober was proud of us pe cee ee | Plano accompaniments admirably, no matter what lat. , and go did but we children were all given @ good education and brought IGNATZ HAMBOR KILLED AS AUTO TURNS TURTLE Head of Big Passaic Worsted Mills and Widely Known to Tex- tile Trade, Ignata Hambor, turned turtle cuts and injuries. ——— 800 CADETS IN REVIEW. Hight hundred cadets of the Hebrew at President of the one-sided domination, Everything 18] Garfield Worsted Mills of Passaic, N. o i J., and prominent in the textile trade My first husband's father waa thé/tmroughout the country, was killed same as he is, Ho has three more) early this morning when his auto- One of them,! mobile who is married, Is not Uving with} and Clifton Avenues, burying him They've been separated | under the wreckage. No child can ever be| Mr. Hambor’a skull was fractured and he was injured internally. His mother can do her full duty, in a| Ceath Js thought to have been in Robert Deyes, the only other > and consideration should guide, The|senmer in the car, escaped with minor Lakeview Did m; mother jive, Uke many foreign-born “He Wl that about every-| Women in New Yor! 0, ahe did Wee site og not. We lived one family in a flat, not four famil! “My father worked ge Orphan Asylum will be reviewed at 11 o'clock to-morrow from the stadium of the College of the City of New York by Major General John F. O'Ryan, who will be accompanied at the review by Acting Mayor George McAneny, Jacob H, Schiff and Mortimer L. Schiff. The cadets of the asylum, who are hiking from Trenton, N. J., will be met on their arrival In the ality by several companies of cadets who stayed behind ‘and who will participate in the Thanks- giving review. The drum and fife corps of the asylum and the asylum band of ninety-five pieces will play. VIOLENT ATTACKS OF DYSPEPSIA Suffered Tortures Until She Trled ‘‘Fruit-a-tlves”” “After suffering for a long dime with Dyspepria, 1 have been made well by “Fruit-a-tives.” I suffered so much that at last I would not dare to eat, for I was afraid of dying. Five years ago I received ples of *Fruit-a-tives,” Then I sent for three boxes and I kept improving until I was well, I quickly regained het lost weight nd now Leat, sleep and digest well—in a word, J am fully recovered, thanks to 'Fruitea-tives.’ Mme. CHARBONNEAU, their father h something nasty before their The children have id heavy un- de ‘ replied, ‘I come first; me, me first; you laat,’ His w is $35 to $40 per week. Tt is American father wha eheats the children of happiness, the worst example for them, Bt, Jean de Matha, Jan, 27th, 1914, 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 5c. and after taking them I felt relief.| Witherspoon In Refreshing Song Recital By Sylvester Rawling. ERBERT WITHERSPOON, the —— wine to American basso of the Metro- Nefands Money i U. 8 Advanced Politan Opera Company, rave a) Him, ‘ INGTON, Nov, 24.—The Trea- recital at Carnegie Hall yesterday | guy Herxgment. today publicly me- afternoon to a large and appreciative audience, His programme had the charm of novelty, It bri songs underscored as “now,” “for the firet time in Now York,” “for the first time in America,” and “new and dedl- | ‘cated to Mr, Withe-spoon.” If noth | ing els@ could be said, Mr. Wither- spoon deserves thanks for this. Most singers, good, bad or indifferent, giv no time to research, Women and men, native and foreign alike, year in and year out, come before us with their stereotyped output of Handel and [Beethoven and Schubert and | Brahmos—great musicians and Neder | writers—but the world still moves and songs are composed every day and \they don’t know it. A voice is a great possession, but brains are a bet- |, ter one, and how few singers have them! | ‘There is monotony In Mr. Wither- spoon’s voico, That's inevitable in a basso. But he has the gift of insight. He penetrates the thought of the , author and the intention of the com- poser whose songs he sings and he has the capacity to interpret them to the Hstener. Then his pronunciation of German and of French and of Eng- lish ts distinct. But, Mr, Witherspoon, if you hesitate to take the lean of alnging all your songs in English, why print your book of words only in English? Give us the German and | French texts when you sing in those | languages, admirable as are your own | translations Into the vernacular. The now songs were fathered by Humperdinck, Lange-Mueller, Alex, Georges, Charles Widor, Felix Four- drain, Koeneman, Hammond, and Henry T. Burleigh, the colored singer of the choir of our own St. George's Church, ‘The latter's “Ethiopla Salut- ing the Colors” is plaintive with the feelings of his race. Each held merit | and most had charm, The names of | \Hugo Wolf, Richard Strauss and | Rubinstein also were on Mr. Wither~ jand he finished with that rattling old | English song, “The Twelve Days of |Christmas,” arranged by Austin, | which savored greatly of Percy Grain- ger. Richard Hageman of the Metro- politan Opera Company played the An incident was the presentation to Mr, Witherspoon of a wreath, attached to which was a silver loving cup, from bis students. The Adele Margulies Trio gave its first recital of the season at Aeolian Hall last night, with our old friend, Alwin Schroed formerly of the Knelsel Quartet and of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, as ‘cellist. in lace of our other old friend Leo hults of the Phitharmonte Society Orchestra, who never bas deserted us for that dear Germany, as once Mr. Schroeder did, The programme began with Schubert's trio in B flat major, opus 99, and ended with Smetana’s trio in @ minor, opus 15. The midd number was the sonata for plano and violin in E major, opus 10, by Erkt Melartin, one of the best known of Finnish composers, presented for the first time here. Mr. Lichtenbers’s playing of the violln has a certain dryness which seemed appropriate to the sonata, which, on a first hearing, made no deep appeal. It ia in four movements, the last being omitted last night. In this, as in the two trios, Miss Margulies played ad- mirably. The Schubert trio was de- lightful, of course, and the Smetana trio was a joy, with Its principal) theme evidently the inspiration for that once popular ditty, “Reuben, Reuben, I've been thinking.” Christine Miller, contralto, with a lovely voice that she uses well, gave a recital at Aeolian Hall yesterday afternoon. Her programme embraced Bach and Beethoven, a group by piest. Yepeat, and among the numbers 9 was forced to add was Cadman's the Land of the Sky-Blue Waters, @ pretty compliment to the composer, ‘who was in one of the boxes. George Copeland, the American pl- anist, who has a breeniness of style land a technique sufficiently marked ‘to make him worth hearing, gives @ | recital at Aeolian Hall this afternoon, knowled#ed receipt of $192 fron De Lumeau of Milltown, N. J Government to f rope at the outbreak of making payment Meity be given his action, the war, Abolish the old- fashioned methods and do it in the SILVO way. RECKITT’S File R, 90 West Broadway, New York > SS = =a. SSS Ss SRN SSss SS Ny SS Hugo Wolf, and songs in English by John A. Carpenter, G. Sibella, Pietro Florida, Edward Horsman and A. Walter Kramer, Sho was least suc- | cessful in the Wolf songs, which call for something more of intense feeling than Miss Miller imparts to them, Her) German and English alike were well pronounced, but It was In the songs | in the vernacular that she was hap- CASTORIA Always bears Signature o! 4 BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Are a Harmless Substitute. Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablete—the substt- tute for calomel—are — mild but sure lnxative, and tholr effect on the liver almost Instantaneo ‘They aro the ro sult of Dr, Edwards’ determination not to treat liver and bowel complaints with oal- His efforte to banish it brought omel, rt Ut pleamnt little tabi that calomel dors, but hav v 4 quic j the expense of the teeth? vos with the “heavy.” how they “clear brain and how they “perk up" the apirita, At 100, and 250, per box. 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