The evening world. Newspaper, May 4, 1916, Page 3

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ANTWARTOEND | EFORE NOVEMBER ) All Belligerents Seek to Avoid Another Winter Campaign. PAYED. firmation Now That Ger- n Chancellor Asked Him to Postpone Vacation, By Carl W. Ackerman. | BERLIN, April 12 (hy mall).-+| Though there is unquestionably a strong undercurrent of peace talk tn! Berlin at present, officials resent the intimation carried in a recent Wash- | tngton news despatch that Chancellor | von Bothmann-Hollweg had® asked Ambassador Gerard to cancel his va- cation plans in order to transmit peace offers from G: many neral feellng among all many that the war fall, Some persons wee should be made by No= vember. The impression prevails here that all belligerents would like to avold another winter eth. Some knowl of this teeling, it , reached Washington and inspired the latest peace story. Ambassador Gerard has denied that the Chancellor mentioned peacs in the conference that gave rise to the ree port, and furthermore has protested again to the State Department be- cause some of bis confidential mes- | ages have been made public. Berlin correspondents knew about Gerard's conference with Chancellor von Betumann-Hollweg. They were requested to cable nothing about it hecause of the fear that wild rumors would spread as to the purpose of the ought to end 1 declare y is helieved here meeting. ut since some information has leaked to the public, the facts re- garding tho mocting are now passed by the censor. | Several months ago Ambassodor ard asked for a leave of absence to return to the United States to take| Part in the coming Presidential cam- | paign. In March he received word! from Secretary of State Lansing that | he could leave his post here. Later, | he was asked by the Imperial Chan- | cellor to forego his vacation. Tho rei- son for the request is not known, but the Ambassador declared the story circulated from Washington was not true, This report, however, was cabled to all the world, and eaused much 4il| feeling Until Gerard made a satisfactory explanation tt appeared that he had placed a false Interprota- tion on statements made to him by (DRINK HOT WATER) | | IF YOU DESIRE A | |ROSY COMPLEXION | \ ||@aye we can't help but Took | better and feel better after an Inside bath, \ —y | To look one's best and feel one’s best fg {0 enjoy an inside bath each morn- ing to Bab omy tite syatem the pres vious day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins, before it is ab- sorbed into the blood. Just as coal, | when it burns, leaves behind @ cer-| tain amount neombustible material in the form drink taken mentary organs & ¢ indigestible material, which if climinated forms toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in-| tended to suck’ in only nourishment | to sustain the body, If you want. to of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning ‘upon arising & glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in which is 4 harmless means of wash- ing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys sud bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tra before putting 1 into the stom ac Jen and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples pallid com plexion, also those who wake up with & erated tongue, taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, hilious spells, acid stomach or constipation, should begin this phos phated hot water drinking, and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two week A quarter pound of limestone phos | phate costs very little at the drug} store, but is sufficient to: demonstrate | that just as soap t water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone sphate act on the inside organs. We mist always consider that internal sanistion is vastly i portant. than oulside clea cause the okin pores do not impurities into the bloud, while bowel pores de. Advt A4) MADE) FROM OLD CARPET. ALUSTRATED @ogmLAY FREE Om MEGUES New Vorw RUCCO. 68.6 59" stm vcry ORIENTAL RUG CO NEWARK N J “Louis Graveure” Relied | ter part of 1911, RVAN PEOPLE ‘Eleanor Painter “Belgian” Singer Whol « Married Comic Opera|: Star Is Said to Be No Other Than English Art- ist of “Lilac Domino” Fame, Who Left New York “to Go to War’ Last Summer. on Bushy Whiskers to Fool Friends, They Be- lieve, but Bride Refuses to Throw Light on Prob- lem of Whom She Mar- ried. ee ere eres Marguerite Mooers Marshall.| Who is Eleanor Painter's brand) }. new husband? That's the latest! Broadway mystery. The pretty]. black-haired star} of “Princess Pat” wae married night before last at the home of her brother, Farle V. Painter, No. 346 Linden Avenue, | Flatbush. The! bridegroom re- MAOCLERITE MMADSHAL corded himself as Louis Graveure, a Belgian baritone, who has just returned from @ con- cert tour through the Middle West. This same Louis Graveure might well follow the example of the late| Mdward Everett Hale, and write a story entitled “My Double and How He Undid Me.” For rumor Tecapitulates that Louls Graveure is nobody else but Wilfrid Douthitt | —also a baritone, also of Belgian extraction, also intimately acquaint- | between your ¢ thitt?” T asked. ed with Miss Painter, And it is a fact that photographs show a post- Mra. Painter responded with a broad | tively uncanny resemblance between | aulle ba: | ean é that (nave Ww ia es Wie ere er engagement. I travelled with the ‘The piquant feature of the asserted identity of the two lies in the fact that Mr. Douthitt, according to let- ters his friends received from him, went bravely away to fight for king and country so long ago as last sum. iner. The letters were posted in Can- ada at that time, and apparently no- body has been given tidings of the writer siica, Miss Painter's brother told me that he had performed one M jor two commissions for Mr, Douthitt, “and I'm still waiting to hear from him about them.” M. GRAVEURE GREETED AS “MR, DOUTHITT.” Out of Canada, a few weeks later, came M. Graveure. Now, Mr. Douthitt made his first | American appearance—and a real | hit—in “The Lilac Domino,” | which Andr Dippel produced | here in 1914. Miss Painter wi a ed with him In this show. Mem! of the company, m ing M. Graveure on Broadwa: unhesitatingly accosted him “Mr. Douthitt,” and where he'd found Graveure hae a Hughe: parted in the middi tacl Mr. Douthitt w shaven, M, Graveure didn’t answer to the beard, name of his double, and said that he'd | well,” never heard of the gentleman, He | called himself a Belgian, whereas | Mr, Douthitt spoke of bimself as Eng- lish, with @ Belgian mother and|th grandfather, M. Graveure made his |», debut at Acollan Hall and afterward went on tour, This is the story of his acquaint- ance with Miss Painter, according to the latter's brother, who is positive that the two singers are separate and distinct entities, “The reason I know,” Painte sald Mr, who {8 physleal director at the ¢ Branch of the Brooklyn Y. M. A., “is that I met Graveure in South Africa in 1910 and 1911, I liked him immensely d introduced him to my sister in Berlin {n the lat- When he came to this country last fall he looked us up 1 renewed the acquaintance, That's how it all came about, I have known him for five years and T am positive that he is nobody else but what he saya he is. I've seon and meét Douthitt, There is a A remarkable physical resemblance be- tween the two men, but their person- alities are entirely distinct.” If Miss Painter knows which of the two men she has married she won't tell, When I sought her at the New York hotel where she and her hus- band were stopping her sphinx-lke response wax, "Ask my brother." and outside the immediate fam- only one girl friend of Miss Paint- ciated, and sho heard from 1 eral times after he left the c they aro Douthitt sang be Graveure was a concert singer.” The World Dec, 6, momentarily from opera comique to | concert, be it admitted at once that M. strated and mustich cap to social jment that no man or woman should | hesitate Jmarks of age by using. thi MISS PAINTER'S MOTHER ONLY |hewe tripe, whieh ean be ADDS TO THE MYSTERY, nat Weds Man Is He Wilfrid Douthitt or M. Graveure? His Double Identity Puzzles Broadway PHOMOOOHL YY ELEANOR _THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1916. TRIED TOLOAD COLT “WITHAS2 000 BILL FOR SIEGE OF JOY Battery of Fair Masseuse, Ori- ental Dancer and 12 Drinks an Hour Fail to Rout Craig. of Mystery; LANDLADY LOSES SUIT. pebeigse3256 Gentleman’s Sickness” in Her Boarding House. ‘The anit of Mrs. Chariotte Stanton, whe conducts a boarding house at No. 64 West Thirty-seventh Street, againet Craig Colt, a young million- aire member of the gunmaking fam- ily to recover $2,990 unpald balance of a Dill for fodging and things oon- » | tracted while Mr. Colt was suffering from what Mra. Stanton called “otub gentioman’s sickness,” was dismisend by Justice Philbin tn the Supreme Court to-day. But not until Mrs. >] Stanton, who t# seventy-four years old and proudly boasts that she maintained homes in Washington tn her earlier days et which Presidents of the United States were entertained, » | had an opportunity to tell of the sort +c entertainment she provided for the Pe kas ~, eHoTo ailing Mr. Colt. axe 3| “There was nothing with which Mr. Las NN * | Colt was not supplied when he made 3 |nown his wish,” said the witness. § |"Me was extromety generous, being a bas ° ¢, |Fich man, and he hed the tastes Pee eee ROHN To with largo fortunes, Ha was PAINTER. vob eb 8 Graveure and Mr. Douthitt were one, but her denial could not be described as vehement and sho seemed highly amused over the matter. She said that M. ure was a friend of her but declared that they met two years ano instead of five “Was there att pment ughter and Mr, Dou- “I'm not at liberty to answer t ‘Lilac Domino’ company and [ should know. Of course my daughter and | “she's ip r, Douthitt were intimately asso- n seve mipany. ‘o, he hasn't written to her from th front.” “If Mr. Douthitt had told his friends that he was qoing to en- Vi id then had come back to this country under another name, would you have allowed your daughter to “arry him?” | red. je would have had a right to do such a thing,” the mother re- plied animatedly. “It would have been his own business. And I should want Eleanor to marry the man she loves. Mr. Douthitt and M. Graveure are both fine men. “But doesn't their singing prove different persons? Mr, in musteal comedy. in- According to a report published tn 1914, “Turning Wilfrid Douthitt demon- in Aeolian Hall Tuesday afternoon that he is no less equippe: to appear under these conditions (han he {s to assume the leading |"The Lilac Domino, jablest one of the several singe role in (He was] the “You say that you know both men I finally ‘appealed to Mrs. ainter. “Will you mention any points, with the exception of the beard in which M, Graveure | unmistakably ‘differs from’ Mr. Dou- mitt” “Oh, no,” laughed Mrs, Painter, “1 rouldn't attempt It.” 12 THE COINCIDENCE OF SOUTH | B AFRICAN VISITS, that her Ea gjonin is 910, According to an account of his career given by Wilfred Dou- thitt in New York two years aco, he went to South Africa in 1909 and after his arrival was booked for a tour. In the Painter home venue $ a signed ra bear on ortrad Linden there of THE MARKS OF AGE Quickly Disappear When You Make Use of This Simple Home Recipe For Darkening Gray Hair, Gray hair is such a decided ha and business advances to obliterate the tell-tale vir home with little trow sud But Mrs, J. A, Painter, Miss Blea. | a pint of water add nor's mother, Was more communica- Loz tive, 1 jer wt the Linden Aver |Glycerine........ 10” nue home where the strangely quiet | Barbo Compound. . +1 small box wedding tools place, It was pers | a yine, Pepilcation ally Fel atte ye en the gray or faded hair to the \f med by the Rev, Edward Sanders | most pled brown sha then Jan application every two weeks will be sufficient, This is also an excel. ers was prosent, Even her father |lent preparation for falling hair, dian. did not come Fast from the family ‘druff, itching scalp, and other hair in North Dukoia, troubles, Any den " Mra, Painter denied that M, | te ingredicuts,=- Ad troubled with a club gentleman's sick- ness, I would call it.” "Tirst off, when Mr. Colt arrived,” the witness continued, “we gave him the best room in the house, The walls were mirrored. there was @ tapestry canopy over the bed and thick velvet carpet, He seemed perfectly satisfied with this accommodation, He spent money liberally night and day, When ‘tho best of teachers, with Christ- jas greeting—Louts.” Mrs, Painter jeald the pleture helonged to her son nd that the latter's work as physteal {director had =m interested M. iGraveure, Wilfrid Douthite visited a g&ymnasium daily when he was in New [York and had a hathlete, Me w tor of gymnastics reputation ag al ” qualified instrac- ind boxing with the Queen's Westininster, the biggest] 1 jearned he was a man of great eae ae teat oe thie ta entEY. | wealth and atter he had pata me $500 well ox in looks, the two baritones {on a $600 bill I trusted him and fur- sevin to be doubles, ished him with all he desired, | Ry the way, the alleged “mystery” “1 paid a bill of $640 to Florence Lambert for him, I aettled with Helen Russell for $440. Miss Mabel Taylor received $120 and Mise Anna Bishop received $20." “What did Miss Lambert do that entitled har to $6407" asked Max Steuer, counsel for the miliionatre, of Miss Painter's wedding—according jto her mother 16 to the girl's preference for and privacy, ting the time and ter explained, “It's the girl wh no other opportunity to ‘star’ who wante a bie wedding,” So there you are, with what. Sh k Holmes undoubtedly would nan Mystery of the Two Baritones: | iG | : | 5 May Sale of Lingerie at MicCutcheon's the better grades is also making its appeal o assortment than we were able to show at t changed thus far by war conditions. | is Handkerchief Linen aE feature, ‘The goods ar from Funchal. Domestic collection selected A Ss ris—Of fine Cambric, Hamburg and Swiss, embroidere Lace Skirts, beautifully trimmed, $2.00 to 5.75. 4g White Tub Skirts—Very special, $4.75 to 8.75. French Underwear Gowns Ot Batiste, hand scalloped and ribbon trimmed, $1. Hand Made Gowns Envelope Chemises chiet Linen) 4 4 Beautiful embroidered designs on she $1.75 to 6.75, Chemises—Hand embroidered, $1.00, 1.25, 1.50 to 7.50. u PAG RONONSLENE PONS Drawers—Wand Umbroidered, $1.25, 1.50, 2,00 and up. Fifth Avenue, 34th & 33d WE have a most abundant supply of every desirable kind of French Lingerie, and even a larger and more attractive The prices are equally attractive—they have not been greatly A very wide assortment of the latest American made Lingerie of Special attention is given to Bridal Trousseaux. ments are embroidered, designs, others are more elaborate and em- body the new real laces. Crepe de Chine Underwear—We are now \ic >} able to show, in the finest quality, a heavy ie texture obtainable only in Europe, finished 2 with the most exquisite embroidery, \Fa “Madeira” Underwear—Thi representing the most dainty goods which the American market affords. Gowns—Flesh Batiste, White Lace trimmed, $1.00, Sheer Nainsook, dainty embroidered, round or square, $1.25, 1.50, Nainsook Lace trimmed, $2.25 to 4.50. are included in this collection, Envelope Chemises—tace trimmed, $1.25 to 3.75. exquisitely embroidered, $4.75, 5.75, 8.75. BWA BWW GHB AW BH BH BY BBW 2B D1 bbs 8A YAY AL BY AVQWOW WOW DNS tatlng? he Wan his masseuse Bave him aleohol rubs." “Ta that ally” the law | further, Not at all, She gave noo deink | about every five minutes” Mrs. Stans {\\ ton replied | “What was the $20 paid to Miss) Bishop for?” the lawyer «shed | “That was for the Oriental dance,” the witnass answered with “You can see by that wo wave Mr.) ,, Colt every attention tmaginable.” a anil. | py, jako has been returned, Mrs, Howard Miss Lambert, the only other sit fier Johnson, wife of a lawyer, —-are fashtonable. ness for Mra, Stanton, desertbed her! ving at No. tol West Mermaid Lane, $ task as that of cup bearer and NUFFOlCHostnut TiN, is the porson whe loat —are flattering. to the milltonatre the The necklace Was ne. “My tnak wan {0 take care of Mrs/ turned ty hier mother, Mrs, George NM. —are smart. Colt,” Minn Lambert testified. “fam | Lamb of Cedarcrott, near Baltimore, by profession n masse Als Cons | Fanmury of ihe anv le diecoiae n —are beautiful. dition was auite det Phad tol Mrs. Job tid to-day th she handin him like a baby day and night. | vas atl Ww appeared that she Says Gunmaker Had UCT yh! TE thourht my services were worth #40) hat it was We and had even for for the day and night eartly U) got inet t anti her mother made, come to Boa| charged that to Mra. Stanton, but [telephoned her that the necklace bad faa not paid. Whan Aff, Colt tett ho {Deen revovertd Headquarters. Surpris- 41d #0 reluctantly, Two fellow meim- | 4A" Sanat Gehl uuMnee ernie ing values at $3.95 to bers of the University Club—a Mr.|irougit the ‘necklace. back. Tha $35.00. All lengths and ‘Woods and a Mr, Johnson—came for | w him and taxicabbed him awa “And all you did to aarn that amount ry of money was to rub down my eliant?” | a+ asked Mr. Steuer. “By the way, you must be an expert maaneuse. What was your business before you entered that profession?” “I spent a good many years miking artificial flowers,” the witness replied. | Justice Philbin refused to take fur ther testimony and dismissed the com-| plaint. v a | ESCAPING GAS KILLS WOMAN, |: Police Report Mra. ¢ as den’ Jean ella Death Mrs wife of Capel, Goorge Capo, was found dead in bed tn her! furnished room rt No, » West On Hundred and Twenty-seventh Strect | this morning. ‘wan loose caused the police to report the | death as accidental | “Tam going out of town with a friend. | Will tell you about tt when I return,” wore the words of @ post card from the woman's husband, dated at the Pennsyl- | vania Terminal. May 2 Bostde this card on a dresser was tho note wr by the woman. It read: “My Dew George: For God's sake don't stay out| nights any more, I've been unable to! n| rt sleep on account of your staying away JEAN.” = -_ CASTELLANE AGAIN LOSES. Your joving wife, Declared Valtd by Vatican. | ROME, via P May #= The yar! fAity of the marr f Count Hout de Castellane to Anna ould, now Tu Talleyrand, was confirmed to-day in a} deviaion by the Cominission of Cardinale Appointed to consider the chain of the Count for annulment of hie marriage. Castellane has appen' to the Vatican for i new heen was Med in da 1 several times a ruling that) his tis ba dey Reg. Trade Mark. his time a year ago. n the basis of good Lingerie. These gar- some in dainty, simple is a special e imported by us direct q Lingerie PSH i with great care and Wawa iy Empire model ed ruffles, $1.50, 2.25 anc 93, 2.50 and 2.75, er Batiste (some on Hande we BY POW Streets 2 . ‘RETURNS NECKLACE | having use of th She had been overcome | by escaping gas, Although a note writ ten by her was found in the room, the fact that @ gas tube attachod to a stove y 7. Brooklyn: 460 Fulton St. SUAS STOLEN 35 YEARS AGO nan Sender Says Her Conscience Now Troubles Her—Mails It to Owner. PHILADELUHIA, Ma 4.—A pearl lisoppeared from the girt thirty-five years eannot rt And for the best boas riter explained that she is the per on who atola the colors. pearls, and after necklace for thirty- become conscienes+ 1 keep It ne longer, > ve years had ricken and ear Genuine London Boas Can Only Be Hed at Brooklyn Store: 522 Fulton Street Hanover rt. 2011 Monterey the Hronx, a cloakmaker who mn strike for several wake, n the Union Square Hotel | to-day tried to strangle ying @ silk handkerenter 1 his ne Via wan taken to Rolle te Howpital a prisoner, Te will We Moo said) he Rad been aut oi of his wife and two children Tomorrow, Friday, May 5th Spring Conceits in Silk Frocks Big Reduction Sale $ RESSES which have been highly ap- proved at their or- iginal prices—some of them were twice as much and even more. Modish, simple and wearable —afternoon and evening models as well as the charming morning« / at-home frocks—pic- v \ turesque as any that were \ turned out in Paris. All the soft, fancy silks which have made such wonderful -successes, in colors carefully selected to conform to Fashion's dictates. Your opportunity tomorrow to provide yourself with three for the price of one. No Charge for Alterations At the New Fashion Shop Nineteen West 34th Street SALE AT ALL STORES Downtown Shop: 14-16 West 14th St. Newark: Broad and W. Park Franklin Stmon 8 Co Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets Smal] Chiloren’s Ages 6 months to 6 years—Third Floor. We have made a study of footwear requirements for small children, with every consideration for comfort and health as well as style and service. These shoes are made of the softest selected leathers and fabrics, hand sewed and on ortho- pedic lasts, so necessary for growing feet. Baby’s First Shoes Ages 6 months to 2 years—Sizes 2 to 6 Of white canvas, tan, black or red kid, flexible hand turned soles, laced or buttoned. SHOES 1.25 ANKLE TIES .95 Small Children’s Shoes Sizes 5 to 8 Of tan or black Russia calf or patent leather, flexible turned soles,spring heels,orthopedic lasts {sHoES 1.75 ANKLE TIES 1./5 Ages 2 to 4 years Girls’ and Boys’ Shoes | yizes 8 to 10'» of tan or black Russia calf or patent leather, orthopedic lasts, welted soles and spring heels, | sHoFS 2.75 OXFORD TIES Ages 4 to 6 years 2.75

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