The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1916, Page 3

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~. ‘ Engineers Stick to Posts and | One Has Remarkable Escape —One Fireman Jumps. HOSPITAL HEAD HURT. Saunders Taken to the Institu tion of Which He Is Superintendent. (Special to The Prening Worlt) STAMFORD, Conn, Oct. 24--One man was badly injured ar fifteen persons were hurt less seriously early to-day when the outbound New Canaan passenger train and a f nt train met in head-on ¢ Whitney Cuy midway betwe © Canaan and Talmadge Hill Theodore Albert Saunders, super- intendent of the New Canaan Hos- pital, No. 28 East Avenue, New Canaan, suffered a fracture of his opine. He is wm New Canaan Gen- eral Hospital, ‘The others injured, ail of whom live in New Canaan, are: 1 leg cut and bruised; Edward Whiley, | hip cut and bruised; Robert Chiches- tar, leg bruised; William Miller, arm y cut and bruised; Wiliam Dooley, arms and head cut and bruised; Wil- liam @ With, leg sprained and’ bruised; ¢ Philip Duffy, leg sprained; John Beekman, bruises and shock; Louis Olmsted, mouth cut’ and t knéoked out; Harry Pedersen, and leg bruised; Frederick Simp: left arm cut and bruised; Ross, mouth cut and brut» Mylic, mouth and lips cut Bableesalk, shaken up and and Mott C. Sceley, knees and arm jured. Although the trainmen say the pas- sehger train was moving slowly and sthat the freight train was at stand- still, the ponderous electric motor that was hauling tho freight train “SYemashed - the front of the pas- Seeley, motorman of the passenger train, had a remarkable esc: ape from serious injury. He remained in the motor cab of the pasenger train, re- versing the Power. with the big elec- back through the ger coaches, Socley wes buried against tho mechanism & his cab, Edward F. Worden, engineer of the ‘treight train, also stuck at his post a@nd came through the accident with ol € shaking up, His fireman, Frank Cole, of Stamford, juinped when the crashed = BEGIN HOT WATER |) | DRINKING IF YOu | > DON'T FEEL RIGHT ee glass "of hot. water with | phosphate before breakfast out polsons, | | ~~ If you wake up with o bad taste, bres and tongue is coate dull or aching; if wha’ ¢ 1 acid in stom- ach, or you are bilious, constipated, water with «teaspoonful of | phosphate in it. isons and toxins from stomach, li ia dneya and bowels, and sweeten and purify the e tary tri D mediately upon arising in the morning to wash out of the system all the pre- vious day's poisonous waste. gases sour bile before putting mor the stomach purities, from your pharmacist quarter p: limestone phospli which is inexpensive and almost taste- fess’ except for 4 sourish twinge, which is not unpleasant. Just as soap and hot water act on ‘ the s! cleansing, sweetening and fresl , #0 hot water and lime phosphate act on the stomach Litaeys and bowe! M who are headachy or order should begin this inside bathing | breakfast soured hefore They wi they will become real cranks on the] subject shortly Advt , BELL-ANS: Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25catall druggists de E Sunday Worl Want Directory makes more “Offers. of Posi- tions’ than any other two mediums in the universe. nervous, sallow and can't get feeling ust right, begin inside bathing, Drink etore breakfast glass of fier hat | To feel like young folks feel like | you felt your blood, nerves and imuscles became loaded with body | por e| ood into | sur Sh, a * TYPES OF WIVES(6) AND OF HUSBANDS (1) THE DEVOTED WIFE. THE DRESSY WIFE. She Pursues Her Husband} She Would Sell Her Child Wilh Rubbers, Tears and Reproaches, THE BIJOU DOLL WIFE. Umbrellas, } for a Callot Tea Gown. Most wis Grieblo, Terrible of All the Specimens, THE MONEYED WIFE. You Are Handed a Leather Leash A’ong With the Mar- Often a Blonde and Always}riage Certificate. a Deceiver, a Nuisance and Warning. THE SENSITIVE WHEE. Her Grievances, Like the Are Never Widow's Cruse, Exhausted, Frank Crowninshield, Editor of Vanity Fair, Has Made a Census of His Own, Matrimonial and From a Bachelor’s View- point, in Which Scientific and Impersonal Classifi- cations Are Made. —s By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Just six kinds of wives. shield, editor of Vanity Falr, has counted them. Wife, the Bijou Doll, the Dressy Wife, the Moneyed Wife, t There are—by actual count Wife and the Pe: detached, scienti utes tillati. 5 magazin Some men have given their lives to isolating the| agree with the editor of Vanity Fair f + microbe of rheu THE PERFECT WIFE. SHE LETS HIM ALONE! —AND MISTER EVERY HUSBAN| He ts Disap They are the Devoted Sensitive this model known as the erfect Wite~ You Alone.” Mr, Crownins' hielt has made a fic, Impersonal way, and he contrit ein America—his own. matism, others have dedicated their ‘ talents to the study of ants or pollywogs, but Mr. Crown- Rikon o that sort of woman diess to add, he {8 an incorrigible bachelor, and true to type, | about. wi ho assured me when we met that he yearns, simply yearns, to be married. When a man says that to you, ae a young ladies, there is no use wasting|#he imagined him, never was, never time sweetness on him, He is]even said he was. So, why should he tively petfuied in celibacy. ht that--Just as a corollary study of wives—Mr, Crownin- ht know something inter- ut husbands, I was not really not a poor man’s fault tf a girl you know’ decides that he plays a marvellous game of golf, dances di- vinely, advres her and ts fond of chil- dren and will therefore make ‘her an ideal husband, and then after they are married discovers that his golf 1s rotten, that he does not adore her particularly, that he regards children noderately endurable and 1s con- sequently Disappointing. It is not the husband's fault, you know, that he ts not any of the things 4 inshield—I repeat impersonally, scientifically and all thing— has investigated the married be blamed? And if she hadn't had the horrible notion of marrying him Just because she loved him he never could have disappointed her NEW YORK DEBUTANTES. | is only ONE type of hus-| “Up to this point Mr. Crowninshield nd] band.” the editor of Vanity Fatr as-| had spoken of love with just the 1 me—the Digappointing Husband, | Proper man-of-the-world gloom, but All husbands are equally disappoint. | Suddenly he brighterted Maybe in That is becouse girls insist upon; he had been to see “Pollyanna” the | getting married merely because they | /sht before and wanted to look on | fall in love. Now, love ts error, to| the glad side even of love, “I must | borrow Mrs. y's phrase, It ig] 8@¥," he said, “that a new type of girl 1s growing up in New York—lit- tle half debutantes, who have studied and read and thought and who find it Impossible to fall in love, These girls, when they marry, say to them- selves, ‘John Jones ts a well man- nered, amiuble person, rides well, plays a good game of polo, does not | get drunk, will not spend my money, Yt marry him.’ 1 call that cerebral marriage, It's the new type, mar- rlase by ratiocination, you know ey may ni by ratlocination, butel assure y i n't divorce vas trying to ine that way, Me vor Tebleres pray a Do You Use yerTablets.« da NN | Aare Aspirin? If so, buy the one genuine, Every package and every tablet of genuine Aspirin bears “The Bayer Cross" your protection against counterfeits and harmful substitutes, “The Bayer Cross —Your Guarantee of Purity’? ‘The trade-mark Aspirin" (Reg, U. 8. P fs a guarantee that the monoacetic Office) jester of salicylicactd in theso tablets is of the reliable, Bayer manufacture, The aisappointay Husband wy Prank Crownine | im ate in my old school romantic way it study of wives in a! tho result of his observations to the most scin- | K |THE CEREBRAL MARRIAGES OF | Ore And more dimeult, "g t love would get them sooner or hut Yh, but they will divorce quite that way,” Mr. Crowninshield as- sured me. “They will say ‘I am mis- taken in him. He does not ride as . ; his polo ta only f drink, and he has 8) money; ergo Ull divorce t All this time, you see, we had been ‘talking about husbands, 1 did not that there Is onl thought he woul ns, anyway, “You know, Mr. Crowntnahield,” I said, “I am astonished and grieved that’ a bachelor like you should write “ and auatrimony in the you have, Your touch haa the m of expertence,” h, T disclaim venom,” Mr, Crown- inshield exclaimed with vehemence, “T-er—approve of marriage, y know, recommend it to all my frien simply yearn, to be married f, Fut do you know marriage, f course, just a primitive rc friendship, 18 becoming ONE kind and | Know more about way is, | substitute MATRIMONY DECLINES ON AC- COUNT OF DEVOTED WIFE. “In some sections of New York; Greenwich Village for instance—it bas | quite gone out. Clever people have done away with it entirely, I at-| Iribute the decline of matrimony | largely to the most terrible specimen of the genus matrimonial, the Do- voted Wife, the woman who loves and Watches oUt for her husband in the | early morning hours; te type that pursues bin with rubbers @ad um- | brellas ag be leaves in the morning and With tears and reproachea if be 1s one train late at night, Leas of @ nulgance, but also a warning to men, ts the bijou doll wife, This type ts often a blonde and al- ways @ decelver, Notwithstanding the complaints of husbands the de- nund for her among mon continues to be brisk. Her husband 1s always groundlessly jealous, yet ahe never | ynverses with other men except to make them better and nobler, Why can't be understand that? Perhaps the most frequent type in Now York City ig the dresay wif Mr. Crowninshleld continued, “she| is (he woman who would sell her child | for a Callot tea-gown. Her husband simply can't understand how her dressmaker’s bill could be $980 for @ single Week. But then he never un- derstands anything! He ts just o business man, a ledger, a glorified viding machine, a super-Hua, who refuses to sign blank checks with the palpable Me that he te overdrawn at the trust company!" “That makes three. You've prom feed me a half dozen typos," I re- minded Mr. Crowninsnteld inexorably, as he paused for breath “I waa just getting to the eenattive | wife, the one who made the mistake of marrying a fier incarnate when | she was a mere child,” Mr. Crowntn- | siteld resumed, "She, of spends tho rest of her life telling ALL to a trusty circle of intimtae female friends." “The worat of tt ts that it nevor 19 quite all," I reflected dolorously. | "You sea, Ihave met the Sensitive| Wife and just when you think she| has got to the bottom of her jar of grievanoes tho darned thing re-) news ftself like the widow's cruse, and you have to Iisten all over agatn."” MONEYED WIFE'S HUSBAND) LIKE A PET PEKINESE. “There ts the Moneyed Wi Crowninshield — continued “The only trouble with m; SIXTFEN INJURED |-Six (6 Kinds of Wives, Five Bad, One Good, INHEAD-ONCRESH ©=But There Is Only One (1)'‘Kind of Husband! CHARGE OF BURNING HERFRIEND'S AUTO: OF TRAINS IN CUT TARE Hi awa” x Th Dolt mE Fownsheld Put a leather collar around his neck and a lithe red velvet blanket around his middle and the husband of a rich wife might as well be a pet Pekineso,” marriage certificate. Ry the time the Crowntngshteld indictment was getting too heayy even for my cynical nature, “L thought you told me you yearned to Kot married,” I reminded the pros- ecutor of wives raproachfully, “So 1 do, ao I do,” the editor ex- claimed, “to the type rm coming to, the only Perfect Wife, the model known as the ‘Let You Alone.’ This woman is muarantoed never to ask any of the four fatal questions, Awhy? ‘Where? Who? and When? Sho Js the incomparable creature Who robs marriage of its most sinister horrors, Give her a cig- arette, & ginss of chartrousy, an im- proving little French novel, and she won't ask for another thing the en- tire evening until the gentlemen call. ers bogin to arrive, and then of cours a husband of delloacy and tact goes to bed, “She—the Perfect Wife—ts the rare woman who has realized that tortures of marriaxe be metamorphosed into @ grand t song if only the two combatants will learn to let each other alone. ———— YONKERS STILL WALKS; KEEPS 15-DAY ORDINANCE Receiver for Car Line Proposed Fol- |'* lowing Failure to Repeal Law. ! Yonkers hag been without trolley service for more*than two months, and tho failure ef the Common Council to repeal the anti-strikebreaking or- dinance last night means that its res- {dente will have to continue walking, Tho meee to repeal was lost by a vote of 7 to 8. In @ eenslon which Inated ox hours many persons mpoke for and against the retention of tho ordinance which has kept the Yonkers Ratlroad Com- pany from operating {ts cars, Samuol Untermyer haw advised | Mayor Lennon to ask the Supreme Court to appoint @ re r for the railroad company, A receiver could | open negotiations with the trolley- men for the purpose of ending the strike, President Whitridge of the hina Avenue Company has adhered to his determination not to recognize the! unto! ® THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1916. BOY OF 8 HELD ON -«GIRLOF STODEATH cca aipaad Benny Hojnacki Accused of Pushing Veronica Brandies Into a Bonfire. \“POURED OIL OVER HER.” Youngster Denies Allegations, but Is Bailed Pending Coroner’s Inquest. Renjamin Hojnackt, el@ht yearn old, blonde, blue eyed, sturdy and hand- | some, was arrmiened tn the Brook- jlyn Children's Court to-day charged with pouring oil on the drens of five- year-old Veronica Brandies and push. ling her Into a bonfire last Satnrday | afternoon, The girl died tn Methodiat Epis copal Hospital Sunday, and j while she was consclous said several times to her father, William Frandtes: “Benny pushed me in the fire, He poured of! on my dress, Please don't whip me, papa.” | Tt wae thie acenaation that brought about the arrest of the little boy. He | wow released to-day on a bond of $800, furnished by his father, until Nov. % In the meantime the tnquest will Mave heen held and the Coroner will have rendered a decision as to what caused the child's death, The boy denied pushing the girl into the fire, Mr. Brandies found near the fire had contained water and not ofl, Bonjamin Hojnackt's perents tive at No. 210 Thirty-second Street, South Brooklyn, and tha Brandies family lives at No. 201 Thirty-second Streat. Last Saturday afternoon little Vero- nica, her three-and-a-half-year-old sister, Roberta, and young Hojnackt were playing around a small bonfire in a Vacant lot oppoalte the Hojnacnt home. Nolghbors heart screams and saw Veronica running about with her clothing on fire, Josephine Hojnackt, twenty-one years old, a alster of Ben- jamin, ran from her home with @ shade #he snatched from a window and a passerby tore off his sweater, and between them they #mothered the flames and carried the little girl to her home. Veronica expressed fear that her father would pQuish her for playing about the bonfire and did not make the charge against little Benjamin un- ti_she had been carried into tho house. Mrs. John Lankenau, who lives on the top floor at No, 206 ‘Thirty-first Street, overlooking the lot in which the tragedy occurred, was hanging out clothes and looked at the group of children a moment before she heard Veronica's screams. She told an ear Evening World reporter toeday that the boy then was altting on tho ground seven or elght feet from the fire and the little girl was passing be- tweon the fire and the boy Little Roberta Hrandies does not y that Bennie pushed her sister tn- the fire, but asserts that Benny was sprinkling off on the fire and spilled some of the ofl on Veronica's dress, Mr. Brandies says his ghters complained that young jnackt teayed them and that he heard charges that the boys had thrown jogs and cats into bonfires, Pressed for particulars, he finally sald that all he had heard was that Benny hid thrown a couple of dead cats into a fh Children’s Society agents, investl- gating the ca say that tf Benny had ol! in the can it should be com- paratively easy to find where ho Leh a aia SS EEEEie cane LOVESICK SODA GLERK WEDS AT THE FOUNTAIN Judge Who Steps In for His Malted Milk Tles Knot for Bridegroom, Who Couldn't Get Day Off. CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—Leo Whiteson ts @ soda clerk, He wanted to marry | Lillian Roblitchek, but couldn't leave bis fountain, His sweetheart happened to meet him at the fountain last night | while County Judge Thomas F, Boully | was ordering @ glass of malted milk, "Say, Judge, I can't t off from work, Can't you marry Lillian and I here?” sald Leo, Ho had hia llcense ready. The Judge was @ sweetheart himaclf and knew no between alps of the how it felt, malted milk hoe married the pat Piss, Coke " Hate, Fi and Nut 906 BROADWAY, on, 207TH rich wife, you know: J J sont that you are od eee wih teat tee . =o canteens aeaarad / FAVORS HALLOWE’ EN bhategas Mluok Cats, W itahea, Comic Figure Snapping Mottoos, ani Cards, B, SHACKMAN & co., Noise NEW YORK city & 2187 OTN. ~~ A hn and sald an off can which | GIRL SLEUTH FINDS BARES Bl THEFTS nee Off With | Stolen Car When She Discovered It in | Front of Restaurant. -HAD CLAIMANT HELD. | Then Followed Prisonet’s Con- | fession That He Had Taken Other Machines, The confession of John A. Ward, | thirty-four years old, of No. 14 Weat Fighty-ocventh Street, to-day re- vealed to the police that they are in- [debted to the cleverness and slouth- |ing ability of Miss Holen Lowenstein Jot No, 202 Riversidé Drive for the ‘arrest of one of the worst automo- bile thieves in the city. Ward has admitted atealing a dozen automo- biles In the past few months and three of them have already, been located by the police. Ward started on his way to @ cell |when, on Oct, 20 last, ho stole the ‘automobile of Courtland Fmden of {the St. Andrew Hotel from in front jof Miss Lowenstein's home, Emden | Was visiting the young woman at the | time and who felt no keenly the loss to her friend that she became an am- lateur detective for the time. Ming-Lowenstein observed every lear she passed, looking for @ little dent In one of the front mudguards, |Last night at Ninety-third Street and | Broadway she saw the car, There |was no policeman about, #0 she [Jumped into th and drove own to the Bt. A el, whe #he turned It over to Emden, Emden and the young woman drove to the Fourt Branch Detective Bureau in West One Hundred and ‘Twenty- third Street and were reporting the recovery of the automobile when Ward walked tn and announced that bh lof a restaurant at Broadway ond Ninoty-third Street. An argument as to Possession of the car fol- lowed and Ward was about to waik out, stating that he would not cause the arrest o f a protty girl for mi ing @ mistake, when Miss Lowenstoin demanded his arrest. hemently protesting. Detectives went to his room and found steel plates, stencils and apparatus for changing the numbers of autos and otherwise Ginguising them, Just before he wi arraigned bef istrate Groehl the West Side Court to-day he wi confronted with the materials and he confersed. He was held in $5,000 bail, but was allowed to go out with tho detectives to recover the stolen cars. ‘On behalf of the ofty, I thank you, Magistrate Groeh! #ald, ad- dreasing Misa Lowenstein from the bench, “This man ts evidently a dan- goroun character, and the police owe his arrest to your presence of mind. Some day woman suffrage may give you the ohance to be one of our de- tectives,.” — Working Night an@ Day te Tera Out Cop Conte, WASHINGTON, Oct, 24.—-What this country needs to-day 1# more pennies, To that end the Philadelphia and Sa: Franctaco mints are working twenty- four hours a day and the Denver mint sixteen hours a day turning them out, Ure of, the copper coins has increased with dealers everything adding # penny every now and then Velours and unqualified approval, furs. car had been stolen frem ip front | Ward was taken into custody, ve- |r Brilliant New Series of Suits The approved Burgundies, navy blue upon which Fashion NEWLY WEDDED PAIR IN TROUBLE OVER AUTO | POLICE SAY WAS STOLEN pone earns Arrested Here Trying to Sell Car for Which Montreal Sent Out an Alarm. Norman Hepworth, thirty years old, and his wife Matelle, twenty, were held in $2,500 bail each to-day by Magistrate Ten Byck In the West Farms Court, charged with bringing stolen property tnto this State, The | couple were arrested yesterday after- | hoon at No, 74 West Ninety-first Street. They say they were marred’ Aug, 24 at the Little Chureh Around the Corner. An automobile answering the de- scription of one stolen in Montreal, Sept. 2, and found tn thetr possession was responsible for their arrest, De- tective Meyer, one of the automobile experts of the department, saw Con- rad Bahr, superintendent of the Bronx Gas and Electric Company, tinkering with a car on Sunday in front of his home, No, 1118 Castle Hill ‘Avenue, Bahr's unfamiliarity with the machine prompted the detective to question him, Bahr told the de- toctive Hepworth had offered to sell him the car for $375, the money to be pald the following da Detective Moyer was terday when Hepworth st |complete the transaction |and his wife told #0 many conflicting | stortes that the police decided to hold them. In the meantime a general alarm sent out by the Montreal poltce regarding the stolen car reached Police Headquarters, Confronted with this evidence, Hepworth and his wife SUIL insisted they had bought the car. An examination of Hepworth's room disclosed he had been recetving mat} Jat the West Side Y, M. C. A. under the name of “Arthur Armstrong.” Ove letter was found asking for tn- | formation concerning a Pennaylvanta | automobila Heense. Mra. Hepworth said that her majd- on name was Estelle Henry, and that her home was in the fashionable Westmount section of Montreal. —_ Even the Cost of Marrying te Going Up. } WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—The high cost of marrying te going higher, Brides almply muat have iliee of site valley that aro coating to-day just twico as much as they aid before’ the come eee in Gountry. 0 in @ more expen RECIPE TO DARKEN GRAY HAIR This Home Made M | ixture Darkens Ratteres Toa hall plat of water ol Sat you can bay tres little oorh nat Apply to Ao for ‘two weeks, t be enough darken the gray hair, and relieve dan- druff. It does not stain the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and does not rub oft, It promotes, the. ‘the hair and makes harsh glossy,—-Advt. prices of ordinary suits, Fall fashions have come through the re- fining process — the final, ultimate word from Fifth Avenue’s recognized designers, Magnificent Velvets Broadcloths lums, greens and ine set the seal of Many of the smartest mew plain-tailored effecte— without fur trimmings, to be worn with your own Other models, with those lighter, graceful touches of fur prescribed by Parisian couturiers, No Charge for Alterations At the Fashion New Shop Nineteen West 34th Street { |

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