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| ISN SANE ATT ABASIC FS ie LTT RRs SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1919 Former New York Enchantress A Victim of the Baffling “Curse of the Hapsburgs’ Alma Vetsera-Hayne-Andrews-Steane, Who Claimed | to Be the Daughter of the Late Crown Prince | Rudolph of Austria and Twice an American by | Marriage, Made the Sixth Victim of the Halt-| Crazed Countess Karolyi’s Curse. ¥ . | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall | Conoright. 918, by The Trem Publishing Company (The New York Evening World.) HEN beautiful | SATURDAY, NOVEBEMR 15 Who Is Boss in Your Home? 7 In WellOrdered Households "Tis — : “The Survival of the Fittest” _ The Bewitching Football Girl of 1919 Rr RE De Ti Plays the Perplexing Game of Hearts *"Gheald Be’ on dedstent Be Should Be an Assistant Boss; That's Pag : A Rw Job Given to the Defeated Candidate. By Fay Stevenson Qumrriaht. 1008, by the Prem Puritcning On (Tee New Yorh Brening Wath) HO'6 Who in your family? i Somebody has to be boss! fs Alma Vetsera-Hayne-Andrews-Steane, twice an Sometimes it’s the husband and sometimes it’s the bat American by marriage and a well known figure in New York, was just depend upon it that some one is going to the found dead at her London home the other night, after the Victory Any 1 Ball—apparently a victim of suicide by polson—was the How many times have you heard it said om world-famous “Curse of the Hapsburgs” once more being has changed since her marriage! I. wouldn't ele wreaked on one of the most picturesque and successful | was the same woman; she’s @ perfect little of modern enchantresses? The House of Hapsburg —“Mis- Hapsburg,” ‘as it has been called, for its long suc- cession of misfor- | tunes —has fallen | again, how often do. | To the long list of Hapsburg mis- | fortunes mrust there be added the |mystorious suicide, through “the in- ‘gredients of a poisoned chalice,” of | an unacknowledged grand-daughter | of the late Francis Joseph, yet a true | Hapsburg—the lovely young woman character. Before |the trunks are to be placed or.grhat = Mg ‘marriage he/|ahall be ordered for tea some ont has 4 was a jolly, amiable |to take the initiative. and one regular tyrant!” always does. This is just thé Fikeaot man; now he's a “All of which proves that when | ning of things. Later on the he tw shé at last. The old) who im her girlhood called herself one ts g0+| bees must ask the janitor 4 Pmperor, Francis Joseph, is dead. | “Alma Vetsera,” though she died as; [raring ‘bes, vmonnren do not be} heat, inform the akrairedt > bie It was directly at him that the aged, | Mre. Steane? . abe quick to dondemn your friends /cuits are liké leather and srief-stricken Countess Karoli lev-| Just before the outbreak of the war for allowing marriage to change|superintend. It scens as if elled her historic imprecation, Her | she said to The World: “It has been | their natures. Most likely few of] year brings new duties and athe | Proved so often that it cannot now be denied—I am the natural daughter of the dead Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria, son of Emperor Francis Jo- jseph, and of the Baroness Marie Vetsera, whom he loved but could not marry. The world knows the story— of the Crown Prince tied to a wife of whom he had tired; of his devotion to the beautiful Marie Vetsera, the girl of eighteen; of their undying love for each other, and of their sad deaths in | 1889 in the hunting lodge at Meyer- ; |ling, not twenty miles from Vienna. Both were found suicides; Marie Vetsera, lying on,a couch covered with wild flowers; the Crown Prince, dead by his own hand, after his girl only son, a brilliant young man, had been executed by the Emperor shortly after his accession to the throne for taking part in a Hunga- rian uprising. The whitehaired, rr is ing to develop) portant every year. If then are P pemienhgr i sth in them that) children this is especially trues y are more of fess inetined to be of the; Although {it is claimed thate‘two initiative type. Nor is this at all| heads are better than one,” only surprising when you stop to think. /need one captain to a ip and Many times has marriage been re-|ly the marriages who have ferred to as a business contract, and|a real head who is steering every business has {ts boss! There-/| life's matrimontal stream, to fore, what is so alarming about hay- make the best progress and io ing a doméstic bons? cioar waters, Fifty-fifty plase for Very fow homes are run apon the! steering the matrimonial ship “lArty-Afty bos» plan. There may be/ tines run amuck because ne knew of the big gamo being played in|an asslstant boss in cases where both| leader. Certain it is that tmemost the grand stand to-day, Goodby for|are strong minded and have’ their love marriages the devoted now. The referee has just sounded |own views about life, but usually you| 42d Wives have submitted to a his horn and the merry leather will find that there ts a head poss, a) 4 Teal boss, Copyright, 1910, by The Progs Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) EW HAVBN, Conn. (Yale Bowl), se halfcrazed mother forced hers¢if into the youthful Francis Joseph's Presence on the oceasion of a grand court ball and cursed him and his ‘house, “May heaven and hell blast happiness!” she exclaimed. your family be exterminated. May you be smitten in the persons of those you best love. May your chil- dren be brought to ruin and may your life be wrecked, and yet may you live on in lonely, unbroken and horrible grief—to tremble when you recall the name of Karolyi!” Francis Joseph was smitten through your “May | sweetheart had breathed her last.” At that time Mrs. Steane was Mrs. George Osborne Hayne, wife of a New York broker, and living at No. 16 Bast 48th Street in this city. She had sued for a divorce, however, on the ground of desertion, bringing the suit in Newark, N. J. She charged that her huskand bad pawned her jewels, had | Used $10,000 of her money and, after heaping her with indignities, had left her at a hotel in Montreal with the {bill unpaid. The suit was undefended, jAnd she received her decree. Two or three years earlier this lovely young woman—slender, petite, |with big blue eyes in a piquant oval | face framed in masses of chestnut hair—had made affidavits in habeas corpus proceedings at Montreal to Procure the release of an arde young admirer, Justin B. McDougald, whose father, a wealty Canadian mining magnate, had placed him in a sanitariuin, She already had tried un- successfully to effect his escape by sending him a package of milk choco- |late, in which a file had been hidden jand a note promising her automobile | Nov. 16.—Well, folks, I'm here at last—right in the midst of the jolliest crowd of pigskin enthu- siasts since the time I helped to warm the concrete the last game a the Harvard Stadium. How busy everybody seemed. say Gotham's a real town. But I'm getting away from my story. When mother finally consented to let me go to the game she said: “Kathryn, be careful in New York: | two don't go near Park Row, and don't forget to get your tickets for the sleeper Saturday night. Ah, me! Mother's such a good soul, Little does she know why I came to this game, When Bill and t I came down’ they both asked me a pert little on the night boat from Boston, and|@Westion. You know, girls, the only twas, a BEY Cee thet By an EeTION that BUL or ‘Pom could goodby to the land of the coafwn.| “8k Me? Well, my two sweeties up How good HI" New York looked this |*%4 removed their respeotive Boston morning en route to the Grand Cen-, Petsenalities td Yale and Princeton. |colored vest and collar of bright yol- rn} beth plighted their troths. 1 | | 1 | i r 7 i You snout, my contiime. I've. been neutral, I am wearing my blue velvet hat with bright yellow tiger lies embroitlered on the crown, My gown is of blue satin, with @ vivid didn’t /and these contrast favorably with tan answer them—I didn't. But—little spats. I've seen worse looking girls~ does the vast crowd here at the/even in New York—if I do say it my- Bow! know of the game I'm playing | self. to-day. No, girlag/not all the big| I like Bill for his sober qualities. games to-day are being played be-|He may possibly be less liberal than en the goal posts, Unless Fate} his competitor in love. And, then, rules Bill and Tom off the scrimmage |again, Tom is a happy, bubbling sort campus I'm going to be a happy girl /of fellow. He's always full of fun. I when I arrive at the South Station | wonder sometimes wheth@r he would to-morrow mornin=. |settle down and make good after col- Both Bill and Tom sent me chrys- | lege. anthemums, and in each box was in-| Well, girls, I'm saying those two closed _a Yale or Princeton pennant. | buddies would be some excited if they! is al- ready in the alr, ‘ husband or wife, who, settles alt the —_—o vital questions of the faxtily and bomottmes the minor peng pill And the strangest part of 5 s] “Hf |that tamities that at ne tie | plan seem to get along the best, man who says, “Ask Mra, Wife about that, she can tell you better than 1,” séorhs tobe proud: of this dominating Influence which can settle all qu tions in a jiffy, front the family finances to their free evenings. on the other hand, the sweet: little wite who steps back and says, “Just ask Mr, Husband about that, he settles all the questions im our house,” takes pride In this capable masculine force whom otler, pe term a “tyrant,” but she looks upen as an Atlas begring the burdens of; the family upon his shoulders. It always peoms as it the real boss of the family is case of “the sur- vival of the fittest." Usually during ANNIVERSARY Jean Marie Roland, KE yacu yy | lor ‘s a e | gT ts said that in q man’s life there ia tral Station for the New Haven train, | 2#ster and Christmas vacations they |low, I've donned lue silk stockings, one woman whom he never for- gets, It is said that. men love more intensely than women, Upon hearing of the gulllotining of btn Wife, the beautiful Mme. Roland, Jean Marte, her husband, ran himself through with his sword-cane, The two were Girondists in the French Revolution--the moderate “party, When the Jacobins came into pow they seized Mme. Roland, impri oned her, put her to death, Her hus: band loved her so that he could not i Tom graduated from high school own romance began. It was a swift and tempestuous affair, viglently op- posed by Mr, and Mrs. Matthqw An- Your Sweethearts’ Revealed by Their survive her. Brief Speeches for Busy Men Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, | (The New York Trening World.) bower and @ better outlook wu ‘sand couples do we Ufewe- 4 | 88% equaty tate" botnet mie we omthese . derstanding couple realise | her and they sail along smoothty, If When two people marry ode is bound to have more force. wilt ! lite }han the other. Only once in awRddue find that the husband scores points and sometimes we find that the wife is ahead. The uae ahead on these points and give a lead, the wheel of the ship, one who will make the best If the man is a natural dpendi & gambler and 4 poor investor erent ree oe rifle to woman, he gives the purse is able to decide im ters in a satisfactory way hes @ far-seeing eye he leaves a. great deal in her hands, Many men especially appreciate this ty in women and upon visiting their | homeg you will goon gind out oJ boss” in their business vers A oun asat home. On the other hand whea 4 wife knows nothing about business, 1g not economical, does not know how: Pat would be ready to bear him away. drews, the young man’s parents. Mrs. to govern her children and is not @ Handwriting A A Poe ears tt B Senne seocresty tor tsanscon, tr|Aoaees sams on a wes Toe ey |COMATACT ETISTICS By Matthew J. Epstein, foot nado sh wlany lee al ta Tiellin oe a lotions Cane cote iaye|roung then was ieresistinie, ‘Not a |t2 prevent the matoh, and 1¢ Was sald A MP: che : 4 bp @ lawless passion and a mys- stible, 2 , usband. Man: terious death; the wext hein, Joneng |Year. after her divorce from Mr,|thit young Donald was guarded by are given the answers to the, Queries concerning the ehar- An Employer on Fire Prevention Incapable of handling money, br of Balvator, “John Orth," a deserter |Hayne was granted she was the|“¢tectives and even locked in his) acteristics of sincere men and women Who have sent specimens of thelr Gentlemen: I hate to be alwaya|the city. Fire, is @ dangerous thing Ordering even from the grocery’ atore, fom his reaponsibRities and his fam- |De*0ine of a romantic melodrama in| Tom at a hotel and his clothes taken| f sweethearts’ handwriting to the Character Analysis Editor AAnding fault, I hate to be alwaya tell+|and spreads vo rapidly as to bo appall-| 220 1M such cases they should Sly; hig successor, ‘Archduke Frang|¥Mch the male role was played by'}*¥8Y from him in the struggle to|@ ing you what not to do, There arvling, There may never have been. a| samt this eave it to the dian of a eta , Donald Shiglds Andrew, a senior in| Prevent the wedding. MILLY X, or (K, or H).—Struggle | MEN'S QUESTIONS. \ouse. Ferdinand, slain by an assassin, his death the final impetus which pushed |‘¢ Sheffield School at Yale Univer- | Europe into the world war; and for- | #!t¥ 4nd the son of a wealthy resi- mer Emperor Charles, grand-nephew | “ent of Cleveland. and actual heir of Francis Joseph,| Young Andrews was introduced to too many dont's entirely about uy But what 1 am golmg (0 tell you Is as much for your own good as for my own. I want to speak about care and carelessness, firé in this building, that may be our fortune, hut let.us be on our guard. Let us prevent fire. Let us be careful of the use of matches wherever pos- Almost every woman who kep a autograph book during her days can look back and find: “When you are married and your bus However, love always outwit stern parents, and Mrs. Hayne and Andrews succeeded in staging their elopement, being married by a manage to| between extravagance and economy. | CARL C. B.—Type though affec- Ability, Affable, \magination, not suf-|tionate will not jump into marriage. ficient force to carry out plans yet.{ idealistic, imaginative. Extravagant. Sense of humor, companionable. Nor-| Suggest waiting, for you yourself are sible and especially of cigars and ciyer y | mal) : te, t i | si \ devbroned apd galled. The tinperious| Mrs. Hayne was one of her best| Justis of the Pesce at Mamaroneck, | Maly, affectionate Artistib taated:| unsafiléd, somewhat ereduioue ame |""y 6 Ng coming into the| butts. If wé exercise the proper care,| | band is cross %y old ruler did live many years “in| friends, Miss Elizabeth Strong of | N.Y» in April, 1915. Several months Orderly, Loyal. Conventional. At-| easily discouraged. Indications aF6/ pulléing smoking ‘a’ big: cigar. Youltnen and they omy can we fea) that | 7 take up the broom ang say "t am Jonely, unbroken and horrible grief.” | Cleveland, to whom Donald had been | “fterward the young wife showed a|ttactive. Will power combating tim-|that he has other friends, because boss, may envy me. You do not need to do wo. When I smoke tn the building I we are doing our proper share and feel a fair measure of security. $$ vial of white powder, whioh she said| idity. Gradual victory for initiative,| she is Jolly and kpontaneous. was poison Donald had procured from | @Nd financial success, |. ARTHUR H, S. H.—Sweet nature, ‘ laborate d threat-| DORIS D., Jersey City—Type in-| latent maternal instinct. Sincere but!“ doing wrong. Lam doing wrong ine Fae orninrt ane hes cares capable of great affection, though af. | conee als feelings, Not fickle. Agrees {to you and to myself. 1am disobey- | miele ge Mena ha pal pl ar epage deaalden airtel 4 Aa he/@ble Companion, but not forceful. |ing the fire lawa and’ am. patting Pen mathe Ai Saving thin" ANA MRIA TERS: ORARIRG SUDDOMR, AS MOL THURS, ML Mab’ Wekneny| cry ite Aa ee Woeneta tel maneeh half seriously at the time—a signifi- | 4PPears conventional, oom | Asreeable, but not demonstrative. Le- | Yes, I tell you frankly. that J am doinit cant remark in view of her recent| Harrow minded, indications ure he] \jable. Careful spender, Well polsed, | this, 1 em ‘my! own greatest. enemy fate. may boast of going out with married | pogitive, but fot axgresmively so. Suc. 7 ue in the’ biellding, ‘aha women, but it will not amount to! cessful business. Tactfully communt.| When I emoke is ch. Fi sce: de- | Cative, but no more, | much, For financial success, must de-| much directed to myself as it ts to | this talk that I am giving to you Is aa of tho strange story of | voion initiative, Excellent at routine} LEEM. K-—~Ruriness abiiity, Jaitia- Much as the mature woman wnilles” a9 she reads this written in a bund, unformed hand, and signed or Betty or some chie little name that brings memories of a tilted nos@’ pink Cheeks and saucy eyes, she stil) has much of this rebellious spirit Mttle autographer. When hewe.hus- band is cross she does feel lik says ing "I am boss” just for the It would seem as if the Karolyi curse might have worked itself out. But has it? engaged, Mrs. Hayne always declared, however, that this engagement had been broken off shortly before her New ‘York Foundry Celebrates 80th Anniversary of Building First Propeller-Driven Vessels GOING DOWN! Copyright, 1990, Uy ‘Tea. Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World.) DEAR EVERYBODY: I see a Ford car standing by the curb This union was no more peaceful than any part this possible daughter of the House hut little fF tive, Girlishly vain, Somewhat sus- | you, sa “a ee of the thing, whether she foo en- DOZBN engineering sosteties of international repute, as well as all|of Hipsburg. The two lived for two| "Gia but ttle force. Berra inaenniy, Father indiferent: | we employers take ‘musty \herties Ee ae eee titled to be boss or not. And sormany the important New York clubs, the New York Chamber of Com-|0F three weeks in the bride's country | flirtatious. Optimistic, and marveluus| of f Broad view ‘ells little. Will | that we do not permit the men under * : 7 en a ase @ husband refuses to let his take merce and the New York Historical Society, will send ropresen\i-|home at Pleasantville, N.Y, then| tmusinetion, Civen to neaeaey |marry, but indications are content-/us to take. We are none the less one Sg we men i the lead because he feels that five slipped away to England, taking with| and ousting, illclent, egotistical.) ment in present position at present, | guilty. Of course you would hot have|] offlco—a * Of promixe~ Tliine gender should rule by divine Nae Be MORIN: tO) Oe the smal} son of her first mar-| Kindly, generous. You are better! Practi¢al sort, no dreamer. the tacnerity fo tall de ahhe we axe only he is right. -y eben bier riage whon Mrs. Andrews had named | rere ds eta ad wite sat hehintes TG: “fteud controls [smoking that we ought not to do #0, | ‘Waiting for some one to start Being Boss is not the real , beginning of Captain| RYlph, the name borne by the | Good housekeeper. affections though ghe is not precisely | However, from time to time I see the him. ‘ the sense of being IT, but ces Prfésson’s work inj Prince she said was his grandfather.) R, B,—Excellent character in the] cold, Rather inclined to keep her|sign of the Fire Department on the| T see a businosy man mes- 1! every household needs a leader; and this country, “Jim little over 4 month Donald An-| making. Indications are success. Pre easel Some imaginaton and) walle of the building and I ain re-| ponent vy pager glen happy is the little family who @ppree sy ae sturned. ai a4 t| F. A. My Brooklyn.—Clever, fluency | latent liking for the mysterious, Neat, |™ i or troubles (#0 called). He [i] oiates this leader and leva It was’ under thia|drews res ae s Jean /ot thought. Affectionate, Natural or=|or careful of appearance, Paithtui | C@lled to my duty in this vy could be of service to the come ‘hic Breen bath bag" her noted engineer that}home to Nis parents in Cleveland. | &, nisep, impatient. In a hurry to! type, Favorable for matrimony. Un-| Do not smoke in the building, Your) mgalty, ‘he Soul 60 0'Om of stee . ‘8 Who ti your the first iron boats|Later Mrs. Andrews announced that| succeed. Good character, Keeps hia| demonstrative interests are bound up in mine and in ‘ah nake “barrels of || {*mly? Have }sa found outtss and the drat river,|ter husbdnd had deserted. her, and/own couasel, tndlcations are too], ¥, F, WAVERLY, N, Yi—Char-|the interesta of tho people about Up bo spk agg oh ° Es meee. ‘ g 4 1 on or{kindly to really intend sarcasm,| acter unformed, Indications are very | _ | ' y 12 jake and ocean yes. | that she, ohains Spend tho remainder) tough insufficient specimen dors not disorderly and unstable. A veritable | People are so careless in the use of) Waiting for some one to HIS PEACEFUL HOMEY gjsels driven by pro. |of her life abroad, where sho planned! snow that trait, Deliberate about! weather vane, Domegticify undevel-|matches, ‘They throw the burnt phere tle N enthusiastic young minister pellers in this coun-|to nurse British soldiers—this was | marriage. oped as yet, matches away. never seeing where the I sce a fellow in love with « who followed one of ola in January, 1916, M. A. R.—Insufficient specimen in- H. M.—Sweet, idealistic, fond of Aicates industry, extravagance. Great ti . f F. burnt stick fall, Most often the type in a ry were built. He PR ar oh hag 7 By girl, He would be a great deal pe sleepy wes re- supervisod the build-| Since that time she has been 4! conceit and beasting. bos . refined. No great force. burnt match falls on hard wood or Detter with her by his side, thumping the rostrum @ goog, deal, ing of the engines|popular member of smart English M. A. C.—Truthful’ Brave. Ma-| £ MARTIN H. Brooklyn—Lively, | Mer hard substances and nothing re- for sho has what he hasn't, and disturbed a spider which had and boilers for the|society, Donald Andrews, it is said,| terial tastes, but hes eumelent will hurried, restless, kindly, Fluency of|#ults, We may throw matches away initiative, but he Is found peaceful refuge in one of the old "United States letly obtained a divorce in Ohio! power to correct habits, Latent busi- thought, Somewhat affected. Imag-|for man: years and no harm may e for many a day. Ps VS. FRIGATE PRINCEION. Mricate pyaee quiet Ms es se rene, nis | 2088 ability. But has not quite found] tnative, fond of dancing and material bat an aeeie. of curtis aril Crear for ome one (or mame yo ao Oe ‘ " * moeelf, indications are no imme- | ty . Extravagant, occasion } A tart 5 U. & Frigate Princeton, the Firet’ Vessel te Have which, incideatally,| former wife, still adhering to her | ime marriage Cartlemn, Disorderly, Lacks eonoeht | strengthened, We may think that we ‘And so it goes, with three- || was met by another spider, the | Boilers and Engines Below the. Water Line. vas the fret vessel | romantic tradition, was secretly mar-| HILDA I. B.—Simple, honest. Sonse| tration, yet does not lack will power. |are wate, that no accident can happen || fourths of the world in the |] tale of woe was im) to have engines and boilers below the water line. Captain Kricawon per-|ried to Capt, Steane. Her first hus- | of hummer, ‘Deliberate, ‘wticient with- Not aitonetner freak. attectionate, [2 YU HOw prone we are to think|] WAITING ROOM, waiting for pe tand orm Hi onstruction feats at the Phoenix Foundry, ich formerly 4 out eine rillian ‘irm. rifle R a Normally ‘ectionate. Jum) Seen nats Want wirset tn the year 188%. It was at this foundry that |DAM4 Incidentally, was a captain in| Crauious, Genial. Indications are| Somewhat “oaaly depron Tate: | that some things can happen to the|| the train to Opportunity thet lived "in the. pulpit many don the Gentca Launch waa cast. the British air service during the] satisfactory husband, No spend- | nessiike, broad views, Domestic ten- | other follow, but never, oh, never can never comes! but I can't stay there any Ame pipe for the Cr a , war. She and Capt. Steane spent a] thrift, denclos' stil undeveloped. Bvasive.lthey happen to us. We like to de- Yours very truly, Said the second ‘When the site was changed to the foot of West 14th Street this foundry 4 : Baa o. ‘tad, franks; ORMIMAIE an Coats fe econ! : me was first to develop the important naval experiments, wuch as self-pro-|boneymoon in Cornwall, and the + be minded, fra: lude ourselves with the belief that in ALFALFA SMITH. A little too mi immediate suco ter mix M. D. A,-—If this writing is natural, me bet-' then” eccentricities point to mental more force. ‘ent, If assumed, indications torpedoes, torpedo boats, torpedo boat destroyers and submi = ‘The engines of the old Monitor were also constructed at ee A our case it tg different. But it ts pot different, Our case is the case of every man and woman in P. 8! Make » start, Paste this om your leoking glass! ine|match apparentiy was a happy one thst the shockingly sudden and tragic death of dre. Steane