The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1920, Page 21

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ae a Widows and divorces. ffs eet ri Hl it i Hi te i i i fi i i Hi t | wot @bolianing the love-matobT” “Mari of fea tl besa ooo happier socie! exist. Somer, hard-wo ions Might be nit. ages prevailed it would be boot Por wh Robinson replied: 4 selfishucas. to war, we way, so ext goneration may have b dated. row and develop.” But if life is to consist tn aly handing the toreh to we ourecives are ae i i i f ; (tt é i Iss t 3 : : ai EF ‘f He il il ! i g " i i ; I i | I E 3 7 i { i IE to be allowed no compensation? What ono take the place, for men and women of the happiness love noes go should be consumineted pecmee mental and Shpsion) Geni: ‘and wi earrying wake more traged.ca than cao bere enumerated, would be eliminated in 4 society Which gave = first consideration to the child. nder a aystem whore the State con- or sanctioned only certain Soietinie coin Seton ea ip becween a man and womeo unless they marry, Buch « eondition naturally forces many mar- riages whieh should uever be made. Under » system where eugenic marri- af on @ girl more than three times Without being obliged to marry her,” which the modern young man romark, “You've sald something, meee’, But wal him imaelt if he could EVER qualify aa 8 bridegroom, in the é¢ugenic slate. 1 inquired what would be the disqualifications for marriage, Dr, “Murciagen ehould not be allowed where there lo any taint of hereditary Gisease or where the habits of either the man or the woman aro anti-social, By anti-social habits of traits may be fncluded taginess, lack of am! which science is now classifying as » @iatinct disease and as beridiary os “The future race comes first, Wo ditions ynder which to live and werk, Eugenio marriages would empty the Insane asylums, poor houses and jails.” “But gould we STAND thom?" 1 in- “Two partners tn business get alon well if their business develops well, matotained Dr. Robinson. “Moo and women of all classes got along hap- pily if they work successfully to- Bether. By the same token, the mar- Fied couple who created a beautiful ohfld would be happy together and proud and could not be uced to leave each other, They would be too Interested Im watching their creation tion, without even the wermzed, yohbd Je there ha bila for mgt Doctor Gives Radical Views ELIMINATE OLD MAIDS AND WIDOWS; POT biVORCE COURTS IN DISCARD; MAKE WORLD SAFE FOR CHILDREN By Marguerite Mooers Marrhall, ———— Ceptteht, 1880, by the Pree Publishing On (The Now York Rrening World). ARRIAGE for love shoud be abolished— . 1 M™ oder to make the world eufe for children and for the future of 2 In order to Gtminiod greatly, if not to eliminate altogether, olf maids, pacvasnnanrmaieannent eine ntti Brainthorecnion By Roy L. McCardell Cover. 1900. ay The Pree Pudi On (tie New York Braoing Work.) HEN Mr, and Mra, Jarr came up the street bringing the Ohikiren home from an en- Joyable evening at an adjacent mor ing picture abow, discussing what filma they Uked and what cove they didn’t like, Mra, Jarr was firet to sense something wrong as she looked up at the dark windows of theit Apartment. “I feel as though something dread-~ baa happened!" remarked, “How gloomy overyth| “Did you expect an illumination tn bonor of our return?’ asked Mr. Jarr. “If 1 understood you correct! your band maiden has gone out th evening, but 1 have my latchkey. re all right.” lat Gertrude is taking every even- ing out," said Mrs, Jarr, “$ho's get- ting as bad as the rest of the world, Wanting duuble pay and to do no work!” “Maybe she ten't put. She may have gone to bed, ntured Mr. Jarg, “Don't worry and got @ wrinkle.” “If worry gave me wrinkles mv skin would be like corduroy.” mur- mured Mra. Ja) the head of the house fumbled with the latch key. ‘Tve @ premonition something hus happened.” » ‘ Ars, Jarr’s premonition cashed {j once. The flat was empty even of tI cat which was mewing pitifully on the fire encape. Willie Jarr rained the window and let the cat in, playfully trying to love the window down out Its tail, Mr, Jarr it the gas aod Mrs. Jarr went from room to room, “Gertrude’s things are gone!” she announced first. ot “| wonder who with, cam it Be an clopement in hw cried Mr, Then. for the firet time, he noticed ® note pinned to the centre of the tab It read as fdtio i “Mr aud Mrs, Jarr: i have ex: “8 cepted & poesishum in the. country and may marry @ rich gentieman if bin wife dies. Hoping thes few lines will find you well @od «rate respeciy Excuse haist and a bad pen. “GERTRUDE” Mrs. Jarr began to cry. “Well, dent worry about It,” snid Mr. Jarr sovthingly. complaining about time.” jertrude for sume “You've got to complain!* whim- pered Mra. Jarr. “if you don't com- Plain the servants think you are pleased with hem aud caao't gel aldi Without them, But to think at «ir Would use ine like this! might Dave stayedatil) | gut some one lo ser piace! 1 had @ chance to get girl last week, but 1 got away from the place abe bed till her Month was up. 1 intended not to say & word to Gertrude till L gave hor her money and let her go. And nuw look how she's used nu—leaving without notice!” “T heard you say the other day you coulda’ put up with Gertrude any moro,” Mr. Jarr. “You maid you could get ail the maids you wanted.” “Now, just for saying that, you can fo to the agebcies and get me an- other girl, who is a good cook and general houseworker and who comes well recommended and’——— “Btop right there!” exclaimed Mr, Jarr, have Seen through all that. Bo TN stay bome and do the house- work, while you prospect for help.” And he was so firm about tt that Mre. Jarr dried her tears and resolved to attend to the matter herself. gues SHOPS the, deai in Christmas are featuring complete Hnes of this stock, wo it {8 posal! your cards in jeisure- befor Christmas rush comea upon ‘The card that bears a persona ment “that just fits,” will giv greater pleasure than merely an or dinary greeting. That is why people who roally care for thelr friends apend so much time In selecting cards as they do in buying gifts and theee usually bring quite as much happiness asa gift does. A handsome gown In one of the. Fifth Avenue shop windows Is of net and metalile threads, the ehlef colors of which are blue, jade and apricot, combined with plain black net that forms bouftant draperies and the wide flowing sash. Crepe jerecy in a new fabric in undergarments and many po ideas are interwoyen in the exquisitely de~ signed modus now showa in the shops. The wide, highly polished brace- lets of fet are very popular, The composition bracelets in color are also in great demand, A favored ooncelt ta to wear avvers) of thevn, say three, with the color of each con- trasting. a There Will be Two More EARLY PICTURES OF STAGE NOTABLES On This Page To-Morrow, By Fay Stevenson. Tie Now Yoo Rresing HELE le & lot of “teen talent” on broadway these days, Five pret- ty giles and owe clever young man, al) ln their teens of early twon- ties, have proved during the present that New York approciates “young blood” and freah talent. For instagee, there is preity litte Ula Sharon who ts just sixteen but soured her first New York success leat Wednerday as an exquisite dan- Winter Garden with George “Broadway Drevitios,” Ming in Kansas on @ Bharon was bora farm looking over the broad prairies, Gnd there is something of the spirit of that great land tn her dancing. Bver since she was a tiny girl ehe has been fond of dane father, a olvil engineor elled all over the word Bhe has lived and danced tn the Pmilitptacs, in Japan, China and Australia, {t Is on Broadway that she won her Bweet sixteen, an exquisite dancer and pretty, just euite Broad~ Then there is Ethelind Terry, who the prima donna role in Zim- comedy, “Honeyde' Ethelind was a student at the Mount Saint Dominjo Aoademy, Cladwetl, N. J., Just twelve months 0, and she ia only seventeen years She made her professional de- but last epring, singing jn the sex- tette of the “Florodora” révival at the Then she was given the prima donna understudy role, played hy Miss Eleanor Painter, Painter missed a performance Ethe- lind proved herself a minute girl of As good fortune would Aima Gluck, wife of Dfrem Zimbalist, heard her in this and discovered the very voice and personality necessary for the role Muriel ia the myaiced G@ WORLD, MONDAY, OOTOBER 11, 1090. IDAILAT VIAGAZZI By Maurice Ketten WEEK SIX YOUNGSTERS, FIVE GIRLS AND ONE YOUTH, SCORE BROADWAY HITS DURING PRESENT SEASON “Honeydew” that her husband bad Juat completed. Mary Milburn ts another youthful star of Broadway. She ts the heroine fo “The Girl In the Spotlight,” which i» at present in Boston Mary was born in Greenwich Village some eighteen years ago, Just as soon as she could do her hair up she worked &s a stenographer for $15 a week #0 tat Ale might cultivate her voloe. Mary says that she trod the offices of Shubert and Frohman’s daily, but the office boys were the only ones she over saw. Ploaily she attended vhlic Herring of Hammeretein » “The Little Gray Home in the * and Was given a job an a girl in the front row of “Angel F Later she played in “Listen Lester” and now ahe is IT in her new Play and an accepted favorite of Broadway. Esther Howard, playing the in "The Bweetheart Shop," |» another youth ful Hroadway success. Mins Howard Boston girl who used to run away from boarding school fust to See & good show, When sixteen she began playing in stock companies and in that way worked her way up to her role of Minerva Butts, which she plays wo well Al im th same “Sweetheart shop’ another “young blood” makes Roo Tt is Harry K. Morton. Harry Degan as & comedian tn the Green- wich Village Follies, In fact, to be accurate Harry wes doing stunts tn the circus with his mother and father when he was but six years old, Now he ls the acrobatic comedian of “The Sweetheart Shop” and made his hit as Peter Potter, Perbapa the most wonderful “teen talent” to come to the front during the Inst season ts hasel-eyed, Titian- halred Hannah Toback, who jumped from the comparative obscurity of the Lowery and §eoond Avenue to tho Lright Nghia of a Morris Gest produc- TAKE (T AWAY | IT GIVES HE HAY monthe ago attended Washington Irving High Behvol. played children’s parte (heatres, but In July abe made up her Diind she wanted @ broade: perience. She left her parent's home At No. 42 Delancey Btreet and ap- peared face to face with Morris Gest, Fince the latter bas abolished off boye and formalities this was no dif Then Miss Toback sar and-—just like that—Mr, Gea! signe MP a contract fof one of the most youthful and Beautiful singers now Therefore, who mys that youth and unknown talent go astray in Now MOOS Nefonco Portable endisss belt with ladders bulit into one side uf the frames have been invented to aid AOA An Englishman hae stocklews anchor for abips w flukes that move separately, to be stowed securely against @ vessel's bow of any shape. Gears for two speeds, ope anion, feature @ We! ntors jee cream freeser to provide the Increased power needed &s Ite contents congeal. The utilization of water pc France has increaned more t singe 1034 and by thi 1921 more than twice as mucn Me but aighleen end gix will be - FLOWERS AS WELL AS THEY DID BEFORE THEY WERE MARRIED + Baseball With — A Havana Flavor HERE'S HOW CUBAN SCRIBES WRITE UP A HOT GAME. By Roger Batcheiser. Primer inning. Bueaneros—Highbes out en fy ai centre. Torry, rolling al short, out en primera, Carey atruck out, No hit, no run. Habaca—Papo out en fy al catcher. Merito muero en rolling al piteber, Custe lo lLaita No, gentle reader, that is not Ch lie Bomervilie’s jazz account of t Werld's series Not at all Por from it. It ta the report of « turttiing Cuban series by @ Havana reporter, a obronivied by Harry A. Franck | his latest book, “Koating Through the Weat indies” (Coptury) Baseball in no simple matter tn Cuba, according to the author, To get a gued seat one must buy @ pink envelope from a specuiator The American then congratulates himecif on getting a graad-stand seat; but when he geta to the wicket through which ell uuset pase who bave re- sorved seats be must buy yet anotoor ticket, Then, by added bargaining, he is able to got a seat from whioh he can see the Kume, Ie baseball only an Amertoan game? ite failure in Bogland and continental countries would sect to prove that “our great national game" would draw the proper crowd on a American or National League cireutt But far be it, “Which do you like best™banoball games or bull-fights’’ ashe i) }ranck of his neighbor at the Cuban series. “Basdball by far-and ao do ali Cubana,” waa the reply That in itself is rather astonish tng, for it i» commonly conceded that Americans are the only ones ear frouse great enthusiasm over a more baneball game itut here te thy dy in the proverbial ointment “It Isn't bo much the game,” de clares Mr, Franck, ‘an the wonderful opportunities for betting that it yiters.”” Down itn Cuba the “fanaticos” (wo suppowe they are what we call “fany") bet on every awing of the bal, 1 overy ball that rises into the air, on whether or not the runner reaches first base, on how many fouls or hte the (nning will produce. There are no blood distinetions, Negroes place bete with full-blooded Spaniards, and tn the crowded “nol,” as the Cubans catl the bivachers, bets by the score are made and paid within five min- utes, The gamblers of Havana leave jittle chance for crooked players, however. It all @ Kame—a gamvie. You buy &n ecavelope at the beginning of the firat Inning. When @ runner reachon e tear them open in the there may be a slip, “la baae, la carrera” (frat base, fret run) K-provea to be a by bet that the first baseman of elther sid@ will make the Gra, Tua, ISIE | Do You Believe in Dreams ? denier of Shelbyville, Ind, dreamed over an embankroent. He Jumped to mve hi Here Are Some Real Stories MAN'S HAIR TURNS BLACK TO RED; , HE DREAMED HE WAS A SQUIRREL; ©. FIREMAN HAD FATAL “GHOST” "ALARM: By Marguerite Dean Copyright. 1090, by The Freee Pubtiching On (The New York Brentng Werle > “We ore such stuff ae dreama are made of.” ROBPERO said !t—Phakespeare’s Prospero—and, worse luck, Prospero wae right! There are scores and hundreds of folks in these parte who have proved, very much to their discomfort and distress, that they ATUE made of the stuff of dreams—their own dreama, In dreamland they have endured perils to life and limb—and waking, found that their sieep~ charmed bodies have come as near as possible to performing the feate whfol: were enacted in thelr dream-bemused braina, with broken limbs and heads Druisen and cuts an the remuit, The Lord mtay take care of drunkards, chil- fren and foole—tut Mephistopheles << sooma to keep hig malignant eye on ¢ dreamers! Take the case of Frank Haggerty, in GOING DOWN! the news only the other day, A Ban‘ Francisco saiomnan of typewriters, visiting New York, he dreamed, as he lay to bed at the Hotel Braddock, that ® bume black cat sat om the fence op- ponite hia window and yowled at him. Naturally enough he arose to throw boots and halr brushes at the animal —awith the ronult, that, sound asleep, $ begin at the beginning. | he climbed out of his second story } » ten-mile journey when you ores window and started to stroll around 3 at the emt ee, CO ts? the narrow coping. As Inet nesednte | Ce Wil Goa teal everyihis wan recovering fram @ badly $ which was started in the begin bumped head in Harlem Hospital. ning of the world was proms Only last yoar William J, Prendor- gast, of Hook and Ladder Company No, 3, No, 108 Kngt Thirteenth Street, Manhattan, was tnatantly killed by « EAR BPGINNER: jump or fall from the window of bis your own bistury room, at No, 303 Enst Twelfth Street. SS Soe Storeea And his friends’ explanation of this ale of tbe teaek, fire veteran's death—he had been tn the service seventeen years—ta that his dreams he beard the “ghost alarm” which often haunts a sleeping fireman. That is, bo dreamed of the call to duty to which he had eo often responded; dreaming, ras to the sild- ing to break out ingpole—and crashed through the opem jail, He opened hie eyes to find that window to his death on the pavement, two bia left wrist were A Pennsylvania railroad train wae broken—he evidently had been pound- approaching ‘Trenton, N, J4 one No- ing the side of the bed, instead “of mber night. Mra J. Rappe Myers, the colored the wife of & wealthy hotel man, was From Kellogg, dah, comes the tile returning to the berth sho stared with john Scharf, who dreamyd her twenty-one-year-old daughter, yatiful Woman and of Gladys, Bhe placed a gentie hand on to bow to her, Me caught hiv the shoulder of the girl, who, dream- the tron at the foot of tho tng of the burglar abe had feared, pulled from undef the pillow @ pistol verely wrenching his lea. . bought for protection, but which she A hod never fired, and shot her mother brakeman, fatally through the breast, dreamed be was on a freight train going under struck bie of the Bacramedto eo 2 : in i ii gs : ; 5 g 2 ' Frank Leroux of Toledo, dream- tng of a burglor, walked in bie sleep, took Bis @un and shot his wife in the his skull Whea to break- right «ida She died shortly afters fast it was seen that his jet viack ward. A New York man, Wasll @tu- hair bad turned evernight to a fiery Jicewles, two years ago dreamed of @ red, wotnan who appeared at his bedside Charles Moreland, a twenty-two to threaten him, and in @elf-defense year.old youth of Nashville, Ind, war took his revolver from under ble Dil- tuoked snugly between the shests jow and shot himeclf ta the left when he dreamed of diving off of,« breast, fog into a swimming pool. np Not all dream dotnge have much asicep, ne stood up in bed, shouted. tragic remilty, however, Some of “Come on, boyal” and took a header them are merely unpleasant aud WIth t» the floor, He woke wp with « ea! fa certain comic aspect for all except headache. : the eufferers, For éxampie there i@ 4 butcher who lived in the saine the case of Will Jacobs, of Ackley, State and was named Charles. Ailc In He dreamed he wae @ equirrel baugh, dreamed of kicking a pulidog. ‘and junyped from tree to trea He Which had entered his meat mar aud chased a cat, He kicked fhe woke up to find he had jumped wall instead of the dog, und ‘camo through a window, taking the glass [o" only to find three’ tone of tte with him. Ho wann't a squirrel—he right fout broken. r was a--oh, well, you know the rest. After borsewhipping a man until! . the whip was worn out, acodrding Al Bohosider, an automobile repal {he Tee ae De arthur is Got . that he waa in an autemobile plunging aprang Upon im and the doctor lan a Ai bas ga eens ‘This ah no harm to the wall beside the bet self, and woke to flud that where it iandod—but the dentie:. nuit be bad leaped throuxh @ window, ae @ badly bruised fist the next day. verely cutting bia lems. Page Dr Sigismund Freud, whole Melita teaponaible for the theo: ait AB. A Calitorals Deputy Gherttt, Larey Skis ase the veeult of suppressed Tiithouse, dreamed that he wae sy> Hegines! And wateh your rare~ duing @ negro prisoner, who was try- bite and mince pie! — Cocoa Snowdrift Cake! HIS wonder-cake with ‘that chocolaty taste’’ is made with Runkel’s All-Purpose Cocoa, No need to bother grating chocolate—Runkel’s is already a powder, all ready to use, The recipe is simple. Bee fourteen of “The New Cocoa =the revised, new Runkel recipe book. «If you haven’t @ copy write us for one today. RUNKEL BROTHERS, Ine, Makers sf Kunial + aimrnd Bars and Frein Nut Bore yet (Ge West 30th Street, New York City » ote oe renee as =o

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