The evening world. Newspaper, November 7, 1922, Page 3

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_THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER “FORGOT” TO PAY $14,417, FIFTH AVE. CONCERNS ATTACH HER ACCOUNT MRS. HAMMERSTEIN BELIEVED ALIVE AS LUGGAGE IS FOUND setae. Left Home of Friend Yester- day After Writing a De- spondent Note. SHABBY AND PENNILESS. Effort of Student to Stage Benefit Found Former Friends Cold. Friends of Mrs Ifammer- stein, who have been concerned since the widow of the late impresario dis- a|ppeared yesterday from the home of Mrs. Julla Warley, No. 27 Columbus Avenue, were somewhat relieved to- day, when it was learned she had left her luggage at a nearby express office with a request to hold it a few days, or until she “would send for it." Publication of that Mrs, Hammerstein had departed from Mrs. Farley's roof leaving a note In which Oscar Nee” - BJ ROBERT D' ERLANGER eee ser Are, sai ee aod Former Mra. Peter C. Hewitt Sued to Recover Claim for Jewels and Clothing. Claims presented by three Fifth Avenue concerns for goods said to stories she oaid she was ‘very weak and have been purchased within six very tired and tould siand it no months of her marriage to Baron longer,’ brought many friends to in- Robert d’Erlanger were made the basis for a @uit for $14,417.25 yester- day against Baroness d'Erlanger, for- merly Mrs, Peter Cooper Hewitt. Frederick E, Lindemann, who 1s suing on assigned claims, obtained an order from Justice Wagner attaching Maroness dl account with ‘Trust Com- quire about her to-day. On learning of the discovery of the bag con- sisting of a trunk and two suitcases, these expressed the hope that Mrs Hammerstein had not destroyed her- self, but perhaps had obtained as- sistance or employment that would end her penniless situation According to Mrs. Farley, Mr Hammerstein told her hort time langer's the Farmers’ Loan and ago, ‘not to be surprised she ae oe found dead on Oscar's grave.’ She a Moe Sra a has been living with Mrs. Farley since] Drelcer & Co., jewellers, of No, 660 when she was found| Fifth Avenue, claim the Baroness four weeks ago, penniless and homeless Park by Miss Catherine De The note in which the w she “could stand it no tonger’’ w addressed to Max Rubin. Rubin ts a student living at No, 255 East Houston Street. He had met oMr Hammerstein and when the stories of her misfortunes were printed in the newspapers, his sympathies were aroused and he attempted to stage a benefit to obtain some relief tor her. He met with little success. Rubin, Mrs. Farley declared, called on Mrs. Hammerstein Sunday nighit jand told her of the way things were jgoing, Sho did not appear to be greatly downcast at the news. She ‘made an appointment with Rubin to seo her last night at her home. When he called there then she had been missing for hours. Mrs. Farley gave Central] bought $8,500 worth of jewelry Dec. hn. 1, 1921, and neglected to pay for it jow said] J. M. Gidding & Co., No. 724 Fifth Avenue, have a bill for $5,297.25 for a broadtail coat, mink coat, a combina- tion and a fur coat they say they sold to Baroness d'Erlanger, then Mz Hewitt, in December, and the milli- nery firm of Henri Bendel, Inc., No, 10 West 5ith Street, complains the Baroness has not paid for $620 worth of merchandise bought between Jan. 9 and 80 this year. Baroness d'Erlanger is Paris. living in ———————— JACOB GIMBEL DIES OF HEART TROUBLE IN ATLANTIC CITY Oldest of Wive Brothers in Gimbel him the note, which Mrs. Hammer- NeLnecianic pec stein had addressed to him. it rea a “My dear Mr. Rubin: AT TIC CITY, Nov. 7.—Jacob “Tf wish to thank you so much for| Gimbel, a member of the department store firm of Gimbel Brothe f Phila- delphia, New York Lilwaukee, died at his summer home here. to-da, Mr. Gimbel died of heart trouble. He came here several weeks cuperate. He v old and unmarric the five the Gimbel concern. Mr one time Preside Chairman of th the recently for He was Presid erated Chari years At M pired w all you have done for me. 1 am very tired and very weak. 1 can stand it no longer. “MRS. OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN.” Mrs. Hammerstein is described as being forty years of age, 5 feet 8 inches tall, 185 pounds in weight; has blue eyes, brown hair and ts of fair complexion. She was dressed in a blue suit, black shaw!, red hat with a black veil and black shoes. Farley declared Mrs. Hamme: had no money with her, =e MAN KILLED BY “L” TRAIN IDENTIFIED BY BROTHER and ago to re seventy-one years and was the oldest of identified in Gimbel was at of the firm and was ard of Directors of d Gimbel Corporation. of the Jewish I s of Philadelphia for ten brothers actively Gimbel's his four bedetde when he ex brothers. Firemen Extricate Body Wedged) 7 ; os # Cae, Mr. Gimbel was born in. Vincennes mb wae, RIAtionmcend)iCer, Ind., the son of Adam ‘Gimbel, whoMn A brother early to-day identified as| 1842) founded a store at Vincennes : - Jacob Gimbel learned the business anil Charles McGuire, an employee of the]; aT.) with, Wa brother Ineac, tile Staten Island Hospital at Tompkins-] grated fo Milwauker and established a ville, the man killed by an elevated] Store a Py Pp raciagelnnt and train at Second Avenue and 42d Haccinbel, Reothere: aon’ tn Street late last night, A letter in the York will he closed during the dead man’s pocket led to the discoy- New funeral and will not open service on Thursday until noon, ‘The funeral will be con- ery of the brother, Patrick, at No.| ducted at the Rodeph Schalom Syna- 201 West 144th Street xogue in Philadelphia by Rabbi Southbound traffic on the Second * Avenue “L” was tied up half an hour last night while firemen worked to extricate the body of McGuire, who had fallen between the platform of the] Waiter Williams, first car and that of the 42d Street] Street, Manhattan. this morning, be station. Dr. Wright of Bellevue| came sudionly iil and died before Dr Hospital pronounced the man dead| Cornell, summoned from Sw York Hos after having worked vainly with af ee ain Sermct police eeeuae pulmoter to restore him to conscious- jisted his teath as due to natural ness. causes PANTOMIME — ee DIFS SUDDENLY VISITING Joseph Rlackman, No. nue, Brooklyn PRIEND, 7510 Fifth Ave while visiting his friend 194 West 23d Rails’ at “An E Love” and Queries, Should It Be Expected? Contemplates Her Successor in Life of Poet-Husband With Philosophic Equa- nimity, Proving Her Own Theory. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. HY does love die? says Georgette Leblanc Maeterlinck; “because the gitnt oak perishes. Every beautiful cre- ation carries the seeds of its own decay, It is a principle of nature. Why should love be the only eter- nal thing in the world? Why do we ask for an eternity of love?" The first Mme. Maeterlinck, singer, actress, author, mistress of many an art—including the art of greatly loving, sat before the fire and talked of love in the stu- dio which she has made go at- tractive a surprise behind the dingy, peeling brownstone front at No, 47 Washington Square. It is two years since I saw the woman who for twenty years was the in- spiration of the famous Belgian poet and’ dramatist, but except that her glorious tawny hair is bobbed, I could discern no change in the most beautiful and mag- netic Frenchwoman I have ever met. And certainly there is no change in her interesting philoso- phy of the heart; a which she has lived as well as talked. The whole world knows the story of how, after a fifth of a centilry of apparently ideal companionship, she went quietly out of the life of Maurice Maeter- linck, while he married a slip of a girl named Selysette Dahon. She came to America in the autumn of 1920, to begin a new life in a new world. And next month she makes her New York debut as an interpreter of the program of the International Composers’ Guild, a musical so- clety for the presentation of the music of Revel, Schonberg and a number of other ultra-modern composers of different nationali- ties — including the American. Although most of us think of Georgette Leblanc primarily as an actress, she won in Europe an equally great reputation as a singer; and that distinguished critic, Arthur Symonds, has sum~- marized her art as "the dramati- zation of song.” philosophy But because I had just finished reading another manifestation of Georgette Lebanc Maeterlinck's artistic versatility, the true and hithemto unpublished version of her autobiography, I asked her to discuss the problem she has stated so delicately and expertly on the last page--the problem of the passing of love. Of herself and Macterlinck she has writte’ Two independent lives have mingled, then after long and happy years they have separated like two etreams which follow natural courses. “Life has separated means that our different natures, little by little, have separated us. Those differences, insignificant in the beginning of love, altogether conquered in the ardent hours of its bloom, gather up their indi- viduality and begin to live again in love's twi “Our love been too deep to die of anything but itself." gain their us—whieh “But why must such love die?” I protested. “Why must love ever die? All the lovers in the* world ask that question, I think. What is your answer?” “That 1 do not ask an eternity of love!" flashed back Georgette Leblanc Maeterlinck, in the swift French her friend Margaret An- derson, editor of the Little Re view, so expressively translated And then the Frenchwoman voiced the brief philosophy of love's mortality, which 18 quoted at the beginning of this story “Have you not thou she continued, “that ail the great lovers in history and story died young? They are lixe the great poets and those whom the gods love. When death comes quickly to lovers, thelr love may last as long as their life. Not otherwise —not in this brutal world, where circumstances are in a conspiracy against love. Men are astonished that a reat love ends—they should be astonished that it has been and that it has lasted to: several years.” . "Then you do not think that all love dies of itself?” J asked. “Vou believe that exterior causes some- times kill it?” “Superficial love dies for siipe ficial reasons,” ex Mme Mreterlinck. “The at is the attraction 5 ts roused by physical beauty passes. “lu lave that Love Is Mortal, Dies of Its Own Decay, But a Spiritual Passion May Live On, Says Georgette Leblanc Maeterlinck Beautiful Woman of Genius ernity of Why 7, 1922, SIX MORE VIGTIN F POISON SOUG IN KLIMEK CASE | Beside Two Other sienna, Four Cousins Died After Eating With Woman. STAR WHO FIGURES IN EFFORT TO HAVE COMEDIAN DEPORTED MAURETANIA OFF TOMAKES-DAY TRIP AND BREAK RECORD. Liner Carries Sister of Gifs ~ ford Pinchot and Brother of Ogden Mills, Candidates, Off on what record CHICAGO, Nov. 7.—Investigation of the life of Mrs, Tillie Kilmek, who, cording to the police, is believed to have poisoned at least four husband: was extended to-day to include other late relatives of the woman, Her Joseph Kii- mek, is seriously ill from poison, He recently had his life In the body of Frank Krupeek, an- Is expected to be a breaking trip that will land passengers in London ahd South Eng- land points In five days, the Maure- tania of the Cunard Line to-day car- ried two English celebreties’ vitally interested in the American election, who are regretfully hurrying home to end political fences’, there, One of these was Lady Johnstone, present husband, insured. other husband, was found enough nister of Gifford Pinchot, Republican Poison “to kill four men," accord- candidate for Governor in Pennsyl- ing to a coroner's physician, vania, Her son is @ candidate for Plans wore mage to exhume the the British Parliament front a London suburb on the Coalition- Liberal tleket. His chances for election are regarded as doubtful, and so, while she wished to remain and h.1) her brother cele- brate an election regarded as certain, she felt it her duty to hurry back te “r gon’s assistance Another passenger was the Earl of Gronard, brother-in-law of Ogden L. Mills, candifate for Congress. In- tensely interested in the result of Mr. retations be English actor] Mills's candidacy, the Earl must be come to his knowledge [back in England Nov. 15 to-take part These, he said, had furnisiicd grounds} in the general elections on that date for a divorce to Margaret Gennerman,}and the opening of | Parliament former ve of ppt Movicto bout certain forged checks in Eng- | era! political meetings, whieh he called “wonderful, with not as much heck- land, Immediately Laurence Cas sidy, his attorney, demanded to knOW) jing as at English meetings, but more pep."" bodies of John Ruszkakski and Joseph Kitkrewlez, mates of the EDITH DAY. former ‘ace to with husband of Edith Somerset, the English Blossoms"* with face Carl Carleton, woman. Day, actress, Pat Meanwhile Harry Suida, a cousin of pheat now fold the State's actor, the accused woman, Attorney's office of the death of his sister Rose, after a din- Mrs. Klimek's home stor told, Elizabeth cousin, brother starring in "0. Miss Day, was inge grilled for immigration officials a when to whether his with the actress had been of such a nature 4 to render him subject to deporta Carleton laid bare the tween his wife and the whieh had mysterious two hours yesterday by ner at relations Suida’s Wyieckowski her two sister was said died after another ation and @ under myster circumstances, eating at the Klimek home. The two cousins asked to have the bodies of their relatives exhumed for examination GIRL RINGS FIRE ALARM AFTER DRINKS; FINED $10 » Heights Engines Kept by False Alar) whether the records were originals or They were copies, and the yer demanded a postponement,| Ne which was granted until Monday, If] Rogers these charges about forged checks are proved, Somerset can be deported for “moral turpitude Washingt Busy Is there the Wi causes young women attended one at which Will made a describing Ogden Mills as a ‘man who could call at the most exclusive homes in New York without delivering something,” styled Will a champion speech something in the liquor in shington Heights district that to turn in fire speech “Leblanc Magterlinck, alarms when there is no fire? Half a dozen or more false alarms and ity—or be- fore it, if its 1 becomes monotonous. Deeper lov than these may be talked to death, or wept to death, or destroyed by cruelty. “But even the supreme love of which a man and woman are eap- able cannot, in the nature of things, last forever. ‘The oak tree lasts longer than the rose, but there is an end to both “One makes love last as long as possible, of course, just as one waters flowers and ctiltivates the earth about their roots. One guards love tenderly and strives to enrich it."’ “And Isn't one way of doing that the enrichment of one's own personality?" I suggested. “When each of two mates grows as much as possible, doesn’t their love grow too?”’ But Georgette Leblanc Maeter- linck slowly shook her lovely head, while her long, heavily lashed hazel eyes narrowed in de- nial. “It Is almost impossible,’ she declared, ‘‘for two developing per sonalities to remain lovers. They are more likely to diverge than to converge. Love likes to attach itself to a fixed point. Ti formerly the wife. Always stayed the same, while her hu at Was band's personality grew—flour- ished’'—the actress-singer’sstrong white hand, with the heavy, odd ring on the forefin swept in everwidening circles. ‘'The man liked th: she finished, a twink in the hazel ¢ nd the woman used to be satisfled. One why marriage to-day does not last reason as long as it lasted yesterday hecause there are in it two per sonalities instead of one Yet madame shrugged—‘'can you ex modern woman to stop a personality? No pect the developing She thinks that love sometimes dies first in the man, sometir in the woman—there is no la no reason. “One flower in you window dies to-day—one to-mor- row; you do not know why." “But has a third person any thing to do with the death of love?’ I usked. Madame’s mobile mouth pur in a firm negative, and the sup} rounded figure in tailored suit of dovegrey straightened in its chair. “The third person,” she said, “may be the beneficiary of the next love; she he—ts ne the thief of the last one, how childish, how absurd, to feal jealousy, to kili or even to hate this innocent successor! “When a love relationship ends for one,’ she recapitulated her own generous creed, "it ends for two. No true lover will drag along a corpse. Oh, I know the theory that dead love may find a resurrection! It is responsihle for many a marriage of jon weary years; a marr t) merely a deference tot cons tlon of not prot 1 dead, Now can hey How can 4 ' prefersbie to t deca habit at the n of lif “But what, 1 asked, ‘can <A have been bothering the department up there lately. Chief Webber says every one of them was turned in by a young woman. The latest was this morning at 150th Street and Seventh Avenue When the apparatus arrived a girl was pointed out as the culprit, She was still leaning against the fire alarm ASPOLL OFFICIALS, Marion Smith, twenty-four, No, 234 at West 123d Street. Magistrate Froth- =? Sitges fined her $10, which she Election Board Head Talks on Rapid Brogress of Make Me Sick,”—and Several Do Republican Didn’t Mind Beating so Much, But Fair Voters Called Him “Tammany Bum.” A remark by Eugene Komanski, No, 392 Manhattan Avenue, at 112th Street and Broadway, thi maker. “I wish T could carry him with me all over England," he said. Senator Medill MeCormick and his wife of Chicago, sailed for a six weeks stay in Europe, The Senator has ar- ranged to, get mid-west election re- turns by Wireless all night. s The Mauretania will stop at Ply- mouth, Cherbourg and Southampton. Plymouth a special train will be oe ‘ say to the young things who think WOMEN EQUAL MEN that they do not want to live un- less love lives forever?" “There is one Jove which lives as long as one wills it,” Georgette Leblane Maeterlinck said softly, “It is the flame in one’s own heart -—the spiritual passion for the be- loved, that is quite unaffected by his presence or absence, since it is nourished by memories and tend- erness and dreams.” waiting to expedite the transit of Lon- don and South England passengers. It ix expected this will help to establish | the five-day record. Jolin R. Voorhis, President of the Board of Elections and Nestor of De- mocracy in this State, glowing tribute to we » election of~ ficials. He says they hava not only made good, but that in practically every respect they are the equal of male officials at the voting places. This tribute is enhanced, coming in}a8 It does from the best informed election official, the most experienced of them all, and perhaps the oldest to-day puld a while the polling place passing “women polities make me sick,’ resulted in Komanski’s receiving a severe drubbing, and tie torn and his glasses broken to-day iaving his collar voter in the city, who finds that At tthe insistence of Mrs: te women, despite their short period of Wallenstein, he also was arrested on enfranchisement here, have caught Charge of disorderly. conduct. and|MURIEL M*CORMICK up with thelr fathers, brothers and taken before Magistrate Smith in the " husbands in the gentle art of recelv- ing the voter and helping him cast his ballot. ‘Judging from the experience my daughter Ann and T had this morning when we cust our votes at 8 o'clock in the Third Assembly District, Fifth Hlection District," said President West Side Court, who discharged TESTS SCREEN ABILITY fe IN ROLE OF “LA TOSCA “The worst of it is," said Koman making a makeshift knot in his fter It was all over, “they called ‘big Tammany chee md tm t straight Republican.” ‘The trouble’ started after “Goodie!” Mother: “Willie, run to the grocery store for a can Mer Initial Film w Jobn Don Consent ¢ Venture Given, CHICAGO, Nov Muriel McCo Approvals. Mer mea Patrotn . " nick, grand-daughter of John p, | VYoorhis, “women election officials are George W. Mahoney of the West ~ . ” 100th Street Station started to r Rockefeller” who holds a contract may oa Save tle! a mn hay ue of Heinz Spaghetti. 1 sign announcing the candidacy of| calling for her appearance in. four ae SC en ee URy Be re ay a pa a A arge thelr duties without unneces-| Willie: (running) moving picture films for $1,000,000, sary talk or questions, ‘There were “ Po tion to Congress, a the urb 4 a 1 eT ete. ite Sait the] Was Made a test Alm of the second act | four oMclals where we voted, only Oh, goody! ON Ae “La Tosca,"? which was shown tof0ne of Whom was aman. ‘The other uw required the three were what I'd call girls. It was Willie knows how good \ woman standing nearby, and ap private audience, it was learn! to- | 4 pleasure to observe their quiet, gen- prea Gf Renublichh: aviuathlet| day cel eMelency. It took less than three} it is. So does Mother, arted pulling at the sign, saying Miss McCormick, in a personal in- | minutes to vote with th efficient ght to be put out of the way alte zether and mighty quick, With other ltepublican women workers they made short work of the sign, tearing it women at hand,”* Mr. Voorhis predicts that practical ly the entire vote of the city will love been cast by 3 o'clock, She also knows it is healthful, wholesome, terview with her g: indfather, tained his consent to her actress. ‘Th venture movie test was de pieces despite the protests of He} ciared successful by the few who ———— economical and conve- Komansk! made the remark about] Viewed the first showing AUTO OVERTURNS, nient. Read ked in jaimantia ponies ana weawret with| SHA willl appear under: the: tage VOTER IS KILLED| ™ eaey COS uch cries as, “You wouldn't say! name of Nawanna Nicor and has for adelicious tomato sauce. at, you big Tammany thug, if YOU! Hidden any mentio# of her true iden Us jer of B vere & republicar You big Tam bi ue tow Killed in Parade, Nov. 7.—An automobile iis inthe crowd mada a) re-] ing of the films, Vittorio Arimondi aera parade intial i rk and ey artec ° 1." va 4a Scarpia o } sh seat mee i : 1 " nd they started t play Baron Rearpla to: Mins’ Mc Joseph C. Pelletier, Demo- | Several women then pounced upon| Cormick's Tosca Komanski <> eratic candidate for District Attorney of skidded Into a hi Suffotlc ‘ e p, « Republican, but ssh! | WOMAN IN SHIELD BL ade itatuean coentiocer: S h tti County, When the excitement subsided Mr uy RUSSIAN POLICE HOLD Wallenste nant isied on Komanski the women der it trict, one of the Injuries ward J. Barrett { the automobil nical charge of being arrested followed to court and comed greatly disappointed when he was Wseharged, ——— YONKERS FOR SMITH 3 TO 1, POLL INDICATES Claims to Have Seen Men Carrying trio, died of his Hody to River, Ready cooked, ready to seree of Allston, MOSCOW, Noy. 7 (Aanoc The police at Simbirsk vestigating the disappearance weeks ago of Phillp J. Shield, ean relief worker, are holding a woman ated Pi three Ameri- ein Nefenity Bons pnt | W282 told thom that inte on the evening Miller Chieftains Concede Defeat, |°f Oct. & she saw two men lugging a The Yonkers Herald completed ita] Sk from which two human legs pro city-wide poll to-day of straw votes for| truded ernatorial candidates nnd ca This information was 1 here ‘or United States Senator. ‘Tiin] by Col. Willlam N. Hank head of the -WHLL ISSUE—— ji Cmte ELECTION EXTRAS | t r nyed. cad sie] ie Mow tay | First With the News. °

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