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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 32

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Oakland Tribunei
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Oakland, California
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32
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FRIDAY EVENING, AHirAND' TTttBUNE. "MARCH 25, 1903. Ei-FO PAG WOMEN IEA1T Tailer-Brown Law Makes Tardy Response With Medal Baronet's Daughter Who Married the Son of Millionaire Inventor Marriage Excites Even Heroic Work Woman Lawyer For a Girl's Tart Letter to Mrs. Roosevelt Ended Her Getting More Invitations a Suffragist The Smart Sets BALTIMORE. Society la on the qui NEW TORK.

Miss Augusta Schwartz, the only woman in a class of 121 to be sworn in as a lawyer by the Appellate Division, made it known the other day that she is a suffragist, although she re Romance, as It Is interpreted by up-to-date novelists, has centered about the wooing of Miss Evelyn Violet Brockle-bank, daughter of Sir Thomas Brorkle-bank, who was one of the fairest of Dp-cember brides when she was finally led to the altar In Irton Parish Church, Cumberland, England, by George Westinghouse son of the millionaire Pittsburg manufacturer of railroad and electrical appli "WASHINGTON. This Incident is re vtv and rostiping; lnceantly about th Tatler-Brown nuptials, which wilt be celebrated; at the Alexander Brown mansion In Cathedral treet on April 14. Of cour4v' it Is roinc to a pompous affair, an6, even though the hypercritical ar In. lated by a woman occupying: a high social position in and whose hua band holds a powerful political post con fused to say 'whether she" would campaign actively for votes for women. Despite the fact that she was graduated from the New York University Law nected with the government.

The lady ances. Though Miss Brocklebank, daintily considered herself on terms of sufficient Intimacy with Mrs, Roosevelt to ask any. blonde In type and scarcely 20 years old cilned to discountenance the marrlag b-cause jT. Buffem la a divorcee, the Browns, especially papa and mamma, are beaming; with Joy, and intend that the wedding snail be the most elaborate that the Oriole City has ever eenl The Immense ball room, which oceuplet favor within the bounds of reason, had a friend reduced by sudden reverse Is pretty enough to be the heroine of Df fortune into having to earn her living, School two years ago. Miss Schwartz has not been ble to "hang out her shingle" up to the present time because of her minority.

She is now just 21. Miss Schwartz is well known among lawyers, having served as a law clerk for several years. She was born in Austria, but. came to this country; with her parents when she was 5 years old. "Why am I a suffragist?" said Miss and who had taken up parlor recitation and ballad singing as the medium.

Of the old style romance of rose gardens and flashing rapiers, her first meeting with "Young George" Westinghouse, as he is known, to distinguish him from his distinguished sire, was in his father's sourse it would have been a tremendous sid if her career could have begun in the. a separate building adjoining the Brown residence, is to be marvelously decoratsd for the event, and embellished with every sort of Llossom from the modest Hly-oN the-valley to the rarest calceolarias, and factory, where she naturally enough sup- posed him to be a workman sin he was Schwartz, who is a pretty brunette. "Well, you see, I've looked up the domestic relation- taw, and it presents many inter toiling in overalls and Jumper in a gang. And to give the affair a still stronger color of the ultra modern their wedding was postponed last suminer, not because of the hero's being called away to war. White House so the lady wrote the cir-i cumstances to the chatelaine of the his-i toric mansion, requesting an immediate reply, as the artist had other plans If Jie.

White House affair miscarried. For four dys she waited, and then the reply came from. Miss Hagner. She said that "she had. received the letter, and as Mrs.

Roosevelt had been very busy, sh? had no opportunity to place the request before her until that morning, and that Krs. Roosevelt regretted her inability, etc, Then the lady indited a letter to-Mrs, Harriet Is going to wear some stunning Parisian creations thst win 'simply trans- i fix the feminine contingent wlth.admlra- tlon. or envy. Only Baltimore's ellt will be Invited, and the very cream ef the elite at that. Tommy Taller Is -oma; ta bring a host of New Torkera over-wTOi esting features.

For instance, if I were married, my husband, under that law, might take all of my earnings as a lawyer ami drive me Into the kitchen. And Just think! He can insist on. my supporting myself, if I displease him by practicing my profession." Miss Schwartz will have- her office at 280 Broadvi-ay. but because of the financial depression and the uncertainties of election results. MISS EVELYN VIOLET BROCKLEBAftK.

As might well be guessed. Miss bank was not allowed to remain for long 6- him, and no doubt Tapa Cnnm'i -irtna bill will be large, which of course It shoulj be for such, a gorgeous occasion. Miss Harner's inter ventlon, and that-letter was probably the warmest missive which the gentle wife of the cvclonic President received during her under trfe Impression that the handsome young Westinghouse was a laborer. To be sure, he had actd as guide for Miss Brocklcbank and her mother three years ago when they inspected the firm's Pitts Waiting to Hear regime as first lady of the land. I i the more customary presents of Jewelry was an almost priceless square-cut emerald that was once part of the crown gems of France.

The bride Is a noteflr horsewoman and Need Bishop to Miss Wilson In Concert burg works, but lie "kept In character" with his greasy working clothes and did not tell them that he was heir to the entire outfit and was merely learning the business from the bottom up. That Miss Brocklebank's charms did not go unnoted The wife of the powerful politician doesn't know whether this letter got be yond Miss Hagner, but she does know that never afterward did she receive an to any of the exclusive social func- tlons of the White House, though she might have been termed an intimate ber fore the correspondence. is considered one of the most daring riders in the hunting field. She. Is possessed both of keen perception and a sense of humor, as is evidenced by: the Stop the 'Bridge amid the din and dust of the factory may story hPr friends tell; that she says; the WASHINGTON.

Society Is' waiting Craze reason she refrained from tipping that with keen Impatience to hear Miss Flora be divined by the fact that shortly afterward the former guide obtained an introduction to her under conventional Wilson sing. Several ambitious hostesses have asked the graceful daughter of the SERENADE WASHINGTON'. There are women In. courteous young workingtnan in the Westinghouse shops was that she. did rot know whether 'such was the custom in America and besides he did not look as If he would accept a gratuity.

Secretary of Agriculture to honor their high society In Washington to- wfcoirt the salons, but she has declined the most It was not many months afterward dally game of bridge Is as necessary as that the engagement was announced, and it was of unusual interest on both sides of the Atlantic, for Miss Brocklebank's tftelr morning coffee, or ahem! their morning tonic of any brand. It would ap MISS MARY McCANN. The Tomb pear that Washington needs 1U Dr. Vaughar to thunder against gambling, father Is not only a baronet, but is one of the wealthiest ship builders in the north of England with a beautiful country seat at Irton 'Hall, Cumberland, and Miss Mary McCann of New York, who Miss McCann, who Is about to be grad- uated as a nurse, from the Florence Crit- alluring appeals, plainly stating that she has come home in a professional capacity. And having expended much money In getting her voice cultivated, she expects to get returns.

Miss Wilson intends to map out tour of concerts when the stress of the changing administration Is over. She will without doubt sing in Washington, but It will be under some well-known manager and in a regular concert hall. Opinions differ as to whether Miss Wilson's voice will prove the gold mine she anticipates. Still, she Is in earnest tenton Training School, in New York, was When, cruel fair one, I am slain By thy. disdain.

And, as a trophy of th -y scorn. To some old tomb nm borne, The Western wind Is blowing fair Across the dark Aegean sea, And at the secret marble stair My Tyrian galley waits for thee. Come down! the purple sail is spread. The watchman sleeps within the town, leave thy lily-flowered bed, Lady mine come down, come down! She will not come, I know her well. Of lover's vows she hath no care, And little good a man can tell Of one so cruel and so fair.

True love is but a woman's toy. They nev3r know the lover's pain, and I who loved as loves a boy Must love in vain, must love in vain. OSCAR WILDE. recuperating at health resort outside New York, and was on the beach at the Imbibing generally and frittering away the precious hours. Once upon a time society was content to retire at midnight.

Now all the up-to-date hosts begin their festaa after that solemn hour and tha game goes on until the sun reddens the Thy fetters must their powers bequeath time the Slocum "caught fire. She saw childrert either thrown or jump has just been presented with a gold medal by Congress for her work of rescue at the time of the Slocum steamship, disaster. The medal was a recognition of Miss McCann's bravery at the time of the accident to the steamship General Slocum in New York, when the young woman saved nine children from drowning. The presentation was arranged by the New York delegation in Congress. Ing overboard frttm the doomed pleasure a town house in Liverpool.

Her elder sister married a son of I-iord Allerton and her brother is a captain in the crack First Dragoons. After the young Pitts-burger had been accepted as a prospective member of the family, he somewhat startled the British aristocracy by the magnificence of his gifts to his fiancee. One of these was a small motor landau equipped with the Ingenious electrical devices for comfort, while among To those of death; Nor thy flnme immortel burn, Like monumental fires within an urn; Thus freed from thy proud empire, shall prove and gives long hours to practicing scales (to" the woe of her neighbors at the Port Fstern sky, when perhips the guests will yet consent to partake of breakfast. JUit this is all under the cover. Outwadly Washington Is observing Lent lb or craft, and went into the water, caught up two cnlldren and (returned to shore.

Again she waded out, brining others to safety, until nine lives had been saved as the result of her heroism. land), and she is spunky in not permitting women who formerly snubbed her to There Is more liberty In death than love, strictly than the oldest Inhabitant fcn patronize her now. recall. Thomas Stnnley Turn Woman'sBlood Into Poison; Physicians Baffled VISIONS DREAM Woman lunged in Stocks And Now Qoeeo Spain Will Abolish Bull Fights-! ten gbniiiiandniems mm AS LAID DOWN BY QUEEN CARMEN SYLVA Sues Broker Cassion that She could never forget her first husband and his tragic end. Yesterday she went out with her daughter Maybe NEW YORK.

A woman who d.ired to 5 tar bull flghti rlunge in the stock market when it was caused her to awake with a scream of terror and pity. A Prey to Her Dreams Almost nightly since the news of the sinking 'of the vessel off he coast of France while in collision with another steamer reached her, these; visions had NEW TORK. One of the most remarkable cases of that rarest of maladies, auto-toxlo poisoning, Is Interesting the house staff and the consulting physicians of the Fordhara Hospital in the person Mrs. Ida Perazzo, the widow of a steamship captain, who perished In a marine disaster in the Mediterranean two wn iciona or Fpam jurpei lrpoiet fluctuating wildly in the recent panic. the barbarous sport of to put the finishing touches on the fiat Cassion had rented and to which they were to have returned today after the wedding.

"From an investigation of this woman's case and a consultation of the authorities executing transactions that amounted -to ing. Although she had acquleiced to th nearly $00,000, and escaped with a bal ance to her credit, was a witness before wishes of her subjecta and attended th tavfrH naHiMtal JIkamU. a i recurred, and from a cheerful, normal Supreme Court Justice Greenbaum yesterday: She is Mrs. Edith McDonald, wife of James F. McDonald, who Is building a visit she was so horrified that ehe eauaed to be revived the memory of the fact thai the vreat QuAn t-t im In railroad in Hayti.

Mrs. McDonald Is suing her brokers. fears ago. Mrs. Perazzo, a slight, pale little woman.

Is SI years old and has two children, a boy, Lawrence, 7 years old, and Florentlna, 9 years old. The woman's iondltion Is extremely critical. i A strange feature of the case is that today was to have been the occasion of Mrs. Perazso's second marriage, but apparently her unrest of mind was such on this disease who are scarce, as there are so few recorded cases I am convinced that this woman is a victim 6t auto-toxic poison," said Dr. Rellly to a reporter.

"Long-continued worry converted her nervous system into an active poison-producing plant and is responsible for her condition. "Her visionsyand semi-trances are undoubtedly the outcome of this complete poisoning of her system, and while, with care, she may'j: recover, her condition at woman Mrs. Perazzo became, a morbid, hysteric creature a prey to hallucinations and fantasies. In this country she found a home with Antonio Pattio and his wife, who live at 348 East One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street, the Bronx. They had known her in Italy and also knew her husband.

This latter, fact seemed to add to the woman's melancholia, although her friends studiously refrained from mentioning the sub- Ball Whicher, for JS612, which she says the brokers owe her as profits of a transaction in Trinity Copper. The brokers say she instructed them to use the copper stock to protect other stocks which she hold on margin. When their lawyers from vanquishing the Moon declared ber determination to put away the cruel sport as cruel, unchristian and Moorish, not Spanish, In origin. If the Spaniards of today ar reminded that the Queen whose sweet memao they revere was prevented only by death from abolishing the bull fight It 1 thought that they may permit their present Queen at least to make It unfashionable fon that her, hysterical condition and over 1. Thou shalt not cause the first quarrel, but if unavoidable, fight it through bravely.

To be in the first domestic quarrel may have a tendency to elevate thee in thine husband's mind for all future1. 2. Thou shalt not forget that thou hast married a man, not a god. Therefore be not surprised by his frailties 3. Thou shalt not always talk money JR thine husband.

Rather try to get along on the allowance he.rroaketh thee. 4. If thou considerest thine; husband heartless, remember that, verily, he hath a stomach. 'By persistently appealing to his stomach with well-cooked meals, thou mayest, after all, touch his heart. 5.

Once, in a great while, but not too often, thou shalt let him have the last lvord. It tickleth him and will not do thee any harm. 6. Thou shalt read the wriole newspaper and magazine, not merely the stories dealing with scandal and society. Thine husband will be pleasantly surprised to find, off and on, that he can talk on general topics and even on politics with his wife.

7. Thou shalt not be rude even when quarreling with thy husband. Forget not that at one time in they life thou didst consider him little short of a demigod. 8. Thou shalt, from time to time, allow thine husband to know' a little more than thyself, admitting that thou art not infallible all through.

9. If thi-ne husband is a smart man, thou shalt be his friend; if he is not, thou shalt be both counsellor and friend to him. 1G. Thou shalt esteem thy husband's relatives, especially his Remember, that she loved him long before thou didst. 3ecfc i -in 1.13311 wrought nerves converted her blood a virulent poison by auto-suggestion.

the present time is extremely critical. The disease is one that is almost unheard insinuated that her transactions were so large she could not have kept an accurate account of them, Mrs. McDonald pulled out of her purse a little red book. Shaking It at the lawyer, she said that she had kept track of every sale and pur met Enrico Cassion. a candv manufac ladles to attend.

Queen Christina, widowed regent in the early days of her of in ordinary medical practice, and as the treatment had to be mental as well as physical, the case we now have will be a turer. He fell in love with her and begged her to marry him. After weeks of pleading Mrs. Perazzo gave her con rule, made a almllar attempt But wltlj particularly delicate one to bring to a such an advanced stage had her malaay progressed when, yesterday afternoon, she Was seized with convulsions on a Morris-avenue car at One Hundred and Eighty-first street, that her rigid limbs, set teeth and twisted body induced the ambulance lurgeon who was summoned to her assistance to diagnose her case as one epilepsy. sent to the wedding, although she told successful issue." many urgent affairs of atate pressing upon her immediate attention aha finally abandoned this unpopular reform.

Queen Victoria, however, has been no cessful In doing away with a like popular EMMA GAME and bloody Spanish custom which tt seemed Impossible to reform. Acting through her husband, aha arranged thai chase she had made, and was confident the brokers owed her, the $SC12, When the lawyer tried to confuse her he discovered that she knew as much about the Wall street terms as he did. She denied vehemently that she ever had to ask favors of her broxers, saying she knew how to speculate better than they did. Mrs. McDonald did most of her business with the agents of the brokers In the Nevada Apartments, where she lived.

Today the brokers' books will be used to shov how complicated the woman's transactions were. Case Very Rare Liking for De Qogorzajs. the' Wonder duelling should never be resorted to by army men as a means of aettilnfcr their ujvtg their The tests for epilepsy, however, when applied at the Fordham Hospital, failed 'to result In a confirmation of the first fllaenosis, and Dr. Rellly, the house sur honor. of All of Her Friemds.

personal disputea or defending theli hef The military example baa baen followed In civic life. boudoir was sent on a vacation, and Fan NEW YORK. Only a year or so ago predicted the Gogorza-Eaimes affair, geon, came to the conclusion from yarlous marked symptoms that the woman had been poisoned. An inquiry into the his 1 which now being dished up with so tory of her case speedily convinced Dr. Cynical Comments much aromatic condiment-as "news" in the daily press, says Town! ToDics.

The Maid of Athens.Ere We Part Rellly and his staff that they had on their hands one of the first cases of auto-toxic Rapid Courtship off Society Bujdl Aedl Football Hero Icy armor in which the beautiful song Of a Business Girl poisoning ever recorded in New York. stress always Incased herself did excellent An Investigation showed that Mrs. service in warding off gossip about her nie, the companion, was packed off on a tour to a Cythera. Fannie, who 13 the daughter of a ballet dancer, is the one person of whom the willful diva stands in fear, for being addicted to strong waters, her tongue Is likely to run astray With her and you never what is going to happen or what she is going to say. Everybody wonders that the ultra-elegant Eames can be so infatuated with a.

person of Gogorza's caliber, as he Is a most ordinary person without even the veneer with which opera singers gen- Perazzo came to this country from Italy and her infatuated admirer, at least in this country. In Paris last summer, how three months ago. She was bowed down by Incessant grieving over the tragic death of her husband, and In nightmares ever, people were not so overawed by Mme. Easnes that they were sneechless Maid of Athens, ere we part. Give, oh, give me back my heart! Or, since that has left my breast, Kserf it now, and take the rest! Hear my vow before I go.

By those tressfs unconfind. Wooed" by each Aegsan wind; By those lids whose jetty fringe Kiss thy soft cheeks' blooming tinge; By those wild eyes like the roe. By that lip I long to taste; discovered her eyes out over a little piece of cactus plant, and all efforts to console her were met with this sharp rejoinder, "Go away and let me alone; my OUie is going to leave me!" And all the while her famous football hero fla ice sat alone on the porch of the Poinciana and at intervals sent a bellboy about the intimacy between her and Gor- PALM EEACH, Fla. "Parting is such sweet sorrow," or so thought Dorothy Taylor, when she with many others went to the station to bid farewell to Harry Black and his two companions as they left Palm Beach New York. It was a very happy assemblage, but there was a noticeable absence of a loud voice and a sharp tongue that has lately grown very constantly saw him on the bridge of his sinking ship, the Regina, plying between Genoa and Marseilles.

In these dreams the doomed man, standing erect In the gonzola oh, no, Gogorza when they lodged at the same Utile hotel, took all Tou never hear of a woman complain Ing of that tired feeling In tha aprlnf if she has got It chasing all over town in search of a fiat. Now is the time when tha wife put htr arms arouncr her husband's neck and coaxes him to beat the family carpet, whereupon hubby generally allpa on his hat and coat and beats It somewhere else. About the only thins that can be their meals together, and drove like two cooing doves every' afternoon in the Allee des Acacias. erally manage, to coat themselves, and besides is positively Illiterate. Of course we are always prepared for the vagaries to Miss Taylor's room to say would the midst of waving.

Imploring arms and writhing faces turned toward her, she declared, with a look of agony that sweet to one member at least of the "Bright Star," and suddenly Dorothy was lady kindly when she would be down, as the gentleman who had been In August they removed, themselves of opera stars, but that the glacial Eames to By that zone-encircled waist; By all the token-tlowers thait tell What words tan never speak so well; By love's alternate and woe. where the faithful Abigail who I should thaw is enough to forever destroy Venice, to Mme. Eames tantrums in her I our faith in appearances. attends in xavor or me nan women are W4arln GIVE WEE this season is that they are getting mi 1 for tlulr money than usual. The married women will tell that waiting for one hour and forty minutes downstairs was now growing impatient.

As an unprejudiced observer I would say that the "Bright Star? party had a very successful time while South. Incidentally Ollie's conquest was made without any effort cn his part, and he was equally devoted to half a dozen pthers. only man. who dcesn't Hck about I give thee treasures hour by hour, That old-time princes asked In vain, And pined for In their useless power, j. price of.hls wlfa's spring bonnet Is Lost Wife's Love, So He Sues Friend for $50,000 tellow with two wooden legs.

(By Edmund Gosse.) I that tumble at your feet Am a rose; Nothing dewier or more sweet Buds or blows; that plucked me, he that threw me. Or died of passion's eager pain. I give thee love as God gives light. Maid of Athens! I am gone. Think of me, sweet, when alone Though I fly to Iatambol, Athens holds my heart and soul.

Can I cease to love thee? No! 1 Lord Byron. through the Southern States. A code of respectability has been established, and any, housekeeper who is known to allow a house fly within her domains Is put In the same class with those who harbor other notorious insects. In some of the larger citieo all stable keepers are re TO Breathed in fire his whoie soul through One peculiar feature of the case is that although Meyer is alleged to have begun Woman Leads In Big Fight TO EXTERMINATE FLIES I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden. Thou needest not fear mine; My spirit Is too deeply laden me.

How the cold air Is Infused With the scent! See, this satin Leaf is bruised Bruised and bent. Lift me, lift the wounded blossom. Soothe at your rosier bosom! PHItADELPHIA. Asserting that John Meyer used every "art, wile, blandishment and physical charm at his command" to steal the love of his wife, William C. Hartman yesterday brought suit in Common Pleas Court against Meyer for $50,000 damages for alienation of affections.

The defendant and Mrs. Hartman' led a gay life, according to the charges made by Hartman. There were lunches and din Aside from merit, or from prayer, Rejoicing In its own delight, Aand freer than the lavish air. I give tbee prayers, like jewels strung On golden threads hope and fear; And tenderer thoughts than ever hung In a sad angel's pitying tear. As earth pours freely to the sea Her thousand streams of wealth untol tuer to Duraen mine.

Mrs. Bernard Tiche of Xew Orleans is the leader In the vigorous war that has I fear thy mien, tones, thy motion, his attentions to the attractive Mrs. Hartman ten years ago, It was a long time before the aggrieved husband heard about it. The pair exercised great care in making their appointments, he said. The Hartman3 were married September 18, 1890.

Until 18.98 they lived happily; according to Hartman, but then Mrs. Hartman met Meyer, Since then, Hartman says, he has lost the affections of his wife because of the action of Meyer. quired to register, with a K'iew to having their premises inspected regularly, and they are prosecuted should they not prevent the breeding of flies. The chief object of the war will be to destroy the breeding places of the house with the hope of ridding the country permanently Frown not with averted eyes! Joy's a flower, That Is born a god, and dies recently been begun in the Crescent City ers, he alleged, and visits to the cafes. to exterminate the house fly.

Posters de Thou needest not fear mine; Innocent is the heart's devotion With which I worship thine. So flows my silent life to thee. hile Meyer and his wife are accused of plctlng the habits of the house fly and Its In -an hour. Take me, for the Summer closes. And your -fife Is but a rose's.

The Autumn Garden. Glad that its very sands are gold, i ROSE TERRY COOKE, rying to give the impression they -3were married. proclivity for gathering and transmitting disease germs are being scattered all Shelley. of the pest. 'A.

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