Sggp It wi I i . 1 .'lk,.l,K j II ... Tr AS .. . ,r",'W'.1 tl. dtt .tilt hk i EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHIEADE13HIA, WEDNESDAY. N SEEKS BASHFUL SUITOR OF GIRLHOOD DAYS tfl. A for 'U I' 5 TO AID IN FIGHT TO REGAIN AR T TREASURM PA ,. L'f'j" 1; y K Hu t j'jrt' Weman ATin Nvtsf Oa.1v i ;:..: &m ff : Wants te Find vMan Who Loved ) Her in Silence for 1 Years , w JU.WC uniuM i TOO Late b'M After She JffA Jl a V i l smnTntr , r ?i "'"" ... i? a.'A-k .' 'NFV'i3X?T" "'"VW-1' 'VT" V'TiWaS-ONiWi'f m !. I igfl. m m fc iv' E& - fife LOVE GIFT ' WAS SOLD BY MISTAKE Strange Remance May Have Cul mination Here if Couple Are Reunited E- iwaiBsMsiM.sma.sa.sssssssssssMsiM'vv 'ISsHRMmVjSk'?' :. "i!iAi T j AaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaHkNJ fBB ,1Pr ' ""WSif rpaLBiHBBBBBBLW BflHiBIP.,s,iE8f.-'' I ' i i i i I ii i I I I ii v- mWMmm & 'WfHSHeH - ' , ' ii LPwlP ' IfWIPM ' 'iW HHB9HBHHHrif ' ' ' iBBliwHMKaBiOTM&ii f "pEETHA ETTIXZON, out of Rus-1 sla, is searching America for the man who loved her yenra n?e. Such a brief statement may sug gest its romance, but it can nover I picture the heartaches, the trials, i the disillusion, the undying dreams of tm3 picturesque woman. Ner does it supgest the amazing t plot" of her life, which reads something like a novel, which cen-, ters about a painting done in oils se ' far back as the eighteenth centary ' by one of the masters. Connoisseurs call it "The Pert of Messina," but Bertha Ettinzon calls i it the "pert of love, of justice, of j my youth." in Kiev, my home," and ehe smiled 1 and unconscious for a long time. This picture looms up net as an and then raised both her hands in ' And when I awoke, there I saw inanimate object In her story, but as mock horror, "Oh, many years age. Simeon Btanding beside my bed. He Bertha Ettinzon, as she Is today, fighting te regain valuable painting which her girlhood sweetheart gave her a personality. It has drawn out of persons greed for riches. Its power is idyllic, at the sarae time it is sattanic. loud be surprised! j seemed se sad as he looked at me. "When I was only six or seven I If he had only told me he loved came te knew Simeon Raschaefsky, jme!" a young painter. He was a wen- It is the symbol of Bertha's happl- ( derful man and he loved children, ness In turbulent Russia; It is a , I used te sit 6n a little steel, and symbol of her childhood. ' watch him work. It was such great And new, today, she says, there , happiness te de that. are these who are trying te pain sm Bcars fhe Scara possession of this picture. A three- , nnrnnrer? Wnl Wt1 is hMne. WflPOf! ! Of ReV0lUtl0mSt8 ShOtS Miss Ettinzon, when she get well, studied nursing, and graduated from a professional school. In 1907 she came te America alone. And the hasn't seen Simeon since, although she loved him, and he, she i knows new, loved her. It was a peculiar twist of fate that would in Les Angeles for the right te own j I often wanted him te give me net permit them te knew hew much it. It was bought without Bertha one of his pictures. And I wen- they loved each ether. Ettinzon's knowledge for $100. She ' dered why he didn't, but I was has been offered $10,000 for It. The 1 afraid te ask him. Perhaps who art enthusiast who get it se cheaply knows maybe he sensed thnt I has insured it, according te Bertha, j wanted ene of them. I never real at Lloyd' for $300,000. ized that till later se much later." She declares that te her its value I As the friendship between the cannot be measured in dollars and cents. I artist and the little girl developed, she grew te love him. But she dared net tell him. ! And it se happened, although she ' never found it out until years later j in America, that he loved her, tee. He asked her father for her hand. 'If he had only asked me, it might Simeon Raschaefsky Was Here of Her Dreams It was given her by the sweet heart of her youth, whose love she never realized. It was triven her. Unknown te her. She learned of the ! have been different," said Miss Et gift, after a great grief had come te tmzen, with a sad smile. her life. It was, sold, she says, J And the father refused. Net be under a misunderstanding, and she cause he disliked Simeon, but be wants te find the donor, in order , cause his wife did. She could net that she may establish her right te ' bear te have her daughter, a Jewess, the painting. She wants te find this man te tell him hew much she honors his love, and hew much she regrets that she never knew he loved her. Bertha Ettinzon says she ha3 j marry a Gentile. "In 190), you knew, there was the , revolution. I was sympathetic with I The young Iiii-Mnn girl enme te In ! with her -"i-jfi-r in L'hi!.i(lp!ililn. and It-sun lu.vUeing as a grnilunti mi!p. Anil -l.i1 wn niiwunlly sue ci fu! in hop mii!j. hi l'.ii;. t met the mnn "f'e bo be c;iiii( her huyb.unl. lit- was it I'hil.iiM in ..in. He wesn t n t.ilcn'pil mnn, hut 1 ii i that Mitli in ui U t ' : ng in :. i nvj . Up mul ' .te ill imuU 1 1 -; ami i i . i -i e a i1 v t Ami 1 l'.ii'. Ii. wm in !i "' ;i l.i' v ' it In eHi t. M'i vtre nun nod In Jim'.)." In l'ldji hhi, had :i h.ihv lil, viuvii -hi' I'aliul U)' ..iif, ninl lu'r t.i.111 toil life .i tur a. tin. i' h:i;ii. In l'.ilO, ui l.itlu'i' en i a- te I'hih. ih'Il'ln i nim Ktlv.i.i. lie lhi'l i lie te r., ami w.ii limictl, I theiiKlit, te lull me -ii i ciiitiiiul and m bu-j. liut mj iiuii'i'ii'il Ir.e tl '1 net turn uf in he .i- 1 1 ilpli l.i I eiei tetl it Ki he. M we .. ! Lept ti.i away from in humi- innny hums, ami I um'iln't give ni.x liusli mil all lit- i'Mi'cii'1 fiem n wife I I'uiililn t 1 'iult ii)ik, lai.iuse he ,i net wml;. 111!.'. Left Her Husband Here and Went te Les Angeles the international net violently se, gathered a movement, One day, bu: we "Yeu Knew, it wan no' fmlj my lni - -and I veihetl for this way l!iu I ...l.w.l .tt. ruMir tti'ii'liliers. ( In, tn i. , , 1 mil"'. 'i. ,'w. - -f. - let of women ana cnil-1 i0un litly I (.-peelalljr'hi'li'dl Shewn-? II. . rr. : "' -tSFTsmFFi . i ' ' i - iliHi lH sue FU -"1"' - THHI wamm&mwj&ffi&ataik i-mtm&mwwsi&mmm&MTim , ' '' - t The Pert of SIesl mistake by a Les na ," painting by Oaude Lerrttinp, a seventecnth-century work, bought through Angelea collector and insured for $.-,00,000. ThU i the painting that Miss Ettinzon is seeking te recover b traveled East, 'stepping nt all the large cities, in an endeuver te find thle man. She is new in Philadel- Shla. Trem here she will go te New 'erk. he is a Russian Jewess. She Irere a bleed-red gown, with a black pearf wrapped piiiunntly about her bobbed brown hair. Her English required bome care in dren in the back yard of Simeen's house. There was sheeting en the streets and we were afraid for them. "The Revolutionists breke down the gates and fired into us. I was shot thrce times. Once in the side, once in the wrist and heie en my head." Mbs Kttiuzen removed the black scurf from her head. Under her tl'j h beginning te understand, but it 'brown hair could be ecph a white IWB quite ciear ana griipiiie umu i U accustomed te it. tpaty btfta back in Russia, scar. "I can never lived she nnl her hushnml pave her per in -Ii ii. Hut her father hud long bus- iei- unli i,ii'.n''-M, slie ulbcevereu. ' tl-- took me in hid arms and i-.iid: I- i. iii, 1 feel guilty. I have done jeu i 'i .a wiutii;.' 1 uuliln't umler-it.iml what lie was "'-' i.', mill l n-keil him te explnin. u i m thou fur tltu first time that . ii.ul ei.ine te America iu IUKI, ' ..' for nit-, lie wi hi that he even iniiiK te my father's bouse In -ii! in ami nM;eil for me. 1 tut tuther replied te him that i '. '.nt n'u me. lie Jld I wan ' , l . t married. "ii' ii.i. iiu father took Simeon tviui' 1 1 ci uld 1,1 n.u. lie did t-ee me, ' ' I ilnl nnt m-i him. before lie Hadl i.i fatiur, he said he wanted my i' r te give me s-eiuethlng for him. V' i he b i.ut-'iit my father a piilnting, Tl.vn Simeon left my father's heute, ii 1 iu-i-r tame back again. " ller fiiiher gave her the picture. It v.as a three left by five feet ennvns, r.itmr dirty. It renrfsented a een ,ort i.)n me uidu reHe the facade of a b .11 ling, en the ether the iiihmb i f dliii.s On the hack was written, "The I'.ut of Messina." Had Only Thirty Cents Upen Arrival in West Stunned, Itertha took the picture ami 'left fur 1M Angek'H. When hhe nr rlvii! tlu'iu, she had "0 cents lu her piicKe. "I livid en water most of the time. And, eiiu di., the Salvation Ann) 1 picked me up ami fcelit me te n Hospital. I fuigiit te tell jeu Unit most of the mom I had -nved fiem my mieeevful 1 1 .ii iii e iu I'liiladelphlii 1 had hpi-nt en ii luir-liiiiid unit en lilt hrntliers, who weie piiMi-. I had te Bell my hair in IMiiliideli.hin te get $1-5 for the tiip. "When the diechnrgeil me from the h -pitnl in J .nt AngelcH I get werli in n Jjetel im ilinli wiihher. I earned mi rents ami two meal- a duy. And 1 a Hiinntfp I'liineldenee huppi'iieil there. Tim eaimilll or tun wnner saw hid enu d.iv and reenunUed me li th nurse who had taken care ei ins wne in I'iillnilelphlii. lie wna nuoekeil te find i inn limine Klteiieii werK. no oepeaiea te the milliliter of the hotel ana lliuy gave inn ii better ponitien. I ".Seme linirt later. Dr. It. n. Grlf ninlilng verj little. I shall tell j mi later i fith sunt for me. 1! questioned re hew slie repaid nie, about my wml; in IMillailclphla with "It was nitillt ii'iii wiien i i'-ii my nrentineiit pnyhiemn- nnu wun jumiiii llial tlehpllul, unil no epeneu up n understand hew it IU I was I lived after that I was i ti l.nvlmnil. I llllln't rXlll'tlV M'M'I' our re intleiwhlp. 1 tehl him I eeuldii't support him nnd be te him nil ft wife should he. I told him I would g" te Leu Angeles Yeu tee, Heme tlnie before I had let a woman friend of niliie take care of mj Kleiuier. Tills fillilllv moved In I.e- VnifelfH nnd took Kleuner with them. "F tehl mv hUbhand I would go te California, l" told him that if he went In wink, and earned HUiieihlng, he could ruiim le me if he wiinti I me. "Then I went ever te bid geed-by te my father." , , , . ., , . U'Un liit rini-lml her fuller x heusii. ha tllwe'inbled a. little. Sim hulU trim ether wkatsd te fe te the Culuerala Jfslr, private hospital, pei-Humllng; me te take charge of the nurHlna." Meantime, btrife broke nut in Europe nnd her liutibiuid went te I)mlen in war serlee. "He wrote, me letters wlipn lie ru tin lied te riiUndelphla ngniii nnd k eil inn te help him. I invited him te live with tup In I. eh Angeles, and he came. Ami we weie happy for five inentlm In Leu Angelet nnd then Aiueileii enlered the war nnd III re turned te rhllndelplila mid enlliled." Shortly nrier, uenn; mn wun an- mvuMw ... mwm - an nir ivirw Mi Bin.. fnHLtva au ' BW Urrtha Ettinzon, as she appeared just before leaving Philadelphia for the Wast aei , btfer she sold htr luxuriant hair for f 123 . . r-11 ui ' ( i KJS1K E iJHlKA8A VV A V " 'at --sn -.v vUViiM -m Masterpiece Sim j ifxw r amu at Half Millien by Experts '. a half years she was an Invalid, ssjb fering from an acuta nerreus dlserlsk "And seen my money (ITe axaln. And an old man whom X bii nursed came te my aid. Somehow Ts the end, Ged is always Just De m knew when this man waa eaa of patients I theuiht he wia . J He would corns for treatment aa7l I uwu 10 B4tv mm is or is erery tsat he came. Fermer Patient Paid When Adversity Came "When he heard I was sick and m of funds he came te me and paid back all of the $36 I had f Wea blm n Tarieus times. He told me that la was a wealthy man and felt that U owed it te me, who had helped bta ae much, te help vjne new. And k did help me. He pnl.d bills that total, ed some thousands of dollars. TUt was a year and a half age. T ' "But while I was alck I heard fiea my husband, who had returned anta "I opened the telegram. It told dm that my husband would never we at ngaln, that I must get a divorce frta him. T "It was auch a surprise believe ft or net I gut up from my bed right away, as well as I ever was! I found put later that he loved that girl I helped nnd mentioned a while age. I wan't resentful. If he loves her, I nil te niywilf, I am glad he is happy. And what is most atrange, I bad just dreamed the night before about tail woman." Fourteen months age, after the tela grain proved such unusually effectlfi medicine, Miss Ettinzon went back'.te her nursing and began making money again. .She moved te 4332 Hollywesd boulevard, taking an apartment abort the art and curie studio of M. Stack, , "All thin time, you must remen) bcr, my painting remained In the crate.' I bad net taken It out. When I west te my plnee nt Hollweod boulevard 1 carted the picture with me. It wu put under the etalra in the building. -"Mr. Staek ww the crnte and naked me what was in it. I naid it held some. flltnl VAPV lilt.. ,M 11u TTa ...n...J i BAA I- A.l T l. f ,.- -I. 1 'I oil; iv. aim x puuneu uic jueiure 10 him. He warned me that the cnti was no place for It. He said the pic ture might be punetured or spoiled la some ether way there, and he invited me te linn? It up in his store. I ! pressed him with the fact the pictUN was net for sale. "Mr. Stack hung the picture In I prominent place en the wall of kH shop. .Seme time later Mr. Stark w Kn st, nnd hid Ren took clmrge of the store. 13. V. Squadrilli, local nrt crltie and a man of wealth, saw the picture en the wall one day weeks Inter. Bt immediately offered te buy it. And tbt bon sold it te him for $100. ' ' "Twe weeks following that was tb first time I noticed the painting bid vanished. I was tee busy with at work te notice 't before. I asked if maud Htnck where the picture wtt He waa evasive. I Bald: 'Arminil, whether jeu take my life or thut plst ture, it's just the same.' 1 cnld it was my jeuth, my happiness. lie MM, I was tee lemaiitie." , Buyer Insures Painting for Round Half Millien Meanwhle, following months of palsJ" tnkinie work, Kqundrilli removed tU vnnilnh and dtiHt covering the paint iug nnd discovered the signature f Uuiidu lirrnlne iu ene of the cerntrl, Claude Lerraine was a seventeenth eta turv Krench nrtlst, Miiiintimcs knel under I tin niiinit of (ilnilde OeitUi' Authcntli', a painting by I his mar.ter,U j .......ii. .. ......... ....... t1 Ullll 11 It'lll E-lllll. , . Xliir't i imiii'iliii tlv limuretl iht Wftlt ut I.lejd's for $500,000. yj "I tried te get the picture bacK.l Miuv l'.iiln7iiii reviiiin.il "I tvnnt tl lnw.un, but they Hiild they enuld d neilniii until Mr. Ktnek ii'titrnM. hen Iu .did return he agreed tj the sale was net valid beeause it U made without his knowledge by Uj, turn, u-hn uiim n miner. I unv the Mil whh net valid because I never auto, lll IU J- "It la mystifying, tee, mat i Stack Haiti he would agree te get taj pietuie hack for me, If I accept S10.000 fnim ,im fr u. Hut he de net understand yet thnt the mew Un'l vtl.ar I tviinf nt nil! It il tM plftiire. And I mean te fight for H, until I get It. . . ! "My lnwyers have had the P"! nttaehed neniline the trial, which f pray will bring it back te me." Mine Uttlmsen smiled. . , wu you eu wnj- iiiunk nun 1"T en? lie can help me plead for It, tsi I want tn lintl him. tee. becaUM ftill leve him. If Im is peer, if M.J ulek, I will nurse him better sMlJr Only if hn Ii new married will V9 away from him, but I will wish W hnpplnesH from the very bottom elW limit even then. "I have suffered n areat dral n. life, J luie lived quickly, and I "J- lenrllitrl In lnni nil nnntin. lOlieT SS longer counts; there nie spiritual neeils. which u :..i ." .....! .. .!.. t.- 1.-..1. i nini nunivvietl v.lien me nvn jii1 nln urn limitiv. Ami I want niy " te lie happy u little, bit, tee, ', "And much of the happiness ex jeuth, of my young love which my j tlen gift wide nobly HUIIH bliiilim M "My fatiier Is dead new, vM rlailclll.ir Kl.eitii.. lu nn nmUlllllSST mm w lily, ami saw. ipie. Meiier e spiritual ure only feWJ e hearts el want my "' ilt. tee. ' i"!'.p,"?h0,i youtlifulneKH dared net even . ... .u- i. .i ii. ..a In tMl i hi inn iiuiii i iini-u, imi ":..:it. hleli wun given le me briiui"j by one of the best men ", mown. . -' "My father Is dead new, a.l tghter, Klenner, is nn neceniBi"J!; m siclan . in Germany, and I A;ft without mv Dttthetlcally fJrJ s 11 I ( it I'-rjfZl -. .vitfrVM.te.'tey. M,w.ia.i-, I,., 1 1MB t&itiMatMmmsLxmiimmHjmmEMMLmm