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THE EVEN[-NG WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1900. WS DROWN WOMAN ASHORE A TAIR Ufe Saver Terry Foley Adis Another to His a f List of Rescu FIGHT IN EAST RIVER. “PIL End My Life Another Way,” Cries Girl Who Was Bent on Suicid East River between the of E en Sixtyer The narrow shore at the foot which ts t hand Sey- ‘ntleth stre and Blackwell's Island, was the at $ o'clock to-day of as ough a tussle to save a lif Wer fallen to the jot of Terry Foley rho about twice a week and ever Runday fishes out folks at this polnt Terry is the band U this § young ne else ty) do, who get lengths of rope ' and are told to V's Island ferry-house or two f away life on exetted shed. the h woman head bobbin ap a down, as, buoyed up by her skir whirled along & the dire of He 1 Gate The lif Gl ar swim- mer, b caught m to her. Her hair h * said Ter and him and poor e every the Presby r name Was He | and tha . | As she gave 3 | and as many minutes, Tegarded a ELD AS SUSPECT IW TRIPLE MUADER ime ee Man Caught Knows of Jersey Crime, the Poli in Brooklyn id and being | ice stat eof Va- gation fon with a} town, N. J. \ gs further in * On that date Willis farmer wife were found murdered i) Frank ri, Who had on the farm hat appeared ha Shepherd, a ennie Benday | r home and | en enip.uy his ieving tha ern Maud Bendvy. went to A ad who th He denies that he ov lishtown Z_ y | | | The successful fisherman pays much| attention to WHAT he puts on his hook and WHERE he drops his line. | And so it is with shrewd advertisers. The best of “bait” is a truthful and con- vincingly worded advertisement; the bes place to publish it is In THE WORLD, which has a daily circulation in New York City DOUBLE that of ANY OTHER morning newspaper. To-Morrow Is Sunday and an Excellent Day to Advertise, or strect— | the fact that | {stand } had to drop | * | nourished.” {Are We Coming to State Nurseries? = Militant Little English Suffragette Warmly Indorses the Opinion . Expressed by Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch. HOMES WOULD BE HAPPIER Matrimony Really a One-Sided Part- nership, but Neither Sex Has Right lo Restrict the Other's Sphere. By Nixola Greeley-Smith, Mrs. Harri leader of the movement in et Stanton moderate New York, suffragist said the the wife to work outside ary thin to remain in the home. ‘We hear a great deal of senti- al twaddle about the house and she said, “The two terms uny means synonymous, rily have a y-| Id wor lowering of Suline { much denun- ion of Mrs. Blatch, | asked Mrs. Borman Wells, the} gallant lithe English woman who ee the enh attled Si home,” are not by a ind do not necessa brows a Tragettes of Mrs. ught led to work because her is not enough to sup-| ‘dren. morn- a day f the set- for them at a n she dey ng up t bena doing s0."" many wive can AND CHILDREN HEALTHIER. Blatch, | other day that it is often better for} for a sal- | en RRRIET Senior BLATCH Borman Wells hl] |Any Wife Should Work fo: a Salary Who Can Better Her Home MAS. i { BUILT. and Her Children by Doing So, Says Mrs. WOMAN ASSERTS “Why Should 1 Go to Jail for | Some One Else?” M Fleming Asks, FRIENDS FOR Her Part Was to Coach Me-| Causlan Girl in Story, She Says, YEARS. to Assistant Dis- Miss Julla Flem- the Tomsb on a In her confession Hart, in trict-Attorney Ing, a prisoner conspiring to manufacture Frank Gould for his for divorce against bitterly against her Ben Teal, “plot” the |charge of evidence against wife in her suit him, has turned former intimate friend, Mrs. of the wite land lays the brunt at the door of the ot stage manager. By the advice of her counsal, pel, Miss Fleming, and she has announced her Intention of aiding the State in eve possible, averybody deserted me in this affair,” this morning to an | Evening World reporter who called to Ed Car- a complete confession was made by. Tr | BORMAN) WELLS... way she sald “VAN RENSSELAER, HOT SHE, 1 ERDINA Y EARLE, the long ist wiho dis- cove interesting fact one's wife and ya younger un ideal existence venture {s reaping the wh on of E {3 Appears Against Max | nel Arrested for Threatening Mother’s m “rubbering” These Included Dane dogs, gar- of the affinity craz wi creator le works, Men Not Created to Do One Thing} and Women Another, considering But “Tam not one of those people who bes 1 t certaln was allotted to \e x. We cooks, men \Neither Sex Has Right to Fix the cleaners, men nurses, These Other's Sphere. so good as the women, though “phat, replied Mrs, Wells, “is a assumed that ghe wif y fitted to do these things? d is a better cook than a the wife IT can see nothing ridiculous In ** his cooking the di Do you belleve that men were ere to do one thing, another?” | “the problem for the individual to setile. 7, Neither sex has a right to say to the is your appointed spi 1 not go." some women who such marvellous mothers that no salary creation,” I replied, would be larga enough to represent ee "1 rent thelr value to their children and t CH 0S et) 0 tho mrp fore to the human race, But w : yes ing woman. Man, Inj we find a great inother we find great ral doe He puts ts, and once In a while cat fish, But feath acl s and exp sta housekeoper, | 0" e Wake |e eo! a girl who ina f She is We regard the existing o ant t n nd women as hav- apt to marry a fellow workman makit : i nything haps a little more. If that woma i to do with creation. Isn't nilnues to work after marr even nse ‘eement, a pa i rship, in‘ up to ew weeks before the birth to the other: ‘I will work lot h ed Ng, I think she 1s probably | for you and protect you it will care preparing for it a better birth th for my h bear my dren and she remained at home, The hy jeurlna the condit ons in a factory—necessarily | A One. Sided Partnership. spected~are far better than in a Trin-} “Now, Is the wite moescutland works for a Ilving ity Church tenement, for Instance. silorinae | Working Mothers’ Children Better Born. agree- hat !s what ted Mrs the man Wells. says, ‘Having more money, she Is better ami that means that the be better born and better nourished, ehild will And Mrs, Wells finished her argu 10 | ment a flash of her big blac husband's wages, a lisped, "Don't you zink sagully, 'Fobd ane it Is as much or “E agreo with you to this extent," * : fed, "It ay ayerage man 26) a wom Not every wife should work for a lish e alary, perhaps, fe qt 1s on Yet he assumes t ndividuals to settle, and it s becoming a mother she Is | sett by th with alm pernatural. kne mmetha arg ieeha aol ae HERES to the care and rearing of chihiren.! ner children, Don't you ; | She Isn't, She learns only at patie cost to the child {tself oa HITCHCOCK WANTS RELIGION “In the poorer classes nine little lives aig he weaiens besauts| AND NATIVITY OF VOTERS, the her's strength has been sappe inte by lack of care and too frequent child bearing, But to me the mere physical fact of motherhood ls no more glory to a wom- an than it {s to a mother rabbit or a mother cat. It Is what she makes of those children that crowns her.” “Ah,” replied Mrs. Wells, ‘that poetry! Economics has no answer to make to poetry, Come down from the clouds and consider the facts, CHICAGO, July ference between Frank H. H hairman of the Republican nmittee, and various State can leaders, eld to-day Auditorium Ar were —The second cons National R was x Tin Michigan, souri and Wiaconsin Instructions were aration State, giving neces: nativity, religion, of a poll Ata as to the ‘ou know very well that If the $3 a ities a week mother remains at home she) portant y man. | weans the baby on dill pickles and beer. | The syst wed In gather Far better for her to continue her work | ing this information was alo, and for the child to spend elght hours| Colorado Springs conference in a State nursery, where competent based upon a method that } nurses would give it proper food and| employed for several years attention. braska by Willlam Hayward, chairman “We are coming to State nurseries, of the Republican State Committee, you know, And why not? Mr, Hitchcock riaces great dependence “I know one young married woman upon this character information, CN AAR 2 RA NE = Join D, Wins Big Victory Over Jake JHN D. ROCKEFELLER Is cash- He was arralgn- ie ran Rockefeller many years and declined re- s for the purchase of his e Rockefeller made ised his price, At the mag- edge of the own the pr neurotie to nothing was an offer Melin it went so high th sed to bother further, Jake and he may have to go at the Oll King’s acute nd last aor, while under nate ref ts sorry Jet the place AO LOVES LIK WEDDED LOVcHS, SNS RUSELELT President Tells Miss Kohlsaat, of Chicago, So in Mar- riage Greeting. now sselaer Paroled. Police Headqarters, Van 'R Lieut, Wilb: to Bel n Rensselae either, Renssolae: AUTO KILLS BOY, RJURES Ai THER CHICAGO, July nt Roose- jas penned an a onate little note to his old f rman H. Kohl- marriage to whom wishes for ey) ; future b ine. and tucked in neatly Lads Riding wre Cles Rut! at the end an expression ct his love Ro assured M Kohl- Down by Big Motor Jerse “there are no lovers Hke on ie y Boulevard. arg Roosevelt's wad- staat on the eve Monday Koh! assure ly frlend yutside of josevelt. pnearey SNAKE ARRIVES. one of the Anglo-Amert- pany's steamships, w docks to-day, had brought tu nown business men ———__ DROWN WHILE iranian AND RAPIDS, Mich., Ju " Both ar ake ever second double drowni days < The snake was cap- ocurred yesterday wit Joe B zisky and| tured in Singapore, and ts of the Indian Stephen Wolseinsk! as the ¥ Dur- non species. It is thirty feat three Ing thelr noon hour a engaged! inches long and welghs 312 pounds. It ts {nm &@ wrestling match, fell into the power sald the snake will be taken to the! canal and were drowned. Bronx Zoological Gardens, wee - Guffaws in the News Of a Variable Half-Day |see her In the Tombs, body but Mr. I am going to marry—he has been as “that 1s, every- McCabe, the young man true and loyal as anybody could be—so I don't see why I should keep still and 60 to jall for the faults of others, “Mrs. Teal pretended to be a friend of mine for years and she got me into this thing, but her husband made ab- solutely no effort to get bail for me. | I presume he had a hard enough time to get it for his wife, but I think he | might have tried to help me, at any | rate." Mosquitoes on Him. N order to collect a bounty I for each fe: and for each male mosquito capt at Bradley Beach, N. J., there was acuvity in that resort. Mr. as 1°. Somers, who made the withdrew {t last night when great Expects to Get Ball, Miss Fleming is a tail, large-frarned young woman with a good color, of generally pleasing appearance and @ marner which gives the impresson that she {8 no ingenue, She says she has not had a hard time In the Tombs, as | Bhe has been In the hospltal a good | part of the time, and that Mrs, Flynn, jthe wife of the warden, has been “per- | fectly lovely" to her, Her lawyer said offer, he found that mosquitoes from the 8 Jersey swamps were being worked as ringers, He also discovered male mosquitoes were belng passed along as females How to Tell Where a Skeeter Comes From. PBAKING of mosquitoes, ‘Dr. Yorke: 8 the heaith of , Hays one can al- jhe expects to get ball for her by Mon- ways tell where a skester comes |day and in view of her complete con- from. If the pest has stripes across | fession It 1s expected that the amount, his Beak and Dig legs he comes from | 0%, will be materially, reduced, Ong and; if he has a mottled 2 a in the Tombs, brown beak he's a vite, and If Dele. mercleds ming frowns upon the {dea, al- ne eald that if Howard Mc- her flance, who works for the | Puller Construction Company, insists upon St she will not refuse, “Howard has been so kind and good Isince this wretched business came out in Island's lowl 1s rlare nis ey Must Wear Pants To Get Man's Job. EA trousers keeps @ | iat 7 will do anything he wants,” she young woman out tn Idaho | UN from taking up the job of |**° She ts quite frank about having gone Into the “plot” with her eyes fully open, and says she knew exactly what letter carrie: didate for Sho was the only can- place who qualified in the examination, and the Civil {t meant and the risk that was being Service people were satisfied. She Was about to be appointed, but it | taken. “LT was a clerk in Tyson's news and theatre ticket stand In the Waldort- | Astoria four years ago,” she sald to the reporter, “and that was when I first met Mrs. Teal. That wos before her marriage to Mr, Teal—I don't think she even knew him then—and we became Intimate friends almost from the jump. She took a great fancy to me and [ regarded her as my greatest friend, I went to Europe four times with her and I was with ‘ner through all her troubles in the | West when she was going through |that breach of promise sult, Strangers After Quarrel, “We quarrelled a short time before Mrs. Teal’s baby was born last Octo- ber,” continued Miss rata “and for SCHOONER IN A Maine Saves Crew and Lands | the Hotel Lincoln to go around and see | the baby. I was willing to make up and Them at New Bedford— |e friends again, 80 I went to her apart- jment. That was on July 18 Her Bow Damaged. | phe detective, Harry Mousley, was i ; ‘there, and he was introduced to me as gen Mr. Staniey. We were sitting around NEW BEDFORD, July 25—Tn a col-\and I was petting the baby when the sion in Long Island Sound to-day the | subject of the Gould divorce came up, w York Line steamer Maine sank/and Mrs. Teal and ‘Stanley’ talked a Rockland schooner Charley Wgol-| great deal about tt. but saved the Woolsey’s crow of} “ ‘Why, I know Frank Gould very chooner, a two-master, I sald, ana Mrs, Teal said; ‘That's in two. The you do—I remember now.’ I hail ealtes fds ‘The | met Mr. Gould when I was In the the- TO eae duet Corr Point | airy ticket stand in the Waldorf, and SNe RENIN Id Tights | used to buy tickets and nowspapers Prov ce tO | from me. yeas om her |"“crrom then on the scheme began to take shape, although I think Mrs. Teal land Mousley had been planning for some time before I was drawn into It, | We had frequent meetings and on July }16 I met the McCauslan girl in Mrs. Teal's apartment. was discovered that under the regu- | lations of the department she would be obliged to wear men's pants. She has not yet deolded to accept STEAMER SINS the five men. was pra 80, sed. ut from une was in- left Pler No. 40 North | York, at 7.40 P. M. yester- r Bedford with a ikit package and 150 makes, her passengers three round New York and | was going to put the thing through. As is a powerfully 1 sald before, I went into tt with my vesse, of ‘ilghter feyes entirely open; T knew exactly what of the Matne's |r ail meant, but I was to have no active Tee amcauite at part in it, I happened to know Mr, n 1865, and her net | Gould and my part was to coach Mabel MeCaust an so she wouldn't make any gm EEN | breaks, which I did | T0 DISCUSS: CAR F FENDERS, | Defense Relies on Gould, Papite Service Com n Prom- also ‘awful ises Marburger Karly Constd- | | Who {9 & | and | eration, to consider this sympathy the more re- In a letter to Coroner Harburger to.‘ w of the fact that she, | Is the o of th Service Commission !n. Q 4 on the conspiracy charg at In response te day the Public forms the Coron re ommendation Magistrate Cor-| e Tombs Court will be re t lay afternoon, when Upp as a wit. ypoenaed by the | d* killed Dy @ car at street and Tenth prought out at Coroner Harburger’s in jquest last Tuesday that a more stantial fender the car might da’ saved the man’s life ‘The defense will not say how they ex- pect My. Gould to ald them. One of * I was told that siie| WOMAN “PLOTTER” IN GOULD CASE, T0 the lawyers is quoted as having sald, however, that if it could be shown that Mr, Gould had peel apartments of Miss E the defendants knew calling at the sie De Voe, and , it might’ help some. It was sald, however, there was any Thav simply Went to Anoth report Js t plot might posstbly have been an et to aid Mr. Gould ‘by belittling the tr Nis Wife and making it appear that ction had not been brought on 1s that could be sustained by relinhle evidence But out of the maze of theory one thing soon became obvious, and that Was that Mabel McCauslan, the only witness “heard yesterday, |s an ex- ceptionally yer girl for ithe eighteen year's she confesses, but that there 1s trouble ahead for ‘her at the cross such an silent examination Tuesday, Maurica Blumenthal, Teal counsel for Mra, who conducted’ a partial cross. nation of Miss McCauslan yester- id the defense expected to show tat jal t that she estic trouble ould until the. amdavit affair n p was untrue, and th. she knew all about the rumors Setorshand) and had once asked J Teal how to market the alleged facts she galé she knew. ROSEIELT CAOETS MUST 0 President SOP the Re- Point roint ts in West Hazing Cases, OYSTER BAY, July 25.—President Roosevelt has approved the dismissal from the United States Military Academy at West Polnt of eight cadets who were found guilty of hazing un- derclassmen, Both the report of the board which tried the cadets and that of the Superintendent of the Academy were approved by the President. Secretary Loeb sald to-day that rein statement of the men could be anc Iplished only by Congressional aci Reward A reward of Two Hundred ‘ and Fifty Dollars will be paid ', for the arrest and conviction of any junk dealer or other person gly, under the provisions of jection 550 of the Penal Code of the State of New York, of criminally receiving any prope ,/ erty belonging to this Company. NEW YORK TELEPHONE.CO,.,,) A5Dey St, NewYork g | JOHN H. CAHILL, # May 1,1902, 2d Vice-President’ LYDIA Ev VEGETABLE COMPOUND, THE MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY FOR ‘WOMAN'S ILLS IN THE WORLD. DR. TOBIAS’ Venetian Liniment warranted the greatest pain reliever Invaluable also for | Mosquito Bites and Insect Stings. All Druggists. Price 25 and 50 cents. jin the world, 00 FER DAY earned by men handling eup SP TOivereal Brush and Broom Attachment %.. ushing and awreping. | Send elanile and full particulars. The Ammgpe Rh aaatt Sanitary Co, Ali tows. Pa. += . | WED IN TOMBS.” CASE PLOT, PINKHAM’S |