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HONE SUBURB otal Represents New Money Absorbed in Purchases, Loans and Construction. IG WORK FOR FUTURE, Pidly Increasing Demands all for Much — Larger Annual Expenditures. @ suburbs have taken $700,000,000 the past year. Dullding operations, mortgage &nd capital placed in the purchase ty. Marked by active speculation, the it @ fair average of what can be ex- d for the coming few years. With Fenewal of wide-spread activity, the would run much higher. Miilions in Big Works, fate builders alone have put $121,- 00 into new work. A large part of it gone into homes ortgage lenders have put out nearly 000,000. ‘This has averaged practic halt of the value of the properties during the year. Thus the new capital drawn into the aub- ban realty market from these two has crossed $50,000,000, i} reets, ‘Idges and projects for preparing out- j@ home lands have taken $40,000,000 Huge Sums for Brooklyn. ‘ooklyn has led all of the sub- n territory in the sale of realty. he total assessed value of such pur- ages during the year has crossed 100,000,000. ‘The sums loaned on stgages aggreate $107,000,000. Building joans have taken nearly 15 rocent. { the Brooklyn mortgage fh of the remaining total fained in the form of pur- mortgages by sellers. for new Brooklyn ring the year has reached the Bronx has run fully ahead of Brooklyn in plans } new buildings during the fmortgage total is $44,000,000 2 Brookly i's, This is ex- ,mrgely by he fact that nearly ffd of thy hew Bronx building cts have * st been financed. Plans 15,0004 outlay, chiefly in flat- were filed hastily by Bronx s in order to get ahead of went into effect on Nov. 19, je lenders on mortgage have 3,000,000 in Bronx contracts he year, operators and invest- bought Bronx properties total assessed value abov They have put in § ney, the balance representing e% arranged by the sellers. Rueens Takes $80,000,000, ns operations of the year dover $80,000,000, Nearly while more than $30,000,000 new has gone into purchases of carrying an assessed value » the vear's work. Most of It has p for immediate occu; peculative field waving been ely quiet in defiance of a large un- pplied demand for homes in that sec- on. While Brooklyn butld pr the year have fallen he 1909 Zotal, Queens has invested 000,000 less than went into its dings. Riches for Far Suburbs, a | New Jersey and the metropolitan su- rbs Outside of the Greater City have | 't ‘ a. bel et ‘taken over $10,000,000 capital during | ‘Awful!” I ejaculated. the year in new building, realty pur- chasr> and mortgage loans, The otal! «yes, indeed,” went on Mre, Ames fs 20 er cent. under that of 1909. \,?RaNK BAILEY HAS ‘i SPREAD DOLLARS ment syndicates ho has ioe expansion of home wections, hie huge iavestment has included | the year for the most part has not | @ of investment is regarded as at| | betterment of womankind tn the civilized | Marriage and Divorce Both Should Be Made More Difficult in Both Coun- tries, Says Mrs. Ames, Founder of the Order ot “The Golden Key.” What Americans Call Love Is No More Than Pas- sional Response to Tem- perament— No Wonder Everybody Divorces Every- body Else. By Ethel Lioyd Patterson. The divorce laws of America are wrong. Also the divorce laws of Great Britain are wrong. Mrs, Hugo Ames, Bng- lish author and lecturer, says a Maybe we not as amazed as we might be to have an asper- sion or two cast at our own most interesting national institution, But the spectacle of an Englishwoman arising to call anything connected with her own country aught but bieswea fills us with respectful but deep astonishment Yet the words of Mrs. Ames are not to be misunderstood, “Divorce is too easy to obtain im Amerioa,” she declar: ‘and too diMoult to obtain in England. “Divorces in this country are se cured dishonestiy. “Marriage shoul4 be made more @imMoult both in England end | Teo America. “Fidelity is the marriage bond of Goa. “Ho marriage exists where either the man or the woman is unfaith- ful. ‘The lowest thing s woman can do is to marry for home. The thought of the number of women who do this thing, here and in England, sickens me. ‘English noblemen are not no- blemen when they marry Ameri- can hoiresses. “One of th men and women—one of the great causes of divorce—is lack of edu- cation.” Is Student of Divorce. But by this tire you are wondering why Mrs. Ames has such an inex- haustible fund of information upon @& subject which the average woman cov- ers in a six months’ course at Reno. Let me relieve your curiosity. Mrs. Ames is a member of an old fa ily and has chosen as a vocation the world. To this end she has, for more int new building regulations | [has written ‘The Book of Divorce’ |nue Hotel preparatory to sailing for| | England to-day. (00 of it has been loaned on mort-| (iohmond jas Kept close to its 190 | own statistics would teach them, Look ptals in all branches of the marget | at California, for example, the State operations of the year have involved | with the worst divorce record tn the 16,000,000 in purchases, mortgage loans ba ON TIONG ISLAND Aw'a representative of large lending interests and a member of big develop. wen one of the Most active operators in the caste than a year, been collecting data for the English Divorce Commission, and shortly to be published. Several of her plays, buflt around the subject most nteresting to her, have excited favo: able comment in London and she Is the founder of the order known as “The Golden Key.” Yesterday she spared a few moments in which to elucidate ideas, before! finishing her packing at the Park Ave-! “Do you know the women of this coun- try bewllder me?" began Mra. Ames. “They seem—so many of them—so ab- solutely unthinking concerning the real meaning of life, sometimes I feel dis- a 1 despair of reaching them.” ucation you d to give them?” I prompted, * echoed Mrs. Ames, “Do ‘ou realize most of the unhappiness, t of the divorces both here and in ngland are because people have not been educated to the proper point of view? I mean men as well as women in that. | “Why, the people of America do not even take time to learn the lesson thelr m Union. In elght years California doubled its population, but in elghteen months it doubled its divorce record.” Says We Don't Know Love. | swiftly, “and you call yourselves edu- } cated, But what !s the emotion you des- ignate as love? Why, most of you do not know true spiritual love, the only | love upon which a man and woman may | safely build their future, when you see | it | wypnat you call love in America | 4» no more than # passional re- i} sponse to temperament. No won- | der everybody divorcos everybody elso! “Is a girl in this country brought up| to believe her first kiss should go to her | 11? Of course not! — | », wait a minute,” I interrupted. ‘You know, Americans are nothing it not practical. Now, do you, yourself, Meve it would, generally speak- | »saible for a girl's first Kiss to | . Ames, uncertainty, “she should be brought up to believe ft, ought. A girl should belleve she has | been something more than indiacreet if she hag been Kissed before her mar- riage.” “Thereby adding another lure to a! pastime auMolently attractive already,” I solfloquiged, “But tell me, how would you make our marriages more diMoult to contract?” Our Divorces @ “Farce,” "T think there should be some publica. | tion of a contemplated marriage for’ three weeks in advance," replied Mra, Ames, much as r ious banns are published In chureh, And I believe the TH ENING W 100,000,000 ‘English Noblemen Not Noblemen YEAR'S GIFT 10 Person who was to perform the cere- mony time to make sure the couple were actually of age and that the full con- sent of the parents had been obtained. “Z also believe the law should forbid divorced people to marry again until three months after the deoree is in effect. Why, good heavens, your divorces are « farce! Your witnesses are perjured and your charges are mere fiction. A man is selecting the wall paper for the home in which he intends to live with his new wife while he is still trying to legally free himself from the old one, “Yet you do not approve of the more | stringent laws of your own country protested. “Because they are most unjust to| women,” replied Mrs. Ames. “A woman before she can obtain a divorce in Eng- British laws, to obtain the necessary evidence to free Herself from a man with whom ft is an insult to her womane hood to live.” “But what of the women who marry for a home?” I suggested. Marrying for a Home. “Ah, that thought sickens me!" Mrs, | Ames exclaimed. “When I think of the women who literally sell themselves for | jal comfort. You know, quite! as speaking on the! ph: lately, when I pi form on this subject a suffragist Brose and told me the matter was purely economic; that when women were paid the just wages for their labor they would not sell themselves for the sake of a home. Well, I tell you, as I told her, the point is not economic, it is ethical. A woman who had the right views of life would not sell herself for & home if she were starving. A real woman could not sell herself under any circumstances. And I want to say the woman who marries for a home has parties wishing to contract a mi should be residents for at least a week in the community where the marriage ta |to be performed. This would give the SAILED O Posted at Maritime Exchange | rasgne men Sa “missing,” which to every ‘lost. It is belleved she went down with her forty-one men In the hurricane that swept the Gulf last] Recently complalnta had been coming Arzacq of New Or berg of Silver City, N Griffiths, the captain's wife, is the only one who has not given UP! ang, completing thelr work, started In @ Ittle apartment at No. #61] )\)inq shortly before midnight, East One Hundred and Forty-first street] “mney were walking through Creevy's she keeps daily vigil by the window. “I cannot believe that 1 shall 1 see my husband agin,” she said to- “Each night I tell my little daumhters} 1, step aside #o he could talk to him Marguerite, that her father will come|q few minutes. Lane went to one aid® home soon, 1 p the truth had been canes, or at any rate some very bad |1, that Creevy tried to persuade him consummated as sordid a sale as ever came to pass in any slave trafic." believe you are going things?” I asked. “fam going to try.” sald Mrs. Ames with a mixture of valliance and hu- mility in her tone. Well, as for me, I would rather see if 1 t make the sphinx change her | At least she would not talk — HUNT FOR FEVER CASES. consequence of scarlet fever in and Brownsville secth | and the belfef that } rescued by some being carried to so ses are not being spector S, Dana Hu must prove cruelty as well as infidel.ty|0¢ Health, Manhattan, with etghteen exsistant inspectors, took up headquar- land. It is aimost impossible for aj} ters at the Brownsville police stath woman of moderate means, under the| yesterday, and began a louse to house for hidden cases of the fever. None was discovered in the hunt yes- terday, but the canvass is to be con- tnued throughout next week. The inspectors will visit parents of children | Schools Nos. 65 and 108, break started. reported yesterday. ard of the Board of his seven! Arsadia was a steel si schooner rij length was 4s) feet, her beam 41.1 feet, | nence In ier depth 21 feet. She was bulit in} He wa | Stockton, Taylor & Co | to outlive the where the out- ORT, Mass., ROCKP lass. Anxiety 1s felt for the safety of the army transport steamer Gen, Bren: which left Fort Moultrie, 8. C., for the United y District at th manded by Capt. Kelly, sprang a leak fourteen miles during the night and by crew of three men early to-day. men in @ ship's boat reached the station exhausted posure and were ¢ was abandoned | cold and ex-} d for by the life ner was made by a tug from Rockpo' Dale was bound for Boston Me, loaded with lumber. HOPE ABANDONED 'BLUECOATINGELL TOES TRAMPLED, When They Wed American Heiresses| FOR MISSING SHIP 4 in Hurricane. | Against Creevy. | Polleeman Thomas J, Creevy, twenty- jetght yea old, of No. % Kast Shell | Road, Corena, 1. 1, and attached to the College Point station, was ars to-day fn the Flushing Potlee Court on a charge of feloniously ae- as “Missing,” Which, Sea- | sauiting seret. Frank T. Lane, thirty- tr cep ty [MOVER Yeara old, of No, 1418 Kast Ninth , Meanse“Lost. | street, Brooklyn, a “shoofly cop” at- |tached to Chief Inpector Schmitt: herger’s staff, Creevey was held for ax- All hope has been abandoned by the | armtnation in $1,600 bail for examination owners for the Arkadia, a steamship of by Magistrate Connolly the New York and Porto Rico Naviga- Tt ts one of the few cases tn the his- tion Company, and to-day her name ts! tory of the department where a “shoo- posted at the Maritime Exchange as fly” has been attacked by a policeman seaman Alleged to have been caught in a dore- lection of duty. Only a few months ago the nofly” system was revived by the then Commissioner Baker | into Headquarters of unsatisfactory pa- skipper was Capt, Richard F.| toiling in College Point, and last night GriMithe of the Bronx, Chief Officer) sergeants Lane and Ticho were sent Girod lived in Brooklyn the crew lived in New Or four passengers, Charles G.| 1, rest of there to look around, bid Caught Off Post. is said that Lane soon caught Creevy off post. He revealed himself, showing his shield, and told Creevy he was going to report ‘him. Lane and Ticho continued around the, precinot x and Oliver L. ns and L, Fre M. E. J. Bourr post when they encountered him at Fourteenth street | and Fifth avenue. According to them, Creevy asked Lane that I may be tell} with him, Tycho waiting @ short dis- .e says Capt, Grif- through worse hurr.- according to the police, not to report him and Lane insisted ne Arkadia left New Orleans for] that he was going to. San Juan Oct. 11 and since that day not] “Well, if you are, take that,” Creevy a word has been heard from her. Tne] ts alleged to hi storm in which she is believed to have] r4 been lost rag lives and did great dai There ts a possibilit ve shouted aa he atruck oon the head with his nightattck for five days, cost many] Lane fell to the sidewalk and Tycho ge to shipping. | grabbed Creevy. but a very re Finally Locked Up. » that the forty-one men were} Prey fought all around the pavement vessel and are} uit) Lane recovered and regained his ne oUt-Of-the-WAY | root, The two soon subdued Creevy, k his pistol and nightstick away and pf OMlcer Girod’s wife and child are| jut nim under arrest ting for news, as is Mrs. Griffiths. |” ye was taken to the Colloge Point Purser Hock has a w and was supporting his aged | felonious assault was suspended by or- , Who Is blind, The chief stew-|qer of Third Deputy Commissioner e and four chil-} station and after being charged with that the day the Ar| waish. 1 become the father] Dr. Dunkly of Flushing Hospital took several stitches In Lane's scalp where it was laid open by the nightstick, and r knew , of 1,626 tons. se raids several years ago, gland, in 18%, by Cral Mind was considered able the department until he was “made rongest seas and winds, | by Commissioner McAdoo. Seca el ~ teak pene WORRY OVER ARMY STEAMER] SURVIVES SHOCK OF 2.200 VOLTS OF ELECTRICITY. Bdward 8. Vail of Orient, L. I. te tn the Eastern Long Island Hospital at Greenport suffering from the effects of stern end of Long|an clectrte shock, For ten minutes he pund on Saturday tast lay acrons live wires with 2,200 volts of nsport is about the size of a| electricity coursing throug: his body, an tug and a sister ship to the | while Als assistant drove at full speed rs, now being repaired at this to the power house, where the chtef en- thing has been heard up to a gineer turned off the current. Surgeons hour yesterday of the Gen, at the hospital aay they believe Vai! nan. will live. Active Business Requires Adequate Telephone Service. The essentials of adequate telephone service for a busy establishment are— 1, An open door for outgoing telephone calls, 2. An open door for incoming telephone calls, 3. Facilities for immediate intercommunica- tion between offices and departments. Private Branch Exchange telephone service meets these requirements. Outgoing and in- | tym, does not pro he went home. Lane came into promi-| ade a plain clothes man. He had ups and downs tn doarded @ Third avenue elevated train at Forty-second street and trod on Mur- phy’s foot. Murphy was returning gem @ dance at Terrace Carden. - FOR USING CLUB | THEN HE'S STABBED jess. soe WITH 41 ABOARD, ON A “SHOOFLY" Arkadia of Porto Rico Line Be- |Sergeant Lane Had Refused to} lieved to Have Gone Down Suppress Off Post Charge per. He and Levy exchanged compil+ ul ” ments by rounds. When the train reached Ninth street Levy and Murphy came to blows. Murphy yelled that he was cut, and the police say that when — we guards pulled Levy off he had @ knife in his hand, Some of the women twenty-el@ht years | screamed and a few ran into other cars, tte avenue, Brook-| The moto n blew his whistle and at to dance ail night | Houston street Policeman White are and then have his overworked feet | ested Levy, who dented everything. He his overworked ‘feet van taken to the Mulberry atreet station ; ers} charged with assault. Murphy had @ He uttered loud protests at 3 o'clock this| stat wound in his right arm and lett morning when « man describing himself! shoulder and was attended by Dr later as Jacob Levy, fifty-two, a tatlor,| Hughes of St. Vincent's Hospital. He of No. 987 South Fourthi street, Brooklyn, ' is not seriously hurt Bway at 6th Av. y. to 35th St. Saddles and Saddlery =. Despite the “Auto Craze,” our stocks are as com- plete as ever in everything that contributes to the comfort of rider, driver or stableman. English Saddles TheVery Finest Made For men at $19.41 and $42.41. For women (side s addles)» $68.00 and $73.75; (astride saddles) $17.41, $27.49, $33.81. Allour English saddles are hand-made. Sold complete with all fittings. Domestic Saddles English Style— $6.74 to $17. McClellan Style—s13,s2, $16.89 and $17.88. Mexican Style—$12.17 and $17.58. Women's Side Saddles—$13.52 to $37.86. All sold complete with necessary fittings. Ere wd . Imported Bridles Reliable pieces of Single Rein—s1.69 to $5.49. harness made in Double Rein—$3.72 to $9.74. England. Breast-plates—$3.44 to $8.74. 4 Sold by us at the same low margin of profit that has made Macy's a Synonym for Underselling Supremacy. Edward C. Murphy, old, of No, 1 Lata stepped on by a careless “L” passenger. | Imported Spurs | Regulation English Spurs, 74¢ and $1.97. Special Polo Spur with blind rowel, $1.97. Special Women's Spur with guard, which makes it ime possible for spur to catch in dress, $1.36. Whips and Crops Whips made of fine whalebone in a variety of mount- ings, from 74c to $9.74. Crops made of Bamboo, Whangee, Malacca and Part- ridge, mounted with bone, ivory, sterling silver and gold plate, 56c to $11.21. Boots and Puttees Black boots, $9.94; Tan boots, $10.94, sold elsewhere at $15.00; Puttees with buckles and straps; Tan and Black, $3.96 and $4.96. Full appointments for Polo, including Mallets and Caps, at similarly low prices. Special racine saddles and spurs, etc. Blankets and rR Robes, Riding and Driving Gloves, Footwarme ers, Goggles, Stable Sundries—in fact, every requisite and con- venience for park, road, track and stable are on sale at Deere Everything always at THE LOWEST PRICES IN Remember ‘‘Comerford” harness is to be had only at Macy’s. (t is made on the premises by Mr. P. H. Comerford, the most skitful harnessmaker in the world. B. Altman & Cn ARTICLES FOR GIFT PURPOSES ARE SHOWN AT VERY REASONABLE PRICES INCLUDING COMPLETE OUTFITS FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN; MEN'S AND BOYS’ FURNISHINGS; MOTOR ACCESSORIES AND LEATHER GOODS, UMBRELLA HANDLES, FANS AND STATION. ERY; LIBRARY TABLE AND DESK REQUISITES, JEWELRY NOVELTIES AND SILVERWARE. ORNAMENTAL OBJECTS OF ART, ORIENTAL RUGS AND JAPANESE SCREENS. Fifth Avenue, 34th and 35th Streets, Nem Bark. coming messages can be handled simultaneously. Interior intercommunication can be carried on independently. Private Branch Exchange telephone service {s recognized as the only suitable telephone service for active organizations. In proportion, this service costs even less than the simpler forms: of telephone service. Let us send our representative to explain it in detail and to quote rates. Communicate with our nearest Commercial Office. NEW YOR TELEPHONE COMPANY Every Beil Telephone ts a Long Distance Station. If You are Not at Your Best don’t worry abow there's no good in worry. Get better! If your stomach ts wrong, your liver and bowels inactive—your nerves are sure to be on edge and your blood impure. Be cheerful and hopeful, As they have helped in thousands of cases, BEECHAW’S PILLS will help you and will give your aystem the natural help it needs, A few doses will make a great difference in your feelings and your looks, ‘They will help you all along the line-to a clear head, free from aches to bright eyes--to healthy active organs, ‘This sure, quick and tonic family remedy will help Nature to Restore Your Full Vigor . Sold Everywhere, In bones with full directions, 10e, and 25, scan nats