The evening world. Newspaper, December 29, 1910, Page 3

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“= “OF FIVE: BANKS . yr P Trey DOUBLE FAILURE BLAMED ON STATE, Depositors Ask Why Banking Department Allowed Doors to Reopen. NOT CHENEY’S DOING. Cause of Crippled Institutions Was Pleaded Before Clark Williams. @ince the closing last Tuesday of the Northern Bank, a reorganization of the old Hamilton Bank, which went down in the pate of 1907, there has been con- siderable talk in the financial distri: as to why the State Banking Depart-| ment ever permitted the institution to| reopen {ts doors. ‘Thousands of citizens were attracted by the bold advertising methods of Jo- seph G. Robin in getting new accounts. ‘These new depositors did not know of the bank's inheritance of bad securities from the Thomas-Heinze-Morse regime, and they now blame the Banking De- partment. Nor are the depositors of the Northern Bank alone !n thelr plight. Four other institutions that fatied in 1907 were per- mitted to resume business upon what subsequently proved to be an altogether unsatisfactory financial basis, The Five Which Failed Twic ‘The five banks which have been forced to fall twice are as follows: First Fynally Closing. Reopened. Closed. Mamitton Ont, Bhs Jan, 0,” Dee. 27, (Norther 1910, Wiklameurs De. 14, ‘Comp 1910, Mechantcn aid i Anr15, Nor, 20 1008. 107. These five Institutions did not get per= Trust Company mission to reopen from the present head of the Banking Department, Orion | H. Cheney, ,but from his predecessor, Clark Williams, now State Comptro! Many Depositors Got Out. Mr. Williams permitted these banks to | resume after hearing the cause of each | institution pleaded by able lawyers | hired by the principal directors, ana atrongly seconded by petitions from the then depositors, But many of these | early depositors after the resumption withdrew thelr money, and the brunt of the second closing appears to have follen upon an entirely new class of de- | positors, who now blame the Banking | Department for permitting the failed | banks to reopen. pS hiscoae 1 Se LOOK OUT FOR MAYOR SHANK | Performs Marringe Ceremony for | Nephew and Warns 1 INDIA Dec, Before | public » that ned many | clty muel Lewls ried his nephew, | und Miss Vaidena ser jpal bullding, edicated a and took the op- irtunity. to deliver & homily on ma- mony. {want rstand,” sald the ar bride ‘and bride- om, “what 1 would ratiter i, than to do e entering | ar ° vat you would have san tome folks do, You've got w chance to | aake a man of yourself, and if I ever | hear of your going wrong, 1 am going | te vet right after 9 | on ngen | NOW! No perso can read all the ad- vertisements printed, but You Should Read This One You are about to start a new year business—success | or | failure. Much Will Depend Upon How You Advertise. An advertising medium is not good just because it is big, and a little advertising medium is not necessarily poor just because it is small. You Must Be Guided by Results! While The Morning World has a circulation 100,000 greater than ANY OTHER morning news- paper in the United States, that is not “the all of it.” | TENS OF THOUSANDS MORE PUBLICITY SEEKERS ADVZER- TISE IN THE WORLD EVERY | WEEK, MONTE AND YDAR THAN | Im ANY OTHDR WOWSPAFER ON | | of e them In return for the | service? “Jn a country where the population Approaches stability motherhood pen- sions, pald by the State, are practical. iy effect this means that women are compensated for the loss of their wages during the Ume they staying at home to bring up children. In this | country, @ith an immense immigration, | TEE FACE OF THE BTE. Is this fact not conclusive PROOF that World advertising is BEST? PLACE THE WORLD AT TEE VERY TOF OF THE LIST OF AD- VERTISING MEDIUMS TOU WILL USE DURING THE COMING WEW tan. xs — 17 | 1 saw her in her home, at No. he | bringin Great Increase in Divorces Obtained by Women BLACK HAND BONA THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, lin hbk ena Fact Since Slavery Ended |( MURDER THREE Asserts Mrs. Rheta Childe Dow, Is Growth of Women’s Suffrage Movement. Third Most Important Fact of the Century Is the In- creasing Number of Women in Industry, In- fluencing All Modern Civilization. BY NIXOLA GREELEY. Santa Claus having solved more ur less to the his complacent old gentlemanly sou! what forty million women want é ook with the categorical title, “What Eight Million satisfaction of Women Want,” able. Rheta Child uncompromising Social purity. Public health. Woman suffrage. The removal of all legal disabilities from women, “What Hight Million Women W SMITH. the appearance of a may seem less grateful than season- which its name from je Dorr’s new book, title, takes the fact that the International Council of Women, which num- bers elght million more or less fermenting souls, has sot itself on record as favoring the following reforms: Peace and arbitration, ant” {8 a brilliant, lucid and remark- ably sane and reasoned plea for the accomplishment of those reforms in which the awakened women of to-day are interested, Mrs, Dorr is but one of many who be- Heve that the time is out of joint, but, unlike Hamlet, she does not add “Oh cursed spite, that ever I born to wet it right." “I belleve I was born to stir things up,” she declared to me yesterday when 331 East Thirty-firet street. And Mrs, Dorr's appearance, her big black eyes, cla sically shaped head and slender body, which seems a dynamo of restless energy, bore out her words. Three Great “Fact “The three most important facts of twentieth century,” the spokesman ‘of 8,000,000 women continued, “are the in- creasing number of women in industry; the increasing number of divorces, and the increasing demand for woman suf- frage. Nine millions 1s @ conservative Buers at the number of women in the United States who earn their own living. Between the years 1890 and 190 the num- ber of women working outside the home invreased faster than the birth rate. So much for the first fact. ‘Within the past twenty years 954,000 divorces have been granted in the United States—two-thirds of them to women. This means that in face of the anathemas of the churches, in the face of tra- ition and prejudice, accepting, in the great majority of cases, the re- sponsibility of earning their own living, more than 600,000 women have repudiated the burdens of “This is the most. important social fact since the slavery q! tion was settled. “The most important political fact the modern world has ever faced 1s the movement to grant women political equality with men, which is gaining strength in every constitutional country in the world, “These a the things w n give to whatever woman wants a new impor- tane The prevalence of diverce shows A nen are » longer satisfied with t sts conditions of marriag id e number of divorces, great it is, by nu means indicates the number of women who ‘are unhappily murried. Many w still endure unhappiness to the end, ow I asked. Why They Endure It. Most of the unhappiness suffered by peo ihe of the poor-house © such large families?” I know that nany women would prefer not to have hildren than they can support, ut beng dopendent on a man for their ad, they are in no position to choose conditions of child-bearing. Any way wo look at It, the eeonomls spendence of women and children secms a mistake. A man commits a Who suffers most when he goes crime, to jail? A man is killed or injured in indus- try. Ills family Is plunged into instar want "A panic throws hundreds of thou- s of men out of employment. The ® community at once has hundreds of sands of women and children on its haven't done anything to de- serve pauperis The women have been doing the work natuve gave them to They have been producing nev human beings, y have been 18 cltlaens, the greatest wealth a cov What does tt in millions of aliens every year, inotherhood pensions seem impractical Insurance an Alternative. “An alternative which has occurred to me {8 a great extension of the day | nursery, We might have municipal ° In each neighborhood, where ‘could leave thelr babies during working hours, ‘But that plan has many objections, It does not solve the problem of the young baby at all, bé- cause the young baby must be fed by its mother. “It seems to me that the ultimate solution will be found in some form of insurance. The young man and woman ated women is endured because | and thelr children are dependent men. Mrs, Dorr replied. “A woman ures lity and abuse only be- se if she resented these things her ren might starve. ‘Often we hear the question: Why do invest in ance against her loss of tin the child-bearing period, just as any of us buy accident insurance. “This may be State insurance, It may develop in lodges, labor unions or other fraternal orders. “In contemplating marriage will an in during any case, can you see how it would work? A young woman $s about to become a mother. The insurance office Is notitied, and the woman retires from her waxe earning, recelving weekly from the company the equivalent of | | her wages. She stays at home until her child Js weaned. Then the well- to-do woman will leave her baby with & good nurse and remirn to her pro- fessional or business life. Shy does this now, without the excuse of productive work. “The Industrial woman will have to put up with the collective nurse—the crech: “But what will be the effect on the husband and father?” 1 Won't he be turned into a dro: ‘Some husbands will," Yly answered. ‘Some are now. Count the endless number of deserting husbands under the present syatem. Go to the Children's Court and listen to the non-support cases. One child in each thirty-five is committed to an Institution In New k City, not be- cause the father can't support it, but because he won't, hey put the children away until they are old enough to get their work- ing papers, then they take them out again and’ set them to work. No," Mrs. Dorr added, ‘the tendency of women's Independe! better husbands of divorce to-day. "t you see t is the tendency men will have to bo better? And this seemed to WILL GO 10,000 MILES TO BECOME A BRIDE. | Miss Florence Willey to Sail in January to Join Fiance in China. A great deal of interest was caused to-day among the friends of Miss Flor- ence Wildey, daughter of C. F. Wildey, proprietor by the announcement that she leaves early in January for China to be mar- led to Vaughan McGee, of Plainfleld, N, J., at present in charge of tie Stan- dard Oll branches jn Manchuria, Miss Wildey is @ popular member of the Plainfield Country Club and a cele- brated tennis player. On her 10,000-mile trip she will be accompamled by Mrs. M, McGee and Miss Flovence Mc- mother and sister of ‘her flance Young Mr. for his bride, to engaged for @ year, [bilities in his 1 slole, She decide could not come year, to go to him, from San Francisco a | WED AFTER RABBI'S ‘DIVORCE! Arrested in whom he has but added resp: iness made {t tn lig that he at least a The party will sail out Jan, 10. Miller In Court on Bigamy Char When Herman Mil No. 179 McKibben stree appeared nue Pollve was ares charge ¢ . twenty Willis -day in the Manhat Court to meet a “l by Detective Bo bigamy, Miller had agreed to meet the lawyer to have a matr - !monial diMeulty adjusted. Miller ad- mits that he ts a much ied man Jand wedded his ond ne, of} nsburg, n Ave. wyer he! leon the ma wit A cou @ rabbinical se having been divorced b; erts he ired for $5 and therefc right (o wed a in, $1,000 for the Grand 28 Pi complaind He was Jury held in | etty young t against Prior to last Aug. 18 she was Gusle Feinberg, but on that day she | married Miller without knowing that on ‘June 20, 19, Miller had Lena Sil- lvenman Mrs. Miller at Troy, Miller Hilved with the first wife In Troy for a short time and then disappeared. Recently an acqualntance whom Miller had met in Troy saw him with his new |wife and was introduced to the second Mrs. Miller. The latter was quickly in- 'formed of the first marriage and she | consulted a who Inducod Miller to vistt his of Manhattan yester- day and then secured the promise to meet him In court to-day, a john Walker Fearn Wed, LONDON, Dy Mrs. John Walker Fearn, widow of the ner American Minister to Greece, Roumanta and Ser- via, and Arthur Inkersley of Lyme- Regis, a well known traveler, were mar- ried at Salisbury Cathedral to-day. ‘The Bishop of Salisbury, a personal friend of ths groom, officiated, and American Am- bassador Reld gave away the brid ¥ bears this ve will be to make | me a hopeful | of the Herald Square Hotel, | McGee intended to return | without | t He; divarse | e belleved he had a) 700 HELLO GIRLS MARRIED DURING HOLIDAYS? NO, NO! {Same Old Joke, Telephone Company Officials Declare of Wholesale Wedding Yarn. If the person who yesterday gave out | for publication the annual story that | the Christmas-tide service of the N | York Telephone Company was seriously hampered because of the sudden mar- {offices of the company a dozen oft | Iclals will ave something of great im- | port to say to him. hen an Evening World reporter | Hed on some of the department man- | agers jay to learn something about it ne reported resignations of so many experienced “hello” girls, he was met by a succession of # me that broke ;the moment he inquired If the story | Was true, | He was shunted from the pfttce of t! Vice-President to that of the traffic perintendent and from there to the j vision manager, who thought the vertising department should make denial emphatic. farrison K. McCann, the advertising 1 the manager, grew angry the instant the story of the wholesate marriages was | mentioned ‘ | ery year at Chrtstinas time some newspaper sppings thi st he sad, | “and every years we are kept busy denying It. Our girls do not leave us a iat istmas of all times, and the idea (of tWo hundred’ of them getting mar ried at a Whack ts nonvense. Tt is true we are short eight hundred operators | but that condition has existed] i eral weeks, Now that the holl season 1s bout over we will be able to nt ely. If it were true th hundred wo girls left us at once 1" | Would ind far | ability of the class y cin ade | NEW YORK WOMAN THROWN | FROM HORSE AND KILLED. Mont tried we desir. ed at th nploy."* | LEWIstow wN, Dec. %.—Mine Irene Van Kleek, thir ears old, « Ithaca, N. Y., one 0 t known educators in Montatia, was thrown by a fractious horse which she was riding yesterday and almost instantly killéd. | Miss Van Kleck was a graduate of |Cornoli and formerly tary to Andrew D. W former sident of }Cornell and Ambassador to Russia and }Germany. She was at the head of t commercial de: tment of t Lewis- town High Seb > NEW FIRE HOSE, ALL GOOD. Every Link of 60,000 by W cet Bought do Ex ceeds Row rementa, | Commissioner Waldo vinpletnd to-day | |the purchase of 60,00 feet of fire ho: jof which two-thirds will in | |Manhattan and the other third in | Brooklyn and « i A new system | | wae used In testing this hoag | ‘Every lnk tested to make sure that 1t was up to its ment of resisting pressure of 400 pounds | to the square inch. he average | strength of the new hose Was found to ‘ontract requires pieces of hose were tested See na ata | drea | the fire: | the | pistols | the \c resist 4 pounds pressure, The date of purchase Is marked on a plece of red rubber at the coupling of each nk, — | Under the former system only selec ed | « ‘ships as they SCORES INPANIC OVER LITTLE FIRE IN BIG TENEMENT Many Flee to Roofs, Firing Pistols, Then Walk Down Through Next House. A nound as of musketry attracted Po- Mceman Galvin of the East One Mun- and and Second a From from some cited me hallway woods on thelr atreet by nel. Att man i joring ho sendis Fourth stood at One Hundred and y he roof of 3 |nue there were freq jas pistols cracked. of the six-story tenement wor capes and thos with equally street station as ho dghth street ue at 3 o'clock this rlage of two hundred of {ts operators | MOFing, and thinking It wa another lwill present himself at the Dey street {898 fight he ran In the direction of ‘ the fusiilade, 0, 191 Second ave- nt spurts of fire Smoke was coming Windows of the big A score or more ex- n and children crowded pouring trom loads of household backs were met in the excited tenants from assisting: the panic-stricken occupants of the building to the street. Hiremen soon arrived, ran up ladders and carried down @ dozen or more from the fire escapes and cleared the hallways of the belated ten- ants with » furniture on thelr backs than they could carry, » blaxe stared In the flat of Vincent Viccelella, on fifth floor, from a defoctive flue and burned through into the hallway, where a draught .o @n open scuttle carried it up t way to the roof. AN t " s were fil nu tire was dis and th Ww the fifth floor ran to the fi and weapons a alarn ROSENHEIME OBJECTS. Contends That Ladict Pelham Park Kilied Miss Grace Was tried a of murder Miss Hous Mr, Lamb vision of thi the indi stitutional defendan imself, Johnston 0 ain reserved Vos. Wa GRAVESENL fourth division Atlantic fleet other divisions English Chan hanged salut RT PTX y, 1910. WRECKS. TENEMENT Victim Refused to Pay $2,000 | Blackmail After Many Death Threats. FLYNN’S MEN N BY. SAR Fire and Pani: Follow Ex- Thirteenth | plosion in Ey Street House. dlordino Sargono, a grocer, regarded as wealthy, refused to pay Biack Hand Jomatiers $2.00, and this morning at| Jock an attempt was made to mur. | for him, his beide of two months ard | fs old aunt with a bomb, The explo- on completely wrecked thelr home, on the ground floor of No. 6% Bast Thir- nth street. When the bomb krocer'’a door Deputy toner Flynn's men were the neighborhood the k Hand suspects. Surgono has been receiving Black Hand letters for a year. At frat he hought they were intended as @ joke. When he realized they meant business be turned them over to the police, but ho clue was obtained to the writers. Two weeks ago Sargono received « letter in which he was told that uniess the $2,000 demanded was paid without delay he and hiv bride of two mo would be murdered and his place of business ruined. This letter was given to the police also. Thought Reign of Terror Over. Sargono was inclined to believe that the recent c@mviction of Black Hand kidnappers in Brooklyn and the raids made on the bandita by Flynn's men and Secret Service agents would end the activities of the Biackhanders for the time being at least. Sargono's grocery taken up the front part of the ground floor on the west side of the tenement. Sargono and his wife occupy the rear room, The next room in used as a kitchen, while the old aunt, Pretresina Sargono, occupies the room directly behind the grocery, Across the hall on the “pposite side of the ground floor 1s the saloon’ of Mat- trone Jalnel, Sixteen families live on the five upper floors, ‘The explosion was terrific. was placed at the Pollee Comm! puting about lookout for on Gas pipes and in the the pantc- stricken tenants fled to the street many of those on the upper Moors were almost overcome before they reached the open air, Covered by Debris, Sargono and his wife were covered by! falling plaster, broken glass and ple of timber. The grocer dug himself cut | und then his bride, and tie two started to the front of the house. They founa the explosion had overturned the kitchen stove and the room was on fire. In the front room Sargono dug his aunt from @ heap of debris and carried her to the street. he door against which the bomb was placed had been blown across the room and was Jammed into the wall, Had the bomb been placed in front of the door of the grocer'y sleeping room, as evi+ dently was the Intention of the Black ander, Sargono and his bride would have been killed. The rear windows of the Sargono apartments were blown out, carrying sash and shutters with them » grocery was completely wrecked. and fired t Venture In Law, | © tha: law. fm oe toneral lire vay last’ and swonheliner n the charge of the killing of aw under whieh r vund Was uncon smuch a mmpelled a si estimony against eck hin ention, dndge = Ips Leave England, 2, Hngland, De Phe n of the United Stat sailed to-day to join the! at the entrance to th a with the Hritith war- assed down the Thames, | Ce 5 lt sees ed Phe bomb made a hole three teat square in the floor of the houve, and then dug another hole in the cear floor, The stairs leading from the ground to the frat Moor were almost torn to pleces, and as the tevante on © upper flors rushed to the street nany of them lost their footing on the broken steps and plunged headlong to the landing at the bottom. nel’s saloon was almost as badly wrecked as the grocery. ‘There was & vottle in the place that was | not broken | nen Deputy Flynn heard of the ou! and reall 1 his m A charming assemblage of winter coats to make their de- parture with the old year, now priced at one-half and less, al- though as new and beautiful as they ever were. Ladies’ & Misses’ Sizes belong a rokhande: arted detectives with to bring bom thrower tf yok weeks to find him, 7 from HH ni fled to the r had tot 1” road t Dot. The I mportant *" Problem confronting anyone in need of a laxa- tive is not a question of a single ac tion only, but of permanently bene ficial effects, which will follow proper efforta to live in a bealth{ul way, with the assistance of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, whenever it is re- quired, it cleanses the system, gently yet promptly, without irritation and will therefore always have (he preference of all who wish the best of family laxatives. The combination has the approval of physicians because it is knowo to be truly beneficial, and because it bas given satisfaction to the millions of well-informed familics who have used {t for many years past. To get its beneficial effects, always buy the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co, only, ——_—___—___—__——. mT OUUUU TT TT CT re ered ~4aess Wreck Caused by Black Hand Bomb in East Thirteenth Street House ‘Third Body to Mi Raine, | Workmen clearing away the ruins of the Manhatian Shoddy mili, Bagle | atres ireenpoint, which wae destroyed | by fir Dec. 16, to-day found another yoking three #0 far dim | covered, It was belleved that the two bodies taken from the rulns yexterdal vere those of the only persons who had been burned to death, but to-day's dis covery leads to the bellef that there may be m ithe, ‘The employees who were permitted to sleep in the mill were In the habit of giving refuge to home- leas persons, and \t la thought that the third victim was one of these. WO, S24 ESTs Coat Sale $22 Caracul Coats $20 Kersey Coats $18 Mixture Coals Now Reduced to $ a 'To-Morrow, Friday, and Saturday The assortment is alive with interesting models of every size and description. Even caraculs are here for your choosing, and stunning black kerseys as well. Many trimmed, all magnificently tailored. Also sturdy mixtures for hard mid-winter wear, to- morrow, $8.75. Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES 1446 West Ath Street 460 and 462 Fulton Street '? 645-651 Broad Street New York Brooslyn Newark, N. J. saaenan Aan Aae Oanearnsene oeeeese: He eesee Money Cheerfully Refunded on ail Unsatisiactory Purchases John MinderéSon HUDSON TERMINAL MARKET Hudson Terminal Bidg., Fulton St. Entrance Phone 4842-4843 Cortlandt We Cook Your Order Free of Charge Fancy Creamery Butter seeeee 840 Ib, Smoked Hams ( Roasted Virginia style) P .18¢ Ib. Smoked Tongues (Boiled if desired). .... ...18¢ Ib, Legs of Spring Lamb ( Roasted if desired) ......18¢ Ib. Phila. Roasting Chickens (Roasted and Stuffed) 22¢ Ib, Long Is!and Ducks (Roasted and Stuffed)... . .22¢ Ib. Maryland Dry Pick Turkeys (Roasted and . .25e Ib, _ Stuffed) ee crsey Fresh Hams (Roasted if desired) .. ..18¢ Ib. PROVO VO VITTD VOT IFTDOTTVIDMOITT DIDS IIIT IST FISTS: \

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