The evening world. Newspaper, May 1, 1911, Page 3

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f T REFUSES TOKsS HER STAGE LOVER, $0 SHES FIRED Helen M. Scholder Says She Was Engaged as ’Cellist | Only. Utah and Idaho, Which Have Been Won Over by Sut-| fragists, Have Failed to Suppress. Polygamy, South-. | | ern Writer Points Out as a Strong Instance of Her Argument of Futility of Sex’s Franchise. No Electorate Can Exist Which Cannot Enforce Its Own | Laws, Declares Anti-Suffragist,and No Voter Can Claim Maintenance From Another Voter—Woman Could Not Legislate on War and Peace. TAKES CASE TO COURT. Dramatist Edward Locke De- clares That Only a Genu- ine Kiss Would Do, By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “The two basic reasons against woman snffra; in the United States are ) NO electorate has ever existed, or ever can exist, which | cannot enforce its own laws. + Firel for refusing a kiae" might} “feoond, no voter has ever claimed, or ever can claim, mainte- eppropriately designate a little drama, asee from another voter.” to-day before Justice Shell in the Mu- Miss Molly Elijott Seawell, Southern novelist, thus sums up her anti- nicipal Court. Helen M. Scholder, a/ guffffrage argument in an interesting little book, just published by Mac- noted ‘cellist, argued with Arthur! millan, and called “The Ladies’ Battle.” | Hammerstein, Fdwant Locke and! yties well Insist others over a broken contract and a| mal voter m be p b : reer make his way to Nder—winsome protegee of position if necessar | Mrs. J. B. Greenhut, Mrs, Morgenthal|avie to carry out by force the effect | and other patrons of music, who gen-\o¢ his ballot. .~ erously gave her an pportunity to be " M Rely on Force. tutored in Europe—claimed that Ham-| won, tenis Gal. that «he merstein d ocke, produc of "The! m ‘ seaasun' i eed fob ied ieaken ¢| Moral forces ought to supplant mere bontract for #100 a week Lod gry bade teen age ret act, Producers charged that Mise | Beer aallave Bulisemians A dein Fut. yh ef used o ear rr ‘ . ‘ older refused to wear a certain | Ieee oa prevent a hundred women Stage dress, “approximating tinselled ingle ballot. tights,” and that she declined the are |ffom depositing a single ballot. Further, Kissed=actually or “Supposing the ballots of women, | | however, to have been deposited by the | Indulgence of men," continues Misx| John D. Black and Former | dent stage lov she refused to } apparentiy. And as tender em. Seawell, “w en will surely be ca and loving gestures and atti- i ‘f | i ‘ tidee=no, © hundred times no, even |UBon to ‘or men upon sud-| Mrs, Warren Beckwith Avoid with p ‘onsent. Actual, b jects of which no woman has ever| , font had, or ever can have, any practical “Fs > Nea om the lips of cxnerience. Women could not, with uss and Feathers. drama's su of wa peace. No woman ‘ the scene in cou: bbe Lert’ hip- | John D. Black, a son of Gen. John C. The s “t 5: feet nave practical knowledge of ship- | Black bs eo Justice | cing and navigation, of the work of | Black, of the National Civil Service Commission ‘ah and his bride, are spe legislation, therefore, would not prov-|their honeymoon in New York. a nd the laws they Chicago, which Is the hom evised might b ly objectionaMe | without Jetting their friends know any- e very persons they sought to /thing about their plans, and were mar- fit." |ried Fotday night at the Hotel RY! n Miss Seawell takes up the re- iton, where they will‘remain several days, Mrs, Black was Miss Loutse Love, the daughter of Henry M. Love, and Is considered one of the most beautiful lation between voting and maintenance. The two things are incompatible, she| | says, as ts proved by the fact that all paupers are virtually disfrancalsed. Must Lose Other Rights. told her | At the production of the plece In Hartford on Jan. 19 she| Her name as young women in Chicago society. Her » showed) “A wife's maintenance,” she asserts, | first husband was Warren Reckwith, the Court. Each of the produ and| “is her equivalent for a vote. If ehe ac-|tne athlete, from whom she obtained a thelr secretaries. she said, turned a cold| quires a vote she must give up her/divorce and the custody of thelr ohild shoulder | She dec’ ht to maintenance.” | Already, Miss Seawell says, the women in the four suffrage states of Colorado, | Utah, Idaho and Wyoming have been about two months ago. Mr. Heckwith first brought suit on the ground of de- sertion, and his wife retaliated with a suit charging incompatibility. Mr. Beck- red there was no real kiss- at she must a didn’t wear the dress| deprived of enormous property privi-| with's first wife was a daughter of Rob- becnuse Mrs. nmerstein | ees. ert T. Lincoln, and a granddaughter of Leake toM hee it ade her| “Women in the Untted States oceupy! Abraham Lincoln. They were divorced ious, | a far more favored condition thafi tose | in 1907, © agreed on terms," deciared | 4 ay country in the world,” she de-| Mr. Black's firet wife was Margaret Ke woman, “there was nothing | Clares. “But in no country is woman) Potter Black, author of several senaa- said of Riveing and nraves, 1 was | Suifrage so utterly unworkable as under | tional novels and daughter of Orrin W. engaged as ‘cellist--nothing more. And|the American system of government. | Potter, the steel millionaire. She waa where, may I meekly inquire, does kivs-|'TH€re are five cardinal principles of | adjudged incompetent and Mr. Black ob- ‘and embracing come in for a ‘cellist? | Woman suffrage which are in direct) tained a divorce from her a little leas as engaged by reason of my reputa conflict w the five rdinal (prin: | than bt Axed ago. f tion as ‘cell ability to hug | “Pies of the government of the United soe eek said the reason for the wed- : hey tO) RAE ates, ding in New York was his and his bride's and embrace s. 1 did not wan ‘The firat is the suffrage contention |J0Mt desire to avold the “fuss and am not an actress. I was edu Th ers’ that @ marriage in Chicago Then Mr. Hammer- 8 moral righ 4 d have caused. They have leased ially enwaged as the United States >a8/an apartment on ) Lincoln Park Boule- oP four peak: Ing 1s not a moral tahyivard and will be at home there after isa bh hed. my father| But @ privilege. jst 1b. and he a enhut and Mra, Would Be Privileged Class, ' Morgenthal. They were sure it would ond, women vo would inevit- | not injure my career. Again I i a privileged class, their plained about acting and Mr. Hammer-| mere” exemption from military and] stein told me to go ahead and do the| Raval duty making them la best I could and ne few lines were | first fundamental of our present form of govern: re shall oe jong voters, me the shock.” | | no. priviie trivial, Then c hat In a long affidavit . “AUNT DEAD BY GAS AS THEY CALL HER told how he hesitated t the clatin. vat the ing th fe under an etec: | r talking to her less than half c would necessitat the Cou’ my, as in thos sked by stage Kiss would not answer in the » electorate 1s not to find a house in the village, | of Miss Scholde ‘orce its laws. | But there was none to be had, so Mtra,| $16,084,819 PROFIT A YEAR. “Indeed not!” replied the dram A $e Bavernment of thaTTintt Gerry concetved the idea of building the — positively With: Aiea based upon the rule of the a i a house on the grounds, just large enough! More Than One- of Its Sule: owed kite Would nev and the suffragists nave tess| Brooklyn Teacher Was Going tor baby and the nurse is Rak Countries— who aid the iaain 5 aa ce the Nothing could have pleased the F. in wr sountrie eae titene Gan ake pe of women of th : E °F. amateur, never! It's got Blind From Chalk F. V's more than this triumph of a| 35,743 Employee Volks down in front w: tendency of woman suf- a a woman, and the flelds and wooded lands | 1 annual re Tees woube mint ine Inevitably toward soctaliam Dust in Eyes. closed to the foxhunters heretof Pletal \e arts of deceiving the pub’ t » doing everything possivie for z been thrown wide open to them, $101,168, mimic a real kiss, such as the play re-| tne individu signs threatening condign punts. “4 ip quires i eh! Quite imy re ble. sir, She Raps at the Leader le daughters of Mrs, Mills of | t° Heat Fl who dai This Was an ase Miss fer also | Mise Seawell takes a tle filig at} ) N. Y., visiting the home of] *? '° % : 18 p pie Gene Lae ae lination, What could y the personnel of the suffrage body |their grandmother, Mrs, Elizabeth Ter- Soe > ere . s more than sarood with, Sin “There Is a large class” she says, | seit, at No, 4 sterling Pace, Brooklyn, | THIS COP GOT SQUARE DEAL. t,t hits apt ts ttunion arose & y to-day and ran downstairs y a 3 serious thra dia Ge of Homes to . Ht . iad 18 © seriou anthropy for] io awaken thelr aunt, Bossto Terrell, | S°*4* Benge 19 Sew profit sharing dis wren ae ete mach | whose room was in the rear of the par- Magintrate Reynolds. ee ae ee cA ty PIE ground floor, They pounded] Among the floral greeting The amount expended during of course] on the door but got no response. Maplirais. Lo 3h Hevncita ; bed a4 p aa Bb me up, sleopy head!’ shouted the ben ty Police Comminsioner, f . und pe is Wa ree! yes PT ttle ones. ting him at Adams street 4 uy aan The noise they made attracted the ry noklyn, on his first appearance a 1 promi | attention of another t, Lillian Ter-|the bench to-day was a great t Great Problems of Some of the };ai1, wino Joined them. She detected the |roves with thin atrange device Ay A Bre CVORCED | odor of gas an mpting to look into| “From a Policeman Who Got a Square h ° rer the room of her sister through the key | Deal scat Life Solved: [Wan marate nae naa mont tam ra! i Loca ete ta words vere eely pone ant fe cay aya wee , Mi N88 | paper. Alarmed, she finally broke a no name was attached prt een tried according to Miss sit all the \ i : ! re ground glass pane! and despite a rush ¢ h No, 1—Where to Work: |resiurios. "Sow" Zoutsna, “where! round aiase pene! ana dante 6 rush | with var. The World printed 12,208 }”' aii the world, | Unlocked the door from the ineide and |} ‘ ae ; 4 “Help Wanted” Ads. Last rado h ed entered t Hie : a er Py D gaveln were presented ! ‘ oO be it was on e floor. |to him to-day ne wa mn his for ‘ Week--9,518 More than the |! 8 ntry. It has Two gas jets were open. The cracks} mer associates at Headquarters and the fe Herald. lp al affairs in F of the dours and windows had been | was from Inspector James EB. D! Beca " 1 aye te eat sealed with strips of newspaper, Dr.) lon pla who was sum’ No. 2—Where to Live: |} had been dead 6,659 Word “To Let” Ads. aie Last Week—3,182 More than | woren wal ¢ ty five ye are the Herald. eae pdtv the Girls’ High School and lived at the | the most important factors ET eae ese elle Sterling place address with her mother and sisters, About two years ago her sight begun to fall and she consulted an ccullst, who said her eyes had been potsoned by mi- nute particles of chalk from her black~ are No, 3—How to Make Money: '«' ot In the World, Last Week, | 1,442 “Business Opportuity” fra 3 | Supererogatory Sympathy, poards. She had to take @ jong rest at Ads. were published—More | mererene lore Tene iene uate than DOUBLE the 633 in 8 there @ siye coming ON} “Upon her return to work Miss Terreil n required to wear b spectacies: the Herald. No, dear; this one tn perfectly well. Recently aie found that she was begin \Tr aympathizes with the sore eye, that’s |ccming blind, Qculists & G h F jan encouragement, Sle Knowing T ese acts | “Well.” grumbled little boy, ap- lent, and although she ‘ plying his handkere’ 1 don't mind |of suicide her sister wate, # Can You Hesitate ? 2 its sympathiain’, but it doean't need tol iy," Mrs. Terrell, who Jw an invalld, | | weep over it" Prostrated over the tragedy, HE EVENING WORLD, ‘States Where Woinch Vote Most Corrupt MONDAY, MAY MOLLY ELLIOT SEAWELL. MRS.GERRY'SBABY POLICE SEEKING LIFTS THE BAN OF | MISSING GIRLS; EXCLUSIVE GLUB) MANS GONE, 100 Mother Overcomes Rule! One Wie GK She Has Married Against Children and Builds and Will Take Good House on Grounds for Infant. Care of Sister. THE PLAINS, Va, May 1—A ittle| The police are to-day looking for Her husband followed her, He was house, erected over night on the grounds! William ©. twenty-three y +] Or SO, Millen BURGEALRY CHS SrUORe ae isi i of the Orange County Hunt Club, brings|and a waite No. 1505 Pacific street, ' been, and seems to Beye | Parasols .and Parisian Novelties Fauauler County, as they ride by tha | seventeen-y Chriatina Shepp and Tried to Leap Of | ‘ exclusive property of half @ dozen|her fifteen-year-old sister, Bessie, of poyoman Kroenbitter: had | x olleman Kroenbitter had gone up Northern millionaires. It ts the visiple| the same address. through th ining house by this J A FEW OF THE VALUES OFFERED evidence that the old rule, “No babies| The mother told the police the older time and reached the roof just. as 65 Trotteur, Auto and | allowed," has been abrogated, and that | !‘l was clerk in an inn at One Hundred! Dugan landed on it. Mrs. Dugan had | [| $ 50: @ tiny mite, scion of the house of Gerry, |4Md Pifty-tfth atrest and Amsterdam been discovered in the atrshatt, and | ff Tra elling Hats bs ‘i {a snuggied within, and made weleom,|*¥enue last February white Bell was raw that his wife had || Former Prices working th Rell visited Christina ame a maniac where heretofore no child was permitted to enter. The parents of the baby are Mr. and firs. Robert Livingston Gerry several times at and when William & moved to Brooklyn Bronx, pr Bell & and rented a father, 4 job in of New that borous yom tn the ‘ork, Newport and Arden, and the in-| the She . tant hus been accorded a privilece de-| Last Thursday Bell and Mrs epp nied to the BE, H. Harriman, August | quarrelied, and Satu packed up Belmont and R, J. Townsend children, |and left. Ina notwithstanding that their fathers wero | nearby dru store, di’ home at organizers of the club, But Robert Liv-| 1 ‘and haven't been seen since. A ingston Gerry refused to come to the/letter was received from Christina say club without his wife, who was Miss/ing, “1 was married to him yesterday Cornelia Harriman, and Mrs, ¢ up the State” Sh fused to come without her ba Mr.|take better care of Bessie Townsend, who succeeded Mr. Harriman | parents could. as president, said no when the baby's| ——— admission was broached, and Gerry tried | HARVESTER TRUST MAKES The Label Is Copied; the Tea Is Inimitable. White Kose, CEYLON TEA stent thi t-veal ‘WOMAN IN PANE: In World, Says Novelist Molly Seawell \] HARLEM BLAZE | 5A, EC INSTI 1, 1911. nor was being hel. A large crowd watched the men as they handed the woman over the four feet of space from Mrs, Dugan wil die. cnansenenadinncmnae CONGRESS OF MOTHERS. ia Congress of Mothers will be under ti! direction of the Religious Educatio# Association, The speakers will bet her window to the roof. Cunningham! sire @amuel C. Barnes of New Yeek, |Sete Manning then passed the children] wang. Church and the Welfare oft Tt is said at Proshytortan Hospital that} the Immigrant Child." “The children Castle,” Walter M. Wood of the Pailee detphia YM. C. A., and the Rev, Gage ton H, Ranck of Baltimore ‘congress conducted memortal see! | FALLS SIX STORIES, é) until help es yesterday James He Mot ing Secretary, and Murphy, National Vic years rs tn Programme for To-Day" Re it jenaion to memory of Mrs, th jd in Washington ‘ON, May 1 to-day's #ession WASHIN gramme The of pro- the for To-morrow, Tuesday WF > $20, $22 & $25 Smart Costumes : ‘Now Reduced to oy | 3 greatly reduced price it will Tries to og to Adjoining Roof but Plunges Down an Airshaft. SOME DARING RESCUES. | George Cunnmgham and Tim- othy Manning, Tenants of Building, Do Gallant Work. Att! | One woman was mortatly hurt and * Ja fre panic of exciting proportions be useless to attempt to hold this swept through the alx-story apartment wonderful assortment of Tailored ouse at No. t6o¢ Third avven Costumes together after to-morrow. when houre ( Therefore, promptness alone will a blaze in some rubbielt filled the « morning enable you to procure one Py i eral porilling rece { Louie inser: gf Black Satins—Serges— : (ire Suntan Renn TC omar eaEReS ite French Novelties and Areproof, in the middie of the bulld- You are sure to find yours'ze andthe color 7 Ing. The doors of the @n=ft open into and material you like best; whereas any of as private hallways leading to the rear | the models will please you y to a pod ge ha In a heap of rud-| describe. Sufficient to say the Tailor. " bish, Before they were disc mades possess all the dash and beauty of ws had gone up the dumbwaiter shaft and line of the Custom-made. Whereasthe ad t % of the shart burned off, Ay trimmed costumes are as tasteful and a The nerwate, Heat slaed has escapes on | refined as though designed to your order. ~ | born the front 1 rear of the house. | 1d Policeman ‘Kroenbitter, who aw the | Alterations FREE ea | ane sa - plied lir il-ah ut Bos SALE AT ALL THREF STORES 1 there was a panic fre top to bottom: Might Have Gone Out Safely | : | M Eaward Dugan lived tn three husband heard the cries of “Fire fi and rushed first into the‘kitchen, It i excape and walked to the ground ae 450 and 462 Fulton Street — Brooklyn easily as wa downstairs, but both 645-651 Broad Street—Newark, N. J. lost their Is. Instead they went SEEN Cecrtr linto another room in which there ta a y™ ae a weF ‘window opening partly over the air- ~ ——— shaft and partly over the roof of the mt adjoining building, », 1652, four feet | below. As she stood poised on the lintel she! les but to drop four feet to the other | | Poot. But the smoke had gained the! ‘airshaft and was so dense she could not (see the edge of the roof, nor could sh Diaisen Bernard, Sait ie'tiaren'ts | ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE | | the wires and she fell fifty feet down the airshaft, where she was found un+ | conscious a short time later, FRENCH HATS Sasskeaee $20.00 to $28.00 | Imported Semi-Dress and Street Hats | Former Prices $25.00 to $35.00 He str roof and man had «1 to got to the p off, and of the oles Hoe was removed in a straightiacket! || Bapesee Defcon 8sorese et teeetete through vement in front of last rites of the Tralee aot LIKiceANae ates $40.00 to $125.00 RESIS See ee en HReeliey All French Parasols, Scarfe, Boas and BRInEE) AGH Sun Rta ke Gee Novelties at Prices Greatly Below Cost. * PE atetea ine watiean ie ele [7 ‘WEST 31st ST., Just off Fifth Ave. 7 } ————— “t of his Windows James Towed, and when he Kot to the edge of “Wear La Grecque and Have a Better Figure.” Rescuc of Mrs, O'Connor. a G Manning, tenants of the house, rushed “1 nto the O'Connor apartments Aid seized | TAILORED UNDERWEAR a on whieh rad xtont and the The Lingerie of a Lady 8 | Shapely garments of finest workmans Fit smoothly to the figure with a f line not to be found in the ordinary undere Come wear, Perte assured both the stout and sler | £ eam is flat-feiled, soft, easily laundered and unstretchable. These gare To-Day | ments are $0 shapely and practical that they appeal irresistibly to every and | woman who sees them, Sold singly or in matched sets ” — See Combination Suits........ $1.50 up “ ” ene Pa Drawers............... ‘ -75 up Vin fas Princess Slips.............. 3.25 up Va uible haby book Van Orden Corset Co., 45 West 34th Street TheTaylor Near Sixth Avenue Norsery SPECIAL OPPORTUNITY NOW We will keep your burniture FREE {ree as tong ays in the country @ you in best condition when Aa 55 PARLOR SUIVeN EAGLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK Always Uniform in Composition and Quality Has No Equal For Infant Feeding Suir C OVERS 50 a

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