The evening world. Newspaper, June 21, 1911, Page 3

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Bra enei tee prenrsatn tenet Vihar snqertimnn sone names eg ae pte SEAMEN'SSTRIKE.| NOTYET SETTLED, ~—\ SAYUNONIEN Ward and Porto Rico Lines| » Fail to Agree to Peace \ Agreement. | Although the conference between the! representatives of the Seamen's Unton and thone of the coastwise steamship lines last night ended !n an agreement satisfactory to the men, officers of the International Seamen's Unton deciared | to-day that peace was not yet assured, Representatives of the Ward Line and the Porto Rico Line were not present. Unless these two lines also subscribe to last night's agreement within forty- eight hours the strike will be renewed. Representatives of the Mallory, Old | id | that they knew that the Ward Line and |the play, “The I Dominion, Clyde and Morgar net the Porto Rico Line w agreement and were not opposed to It. “Mhen jet them say so, in writing,” retorted E. H. Frazler, secretary of the | Satlore’ Union. | UNION AND NON-UNION MEN} CLASH ON THE ANTILLES. | Im consequence of the peace agre! ment, the Antilles of the Morgan line sailed to-day at - oon for New Orleans with over @ hundred passengers and | chook-a-blook with freight. For « time sailing seemed likely to be de- ferred. General Manager Junger had signed up twenty-five non-union men before the strike was called off. The union crew, going aboard, refused to! work with them. There was @ three- cormered wrangle between the union seamen and firemen, the non-union men, who were disposed to insist that the company stand by {ta contract. It ended by the ordering off the boat of the twehty-five non-union men, who wei told to report at the offices of the company. Many union men were about the pier watching the progress of events, and they made for every non-union man who was not near a policeman. There were a score of un- equal battles, and when the non-union substitutes reached fhe offices of the line they were a sorry collection, Hardly one of them was without mar! the conflict, They were paid as for the completed voyage of the ship and discharged. | The were mighty few union satlors at the union headquarters at No. West street hen the news of victory! arrived. There had been a hundred or| more of them there eariler In the night. AM of them were in belligerent mood. Few expected to win. They had heated discussions among themselves and at about 11 o'clock a general free fight started. Policeman Moloney of the Chark etreet ation heard the noise and 4 ed into the hail. POLICEMAN FIRES OVER CROwD| IN FIGHT WITH SAILORS. | He was apparently greeted as @ co: mon enemy ana ‘in a moment wi baeked to th |. fighting for his life. He got out h shots into the gave way enough for him to get out to a telephone. He called the reserves, who cleared the place out and stood guard for the rest of the sesston. i The concessions made by the steam- | ship lines in the agreement include substantial increases In wages, so that seamen and firemen will get from $0 to #0 a month, walters $22.0 a month, cooks from $60 to $8 a month and th men will be paid 60 cents a day for a eal allowance while ashore. They hal n wetting 50 cents a day and asked for 7% cents a ed LINER ST. PAUL SAILS UNDER POLICE GUARD LONDON, J The American line steamer § b tained of seamen, got guarded by poll HUSBAND'S PLEA SAVES HIM FROM ALIMONY cLUB Couldn’t Afford Larger Apart- ment Wife Wanted and She Left Him. Louls Vogel pre sdvocate of his ¢ Joe Page in the Sup toat Re escaped at rights Jatl as a member xb + | “Yes, unfortunately, but these women | Vogel was brought into court by hia | e. The engagement period '8 | are of no Aner grado than the bachelor | wite, FL because he had to|the tdeal tlme™to discover fully your | who prefers to live in single luxury to pay up $00 !n accrued alimony, Mra. | future husband's resources and to talk wedded economy. There are men and| Vogel wanted the brawny butcher jailed |over the financial aspects of the future women both who prefer single ease to | or his neglect. 'home. It would be better to br an wedded strenuousness But don't lot us ‘The alimony swe ont of a sult {engagement 1f a man seems unreason- Put this e of woman on a pedestal for separation filed by Mrs, Vogel mi d abide by the ;many essays, is a champion cutter of | 400 @seert that the woman wit a |should be perfect co-operation and mu- to” |tual trust—-it these do not exists tt can. | |not be a happy marriage, ed such an eloquent | » dus: | art to-day | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE Marriage Is the Best Paid Profession 24, i611. SALVATION NAVY For American Woman, Says Mrs. Meyer\| GETSSEND-OfF Present Day Women’ Clubs Are sen s| First Cruiser of Salvation Navy, Her Crew, and Commander Booth Members Shallow, Not Deep, Says Playwright | and Essayist. , If a Wife’s Pocketbook Is Empty, the Chances) Are It Is All Her Own) Fault. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. ‘What is a wife's just share of the family income? | Do the joye of wifehood ana | motherhood compensate for finan- | cial dependence? | Ie the wife's empty pocketbook a | factor in the divorce problem? Mrs. Annie Nathan Meyer, author of inant Set,” and of | | | | | | feminine Gordian knots, Soctologists and Suffragettes may tle the most in-| tricate and puzzling ones, yet Mre. Meyer invariably rises to amite them. ‘Therefore, it was to her that I sub: mitted yesterday the widely discussed | Queries of Mrs. Ela W. Peattie in a! recent article regarding the economia fatus of the modern wife. “The basic difficulty in the whole alt uation t# the woman's Promptly dedlared Mr: not mean to eay that I consider the great majority of American wives in- efficient, “But there is « certain Wype to whom it seems to moe Mrs, Peatti article and many similar articles are meant to appeal—a selfish, lasy, cesentially incapable wom- an, who prides herself on a divine Giscontent with the existing or der of marriage when she ought to ‘be discontented and disgusted with herself ana her incompetence. “The morbid rot that is written by | and about this kind of women makes me utterly weary, She is exalted on |°ase of unhap; & pedestal when she should tre put into | Detter for the primer class of common senso, | 80 defin course, I d EMPTY POCKETBOOK WOMAN'S the numillation of asking for every car- FAULT. fare. Only I do not. belteve the Soy " epeaki: competent and careful wife is often bonged Poa al wiling £°| forced into such an anomalous and un- Pocket- | gignifled position.” book is empty after marriage emptics| ‘Mrs, Peattle suggests that wives marriage tl d to set aside In the | @ wife to recely personal allowance. Of it herself by her own fault. You can-| become economically independent by | not persuade me that the average | entering the ranks of the wage earn- American man {e not gengrous and lov * 1 remarked. ing and, indeed, just eyough to give | irs, Meyer heaved a sigh of desper- hie wife all the money he can afford, | ate patience. Very often he gives her more than he| MARRIED WOMAN’S JOB THE should and works himself to @ nervous HARDEST. breakdown to sat . a denintk -O erarsler aac aa Te “When ts this thing going to end women with the! patent to epend wisely and well the | she cried average man is only too glad to turn P&tudo-ne over that part of the day’s work to young girls, | “The sheer, naked truth is that ‘s probably true that many! the average married womin hae on | women can spend money to greater ad-| her hands » job far more engross- vantage than their husbands. Only| ing, far more developing than any they need not pridp themselves too ex-| she could possibly find outside. | But in many cases it would | ss be conventent and practical | ie not quite the time to pose as allow: | sacrifices to let a man support you! “As tor divorce, the great cause for tis undoubtedly | the increase of that is a lowering of a fixed) pubtic standards, When a woman who | has been divorced for cause can be re- not think she should suffer | ceived everywhere in good soclety—a never countenance then Indeed the door to the divorce It ts another sign of court fs down. the detertoration of our women. “It takes great self-control, a sense of | ltair play and the power both to give married If divorces are made so easy, and no social stigma is connected with | them, the greatest encouragement for and generosity taken | sive way to thelr outbursts of | temper, to their petty causes for die “Really much of this discontent of to- and pseudo-setence | day is another word for lack of char- ‘Less sociology auJ more com-! née will tell us we need, not! Pheepnti .|more laws, but more character.” Pioatsat Bato WIRELESS MAN DODGES “PEN” WITH $2,000 FINE. are doing thelr utmost to ruin our | acter, orbitantly on that conclusion. They| They tell me Zam an enemy to the have the time avd opportunity to do! supporting woman. I am not, thelr buying that 1s absolutely lacking; gne ig worthy of respe: to the average man. He must work, fave man: all day tn the office instead of hunting| are business women. But Z in bargains. So let the women be a little| that she ls an easter job than modest at their own shopping|- woman who stays at home. achtevement: “It isn't pleasanter, an emphatically “4 Fe tashe-oA ; I protest {t isn't more Interesting, at Eee ah carh pao 0) you think) least to. my mind, but it ‘w Infinitely Detween husand and wife?” I inter, | le# difficult to do one definite thing rupted, t supertntend the doing of 4a thousand “When I di his question,” Mrs.| things in « household, And the latter Meyer returned slowly, ‘my friends! jo) {s infinitely more developing for say that being a happily married| brain and body. woman I have no right to speak about| “The ‘broadness’ and the ‘wide inter- the troubles that beset the woman | ests’ of the by iness world are #0 ¢ bund {8 not generous and not | aRgerated ; 0. . talking about the broadening effect of st. But Ido not think one has to be || ; ae master pi oe whose hu u.vorced In order to have ideas on the | (iSite Me e doesn't know what | divorce problem, nor to be the wife of a sing about runkard in order to loathe drunken ‘The home is the broadest, wide- est, deepest inte in the world, “2 think the natural division of and if the clubs are doing anything labor im the household is for the | for women, thoy are making them husband to be the breadwinner and shallow, not deep. the wife to have the purchasing of all the necessaries of the home and | PAY FOR THEM WITH EER OWN CHECKBOOR. “If the income is modest, I sup- | ng orders to God Almighty.’ @ fixed allowance would be | "Suppose we can buy our bread bak, best. But if there is anything r and our clothes made, It takes mo hate it is this talk about giving |cnergy and nerve force to see that the the wife @ salary, or paying her [things are done properly than It did for services rendered, It cheapens | !P thee old days to do them one's self. If the average wife does her full duty Wie whole mAstAl seaMen, by her home and her husband, she will The husband's earnings are earned|fna her time too completely: occupied for the purpose of porting a home, to permit regular work outside the the wife attends to making that home home. Housekeeping, _home-making what It hould be. A sensible man never exacted such a nervous drain on knows that his wife cannot both be a| the mind as it does to-day.” jome-maker and a Wage-earner, There |." for Mrs, Peattie’s other mugges- b women talk hong from morn e shtbs, and po a are holding their business jobs tn pref- jerence to marrying, and do you think their lack of vey after marriage TALK MATTERS OVER DURING |Iends then into the divorce courts ENGAGEMENT. SINGLE EASE VERSUS WEDDED) “A woman should not wait until mar- | STRENUOUSNESS., to establish the right basis of | x admire and respect her, when | Judge Martin Reconsiders in Case personal friends who | of Treasurer of the United | Judge Martin of the Vermont dis- who while sitting tn the Crim- States | Court here on may @ last for defintte hours in an office than tol tniteq W: chub woman to-day !9/ of @ jail sentence a fine of $2,000 has been imposed. who has been tn the Tombs since his conviction | Wilson and other officers of (ne ‘ was vrought t the nal to ie Dominant Sex’| Was discharged f from paying his share o which It cost the de > prose | and | direct ett 1 gold-mounted thrones | © 1 wala, “Do you think women | “But, really, after all, if you are able than to have recourse to the! gomuly Font, Mite Ole motley bee divorce court later from @ lack of co- than @ year ago sis, marriage is the best paid pro- ”, ¥ @ you into my onfi-| operation, jhe whole, for women. pal ate Nd Lgl aiatadl von The engaged man does not often rising from his seat Mrs Vogel and I split up when I toll her I couldn't af- ford to rent a seven artment We had been oecupying six rooms, I « expense and f then brous st “Now, I've been dl arged from place an I'y to pay the alin Your Honor, bu able to provid things for } Justice 1 young couple Rether, sides, When \ Voge failed to satisfac expla the sult aad not been priced ealenday fo trial after iMrs. Vo: is given her saw de nounced t+ » Vowel for contemp: and directed the lawyers to Was silence from both ® cussed question of the finan fio bring the young folks together| ‘his money’ and ‘her money resent (as 1s cominonly sald), hig in- tended showing a senaible and business- like interest !n his money affairs, Mos only too glad to make confl- chose? their wives {f those wives are enough to pay for ther glov ent, sensible women, Of course, if hoes with carfere thrown 4 woman immediately cries that figures bore her or business {8 a nuisance, the = likely to unbosom himself, y, I believe this much dis tal relations nd and wife is a questi@n of SO al dignity pave of SE a woman of dign g the CEYLON TEA matter in & satisfactory way personal Tt ti a questo equation | jist’ as whether ono should forgive ® sband © ot, No ed by AF male an inet your tea problem nh ne / NU aseniinn the Dandy law that the wife ts to run that house- for Iced Tea hold. “[ don't belleve in a forma} division of It seems | Brouw ate, | ‘oatety, pel | Soctety, has changed | 10.000." Ciroutt Court United! applicatton pany for pi papers. BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM, GCLLINS= G Iton and Bridge Streets, Brooklyn. SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARING SALE The entire wearing apparel, consisting of Ladies’ and Misses’ Tailored Suits, Lingerie, and Foulard Dresses, Separate Coats and Skirts, Ladies’ Lingerie and Linen Waists, Children's Coats and Dresses and Trimmed Hats will be offered at a HALF FORMER PRICES This is a rare opportunity to pur- rticles tion of their value, GOSPEL FOR SAILORS. Brouwer Ieaves 92,000 |into the ranks ead marched off up for Promoting It. For promoting the | American seamen, especially in the port ot New York, in his will filed to-day for pro- ves $2,000 to the Seamen's Gos. Gospel among |first voyage. Anthony |11@ their meale aboard, the “Navy” | Charitable bequests of $2,000 each are | service. also made to the National Temperance nclety and the Amerkean Bible Society, while $1,000 ts left to the American Tract | ‘The bulk of the testator’s estate in| ntenced | aivided between his two son ‘ of the | ‘Theophilus legraph Company, to a year’s ‘mprisonment in the Pentten. ary on Blackwell's Island, and to his share of the costs of the prosecution | Ms estate for misuse of the mails, | the Judgmnent in that oase, and in Iteu Provision {#| also made for his daughter Bertha, Mr. Brouwer died on June 15 at No, 820 St. Nicholas avenue. f “upwards of FIGHT OVER DIVIDEND SUIT. Judge Lacombe of the United Sta! this afterngon rmission to file a oross in the action brought by the Twen- ird street ‘compel the payment of pri y he | terest of a note for $400, Diboll| As the application w: $50,000 | Twenty- Judge Lacombe reserved lawyers to file additional hird § ed the Silk $35Pongee, ON FIRST TRIP First Cruiser Goes Into Commi on Off the | Battery. Tn the presence of about 2000 In ested and, for the most part, reve spectators the Salvation Army forces of | the kreater city to-day at the # dedicated the firet cruiser of the | Salvation Navy—a trim thirty-five foot | motor boat | Ifeaded by thetr commander, M ‘Rooth, and marching their national staff band, and we the mum ft he 400 men nen of the local brigades, in em and with flags fying, marched to the sea wail at 11% and took places aly the little basin along | side the Har 6. Just as they ar- rived t wale y boat ne steam | ing around the tip of Manhattan Island from her anchorage at the foot of Firth | street, et River. The little craft was a picture of glia jtening white paint, polished brasswork and streaming bunting. She bore the name of her original owner-Jerry Mo- Auley, late founder and head of eo |Jerry MoAuley Misston. About her sheer atrake In gold letters ran the le- kend “The Wages of Sin Ie Death but the Gift of God Is Eternal TAfe" Bhe made #0 brave & show that Salvationiats and on-lookers alike joined tn a wele < cheer. | She docked nandtly, and then her |remular crew, in apotiess white unt- {forma, came ashore ant saluted. Tho | akipper, Major M. A. Mrickson, t# him- | Jacif an ald deap water eatlor, ila | | pretey little wife, Mra. Etta Irickson, |e the purser, H. H. Newty te the «n-| gineer who will run the twenty horas | power motor, while Ole Haveraon, also @n ex-able seaman, te the deck hand. | MI88 BOOTH OUTLINES PUR-| POSES OF NEW NAVY. After a prayer, a song and a hymn by the band, Col, McIntyre and Mra. Adjt. | Whitmore made short talks, Bradford | Lee Gilbert, an architect, who married | the widow of Jerry McAuley and who | sold the launch to the Army, formally turned ft over. The address of accept ance and deffication by Misa Hooth | followed. She outlined the purposes to | which it would be put, saying that the Salvation Army, the church of the poor {and friendiess, now proposed to carry {ite work of social and spiritual suocor to the people of the waters—the enilors, the longwhoremen, the ship's crews and 1 those who make their living and their home upon the seas and rivera. Then there was @ doxology and ‘benediction and the Galvationists fell town, leaving Major Erickson and his lcrew to get thetr stp in trim for the Living in the Mttle catine arn ocook- | will cruise through all the waters about l¢his port. holding datly and nightly sor- |vices on ship and shore. Perth Amboy |to-night 1s to be the scene of the first TALCOX: TALCUM POWDER fev: All Skin Irritations To prove this we have published test!- ‘monials from Physicians and Graduate Nurses tifel and Healthful shin At the usual cost of Talcum Powder Write for free sample, ORMONT CHEMICAL CO. Dept. 10 4. Y, City $9 Lingerie Dresses........ 3-90 $18 Lingerie Dresses. $25 Lingerie Dresses. ....... 12.75 $5 Wash Dresses .......... 2.95 real values; $10 Wash Dresses ... $15 Wash Dre: $35 Cloth Tailored Suits...15.00 $15 Linen Tailored Suits $4 English Rep Skirts...., 1.95 vertised prices $3 Girls’ Wash Dresses..., 1.50 $12 Foulard Dresses........ 0.75 $3 Lingerie Waists........ 1.65 $3.75 Lingerie \\ aists Aner 2.00 8.75 atinLinedCoats 15.00 Rothschild & Company, makers of the MEISTER PIANO, have never at any time tolerated the use of any plan because the number of way outnumber the others a milli time payment plan has been developed up to the present ten- ncy of thought and ia a tremendous help to those people whe want the refining influence of a piane in their homes, ‘To prove he merit of the MEISTER—its splendid and de- tailed qualities of construction, as well as its mellow tone, we devised the plan of sending the instrument to your home en This was to settle all doubts in your to the intrinsic value of the piano. The plan carries ration because if the instrument doesn't pbb ae or short of our claims in your estimation, why we send for it pay the cartage back to our place of business. no plan in the world so clean, so straight-forward: and desirable as ours, and if you have any doubt ‘aa the ject, just try it and see. NO CASH PAYMENT DOWN-—NO INTEREST—NO EXTRAS PAYMENTS AS LOW AS $1 A WEEK PIANO STOOL AND SCARF FREE Rothschiid's Ten Year Guarantee With Each Insirement You may choose from the eight different styles of MEISTER and we will the instrument to you for a month free of thiriy days’ Prices from $175 to $350 No Prizes, Puzzle Schemes or Club Plans é i Pianos of Other Well-known Makes, $75 and Upwards : We Pay the Freight)No Master Where You Live THE MEISTER PIANO:CO. (Rothschild & Co., Sole Owners, Chicago, , Lil.) Eastern Branch, New York City Clarendon Bldg., S. E. Cor. 18th St. & 4th Ave, Tel. Stuyvesant 353-354, TAKE ELEVATOR TO TENTH FLOOR | Saturday (until 10 P. M.) is POSITIVELY, the last of Our Remarkaljle Long-Time Credit Offer vou jae Sa eee tee ew York) ie Pick and | iim Up oeryetert WITHO Complete $15 Bed Outfits, like design, fine-white ‘xtension Tables, in enulne golden oak, heavy ring-fluted pik shaped legs, 42 In. top; com- nlete with casters and 3 extraj, eaves; like design; ONY. .meeees> Open This Sat. Evening. August Store Will Close Saturdays at 6 P. 6.75 For Furniture 8.90 | We Furnish Homes Complete | aeeet Se | —Cash or Credit | You get at Fennell’s two stores | rely absolutely upon their intrinsic merit. real, solid, genuine, | guaranteed ; vive you satisfaction as long as vou live; you get furniture that $8 ..0...04-, 8.75 wears, lasts, satisfies, pleases. Rellabie Furniture —Low Prices | Honest, well made, latest styles | ery piece guaranteed. 5.90 gi Quality means everything, get quality at low prices from us, GEO. FENNELL & €0., Bet, 120th & 124st Sts. , dd Av. & 149th St 65-87 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn. 2209 3d A + Bronx Stor No Extra Charge tor It, ata for Dh World may be jaf, 04 Diserict ‘Cities iy ey |e puzzle schemes, clu plans or so-called “‘first commumity” plans in the sale of this exquisite in- strument. Their method of salehas been a straight- forward proposition direct te the home and not ¢! any dealer or agent who be apt to indulge in euch practices, : all cost. Giving CENTCAS —— | it the ion- PIANOS © USED UPRIGHT PIANOS in good order, $75—$90—-$100---$125 ® to % monthly. Square Pianos $10 Up. Send postal for catalogue, WISSNER WAREROOMS: 96 6th Ave,, cor. 16th St., N. ¥. 14TH ST. UPHOLSTERY C8. 28 W. 14th St Phoos 6190 bl ‘COVERS to ordert agian ates poaad © \t b $ i ¥ ‘ite me

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