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TMI | EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MEET HALF WAY ‘TOWED, WILLEVER MEET HALF WAY Irish Bride of British Columbia Lumberman Starts Right, From Brooklyn. SHE’S NO SUFFRAGIST. Woman's “Rights” Seem Hus- band’s “Lefts” to Newly- wed Mrs. Kennedy. This ts the etory of @ bride and a| briderroom who have etarted their| married life correctly. The Rev. Father 'W. T. MoGuire of St. Michael's Church, Fourth avenue and Forty-second street, Brooklyn, says that they have. And he ought to know, for you could not count all the couples ne has united, nor all the subsequent Httle married knots he has straightened out. But even Father McGuirl never before per-| f=-med @ marriage just like this one. The bride was Kathleen M. Conway ef Mayhora, Castlecomer, County Kil- Kenny, Ireland, The bridegroom” ta Patrick J, Kennedy of Fernie, Britten Columbia. Of all places in the world they chose to be married in Brooklyn, But this ts why: Each wanted to come halfway to meet the other. “It did not seem fair to make Mr. Kennedy travel all the way to County Kilkenny,” Mrs, Kennedy explained, af- ter she had become Mrs. Kennedy and | begun her honeymoon at the Hotel St. Denis, “and he would not listen to my ravelling ail the way to British Co- | lumbia, 0 We agreed to meet each other half way. Father McGuiri told us it was @ pretty good rule to follow through all our lives and we rather think it ts, too, “It seems to me—of course I do not know because I have not been in Amer- fea long enough—but it does seem that | the modern woman's rights are all the Tights for her and very few left for her husband. They sound like anything | but equal rights, as they are called, | “To me marriage means a w Jack Spratt could eat no fat, His wife could eat no lean @tory. And if the wife finds she pre- fers the lean afterall, then she should startin and accustom herself to liking the fat anyway, so that her husband | what he prefers. lat sounds like all the rights for husband,” was suggested to Mrs. | nedy Not at all, ehe smiled. “A wife who his chosen a husband always | han the best of it, 10 matter how muc ® Ile promises + and cherish he love in slekness or in hea when her, and If he does it the least she an do tn return is to meet m half wa ) any of the ’ p snderstandings they may hap-! pen to day So, quite plainty, trick J. Ken- nedy very tu on. SUT, he de f ap hia mind at| vad a t notice. F ‘ o, that Me, Kennedy, who| 4 © travel about the w " 4 interests of his lum! " first mot yooth pi Kenn ‘ ness Aterest | Nort 1 for» sas ia do h Pr ‘ ” ic ip his mind, | Me propo: 1 the return | fealner brought him his answer | wee! bd Miss Conwa landed in nd went to the home of her | No, 639 and My thelr GIRL PILOTS AIRSHIP. | Mine Quinby Makes T eo Clroutts of Mincoin After weeks of effort trying to master urt of flying, Miss Harriet Quimby ade three elrcuits of the Mineola fleld to-day and then hetght of about roventy-five f a complete figure | echt, which is the first that has been made by any aviator tn this country Weather conditions were perfect for the trial and when Miss Quimby had made a successful landing, Miss Matilda Moisant, sister of the late John B. Moi- fant, made several good short flights but did not attempt to get high { air, owing to her Mmited expert Miss Molsant is determined to fly and will make longer flights to-morrow in her Molsant monoplane, Bt. Croix Johnstone will attempt to break the world's for endurance fights Hie will start at 60" keep going until he has exhausted forty-two gal- lons of gasoline. hh Avenne, Mrs. Minerva Rowley Siegrist of this ef San Franctsco noon at the Mar- at Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, by the pastor, . Burrell, Only the tin- ly of the bi and pride- givom were present, After a brief wed- ding journey Mr, and Mrs, Ives will re- turn to her home at No, 64 Bast Fifty- eighth street move to San about a year they wil —~— As From the Louisville © “The fellows at ou! of anything to do to Why not?” “Oh, there are “So many objections to very thing.” le. rter-Jonrnal.) club can't time, think | | valuations. | rled does the ideal come into shattering Denis. | # Marriage Most Likely to Be Occurs Aiter Crudities and Extravagen<vs of ) outh Are Outlived—Early Thirties Ideal Age. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What ts the proper age to marry? | “For a woman, thirty-five; for a man, fifty,” Mrs. Thomas J. Vivian,| | President and founder of the National Society of the Daughters of ( fornia, said the other day. “A union between two such people holds the! Greatest prospect of happiness.” I put the vexed question of matrimonial coming-of-age to Mrs. fe) Barker, poet and novelist, nh a ‘The proper time to marry,” emphatically, the one youth are ontlived. The first maturity, the early thirties, is an ideal age for both man and woman.” “But {8 not the romance and the fire of youth lacking?” I objected. A gleam of laughter came into Mrs. Barker's brilliant brown eyes, and her flexible, expressive mouth widened at the corners. LOVE OF YOUNG PERSON DI- RECTED TOWARD SELF. “The love of the young person i@ usually directed toward just one ob- Ject—himself,” she smiled. “And 1 mean herself, too. I frankly admit that | when I was a young girl I was much more interested in my own personality than in that of anybody else. “T am using love here in the sense of the greatest, the most overpowering emotion. With the very young that ts nearly always the searchlight turned In- rd. Of course they have other loves, very charming, ve! very vistonary, Th 4s rosebuds and as perishable. “The young person—I am speaking of both sexes—who thinks himself in love ‘s almost invariably in love with an {deal. ‘That ideal may or may not bear jon whom The young are not skilled to look behind their !maginary conceptions of each other. They can not form true Only after they have mar- conflict with the reality, and then fol- lows the crash. “Don't think, though,” Mrs, Barker Interrupted herself to explain, “that I am opposed to the marriage of young People. I am not. “EZ Wolleve in immediate mar- riage whenever the great love nd it may come at twenty Only it should be truly most loves are so littk uu define this love that ary for the ideal really too complex to be de- fined in a sentence, but it must be love! S80 deep that it will sacrifice even itself ‘or the beloved, and a great deal more besides. It embraces every part of the natu ntal and physical. om It not only dissolves everyihing, but Issues everything, LOVE MUST INCLUDE GIVING AND RECEIVING. Probably the cause of it, in the be-| ginning, Is the human need of gtving and receiving something. Love must Include 1, or it Soon exhausts tteelt And to be povfect It must be mutual and equal, for a one-sided thing never can be perfect. tut you krow the French proverb, eis always one who Kisses and one who turns the cheek,’ 1 reminded Irs not true!” declared Mrs. Barker, The great love which accompanios th ' nappy marriage {9 equal shared and given forth by both lovers.” ‘Even if on tries at the proper psychological moment, do you think the happ is likely to Inst?” why It should not grow « and more wonderful, | u . nf maturity t more complex, T think it is superior to the eof youth. A tencup can only hold hale a pints a larg. rel has so much “his iden that love ts = chase must have been conceived ortginal- ly by the people who never caught anything. Possossion does not de- atroy affection. It ts only because lovers do uot understand tho ua- inevitable rhythm in love as rything olee that they find tt nagatisfactory. HABIT 18 GREATEST ENEMY TO LOVE. at the greatest enemy to habit, { know vit a dut them soo ao to work every morning What foll “A Kise that {s not spontaneous is not only worthless, but is fai more cruel than a blow, for a Jenst a blow has feeling behind it," “Do you think the age of marriage 1 Wepend at all on eeonomte inde t myself to thing epliod with 4 tho ae | mance from the continen a If I loved a hadn't a te the great os “As far modern sc all know the reach « unt The mother of equally able to give boop men 1 a 1 concluded Mra you will know tt t tion Shor 9m recat, ola Marine, tweaty old, of No, itt I Wor Brighton 8. 1. who way shot y ‘ by Benedetto Macri of No, 10% W Third street this city, died tod St. Vincent's Hosplial Ma un er wrest charged with homicide, Happy When This Meeting) | EWELLSDR DOPSUT CAUSED BY CHILD'S. DEBUT ON STAGE Former Actress Had Objected | to Theatrical Career Urged by Singer Husband. Harry 6. Twucta, an attorney, of No. %6 Fulton street, Brooklyn, appeared defore Supreme Court Justice Crane to- day and announced that Mr. and Mrs, Raine Ewell of No. 116 St. Mark's ave- nue had dropped their separation suit and agreed to live toge: be wether In peace and The husband fe a wealthy automob: dealer. Mrs. Letin Ewell was once an actress, but her chier domestic conten- | tlon wan over the aesire of her hus-| band to have their nve-year-old itttle wirl Lots educated for the stage, Mr. Ewell has been an opera singer, and wanted his Iittle girl to have a stage education, believing sne had exceptional talent, After many quarrels the cou: arated. Mr. Ewell sent the nitartes home of hia mother at Atlantic Higi lands and persisted in his desire to have her educated for the When Mra, Ewell read that Lofe had obtained permission from Mayor Gaynor to play! & child's part in “Madame Butterfly” she started separation proceedings and obtained @ writ of habeas corpus, In Jone of her affidavits Mre. Ewell aald: | "I had nothing against the stage and | stage people, but I thought it a bad| place for a young child, Children go| Into those dressing rooms, young and |notural, beautiful in their appearance and obtidishness, but they never reinaia | that way, become old before their time.” The case was before Justice Cra: July 16, The Court then advised Law- yer Lucia to attempt to effect a re oneiiation, When the lawyer @ nounced to-day that he had suocecded | Justice Crane conrratulated him and sald he wished there were more law- | vers ike him. sc cicllipletinitinn BOY’S BODY IS FOUND. | 'Tenter Rockaway From Home on Monday, jechoed this exc! Proper Time to Marry Is When Love Comes, Whether It Is at the Age of 20 Years or 50 Should Wed Immediately When You Meet the One Man! or Woman Without Whom You Cannot Lwe, Says | Mrs. Barker, Poet and Novelist. JULY RECIPROCITY BILL SIGNED BY TAFT; NOTABLES PRESENT | Final Chapter in Congressional Part in Canadian Treaty Concluded. WASHINGTON, July %—The final chapter in Uncle Sam's part in the Canadian reciprocity agreement was concluded at 8.12 o'clock this afternoon when President Taft formally aligned the engrossed copy of the measure, to which Vice-President Sherman and Speaker Clark had attached their names earlier in the day. Secretary Knox and several other high officials of the Government witnessed the signing of the document by the President. “There, it's dont aid the President, y of State Knox fon, Barly in the day President Taft pur- chased a gold-mounted fountain pen, It was with this that he ed tho a ment, calling Senator Penrose, Repu of Ponnaylvania, to his non he finished his sanature the pen to Penrose, asserting t thi Pennaylvanta Senator doserved great) Dinappeared croait for his work in pushing the agree- | wite, who was the only woman aboard ‘ment through the Senate, Prosent when the measure waa siened ‘The body of ten-year-old Henry wore: Secretaries Knox and Nagel, Nowak, who disappeared Monday after- Aenator Penrose and Representative was found this afternoon by Littleton, Democrat, of New York, 'y Meyer fr. nnd John Olsen float- Ray off Fifth avenue, Death was caused by Young Nowak, whose par- live tn Tent City, Rockaway, ase to the ratiroad sta- | ents Jcarrted a sult « |tlon for a netghbor Monday afternoon, | When he did not return that tlhe tt in feared he had been kidnapped, s bathing mult under It In supposed 4 und on his a swim | MWten in a spot near where the body sas found, aie OLD BALL PLAYER DIES. Ridelite Played WIth the Athletes | Many Vears Ago, | ocran cry, . duly %.Joun ¥ jae fo of ton, Nv da a poult Nod yelay 0 ating Ma k sud rivery Many KOM, arte the. func “ yeroft of Bloomfeld, N. Ju] ite was a broth aw in the Post-Otflce, te danger-| taison andy at hie home with blood pot nuren end pe ' ‘ng. The young man had @ boll on hie 1 Powt mate 1 t left hand end he opened tt with @ pin, | yeure ——— JOHN wer of Tirict WANTED IN READING, PA. Man Arrented Here Charged With Stealing Two Autos, Witttam Marna, nocording te the polle thews, was arrested (hl ‘Phird avenue and One Morty-ninth street by Detective Tlerney upon the eomplaint of the polles of Reading and P charged with valued at $10,000, whone correct name, w, te Mat. fternoon at paling two When taken before Magistrate Mor-| man in Morrisiana Court he ¢ the charge and was remonded to the Tom to awalt extradition, ‘The polles # that the f rere noted ae a strike: breaker, Robert Miller Dead, CHAUTAUQUA, N O, Miller, Homt » Rise, died here mn J. HOGA Nit ros, Optical Dept. for 20 Years Removed to His New Store, 15 W. 23d St. (5th Av. Bid.) ypoenr : ee GEyegtasses& Spectacies«*™ on ‘ipo ty: = PDOs be COR exe nd get yo aves) WHOLESALS Bring your Broken Lenser to us—ve replace t Voctorsierc every day, includin, vaturday, iromsA.M.106.30P. SN RAVES BEEN WITH WE Io VOB. Personal | “ Attention, | anulng to mine byes, inte thi OPTICAL sor WiTHOUT CHARGE ir eye aa without prese fon and save you 50° fon, aa he blotted | Hundred and} totown, Pa, He ta] automobiles | MOTOR BOAT RACER ~ SNAPSHOT Ill IS | MAISSING AT SEA Fears for the Safety of Water Flyer in Run From New York to Halifax. HALIFAX, N. 6. July %—Up to a late hour to-day nothing had been seen of the motorboat Snapshot III, one of the Contestants in the Reotprocity race of 658 miles from New York to this harbor, and some fear is expressed for the safety of her ori Two of the other boats finished early yesterday and word was received that test noar Block Island, No word has been received regarding | Broadway line in Manhatta: the third had dropped out of the eon- | 96, 1911, SERVICE BOARD LETS A CONTRACT FOR NEW ENUM President Mitchel Sails for! Europe Satisfied With the Situation, Tha Public Service Commission to-day | t awarded to the Motropolitan le ing Company the miract to the Afth section of the Mroadway and Lexington avenue suoway. This tion extends from Fourteenth street and ¢ to Lexington avenue and nth street. The contracting company's bid was $2,419,127.40, | ‘The Board of Estimate will approve the award to-morrow at the remutar | meeting. Before eating to-day for a two-| months’ tour of Burope President Mit-| ohel of the Board of Aldermen talked for publication on the subway altuna tion and other muntotpal subjects Ido not know that anything need be sald except that wo have taken ac Hon Which Is really @ dofintte settle. ment of Mitchel begin within the next ten days upon) the five sections let by the Board of| Estimate, Further construction work/| should and will go on just as quickly as the Public Service Commiaston can the plans and specifications Contract- Continuing posed charter changes President Mit- che! said regarding the provision giving & seat in the Board of Estimate to the chairman of the Aldermanic Finan his remarks on the pro- Committee: “I want to say that whi T have tho hii regard for Alderman Frank Dow!ing and would be giad to ait on any board with him, I belleve that to place a chairman of the Finance Committee as @ member of the Board of Datimate would be violative of the prin- of our city government and would estructive of the balance of Drovides for In the present nt link in the proposed new | subway system was mado evident by hie own announcement to-day. The Unk, not yet legalized, was intended to connect the Fourth avenue subway, Prooklyn, with the B. noction was to be made by der the Kast River, thence tery Park to a point near Bro and Vesey street. Mayor Gayno: no room for doubt that he would ¢lee hig authority under the lnw a: Aisapprove of that important route, President Mitchel before salling for Burope to-day sald that he, ax a mem- der of the Metimate Rourd's Trini Committes, had signed a report fay Ts | the whereabouts of the motor-boat Snap Shot ILI, at the National Yaoht Club, | from whose wharf in Gravesend Bay | the bout departed last Saturday with three other contestants !. the Rect- proolty Race to Hullfax, The Snap Shot TIL. was owned and sailed by J. B. | | Lindemann of thie olty, a wealthy Goaler | |in optiont goods, With him were his any of the racers, and a orew of three men, consisting of Capt. Alfred Street, | Andrew Muakat and Nicholas Crow, None of Mr, and Mra. Lindemann's relatives und friends heard from them loince the race bexan, ‘The boat wae rated about the ns the Caroling and the Eronel, the Jother two entrants, which finished the | race yesterday, the pores the trouble sample, Ormont Chemical Co. ie ENNELLS Furniture Stores Summer Price Reductions | Reduced Prices in Every Dept. ite Te. GEYLON TEA er "i ( if you like in Summer—hot {f you like any time —cither way all ways the Se | The olde: tea--over 122 years of prestige in New York. oth, palat- able, mature, Try it, EWART DISTILLING €O, New York wiih fas Hie’ Gt ‘soauylen fey Dresser Gi; Mahogany LIKE THIS te Mates O Bey i BR. tires 2 Kk DESIGN Extra well made various woods Goiden Oak $7. English Dining Room Chairs Cane. - Leather - 81.00 82.00 Goods Marked In Plain ¢igures ANG Furaish Homes Complete We Cash or Credit GEO. FENNELL & CO. Bet. softy «& 2209 3d Ave., *3:./ bron 34 Ave, & 149th Si. i v sans, He vey dleease, The Forsythe College Sweater, Price $5.00. Special Sale Women’s Linen Suits White, Natural and All Colors 22-24-26 Hundreds of Meister Pianos are now being tried free of charge for thirty-day periods in hundreds of private homes test you may pay for it in small weekly sums as low as $1, every Meister that leaves our factory is accompanied by a ten-year guarantee, signed by Rothschild & C UNDERSTAND cartage to your home in Xue sony and Wrekgt't of points outside NO CASH PAYMENT DOWN-—-NC Interest—No Extras 2 $1 a Week—Fianc Stool and Scarf Free ROTHSCHILD'S TEN-YEAR GUARANTEE WITH EACH INSTRUMENT Payments as Low You may choose from eight ditferent styles of MEL instrument to you for a month free of all cost. Prices from $175 to $350 We Pay the Freight No Matter Where You Live THE MEISTER PIA‘‘0 CO, Rothsehild & Co. EASTERN BRANCH, NEW YORK CITY $ Clarendon Bidg., 5. Tel. Stuyvesant 353-354 vee A PACK OF BEAUTY IS AgOV 14 Mths hick Au Waite Charge pi ot 4 oring trom | Values up to $20.00 Women’s and Misses’ Linen Dresses Value $12.50 Important Waist Sale French Voile and Marquisette Waists white with dainty colored embroidery, Regular Selling Prices $7.50, $9.50, $12.50 John F orsythe West s4th St, ™ on trial, but the trial does not | voluntarily from us, therefore it | places you under no obligations oop Yo Bo pusale schemew no TAKE ELEVATOR TO TENTH FLOOR n Dep wy Look WHO'S HERE! "ELEVENTH AVENUE BILL SIGNED BY GOV. DIX. Measure Calling for Removal of New York Central Tracks Becomes a Law ALNANY, July %—Gov, Diz to-day signed the Walker bill, designed to se- ure the removal of the New York Cen. ad npany’s tracks from of Eleventh avenue in Mane orough jovernor also ned the two bills ator Cullen, emoracing a plan for elaborate improvements to New York City's water front, so that all ocean steamers may [and in New York without dangor, One of the bills pro- | vides for the incorporation of private terminal companies to handle the freight @ the water fronts as between the nipper, the railroad company and the ocean-going freighters. et — The Forsythe Coventry Club Waist, 97.50. $6.75 $7.50 | $3.95 We are not chargi for them; we are not cl rs 4 cost the ge pe purchasers acent. We will do precisely the same thing for you if you will either phone fora Meister or call at our sulesrooms. This 30-day free trial offer is inspired by our '| absolute confidence in the Meister's, sureness of making good, It comes whatsoever in case you use a Meister for 30 days, whether you decide to buy it or not. None but a house with such resources as Rothschild & Company enjoys could afford to put out so many pianos on free tral. Yet no piano should ever be bought and La > until it has had just such a test as we describe! This, we believe, is the cleanest, best, most complete piano proposition rdevised, It makes piano buying ot only easy but safe, even for the most inexperienced, If you decide to keep the Meister after the 30-day And mpany, y deccription. Wepay the ‘TER ond we will bend the Sole Own s, Chicago, IIL) . corner 1th St. & 4th Ave, h he little man-wasp who lashed his way to the si My presidency of Venezuela— Cipriano Castro and who was exiled, kept a dozen foreign offices in fidgets, and, “by running the blockade, is back on his native soil, One of the many big Magazine articles in rite Sls - | Next Sunday's world EE