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Snafiy —- GRABS WOMAN'S THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 29 1911 | Best Laws and Homes Where Women Vote, JOHN KENLON BAGIN OPEN CAR | Says Premier McGowan of New South Wales WINS IN CONTEST AND ND JUMPS OFF «Feminine Ballot Is the She derotvn (lt and Chases Him| Until He Is Stopped by Passer-By. BAG CONTAINED § $433. Man Supposed to Have Seen Her Draw the Money From Bank, Strongest Moral Force in the World,” He De- clares, “and Doesn't Accept ‘Necessary Evil’ in Politics, as Men Often Do.” Mrs. McGowan, Mother of Eight Voters, Two of Them Daughters, Tells of Good Accomplished by Practical Suffragists There in Few Years. Waiting ear on wh ance until the street © and Miss Rose Oppen- 8 Ames street, passeng empty, Guiseppe Z thdf he Isa plumber, bu where he works, mace an attempt to 1 the hand ag tn which Miss Op- elm was carrying $423 wi which to pay off the hands in the shop where n elm of No, Brooklyn, were . who says Joesn’t know ‘she is hookkeeper. x0) © 14 tle manuta aWich street Miss Oppenheim, a pretty girl of twen- the employ of Mrs. B. TL Lage, rat No. 484 Green- morning, as is her custom on Saturdays, she went to the tank, at Spring street and the Bowery, to cash the check which Mrs, Lal ad drawn for the weekly payroll, The money was counted ont to ber fn packages of small bills, whieh she placed In the handbag. Then she hat she dia not see Zolla wien che got on the car, Which was crowded, but it Is believed he Was hanging about when the money was to her, and that he boarded r with h Paesengers dropped H Thome and Broome la was in the car with ve Kame row. ted out Buddeniy and tore ‘the 1 Miss Oppen- jieen Zollu started imp fro’ t him ‘TETS ON “PONIES” to vttalls: eet vith Miss ention of ¢ his hard tir the of man station vad was nm ses fouad on 2UT SUES HUBBY TO GET SUPPORT rooklyn Wife, However, Re- lenis When Her Delayed Mlowidnee Arrives ‘Four Uonor,”* alt? Alexander Doty of No, Si Sands street, Brooklyn, when urvaigned before Magistrate Dooley the Court of Domestic Relations to-day on a cha { non-support, “some women by a awful nerve But my fe has ‘em all beaten when she puts charge against me. I give her $15 every week and ho goes and vets tt on | the ponigs, and then, just because she almost always loses, she cones into eourt prefers charges against me." Given a chance to explain, Mrs, El abeth Doty told the Court that when She secured a warrant for Doty yester- | day he ‘was two days late with the} weekly fifteen, and she thought he had | slipped one over on her. Last night, however, he came through with the big livide, she sald, and she didn’t want to press the charge. “What about these horse racing bets of yours?" asked the Court “Well, your honor, you see fifteen a week isn't enough to make a woman contented and I have been in the habit of giving some of the money cousin to place on the ponies, now and then I make @ good winning and buy some new ¢ es. The rest of the tine I Jose, but I manage to get along on eight or ten a week just co well as IT could on fifteen.” The court couldn't see the woman's to a Bevery argument and after a severe lecture on the evils of horse betting made Mra, Doty promise to give up the habit nd to try to be contented on the week- stipend that .he faithful Doty turns | ° o her, Doty works in a sugar re- | and, he explained, the reason this week's instalment was late was | because his pay had been delayed two aa —_———_—__- | $9,000,000 WATER RENTS. | City's Booke Show From That Source in History, When the books in the Water} Register’s offices in the various boroughs | are closed Monday afternoon they wil! show one of the largest collections of | water revenue for the elty otal will be nearly $9,900,000, » divide}, approximately, rgeest Revenue This among the various boroughs as follows: Man- hattan, $5,100,000; the Bronx, $80 Brooklyn, $2,900,000; Queens, uchmond, $1 ne total re\ ops year be will $4£1000,000, but a large number of peo| approximat n paying thelr unless t Haye refrained fr and will be penal t money in before the close of busi- Monday, a - > a i | bers | the gentle, gra: By N T= more ates of suffrage in New York to-day than there were yvester- day morning. They are James 8 T. McGowan, Premier of New South Wales, on his way home from the coronation, and Mrs. McGowan, mother of eight two daughters and six sons, and a voter, For women have been voting in New South Wales for mem- of Parliament for the last ten years—ever since the Federated Aus- tralian Parliament became a fact. Be- fore the federation women voted some States and were not enfranchised In others, But Mrs. McGowan has cast her ballot for the Labor didate for the past three, years, and at the moat recent election’ her vote was simplified hy the fact that she cast it for her own husband, She 1s ® spare tittle woman with the jook of care and competency that comes to the mother of eight children. Her iusband began life as a railroad work- man and now, though the head of the slal life of New South Wa! ‘est could not accuse either the Pre- mier or his wife of putting on ‘airs or frills. The Premier belongs to what we con- sider here the old-fashioned type of ia- bor leader, the rough diamond sort. His seas about woman suffrage are as dl- and uncompromising as a ten-word telegram. And if you want the light and’ color of the interesting detall of suffrage in Australasia you get it from haired Mrs, MoGowan, two advo- woman NIXOLA GREELTY* SMITH vote hersei | WOMAN'S INFLUENCE THROUGH BALLOT 13 GOOD. ‘Women have been voting in New South Wales ever since the Federation, | ten years ' the ews ie no doubt that their in- finence has had « marked change upcn our politics, a change for the better in every wi . ‘The perceutage of w gher than of men voters with us. ry Australasian woman can talk polities intelligently, but she's none the less womanly for that. About 7% per ent. of the woman vote !s a reflex of the husband's vote, I don't mean that ands dictate to their wives or the wives accept their husband's opinions blindly But having the same Interests and the same prejudices, they naturally vote for the same man, It's the other % per cent. of the woman's vote that Is the strong moral tnfluence ip Australasia, “wh ® woman vot ly from her husba: ter then her husband. The good woman doesn't accept the ‘neces- wary evil’ in politics. She doesn’t 5 & man does rascal, but we can't do any better.’ She asks ques- th aeks, ‘Is be @ good man? Ie he # good husband, a good father, does he lead @ decent pri- vate i! “In England,” said Mrs, McGowan, when I asked for her views of the suf- frage question, “I was asked If voting made women less womanly, I laughed. There are no more womanly women anywhere than among the women voters of Australia, I have voted at three elections myself. Both my daughters and all my six sons are voters, and even politically we are a very united fami) as we a ng members of th Labor pa But my sister and he: husband vote different tickets, POLITICS BROADENS HER MIND AND SYMPATHIES. “Husbands and wives do not differ on politics half so much as on more do- me: matiers, It makes a wife more interesting to her husband to be able to discuss public affairs with her. With us a man doesn’t have to go to the corner saloon for his politics. Perhaps, Mrs, McGowan added, “the most markea | effect of woman suffrage is the attitude of women toward each other, They are so much broader and more sympa thetic and loyal. The w an’s vote has brought better factory laws for women, better regu for the srg of shops. With us all shops, che or shops, are obliged to close at 6 o'clock and on Saturday at 1 o'clock, And if a holid y falls any day ing the week it Is celebrated on Monday, so the work erg have nearly three days of vest “T often go around in the shops a Sydney and talk to the girls to see if the regulations prov! ats for them are enforced. r don't know me, of course, and it’s very Interesting And I discuss pollites with the shop men sometime ‘Th a very avy experie ce once when a electioneer ng called 0} the Libera Liberal a two great yolitival '‘xola Greeley-Smith. | HERE sre at! in} en voters Is) Ungerie. divisions with us. The young woman é!d not know I was Mrs. McGowan and began to explain to me why I should not vote for the Labor candidat: “They Gia not believe in God, she said, nor in marriage, and they wanted to turn all children over to the state to | be brought up. Then I told her I was Mrs. McGowan, and that, while I had no doubt she was paid to tell such wicked lies, I would tell her that Mr. McGowan had taught in @ Sunday |achool all his life, that he is the best | hysband and father a man could be, and I talked to her about the children. Before whe left I think ahe was about converted, and she thanked me. “The women ‘of the Labor party are just as much interested in the party's triumph as the men. You ought to see them get the women voters out on elec- tion day. Why, I've minded a sick baby while the mother cast her ballot, and !! a woman says she can't go to the polls, because she has no hat oF no shoes, we lend her ours.” And just here ..r. McGowan took up the song of suffrage again. “Any state whe: & better state, has jus better homes and finer wives than @ country where the stro moral force { the world is kept out of politics,” he said. en “POSTS” WIFE WITH WHOM HE IS LIVING HAPPILY. Brooklyn Man Causes Mystery by Notice He Says Means “Some Too, Others” ontracted by my AN RIN TS SPAcL DING | 270 Rugby road, Brooklyn, New Yd 0 ust Why the above “ad,” was : a in a Brooklyn newspaper is a myst which residents of one of the best sections of Flatbush last night wer ing. That been } between Spaulding and his w the fact that a Wo em chatting in th 1 section of F from Prospect there had urt of throw Park No troub when 4 od 1.” said Mr. Spauld estioned, “Merely did it of my wife and some the 6 clerk it Company. of MINNEAT Hermione jon from inkle Having read the ia’ ela) hin from New York, Miss Van alvke slipped the gold ' st vand fro. by ork, the lot | work man |r the tracting Comp; the new subwa pointe along the a One Hundred and Bradley bit of eart words will be but there the marked mn what t inde Lingerie “Bonnichons” Latest Vagary in Women’s Hats to Arrive From Europe tis. sexes competitor | One may say that what characterizes the fashion in hats of the moment is the great variety of styles. Any shape or eize can be worn, and nothing appears too extraordinary. “The dirt will fly on Monday on Lex- ington avenue, hen the Bradley Con- starts excavating for At twenty different as far north us hind street, section onde, tt where picks and) het, spades will swing at the same time, and the long deferred cons }tlonal transit facilities for New City will begin. The ceremonial on of addl- York nitiation of the work will be at Sixty-sey platform is being {the clty oMcials nor, who ha when Chatr with « Pubt Hoboken, nth street, ructed to recety uding Mayor G ited to be pre ox of the Publ will turn the firs silver trowel, A few by Mr. Willeox moon the part Commission to of this important beginning me of their the | There are also @ pair of leather leg- where a | ing. | Ralph avenue loaded with passengers. | ere pital records, he gave Clark, thirty, @ ) Sixt street | Miss Cora Clark ty-seve N Macon sireet he 7 she asked him what na ‘ I don’t remember," he said. pena ie . ‘ ~— FOR FIRE CHIEF Civil Service Examination Was William Guerin. John Kenton, Acting Ohtet of the Fire | Department since the retirement of Hd- ward I. Croker, will be selected from the twelve deputy chiefs who recently took the Civil Service examination for the post of commanding department, While such been expected, It was only to- jay that the Information came from semt-oMetal sources that the character of the mental and physical examinations passed by | Kenion would surely land aim the of. | fice, Only eight of the twelve depuntiea | | who went up for examination earned | suMfctent marks to justi having their names sent in for the chiefs place. The two highest scores were thoi Kenion and Willa & close race between these two, James Creelman, head of the Civil Service Commiasion, will send in the papers next week. He declares that the examination was strictly a solentific | performance, with merit alone as the criterion. Joseph Johnson, Fire Com- missioner, will announce the result next week. Kenton haa been the choice of Mayor Gaynor for the place, and tho general sentiment awarded him the winning poat while the examinations were on. He was an odds-on favorite among those who bet on suoh events without per- sonal feoling in the matter. fan Retin anes CHOICE NAMES FOR UMPIRE AT CHORUS GIRLS’ GAME. Applied to William Rochen by De- feated Chorus Men's Base- ball Nine. ‘William Roshen, who has charge of a troupe of athletic girls at the Brig! ton Reach Music Hall, is a “humm « ‘tum, fa blind in one eye and can't see out of the other, and he ought to be ohtef barker for a watermelon wagon, Outside of that he ta ail right. None of these things reflects upon Mr. Roshen. He was @ perfectly nice man before he went out to-day to umpire a Daseball game between nine of his gira and nine members of Gus Hawarden’ Gong Review chorus boys. He acquired all of the new titular decorations dur- ing the game. The hard names, gentie reeder, came from the Edwaries boys, But with all this abundance of millinery,/and when it is remembered that the there yet seemed to lack something. That something has now been supplied in these attractive bonnichons,! girls defeated them by a« score of 20 which have just come into vogue. Besides being rather amusing to look at, they form @ most becoming head-|‘t° § 8nd they are stuck for the price of | dress, being entirely made of fine linen, with frills falling softly round the face; hence their being likened to DIRT WILL FLY ONLEXINGTON AVE. SUBWAY MONDAY Bradley Company Is Ready to Dig and Chairman Willcox Will Use Silver Trowel. ® bathing party and for @ dinner to- night, even the man who was abused ies eneeres Se: NED SUE: S8N' oi Nees ine girls wore bathing sults or iiemare They had all of the curves on the boys and the men just couldn't eee how to bat. Irene Bennet pitched pk har dam with Ruth Rockwood e Kelly act. The game, which von pred five innings, brought to the beach one of the big crowds of the jon. MOTORCYCLE HITS TROLLEY; MAN AND GIRL ARE INJURED Unconscious Couple, Revived at Hospital, Hurried Away in Taxicab. Lei ae eT HITCHED WIFE TO HARROW WITH TEAM OF MULES. Missouri Man Made Woman Do Work of a Horse and Clubbed Her When She Fell. KANSAS CITY, July 29.—Recause her husband hitched her to a harrow beside a team of mules and drove her around @ corn field Mra, Lafayette Choate, wife of a farmer living near Birming- ham, Mo., appealed to the Juvenile The wreck of a $500 tandem motor-|Court here yestentay for the custody cycle is the main exhibit ta a mystery | %f Her two sons, four and six years old Mrs, Choate declared that her husband te’ police ‘oF: the Saleh: evga tled her hands behind her and drove Brooklyn, station, are trying to clear to-day. with the mules, @he sald that when she stumbled and | fell he beat her with a club, ‘The woman bared her arm before the Court. It was black and ‘blue, When asked by the Court why sings, glass @ cap and a woman’ A well dressed man and a pretty, handsomely attired woman rode it tnto a Raiph avenue car at Macon street and Ralph avenue at 12.29 o'clock this morn- The roliey was going through she would not do #0 because the father of her children. ‘The Court gave the children to her and provided that they be sent to the Institutional Church until she could give them a The motorcycle cane chugging along at t speed through Macon street ¢rom | home Island toward Broadway. le fol on the car, as it belleved they had fallen under the Wheels and been crushed to death. Dr Wahlenta came in an ambulance and took then to Bushwick Hospital, v onse: ousness, @ wiled a docte ent, and that he didn't waat OOK for this mark on the bottle. It is the guarantee of good beer at a reazon- able price. PALE RIPE + had strongly advised em against lea 6 hospital, but they in Lieut, ip » the S. L. S. means S. Lieb- mann’s Sons, who brew was told it was av The police then t found that Park Circle and the Wlevard, whe she did not | prosecute her husband #he replied that | he was) |MAN WHO GETS | Guerin There was! her four times around the field hitched | wae en CMIE F ‘POTATO A LEGAL TENDER. DENVER, tender has apeared in Melltken, caused by the was fone A second, and then laid on the bar a nice clean potato. Murphy called for his change and the barkeoper gravely returned him « nickel and put the potato in the cash RHEINGOLD | |READERs WORLD CROKER’S PLACE AS FIRE CHIEF. FANGE ISING AFTER ROW; ORL FEASHE| SIE Fearing thet he may heave éGrowned The threat culminated a quarrel |had lasted several hours over termination to marry Miss Abrahams spite of his parents’ opposition jlove match. Miss Abrahame Evening World reporter to-day mith, who te twenty-siz years was graduated from Medical Coliege four i tet 3 t BEE HEH YOWN NENLON _ ab Gz ifs have been bitter quarrele quence. The one which disappearance lasted morning, and not only hig uncle took part in it. quarret Dr. @mith’s father several times, and when he couldn't stand any more he left the house, tak- ing nothing with htm, and he woukl elther be found with would be found tn the river.” July Daa 33 Col. F i $25 | FOURTEENTH STREET West of Fifth Avenue 4 | Our Annual Blankets and Household Dry Goods BEGINS MONDAY, Jaly 31st { SALE DEPARTMENTS INCLUDE:— Muslins Blankets Linens Curtains | Sheets Quilts Towels Curtain Fabrics | Pillow Cases _ Pillows Towellings Rugs 5 White Goods Tickings Silverware Shades & Poles | Flannels Bureau Scarfs; ete. Cutlery Soaps INVESTMENT TIME FOR HOUSEKEEPERS! ] Particalars in Sunday’s World and Other Newspapers iia care? are rather woul@ ant Feat ito AVOLENE ad Nias OF mouTH | SOUNDNESS Perfectly blended OF TEETH | Next in importance | to the use of perfect i materials in making 1 soup, come the care | and skill used in blend- ing it. ou realize this at FOUR WEEKS OF 1 the first taste of O. HENRY STORIES a The fection treat of the season, TOMATO is Augun, Weich forthe The last and best of O, HENRY’S Soup (Se: Its delightful flavor iy whotesomneniees Ags . —emmenemenns the. resu not only o choice i edients, but of | coe titsianeed tient (PLAN YOUR ing, directed by an ex- prt wiio has si i Judge the yourself, ical TO-MORROW 21 kinds 10cacan | when there will be printed about Summer Resort Advertisements SUNDAY WORLD Nearly As Many As im ALL THE SIX OTHER New York Sunday Newspapers COMBINED bring to « boil, and eerve. Camden NI Look for the red-and-white label Of The Going out of town for the | t . | summer may have The World |]| This will be a Great Oppor | sent to them, and address | | changed as often as desired, | a Vacation Trip to the best Morning World, 126 per week evening World, 6¢ per week | Sunday World, 5¢ per Sunday | your remittance to the Cashier | NEW_YORK WORLD: | advantage. Among these Hundreds of Hotels and Boarding Houses to be Ad- | vertised you can surely find your “Ideal,” | | i | tunity for you to map out | |