The evening world. Newspaper, August 23, 1911, Page 3

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FALSITOOGENN WHEN HPP ROARS )INNONKE CHASE | Cook of President Grant, a} Modern Noah’s Ark, Rescued | , While Passengers Watch. ANIMALS FOR PARKS.) Big Consignment Is Brought! Over Hagenback’s Menagerie in Hamburg. From “ Moah’e Ark had very little on the Cambure-American liner President | Grant which arrived to-day from Ham- | Durg. In the hold of the steamship | fwee an immense consignment of bis | Qnd litile animals and birds from Hag: | fenback’s Menagerie at Hamburg, on the fway to various zoological gardens and @lrcuses in this country. | The animal cargo of the President Grant was the direct cause of furnish- dng the passengers a spectacle that few Pcean voyagers are privileged to witness, amely a rescue at sea. A monkey, a Hippopotamus and a cook bearing the Bip-twisting namo of Max Harwst fig- fred in the proceedings leading up to! Pie rescue, The hippopotamus, one o fthe largest Brer imported, was in a big cage on the @eck forward of the superstructure. Whe front was open but barred to give Qhe hippo light and atr, and the fwas the centre of attraction for the, Passengers troughout the voyage. Monday, \ug. 14, Max Harwst, four:h| ook, was working in the galley, which fs near where the hippopotamus was. (ex Harwst was mixing dough for ake. Suddenly there popped into the alley @ large and active monkey which had escaped from the cages below ks. MONKEY RAISED SOME RUMPUS IN GALLEY. ‘The monkey, after the manner of its kind, proceeded to play tricks in the galley. It landed on all fours in the dough Max Harwst was mixing, much to the dismay of Max. Then it pro- ceeded to throw pans and kettles and hottles all over the place. Max picked up a pan of water and @oused the monkey, which scampered out on the deck, The cook followed. The monkey, chattering and scolding, | Jumped on top of the hippo's cage, Brabbed a spar and hegan to clinb to- La the bridge. Inspired by a desire to catch the} monkey, Max climbed up on the hippo's | cage, too, Just as he was pulling! himself over the edge the hippo opened its capactous mouth and gave vent to| &@ roar that was heard all over the ship, The rear was too much for Max Harwet Terrorized and helpless, he slipped over- Doard, striking the rail and bounding far out from the side of the ship. Capt. Magin was on the bridge and @aw Max tumble into the ocean, The cook, a good swimmer, struck out man-| fully to avoid the suction of the screws f&nd was soon a bobbing speck in the White foaming wake astern. DIDN'T STOP SHIP TO RESCUE cOooK. Mstead of stopping his vessel, Capt Blagin put the wheel over and sta the President Grant on a wide cir oon the ship w back to where Max} as supporting himself in the water, | fakin, Bary invtions as possible. Two boats, manned by eight men eac: and in charge of Senior Second Offic Ladewig and Junior Second Ott Paiser, were lowered, The senior nd officer's boat reached Max and ‘was dragged aboard. In just fourteen minutes after the boats struck the water | Max Harwst was back on the deck of | the President Grant, little the werse for bis experience ‘The rescue of the cook happened just | after the breakfast hour when al! t Passengers were on deck, Probably a thousand snapshots were taken of the Movement of the rescuing boats. Melville Keim Chicago, a@ son of one of the vice-presidents of the Siegel- Cooper Pry Goods Company, happened to have his camera unc arm when Max Harwst went overboard and @uccecded in getting # good line of plotures. Nothing else of moment age except a long ey, which happened on amusing Hilton of the Royal Liverpool Club and British amateur sailed for New York to-day Wilhelm IL. to co’ mplonship: Before Selecting |) Your Apartment CONSULT THE “Apartment to Let” Advertisements in THE WORLD IT WILL SAVE YOU Time, Encrgy and Money |}, The World's “Apartment to Let” Advertisements offer you the greatest variety of election. All prices, sizes and locations), }x Brooklyn Woman Who Seeks Artist Husband’s Other Wife.in London MRS. KATHERINE DREIER-TRUMBULL-SMITH. Money and Monotony Most to Blame When Couples Dritt Apart Magistrate Freschi’s Views Blaming the Wives Show Crying Need of Women on Bench to Solve Marital Problems, Asserts Suffrage Editor. Differences Resulting From Segregation of the Sexes Most Frequent Causes of Domestic Misery— BY NIXOLA. GREELEY® SMITH Co-Education the Remedy. NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Who 1s to blame when a husband and wife separate? Must we seck the answer to this old but hardy per ennial prot'sm of marriage in the unreasonableness of the woman oc he petty exactions of tHe man? “Find the woman!” {8 the latest solution of this riddle of the divorce courts. It 1s offered by John J, Freacht, City Magistrate of New York, in a recent article in Harper's Weekly, which he calls “Why Marriage Ties Are Rent.” For this boldest of our city solons declares high-handedly that, the wife has been to blame in the very great majority of domestic discords which it has been a part of his judicial duty to attune. You don’t agree with him? Neither do I. Neither | does Mrs. Mary Beard, editor of “The Womar Voter” and wife of Prof. Charles Beard of Columbia Untversity. But the learned Court ‘s entitled to hand down his opin the ris at rels to th that in an most of the domestic snarls that reach’ court, ity might have been avolded begin’ nstan who opened the way yung wive sed those wonderfu' standing, conside-¢ 4 cradle or scuttled a political prejudice. on firat, so here tt is:| “Here We have a maginrate of the sk of being called | Of New York who offers as the : the quar. [lution of one of the gravest prob- rae ytil find | 28 of existence, ‘a roast piping hot,’ ning, you WH! Ti") or a ‘lamb stew,’ For the lack of these ces It was the WOM] Juxurles he attributes the failure of his for the final| typteal’ marriage; umably, there- my opinion that,/fore, a lainb stew would have saved the day, DECLARES CASE CITED I8 NOT TYPICAL, “Of course, the case he cites is not more freely exer- serva> neace © fon ¢ taneenal typical and no woman would be unfair Itberal reaso! enough to arraign @ whole sex on such FENN Even though We | slender evidence, may yearn upon and destroy “Mr, Preschi's arti simp! woman's latest for theso fe] proves the necessity rage oa words, let's give him some more * | an's point of view on the bench, “A frequent of marital disagree-| the absolute crying need of women ment lies in the fact that so many| moegistrates to hear the stories and women marry to better thelr condit endenvor to : lve the problem of tinues Magistrate Freschi's arti the unhappily married women, of ever But tt e have ® Domestic Relations toularly youn Court. What a farce it is when of the great middie class the man’s point of view is domin- guiters of respectable families WhO] ant everywhere within ite pre- ent not to support them-) ginets, elves, but generally because thé fam-| «7 don't say men are to blame for y se js too light to en tiem to) cnhappy marriages,” Mrs, Beard con- ke the Unued, "I don't believe they are, any pS y H more than women. Money and mo- shift responsibil: were NOt) notony are the principal causes of do- realizing that in marriage there #re|mestic misery—the lack of money and r responsibilities. the narrow, monotonous life which re- TELLS OF ONE WHO, DIDN'T |sults from it. But even among the very LIKE TO COOK sor the man's life 1s less monotonous ve Chw Madiatrate cites what /than the Woman's, He hag the inter- ieee iat case of marital [est of his outside work, of his partict- min public affairs. The wife 1s A ere eee rceinig ning (Aue IEA ese things. She shares egone of tha many cases of tm fran {Rone but the most trivia! interesta of who married a protty young school|@ pusand. | * op MArTiAd (& WORLY” FOURR AShOe ‘Mr. Fresohi would find better ‘a ree ea eee copinge aha| Fea#ons for domestic misery than ad discoursed knowingly upon the 7 Mp precio Shene, is the te 1d acre nat food, She would | Bemle dependence of the wife and sot take the trouble to learn, because| See Sumerente SS SMnA Oné petns of ire hated cooking. Beaides, there was| YieW Wale reruite frm the prem te inirwady cooked, ta be nad at any| Seal SeNregenion of the. soues ts delicatessen shop. He wanted roasts, | eept their emotional ad. Ot frat plese Nae elt | woman to love each other and live snappy, while she in turn, as ad-| SAgply Segethes G6 husbens nad 1 partl ly nit yearr get at he 1a boar ang moved th bag and The home {s still disrupted, EDUCATION, “That article Is Just the sort of thing] “T am a strong believer in co-educa- that makes me boil! exclaimed Mrs./ tion. The finest sort of feeling exists Mary Beard, who besliss sche! petwe young men and women in| otticlo! organ of the Woman ze | the olleges—a tnutual admir party presides over th »y home! tlon on knowledge and resp ot imbia_ profe net sh other, And you do not aftten first | educationa Sridls | of 1s between the husband ana, na had scolded See eerrta| place for acquiring auch knowledge Oe RRs “ than in the public schools, the husband fnelly hunted up 9| ‘ined BAsM sokcola OBd- the fe use noted for its good table ene is as gentle @ Woman Bs ever socked wife they thoroughly, and there is no better on every | educational ool .|18 A STRONG BELIEVER IN CO- LOU BETTS MADE DOCTOR CONFESS | WITH LIFE THREAT Physician Declares Gambler Held Knife at His Throat After Raid. WIFE TELLS HER STORY. Friend Who Aided Husband Was With Her When She Phoned Doctor. ‘The examination of Lou Betts, who {eo accused by his wife of being the kige of New York mblers, for an Assault upon Dr. Leonard Jasiow of No. 206 West One Hundred and Twen- ty-first street, was begun to-day in Yorkville Court. After Dr. Jaslow and Mra. Betts had been heard Magistrate Breen adjourned the hearing until 10 o'clock to-morrow morning. Betts and a friend named Smith went to the home of Mra. Betts, at No. 70 West Forty-fitth street, at about 2.45 o'clock yesterday morning. They found Dr. Jasiow there and it him thor- oughly. Betts was ‘arr |. He said he was justified in handing the doctor a couplet of black eyes and other die- figuremepts. ‘Dr. Jeslow was the firet witness called today. He eaid he was in bed at his ‘home Monday night at midnight when Mra. Betts called him up and asked him to visit her, She eat4 she had not been asleep for two nights and was in @ highly nervous state He went to her home, arrtving about 1 o’clook. Mrs. Betts took him to the din! room on the basement floor, where ate some chicken sandwiches and drank sarsaparilia, Then the doctor gave his patient a hypodermic injection. ‘I was just wiping my syringe on a napkin,” said the doctor, ‘when there was @ commotion on the stairs and Mr. Betts and his friend rushed into the room, ‘They knocked me down and kicked me about the body and head and Mr, Smith smashed me with his cane, Mr. Betts got a knife and stood over me and asked me to sign @ state- ment admitting I had had improper relations with his wife. He said he would let me go if I would sign. “I promised to sign, but only because I wan in fear of my life. Mr. Betts said if I dia not sign he would cut my head off. Just then the policeman came and I was safe from further beating.” George Gordon Battle, counsel for Betts, cross-examined the doctor length- fly and carefully. The doctor said he first met Mrs. Betts ow Aug. 11 at the home of a Mrs. Simmona at No. 161 West Forty-fourth street, and called on Mrs, Betts thereafter twice a day in a professional capacity, He did not know Mrs. Betts had heen a patient in River- crest Sanitarium and other sanitariume. ‘The doctor admitted that he expressed a willingness to sign a statement dic- tated by Betts while he was being beaten up, but denied that he yolun- teered to sign such a statement while he was on the way to the station house policema: mpany. woman of ml nervous, took the The Court and lawyers had a hard time with her. She wanted to tell all about her domestic troubles and the gambling activities of her hus- band. Her teatimony corroborated that of the doctor. She sald that Smith, who had claimed to be her friend as well as @ friend of her husband, was at her home late Monday evening and was {n her company when she called up Dr. Jaslow. Mri ale ge stand. pl RSS NO INTEREST IN ANY PAPER, SAYS ERLANGER. Theatrical Man Says He Knows Nothing About Legal Advertis- ing in the Telegraph. Everett N. Blanke, President of the Lawyers’ Advertising Company, tr statement printed *o-day, accusing many Hall of using Su Court refereeships for the purpose of adding to the bank nt of Charles F’. Murphy's friend, Phil Donohue, Tam- many's treasurer, is quoted as saying “Of course every one knows that the Morting Telegraph is very friendly to Klaw & Erlanger and many people say that Abraham Erlanger has an in- ranger's trother Supri Court and terest in the sheet is a Justice of the said to be very friendly with the Sul- livans.”’ This ement is par an apt to explain why the Morning Kraph carnies a great deal of legal advertising jn foreclosure sults before referees Abraham Erlanger sald to-day “T have nothing whatever to do w the advertising matter, I don't know anything about it. I haven't a penny of| interest in the Morning Telegraph. 1 have no interest in any newspaper. 1 never had any interest {n the Mornin. Telegraph. Dragging my name into an affair of which I know absolutely nothing and never heard of before is an| Injustice which 1 de not propose to t erate.” solution of the marriage problem tf every women were trained to economic independence. I don’t mean that all wives should work for a living outatde | the home, but that they should be able | to do go tf neoersary. Then they would have @ more definite tdea of the eco- nomte value of a wife's work in the home. ¢ “The oauses of married misery are 80 nerious, so obvious,” Mra, Beard con- cluded, “that {t seems rather unfair to lay the trouble on the delicatessen stores, aa Mr. Fvesehi does, ‘The canned dea sounds ver ich Hike mental deli catesse! But, then th delicatessen shops c formed a {fe who first met in college, would be tar on the mad te the state, Incidentally, THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUS T 28, 2911. MRS. VANDERBILT, WHO FOUGHT FIRE ON REGGIE'S” FARM NS VANDERBLT FIGHTS FIRE COUNTY HONE Wife of “Reggie” in Absence of Husband Heads Force of Men and Conquers. NEWPORT, R. I., Aug. 2.—-When the power house on the farm of Reginald C. Vanderbilt at Portsmouth, near here, caught fire early to-day Mrs. Vanderbilt hastily dressed and went mit and di- rected the efforts of the farmhands to subdue the filam: Men and apparatus were rushed over from Albert G. Vanderbilt's farm near by, and although the power house was burned flat the fire-fighters were able to save an automobile shed adjoining in which were stored five motor cars The loss 1s estimated at $10,000, fully insured. Mr. Vanderbilt 1s at present in Can- ada. It was about 1.40 when the on the place discovered the f chman mes and sent in an alarm which aroused the en- “Oakland re de- tire populace of the fa Farm” was telephoned, and th tail from there rushed its app) he half mile down Sandy Point m was a nd, with t + made another dan) themselves. two twenty horse-powe wines and generators, also a storage battery. The contents of* the structure were ruined, and {t will take some time to again equip the plant Kerosene was used for power in ple. of gasoline, and for a day or two there is reported to wen vome engine trouble, This {8 not supposed to hav yeen responsible for a fire at th of night, and it ts sta that the Sandy Polnt I for w time upon o WOOLLEN MAN DIES. End Came rely nps and tapers. lenly to Visitor at Atlantic City, ATLANTIC CITY, John W. Bentley, a wea from Plymouth, Mase., @ed « h front hotel t disease, Mr. Bentley best of health and had been week with his two sister N. J had been in t LYMOUTH, Mass., Bentley, who d City to-day was Superintendent of tne tandish Woollen Mills. bh 1 was a dedler in real estate in Piymourn Bentley was about sixty-ti ea and Is survived by a widow and on daughter, White 5 Rumors a 15 will see the end iniforms in the sults cost the and have been but the exper proved @ failure, as work Was required as to practloa ruin then, Now bi t ea underst n H extravagant people; inex- pensive enough for economical ones ‘White TPose. CEY LONG RBA vitee trust yet, so it's quite gafe to put the il, anit ull} ull ‘| warding off an invasion of negroes in WATE DNELLERS PROTEST GANS NEGRO ASIN Owners of Property on 121st Street Fear Values Will Deteriorate. Neatly a score of owners of property on Weat One Hundred and Twenty-| firat etrest and on Seventh avenue, m and women, held a meeting to-day at the oMce of Frederick Zittel & Co., real estate agents, Seventy-ninth street and Broadway, to devise a plat for the block of One Hundred and Twenty- firet mtroet, from Seventh to Eighth avenue, which has been threatenin since Monday, when a negro real estate | agent hung out hie shingle in front of No. 217, a tenement in the middle of the block. They met at the“Zittel offices because this firm represents former Vice-President Levi P, Morton, who owns @ modern apartment house on the northwest corner of the block. At the end of the meeting, which Insted nearly three hours, the property owners were plainly up a tree, as they were frightened by the Impending de- tertoration of thelr property, and it was! decided to meet again to-night, at Richard Bonnamy's paint shop, No, 2063 Seventh avenue, when Frank Zittel, who was appointed a committee to dis- suade the owner of the negro welcom- | ing tenement, will report, Mrs. Anna Jacobs, who owns three parcels on the threatened block, and! who has been most vigorous in atimu- lating the other property owners into! taking some action, confessed after the | meeting that she didn't know how the) thing was going to end. Mr. Zittel aatd that the property owners were willing to do anything in reason “If the owner, Conrad Miller, ts hard up, or if his rooms are not renting as rapidly as he would ike we will do all ve can to help him get desirable white! tenants, ve can afford the possible deterioration of the property, a thing inevitable {f the negroes flock in. But we won't stand for any hold up—that's sur ‘The negro welcoming house !s an ordl- nary brick five-story tenement, one of four. Immediately opposite is a row of private houses, and on Seventh avenue, nearby, are a number of high-class apartment houses. Conrad Miller, Who owns the house together with a man named Bernstein, was standing in front of the building when an Evening World reporter Visited the block to-day. He ts also the janitor. He tried to deny his identity at first, but when ho was natled down he re- fused to make any explanation of his motive {n allowing the negro agent, A. rhompson of 12 West One Hun- dred and Thirty-fitth street, to under- take to fill the house with black ten- ants, ‘To all was “1 don't know anything about !t. the agent.” inal MONEY TRUST REPORT See MacVeagh and Wickersham Un- able to Agree on Case and Papers Sent to President. WASHINGTON, Maeve ht Secretary y decision at Aug: not make ipon Attorney-<« which holda that th National City Bank Kk and the National City y be a transgression of the Na- | Hecause of what opinion | icers, ail am's report, is of the Banking laws. iy belleved to be a dif! t the two Ci 6 papers in the case will be sent to President Tart at Beverly —$—<—<———— 3101 DROP CAKES “T used to make a dozen dp&C at a time—with Thave to bake three dozen Mrs, Henne: Mf W, 103d St, N. ¥. <SELF-RAISING FLOUR Try it with your dinner to-night Eddys questions his one answer | IS PUT UP TO TAFT.| eral Wick= 234 STREET, WEST Near Fifth Avenue, New York Sonata MILLINERY AND OUTERWEAR TO-MORROW—THURSDAY: Stirring Clean-Up Sales ALL REMAINING LINEN SUITS and DRESSES 5.00 Values 12.50, 15.00, 17.50, Up to 25.00 ALL REMAINING SUMMER DRESSES 1.95 3.95 5.00 WERE WERE WERE §.00, 6.50 7.50, 10.00 12.00, 15.00 and 7.50 up to 15.00 16.50 to 25.00 Please do not expect too many of any ONE hind. “Best Values at the = Prices.” 3d 121st Ave. CAL Street Annual Mid-Summer Sales—Thursday Women’s Satin ees Women’s House Dresses i i fall; waist, empire model; from h grade Dlack duchess satin, | percales por troen panel back and front; pointed sailor | plaids; also dark gray all- collar, with long revers front; over patterns over leeves; collar, cuffs and points coller; front but. [ona bednysipectrstt ig’ y ene Wt tone; sizes up to coml eatin; sises + to 40; value $12.98........ 6.98 Seer nomen’ Linen Dresses I gees coaaeeees from plain linen; pointed sailor ltinen ekirts, pane! collar; high empire le okirt; half sleeves, panel front and back; collar and cuffs of silk messaline; waist to match the collar; 95 14, worth up to $4.98 ° Boys’ Shoes Uva 98c Misses’ Shoes = Dongola, patent tip; ion OF H Tid islseaii to Srepeial.. OIC ween ean ne Neto iifads ng IS Women’s Long Lisle Gloves 16 button length, black, DOP white or colors; worth 49c... . Pillow Cases Size 42 by ba Heo biagd Late fine qual- ity muslin, wash heavier; value 120. « 734c Lord & Taylor. Founded 1826 y On Thursday, August 24th, A Special Sale of Men’s Shirts Colored Negligee Shirts Plain and pleated bosoms, coat model, attached cuffs, Value $1.50 Silk &F Linen Mixture Negligee $ Bld English | Uuce KOR SOUPS, SALADS AND COLD MEATS $1 Spring St. CRANDALL’S ESTABLISHED 1841, Carriages in Now York, SPECIAL AUGUST CLEARING SALE * 593 3d Av. ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food. All Grocers and Drugsiste, Shirts with neck bands and collars at-[.)2.0 tached, French turned back cuffs, $ 00 | sizes 14 to 1514. Valuer $3,00 and $3.50. Broadway & 20th St.; Sth Ave.; * | | | you want your “business” to become the talk of the town, tell about it through a World “Want” Ad. 3 3 2

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