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ta ea | | { | FINED HS WIFE SD.SHED BEHANE, (7 BUTSHEDINT Embroidery Maker Recites Many Acts of “Cruelty” as Spouse Seeks Separation. BEAT HIS — CHILDREN. She Says He Got $1,600 and | Invited Her to Go Away and Leave Him. ant Herman Goldner, of the firm of Gold+ mer, Kramer & Saperstein, embroidery | Manufacturers of No fth avenue, | devised an original © mioof making die wife “behave.” ‘The system not only falled to work, but it haa brought Goldner tnto the Supreme Court to dee fend an action for separation Mrs. Goldner hat her huse ‘band s} $ of her money in | his bu: nd that In return for tt] she on tings and fin an in- Vitation to let wife G retorted with a alleged £0 his w to bother him. without @ Justice miacond ven home. He declare cruelly ab first tv 2 80 hat wit chang Sry tell the trie fairs, reolte af had retsied her von met at when \ 1 solemnly that she would be a kh Afectionate mother to the threc Oing, be the thought of having the cht brouxht up by strangers. THEN SHE MADE LIFE MISER- é ABLE FOR HIM After the v once » he h vugeat nd proveeded to make able for him and th 7 joldner finally sent the daughter to the home of her grandmother. Goldner next planned to surprise his wife by bringing home MHttle Jullus, the younr gon by his fret 80 he dressed Julius in sult of clothes, and, not being sure ¢ e re ception he would get when the boy made Dis apperran he took his frien? Saper- stein along Goldner swears that when his wife looked wpon her aiepson, who surgled his in the pres his ( gave a shout could be heard a block away ani kept her screams against the boy's pres e In the hans going continual eral day f , * at ie « The fifth on couch, but his 1 wife, “He him sho d \ 4 Ueeman ran WANTS TO GO TO POLICE STA. TION 7O § “Take me to the pol station, T want alleges he sald. Ms wife objected and P vsband n Frat A aad nual ani : is he » two cat of a trunk alarm ¢ her n and hueoa vien es 0 Advertis sing . “Scoops” 2 CoO There were printed yesterday : | 2,337 World “Help Wanted" Ads. 2,082 more than the Jie 765 World “Situation Wanted” Ads.— 191 than the Herald; £95 World "To Let” Ade.— 626 more than the Herald; 41 World “@eal Estate” Ads. 120 more than tio I more vrald; 120 World Adi Busin 120 more than the Herald; 121 world “ jummer Resort” Ads.— 79 more than the Herald. So in Which Newspaper Wili You Look for the Things You Want To-Day ? KAN ANRARRIA Opportunity " THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST __ 80, — TT een What Is an Affinity? and How Many Trials Is the Szeker to Have Before He ‘Strikes Qui? - Chances of the Game Are Net the Same for Men and Women; the Former Have the Loaded Dice or the Marked Cards. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Upton tinue to be Mrs. rather, in NIXOLA. GREELEY* SMITH disapproval the law above the law when formers ha . sometimes, count for M The two recruits to t ble affinities have giv thelr of the sense of humor and a otu- ¢, ines around and blaze to the first floor of the laundry brilliant men and, pemdons conceit which sete thcir jy. uses came trom che metenntt |butlding, where the damage {s estl- 1 Sh olive eflorte to solve the os me “ume from the Hellevue Hos) mated at $1,000 grentest of gocial problema abovo ea ae vitae that nothing was] si ae 0 philosophy and ezperien rons with Lindsay, so he was net the philosophy Derleace o¢ [Troms Wii Lindsay, a |CHANCE SHOT SPOILS untold centuries, re with his Marriage, as we know tt to- So ae ante Outs TAndnes tod bee on MOTHER’S PET NOSE. that he tn- solution of the sex prob. Uy t he owned some property at ‘ ms of fr y future ages can deter- Midd » which he had an opportun ‘ ahi : m to the « Mr, Upton Sinclair in a YY 10 exchange for better land r|Boy Examining Revolver Sends st a divorce suit . wellemeant novei Yonkers and that ho needet $2,000 to sullet TI hatte : IN “LOVE'S PILGRIMAGE” th th swing how to PUt the deal through, Me asked her Bullet That Shatters Mrs. AND HIS IDEAL be so artistic So: lend. ala nn money And Beeniilnd Mendelson's Beauty ber newspape ss of warmed over “e" & Mortgage on tho perty and to “does not believe in marriage”’—what do *°Y °F Fecelved the mortgage nor the in- | Were indi responsible tor “pain | such peop a tat t she sald, although she had fre-|ful and dtetiguring *{ Thole phil \ aneativa ntly asked him for both to-day from her fou chical, tor said he told her he would marry | I#idor, As a the soc Nesieita woulin't have arrested,” | Mra Mendets Collins, “but sald she | Pride, has troy, A hh though the iPatig peal i os 5 leas and ¢ are cl with os aL oe Snir haga | leaves and the architecture !s not such | * $ ij a8 appeals to the artistic temperament LINER MOHAWK SAFE, po". ’ eerie appre: | a elter than a howling licesraiy is right there, in the very |and misleading theorles, Incidentally, Vainjured tn | pillow on her bad. on of ft, that Mr, Sinclair gives | just because Mr, ey KainOn Niandalaoncanw and & his ease and that of other fre tal monogaml, . He er jthe s w The “chances of the game" are ald i for men and women, | two “ 7; and the institution of imarriage | genius , 4 4 with tho social protection it affords oa mn é to the woman and her childroa 1s nola 4 i soctety’s imperfect recognition of WO) : S by tha wualterable inequality. t Ae Seine wie ‘ nw to ’ se regen and that it w t an of | " ¢ the ” w : OF ‘aie’ M 8 the chances of the game, It is 4 i a Se) s poor sort of a man who Invites a woman | cee 7 a » such es’ when the ja — naiure a the laws of men d | neem ry 9 ac “ s iy : . 55 as man wro exnows|| essential Monogamy’ as Seen n who her of his 1 uit for divor Mr has brow @ poor sort of man who poses under t? otlight as her affinity, and it ts av silly and pittable woman who offers a the brightness of her life and whatever Sinclair, does not believe in marriage. author of “Love's Pilgrimage,” The lady who will con- Upton Sinclair till Mr. Sinclair's sutt | for divorce is decided, does not believe in marriage. | Neither is Mr. Harry Kemp, | sult, troubled with faith in an archaic institution. Each of these distinctly unusual individuals has proclaimed his lack of faith from the housetops, or, two and three column interviews, setting | forth his ideas on everything !n life from the classic spirit {n poetry to the problem of what an essential a monogamist should do when he finds himself mated to rat @ lady with a Greek temperament and @ slight partiality for polyandry. immediate cause of the what he conceives to be outworn ed countries regulate the sex rela- Ss not extend to divorce. He is ubject of taking a mate, but not Mra, finotatr wish that the amnity mania works to the * | ein to an “essential monog- thin of it as anything but funny. amist.” She says she has been looking But there ik ono thing mhout the f nother soul-mate for some time,| purentt and capture of affinitios 1 notwithstanding Mr. Harry Kemp's! that should be settled at once, and pro edn ieband’s suit, she |, that is how many trials ts the af- by no means certain that he will do.! fintty seeker to be permitted beforo Mr. Kemp ot sure th Sins) he “strikes out?” ir ts mperishable In| Ferdinand Pinney Earle, most famou upon Ww tuis!exploiter of the affinity theory, tas are agreed is that, numbered thr vee he decided 8 of matrimony a few - ‘ At his poe ‘ . should have sou ne tw King Joseph ations sly mt of the Mormon yt rake them all at once Denent of wholesale ra ng, millinery and wedding rin Tho whole trouble with afnitios gud aifinity-seekors is @ total lack From a Japanese Point of View CHICAGO, Aug returned from a 10,000-m ter of Baron K. Ishii, Vi the wisdom of parents « re says Not even his willingness to wear the matrimonial yoke saved Ray H. Lind- Mr. Sinclair, not believing {n marriage, which remains despite his, *®%. ® promoter, who lives at the Hotel | by which all civil! tlon, has shown that his Intolerance do he considers the above invoking Its assistance when he seeks to get rid of one—a way re- | sisted in th cdillac, from prose Baxter, a t M. 900 E ball, In the matter of cells, Mr. Lindsay ts When cution by nurse, | @ young man of fastidious taste. | he was arrested reste | Collins and taken to the [ ffth street station, he fixe \ te at wi too stuffy for a irch, and and he dem turnkey repo he Oh, Helen, how could And when Miss Baxter had explained onda: Miss Bax- r with @ reproachful gaze and ex- | ned length how she could and as taken to a cel ed to Lic Hirected that the the best in the house, say was placed tn the ci ti ein th his twenty-y Affairs of J ating t an | Ls Thirty-seventh street. he cheated her of $2,000 and in- @ Tombs court to-day [he be sent to @ cell in default of $1,000 he protested terly against the accommodations, uit Ce promoter and de: He t FUSSY PROMOTER RETURNS TO CELL, GIRL REJECTS Hil | Miss Baxter Turns Down Mar- riage Offer of Lindsay, Who Objected to Prison Quarters. Miss that human being to live 1 better lodgement She dsay The piace wasn't fit for a dog kennel—it was | ‘n, The} isan, and be given But when Lind- 1 de luxe of the! East Thirty-fifth street “pen” he bewan | 200 “BAD” BOYS FIGHT BIG FIRE ON Incorrigible Children to Help Firemen. BLAZE IN MAIN LAUNDRY.) watchman who was going his rou It started on the er of the | three-story brick # contatning ‘an employees’ kitchen, lnundry and dry | | ing rooms on the first floor, nen and sewing rooms on the second floor and a} |dormttory for the female employees on, | the third floor Real! Dp tatly sleeping women in the upper story, ind floor etl to the | the watchman hurriedly turn the alarm to the office. As soon the office passed It on to the engine room the big fro whistle began to nd and fire ing all around the Istand, Pandemonium followed In the blazing building. Women and xiris, terrified by, the clamor and the shrieking of the whistle, and beside themselves as the automatic al began clang- the smoke came rolling through the corridors, rushed down the stairs to the second floor, but found escape cut off, Only a few cooler heads helped to re- store a semblance of discipline, and led the frightened women back to the third floor, whence they got out safely by the fire escapes. TWO HUNDRED INCORRIGIBLE BOYS AID FIREMEN. In the mean time Engine Company No 4%, which i tioned on the tsland, answered the alarm, reinforced by the 200 boys from the School for Incorrig- thle children, Fire headquarters was notified and the fire boat George B, MoClelland steamed across from h hb at th foot of East Ninety-ninth street. The police of Harbor Squad B, from the ot | tleth street, rushed over the reserv ty-sixth street station, By this time the glare was lighting up all the eur- rounding building! Considerable dificulty was experienced in calming the excited inmates of tha hildren’s Hospital, the School for De- fective Children and the House of Refuge, and the nurses in the three [institutions had thelr hands full. In several buildings the occupants got out nore or less quietly by following the fire drill, Much of the river front of Manhattan and the tors, These were unable to distinguish the extent of the fire, but rumors of | what was going on grew until the tales reached formidable proportions. Thousands went up on the roofs to wateh, the fog and rain serving only to make the spectacle more ominous, ‘The firemen managed to confine the | bloom there ts to he. soul to exploit ountry ought to er which pa advice | Uniformly jes of two humorless cra fore lovers may b theories must ull crus! rant AGaa Mah ehiinls sa eee Ves filt gayly to other theorles and other! | the parents will conse da roes in Japan than tn this coun women sponge-like brains and 4|f try as a result, Suen a policy ntry Would be a positive beneilt, in my king for sociological syrup. jon.” } dy le only te conmgering tbe nara: 4 » J, lll RANDALL'S ISLAND — BY GIANT WAVES Taken From the School for Oceanic Arrives With Host of ‘ing haven by | big whip from stem to stern. foot of East One Hundred and Twen-| to from the East One Hundred and ‘Twen-| | American vaudeville acts over for Stage Bronx was lined with specta- | PENNELL: 1911. COL. ASTOR’S FISHING TRIP RESULTS IN ONLY ONE CATCH That Was Made by His Fiancee’s Father—-No Date Fixed Yet for Wedding. Col, John Jacob Astor, his flancgee, ne Force and Wiliam H. . returned to New York to-day on Astor’a y t Nomad from a fisbing trip which began Jast Fri- day. The yacht reached the New York Yacht Club janding off Kast Twenty- third street o'clock and Col. Astor and his gues me off two hours later with a big iitter of bags and trap tomobile was waiting at the plet and his daughter rode to thelr No, 18 Kast ‘hirty-seventh house, while Col. (CROWDED LINER'S PASSENGERS HIT Americans Held Up by Strike Abroad. ! home at street and entered t Astor went on to his own quarters “Rumors that Miss Force and I have PASSED HUGE deen fact, married said Col, have Astor, ne foundation “The date for ICEBERG. the wedding has not been set. We have W Deen out on a iittle decp sea fishing J, my Dre a ey sane Wa ara, Sag trip that was not much of @ success omen and Girl Employees; Weathered Fog and Found] {<'?, thet ras pot much of « succom 4, ’ Z r Mr. Force hecho The the only fish landed.” in Panic, but All Escape Three Ships Within Half- Safely, | Mile Radius HUNTS WIFE; FINDS SUIT. ef | PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 9 — Menry ap | Walters, jr, a nephew of the former pr | two hours before dayttent this) The steamship Oceante, of the White | Prietor of the London Timas, who ean ng in the main laundry bullding | Star Line, which arrived in port to-day, | t? this clty Saturday to find hie wife, on Randall's Island cansed ® panic Was ao crowded with Americans re. a Serius suit ineton mong the thousands of tnmates of the| turning from holldays abroad and who| lane Svale os ae dormerty Aine Taurs | neighboring bulklings, brought a fire. | Dad been transferred from other vee! hat tel anh o, 36 1 boat post he Hawi son account o: the big dock atrike, 2%@ Married Marmaduke Bowker and Pate is Hed ‘iuminated the whole " Liverpool, that the ship's officers reed him four years after, She me | sland with a glare that e ed thous. ad give up thetr cabins and it was! Walter in London and married him last | o people t ie i be prus san te rh Wy hla oon y to place dining tables in the | February , ronx, and gave 200 “bad” boys & companionways, As the Oceanic salled| She came to thie so laat month to chance to show their ski! as flre- from Southampton, where there are no| See her father, who, she aatd, was il) fighters. {strike troubles, she was not yed or| Walter says he saw her off and they | The blaze w: Alacove by the embarrassed by a scarcity of stokere or parted the best of friend But Mrs. Walter says out of sorts nd Ww had a way of getting and swearing at her, #9 stewards regarded as a float- weores of stranded tray- elle: she came back home fo get a divorce. liner passed through auch ¢x-) === en of weather on the trip that her i usually urbable commander, Capt. 7.4 Haddock, was moved to indulge tf superiatives and describe tt as “a bit bf dt, | nawsty.” Which, according to a who know him best, fs equal to an expletive for an ordinary man. The weather ranged from polar cold to equatorial humidity, and there was a storm Monday that came up so quick- ly passengers on the deck were drenched by the great waves that deluged the Tuesday an tceberg, Which is described as @ mile ong and 20 feet high, was encountered nd made things #0 cold that everybody promenaded in heavy coats, That night the Oceante ran into @ dense fog and when it lifted he found herself within half a mile of three big ships, N. M. Robins bf London, who comes over to race the Duke of Westrhinster's 40-toot nydroplane motor boat, the Pioneer, in the races at Huntington, L. L, on Sept. 6, told of his troubles in arranging for the transportation of the motor boa’ “We shipped her first to Liverpool,” he said, “and arrived in the midst of the strike. We found we couldn't send from there by ship, = 1 her to Glasgow to make the trip Anchor liner, But the mobs in the str were: fierce, and we knew that If they learned that a motor boat belonging to His Grace the Duke was in the city they'd Ike nothing better than to heave a brick or two through her delicate sides. 0, would you belleve it, @ had to have an escort of 300 bobbles her safely through the streete to the ratlway station. She came over on the California, and {# all right.” Among the other pansengers were Jo- Eyesight Examinations | by Registered Physicians (Oculists of Long Experience) assure accuracy and sat isfaction worth many limes the cost of glasses. | You can get glasses in| many places, but you! get this careful service | only at the Ehrlich stores. | We Charge for Glasses Only. Perfect Fitting Glasses as Low ns $2.50, Oculiete’ | 23th he. the 217B'dway, Aster House bjlmy W224 ry ies bb the erat 20 Palen St, Cor. Bond PETER PORLGER soo BEER $1.25 the case of 24 bottles— seph_ C. Smith, who first gave the} one cent a bottle more than Apache dance in this country, and his wife, Fran Demarest, the actre the ordinary beer. A little higher in price—a great deal higher in quality. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS, Franklin Simon & Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Sts, Final Sale of Summer Apparel THURSDAY, AUGUST 31 They are returning from a@ hon trip. Mr. Smtth appeared in a vai Mille ekit in the Alhambra London with Ethel Levey. and he has made an ar- rangement by which he is to send Director Moul of the Alhambra. 65 Women’s Summer Gowns Of striped voile, or marquisette. Heretofore $14.50 to $29.50 285 Women’s Lingerie Waists French batiste or marquisette, hand-emb*d or lace trimmed, Heretofore $2.95 to $5.75 145 White Cordeline Skirts Button front model for women and misses. Lengths 34 to 42, Heretofore $3.05 to $5.75 87 Silk Bathing Suits For women and misses, of navy blue or black messaline silk, Heretofore $4.95 to $9.75 5.00 1.00 1.75 2.95 None sent C.O.D. or on approval Furniture SD Stores _ Every Floor Filied Wita New Pali Sio Latest and “est Designs Low Quallty. Some Specials In gains in Tabie, and Parlor Suites, Dressers and Chifionters in hogany, Gelden Oak, Blrg Eye Mapte ead Carcassian Walnut; Some Wiih Wood Beds to Match, Ali at Very Low Prices, Quality Guaranteed. | WE FURNISH HOMES COMPLETE CASH GL CREDIT, 2209 3d Av., Bet. 120 & 121 Sis, stablished Nearly talt KS, Prices; High Beds, many Bar- = ROBINSON’S LET US SEND A MeisterPiano TO YOUR HOME ON 30 Days’ Free Trial If it doesn't earn its right to stay there, we will send for it and ry the charges back to our place of business, Fight Handsome Styles to Choose From Prices $175 to $350 We are confident that the month's) trial will induce you to buy the Piano you select, in which event you can buy it on these terms: SMALL WECKLY ( R MONTHLY PAYMENTS NO CASH PAYMENT Gs ‘NO_INe EI NO EXTRA SOLD .D & COMPANY'S TEN-YEAR IANO STOOL AND COVER FREE sell to dealers of come wader any eine ot not ne me-and wave sording + WE PAY THE EXPENSE OF SENDING THE MEISTER TO YOU« HOME, AND HE FREIGHT TO POINTS OUTSIDE Rothschild & Company's resources are in excess of tse at uly capable ¢ Fe ve home tan any ve world, | Write, on. iy teleuraph or tele one from eight differant cheown MIMBTRR and we sill Jend the ment to you for a mouth free of all east. Prices $175 to $350 We pay the freight no matter where you live THE MEISTER PIANO CO. Tothehtid & Co, Bole Owners, Chicago, M.) Eastern Branch, New York City Clarendon mige.. a. %. Cor. 18th St. Tel. starrennnt ABa-254 EVATOR TO TENTH i L008 wi pieces, Beis PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food. All Grocers and Drugetuts, “READERS \ HE WORLD ing out of town for * vaca nomay have The World sen end addres® changed a » ae desired, aing World, 12@ per week. \\ vening World, Ge per week, \\ Sunday World, Se per Sunday 1d your tance tthe NEW YORK WORLD