The evening world. Newspaper, October 21, 1911, Page 5

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1911. : Put Your Wife on Your Payroll; \WIH ST000Q0) ("40st WRa WSS. Lean eae a —_— of the Bronx merchaiite to @et tt In op-|to Bridgeport aml had the ©) gremeny per- Officials and ¢ aos ‘ 1 nnn ARA AANA AAA AAR ARARRAARAAARARAAAARAANAR zens Join in Cele-| eration President Maher decsded to open |teened. Caph, Bort ie. wonkbengy aie eax 4 nee t to Lenox avenue a@prain thas AS YONKERS CAR Her Work Hasa Real Cash Value bratng Sart of One Hundred |e asa we care waa a - and Forty-ninth Street Line, — | como back through One Hundred and| “Women be like ships: fheynesd.some at ooOO——rrr——rrreeaeEO>EOwrErerorrreors>O™". “ With One Hundred and Morty-ninth | Forty-ninth street to Gouthern Boule. | 0n% constantly at the bv fm or they will # 0 ed and bands of musto to| v up to Legmett « laff up in the wind an iJ give you trou- 1 Even the Society Woman Labors at Her Imposed Func oT | imake it lively for the large crowd that | east through | siete aed tel say, mt gers, “ [ia expected, the One Hundred and| Point road and Lafayette , ae tions as Few Men Are Compelled To in Order ie |Forty-ninth street crosstown trolley | the entire route has been covered the ° 4 - line, for which the Bron. has been| party will return to Protection Hall, at Dea / 4] fogs , to Provide for Families, Says —_>+— clamoring for years, will be opened this | One Hundred and Fifty-second street | j a ; _ afternoon. ‘The hustiing chairman of | and Courtiandt avenug where @ ban. | r. Geo, H, WH { otormen Unable to See Each Alive Eatbard. Begins, at Once to Dispense | the opening commit | Quet will be served cmninom bests Bare teegles mut et tee \ is in charge of the arrangements. Mayor Gaynor, President Miller of the of deafness at the Imp 8 r of the Union R Kerrigan and other , and membe perty Own Bronx, ex-President Louls F. HMaffen and Public Service Commissioner Bustie will address the dinera Inheritance From Uncle— |. President Ma way Company, To Seek “White Way.” joMcials of th the Twenty-third Ward Other in Time to Avoid | Productive Labor Should Be Considered an Asset, to Be , Collision. } Recompensed Not Alone by Words of Praise ' but in Actual Cash Value for Services MACKS SLIPPERY, TOO. That Are Rendered. ny Doctors Attend Victims immune. So-called ab and Only Two Go to Woman's work in the home has remained unpaid for eo long e that {¢ has been recognized as unproductive’ labor. f Hospital. When 6 woman meets with en ecoldent her husband te paid eeveral thousand dollars “for the toes of her scrvices.” Yet were she to demend that much pay for giving those services, that de Yeakere last night in a caltuon (4 ee ee oe nee bwo trotiey The acctéent i a re labor should be considered an asset to a woman, * i he on opposite t, om the contrary, 3 working woman is not reckoned side by Graft No. 3 of the New York Aqueauct,| *4@ with the society woman. @ hundred feet east of Seminary ave No woman whose time has commercial value és in society, for ee ‘ion €0 women cam work in one world and play in the other. “All or car manned by Douglass, nothing,” society makes demand of woman. mavto: . : igre Maca Wee ‘pg | oa Woman te developing more than man, decause in order to get | ‘expected to wait on the switch at Cea recognition she has to be @ digger woman than he is a man. | ‘ @venue for a car the crew of The advent of the business woman has ushered out the emo- ich was Henry Hart, motorman, and tional woman. jacob Rothstein, conductor. Instead ef Charles Ki ting the car bound from Mount Ver- Wm proceeded along Yonkers avenue re 1s @ sharp curve and incline in ‘onkers avenue as it nears Seminary oo nd neither Motorman Douglass mor Motorman Hart could eee each other's cars until it was too late to wad dodaci tad bdo Hho prevent a collision. ith new inventions and improved sanitary conditions, Hart says he put on the brakes but he women are not needed in the homes to the exclusion of all else. 264s the tracks were silppery and the The redemption of any woman lies in doing some work “But Wheels slid along. Mounted Poitcerran : Aron Morton was thirty ‘eet ‘rom t! BY SOPHIE IRENE LOEB. ears when they met. He ed to the These are the views of Alice Hubbard, author, lec- purpose of showing ead ite of the drums, | TO MATRIMONY AT 3 prota. tia Aamoctation, under whose, auspices | SAILS TO MATRIMONY AT 76. ; mins Cott the ceremony w nned, accompanied | —— SEATTLE, Oct. 21—By means of @)y) prominent @itizens and invitat| SOUTIT NORWALK, Comn., Oct, a legacy of $7,000,000 through the death) gucsts, will start from One Hundred | “It's never te to wad.” remarked got ea uncle in Texas, Bidney Love, who! and Forty-ninth street and Third ave-|John J, Perry, ty-aix years old, a | Drums played at financia! skyrocketing both in| nue in elaht new cara, going west to|retived » main of Wemtport, yeater- |f cieeme! ‘i Chicago and New York, is again re-|One Hundred and Vortysffth street and{day. Then he called on Mrs. Saran Saee tates eae a rag | Meved of the necesstty of hustling for a living. He wert out to Baker, Or ter his last collapse for a fresh start in life and was making good headway | when another fortune dropped into his [iap. He owns the Mountain Boy mine) | there, but that property will now de- | velop itself, If It is to amount to any- thing, for Love announces that the White Way will be good enough for bim until further notice. There will be no effort to patch up the differences between Love and his wife, Marjorie Burnes, described by Burne- Jones, the English painter as the most | Love was Wizzle at the Bat! Ready to Compete for the World’s Championship In the Game of Value Giving intent on por lowed her to Europe for that purpose, \ but fatled, after she obtained @ New York divorce last May. His life in Baker has been spent in a cowboy sult, sombrero and amoke When news came of his legacy embled the townspeople and threw everything wide open for thelr ent tainment, Since then he has been spend- vea « | dng money as if he had no other thought cumulate | in the world. ttle, They| Love evolved from horse showing into of the earth. | brokerage In Chicago and made a atir tn | mother who gives her the market by plung that swung for-) » her power, her life, and ives to) tunes poth for and against him, That jit SA nerd atcha ie mkt pat field proving too all for him he tried orld, We give a few words and New York in January, 1908, and #oon hit ley said: “Men must work and women must weep.” But it is high time we were turning tears into thrift No woman who washes for a living labors as does the average society woman. Women are not all flited for housework, and therefore should moth of senti ssing word New York’s Newest Department Store jeetice \iesete Teal ao se Lect thoes turer, farmer, summing up the position of woman of this Me ei arand, Dinebion et tharCane phe rena eine oF weet fo ee Sect pitmis. Besides the ambulance doctors progressive era, at her desk in the Roycroft Philansterle | sus, tas just sald ae eis ae rere nee wea coaueed to 96,000, De. Pratt, Dr. MacLaren and Dr. Miller at West Aurora, N. Y. some, fiousewives who. think they ‘ate —_—_—_—— Only a Few Days Now responded; also Dr. Paul and Dr. Olm- “Now that woman has entered al! the walke in! emplo: when they are not. No one] agp DAY OF REGISTRATION, the realm of trade where her Isbor has a fixed valuo, 4's" ynisewite earns noting. A min |, ROcltwr XO-gey, | Berseerany tae what of the woman at home,” said Mrs. Hubbard, “the or womun earns just as much a he or) ye yeu go nos register you cannot vote wife, whose so-called unproductive labor has remained |*"* £o1s Wenn ee work ap | At the primarion next year unrecognized? Isn't tt about time that she have a fixed| mothers, home makers, housekeep- remuneration for her services? Must ehe continue to be ers, they will have to receive |... pations, and care for them well, ait to the worth the chattel, and is the result of her work Justa matter| Sy\her work, and’ in the same |éivine the Destproduct, | | of board and keep? medium that men receive theirs. ga hoes Not the homes of free eaGered severe injerise on his right bes, “A man thinks he is generous when he gives her big ddetegpd tering bib res ey | women and free men. It would save and Peter Dove of No 21 Vas Bure) 44 much allowance. All summed up, alldwance is but married alimony.| tuetr work, of they will not value [mOn¥ eoceeeppodl neh pel pee ane Motorman Hert escaped injury and| Many women are veritable slaves that must come a-begging for the money| thetr sigalg hagres 9 (ror Rated ural result of evolution and must fol- o use either intelligently. } Douglass wae hurt sligutiy. The ist ofl chat is in reality thetrs for the labors that have heretofore been unrocog:| SWamen are, human beings frst, Inat |!ow ae the peel g a agp ar taal ae ee nderont cvanae. che Dron, | nized, termed unproductive. If similar rules covering the pay for business | and always. ‘There cannot be one world | Pian wor i and Mount Vernon ai onkera resl-| women were to be adopted in the home-and were the woman to receive | for men and another for women, one} ' i wou mal 3 01 c other for wo- Gents, Both cars wero partlally-wrecked. | gctual pay in dollare and cents for her labor much of the domestic tangles | standard for men and amine fit My gow a value stead. ‘The doctors found that few of the pas- wengers escaped injury. At the terrific impact they were all thrown forward, bat all except two were able to go home after Raving their cuts an@ bruises and theOpening Date et i Will Be Announced. ESNE 6th AVENUE, 22nd and 23rd STREETS, . secretary of the men and women) pon woman's time, Pt celeiticbe eh ssh men, ‘ © spent it in farming, in would be solved. Dh re| Whether shi s. f mn world, and thelr life Ix one, ‘They a Figg te eM age AA BROOKLYN PAYS TRIBUTE “}fow would you measure this eer- and finished at % o'clock of the marn-|not far apart in desire, purpose and SE ee ten Gt toed ao co?” I asked ing followin potential power. h can be valuable to humantt, TO TWO NOTED MEN. “Tet me give you an tnatance of what! “No woman who washes for a iiving| “Man does not have to prove bod Re thane ¥ tue would be ginced On rs a wife's service re legally worth to @ could labor as this woman did. No| worth, He demands his pay « the work of motherhood @nd the teaoh- y ve r " Dy | ‘on it ually do the un- The Mayor and Seth Low Laud|*ti " nawered Mra, Hubbard, with|Woman who works in tho fleids oni ae Ot ee aeaaie as much recog. |e of children. | J 2 ‘@-[endure it. No workd hi ‘Woman would rank as an inai- E. M. Shepard and Abraham considerable accent on the word We | strength for exertion so arduous, x few | nition of her efforts vidual, ap « citizen, and she would ’ Abraham. enter anitem cand |™Months of it, then sanitarlums, hosp!-| WOMAN'S WORK WITHOUT) occupy @ place in the world never here, dated Sept. 11, 111, doctors, surgeons, PRICE TO FAMILY. yet held by a ‘civilisea’ woman. m is @ common one) eaying: VALUE More than 1,000 persons attended the| this fpemorial services to Edward M. Shep-| MEASURE OF WOMAN’! ard and Abraham Abroham at the IN DAMAGE SUITS. ooklyn Academy of Music last night. yor Gaynor was chairman of the “Men who want to own human be ings, and women who want to be owned, will always cry out against cutting asunder the bonds that compel two classes, the superior and the inferior. uctora dn phy-| — wyoman's work has been esti- A funerals, obit-| mated as without money and with- ritten by those whose) ont price to husband, father or code of «morals requires | + Claims have deen Aled in the City |apeak no iil of the dead, Nt MY) Wrother, | 2t te not to be oempen gated for by money. We do ni uarles, epitap! use. Clerk's office during the last 3 “& society woman's life is 1a- |The people are the sick Who tnherit ting and principal speaker, Of Me) eraons who have fallen on allp- | orfows, Tt takes an tmmens- | Joie’ y” ipod 0 oo mee one’ pre, [ie malady from which th» Sultan of nd I started tn Brooklyn the], Dery, oF dafective sidewalks ae fol- of energy, toll | paring food for human beings, and | mmo love lberty a At all times ne was an tne] / tows: wis olawead work without business egreements, | V4) for the liberty of mi Mra. Bertha Norris, %,000 for fall- ve sidewalk on Wetes and child A q 1 will their work motion nee Kind a ae ing on defec labor is so ex- JMiorestimaved. The work, not tl ut he was unable to attain] ! * rece’ 0 gnitic fr ehase idoain, None of us ever doen.| street fast April 10. William J. Nor product, ives no recognition = — — » Vaan ‘Phere whould be a business | | ‘Although he did not become a Pre ris, the iusband, $5,000 for the loss of | Women, ment whereby the wifo should receive SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES | ‘ ent, a Governor or a United States] his wife's services. ‘ Jaws are easy to follow.| yay for her portion of the work. But! | : his fe was by no means & Mrs. Mary ©. Scott, $10,000 for @ |The reward for obedience of these laws ts | hq a. she travels a road that leads *s Foot-E: A ; He was one of the best and] gay; on slippery sidewalk in Elk ‘ days and happin BL AAP sbhares Alea Foot Bats the sattonlionensen ‘Most just men I ever knew." street last March. Albert Boot, her “Thus no woman whose time has\pne wastes, becomes a triffler, is akil-|It relieves painful, smarting, tender, Of the merchant the May i $10,000 for the loss of her [Commercial value is in soctety. ful in nothing, !* at the beck and|nervous feet, and instantly takes the | “LE mever knew a more perfect char-]| Husband, Sey J. Norrie hae “and with the advent of the | (ai) of one man because, to quote Mr#. | sting out of corns and bunions. It's th i‘ leeter than Mr. Abraham. He was a] services. William (i woman whose worth has a fixed ((jjiman, a youl has asked her this g . It's the Marge man in every sense and always re-| made solemn testimony that hla Vales im dollars aud conte the | ution. Will, you, be antne™ greatest cormfort discovery of the age minded me of the scers of which his} wife's services were worth to him emotions! woman is passicg. An ‘He does not suy y valet, my Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight or new! race has produced so many.” $5,000, emotional mother, for instance, ts [gervani, uy slave at she in all of feel nr nash 1 Seth Low, the next spoaker, sald he] vppe inference is that her services| the worst kind. Work is the no Iwite. We mere- # feel easy is a certain relief for | and Mr. Shepard had been friends for] wore worth to him $500 between April! most blessed thing, for it takes se it is easier to sweating, callous, swollen, tired, aching | thirty-five years, although once they to question. We have al- feet. Always use it to Break in New| {J 10, 1911, and Sept. 17, 19M1—or $5,000 for) her out of Rer emotional self. z | < ts for the same offic it that way befo fs mee cprncenin for te hme Ofoe ORE ta. cuther work, $10.6 month. | 1k lang teen eee Fee ene eet in one work jx Shoes. ‘Try it today. Sold everywhere, | “what 60 ¥< ‘iiliam J. Nor- . raining and skill 4 0 a y arke Cadman said of] “Waat do you Sain Blain) Pen HAVE MONEY Sy Vily aaah the thing cents. Don't accept any substitute, | | ris would say to Mrs. a “Fifteen persons could domestically For FREE trial package, address end of one year's Work she should de-| «4 woman who feels freadom tn care for seventy-five who work at othe 4 hd from hin $12,000 for gervices ren- oe Allen $, Olinsted, Le Roy, N.Y ad? Or what would be the expres. === = — sion on William's face f, by a new legal anactinent, he could be compelled to pay this amount to nie wife. i ye) “Albert Scott estimates hin wife's ser- BOMB, Oct. arcont, tho TAMOUS| Viney ag atili more valuable—$10,00 for | inventor of wireless telegraphy, Will oon | viene or en,000 @ year. Mr. | be offered a title by the King of Maly | scott should be rich if Mary earns bim ‘an recognition of his patriotiam In turn | gsy00 a year, his only expense for get- | ing over the entire Marcon! equipment }iing so mucli money being the board) in Italy to the Government on €he out- | ang Keep he chooses to give her. ee of.030 was wins Burks “Yt fe not difficult to see why woman's | 7 again work should be considered not of worth | falda in the business world. Consequently, | even women who are not in soctety do| hot place a price upon their labor. S80 ‘and waste, as saves do | drifted into destructive | name Was a safety vault for the city, Cl men ar plentiful as blackberries good men fe very scarce, Abraham Abraham yaa one of the latter.” > To-day is Your Last Chance to Visit the Wonderful Electrical Exposition This is the greatest Exposition of its kind ever held. It is worth going many miles to see. Yet it is right here in New York. Don’t miss it. You will be surprised to find how much benefit and enjoyment you will get from ** THE SUNDAY WORLD Some Magazine Features To-Morrow: The Girl Who Changes Her Clothes 26 Times a Day. Tweed’s Ghost—Alleged to Haunt New York’s County Court House. A Newspaper Writer’s “‘Most Amazing and True Story.”’ Stewart Edward White’s Excitit,, Experiences in ‘‘Darkest Africa.” Girls Who Have Proved Themsel@ts ‘‘Heroines of the Switchboard.” | Newest American Beauties Who Are Now Posing in Paris. | ; “Don’t Destroy Old Buildings.’’ By Rodin, Greatest of Sculptors. | A Woman’s Choice—$2,000,000 or the Man She Loved. t Seven Games for Hallowe'en. ‘‘Three Weeks With the Turkish Army.” Wordsand Music of the Great Hippodrome Song: ‘‘Pretty Little Sunshade.” ; A progressive euchre under th ploes of the Phoenix Club of W. will be given at Summerfeldt’s Ha! extravagance. a Joy. “The womas who dawdles seal Huguenot, on Nov. 10 oudolr, im her yartor, on the ver- Mies Mabel Ransine of Graniteville hes b ned from New Brunewick,| Sade, in the kitchen or over the ‘th est of friends for Dack fence necods more pity than alltel dagaliate say overworked woman on earth. Rev. J. B. J. Thodes will eccupy the| she hee misallied herself with us- | ot Army end Navy Officers and Men Using the Wirele —Popul A Battloship Blown Up. Both Afternoon and A Multitude of Things Evening. Manufactured and Performed by The? Marvellous Electric Electricity. Violin: How to Save ifoney tn The Sight of a Great ace Superbly Iillu LEARN, =~” ENJOY $35 pulpit of the Kinguley M. F. Church] petural conditions and surround- \ Stapleton tomorrow morning and} ney, | overting. i Miance should be with{ ‘The a! . Woman's alll | annual ball of the Young Men's! vsiure, which planned that every mo- Stapleton will be held thie o' ening vat the German Clubrooms | nent of the twenty-four hours should | Stapleton. Souvenirs will pr be occupied with work, play, sleep. leanted to each of the ladies present. | MAN-MADE LAWS MADE TO BE ‘Mies Hattie Hitchcock of Stapleton BROKEN i le the guest of friends in Portland, Me. e | ‘The ‘members of Richmond Lodge,| “Man-made laws may be broken will hoid box | without serious consequs of Pytilas Halll erly done, Woman-mnde bs voteg | 27° Uke those of the Medes and Per- Sompte) slans. Woman power in lawmaking Fee eaten ee held. at Columbia | 18 Bomething 19 be feared tn soctety dn West New Brighton, on ne: for sine of omission te Run an Auto- ishing Features of This Great Exposition. mobile. Electrical Exposition and Automobile Show New Grand Central Palace, Lexington Ave. and 46th St. Coca Wait aana 10,A.M.to 11. P.M Full Reporte of World's Champlenchip Series An Artist’s Study of the Faces of Beautiful! Women. ‘dance to be given by Court Etleen, ‘ei Be cure te eee the many exhibits of The New York Edison Company 5 “A eee sitlons co Nene the “‘At-Your-Service’’ Company, 4 most cordial welcome ls assured all visitors GET YOUR COPY EARLY IN THE MORNING ; { to be an exceptional affair. Qrescent Athletic Club of New aslebrate ite ennivereasy ° ‘ iP 4 at the Ger ) he ae » Mor. 1k 1 ae

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