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GAYNOR TAKES UP SE OF BLUECOAT SCORED BY JUDGE Receives Complaint From Police Chaplain That Hylan Was Unfair to McCarthy. PI ADS FOR JUSTICE. Rey. Mr, Morrison Says Humi- liated Policeman Wanted | to Quit the Force. Mayor Gaynor is ¢ of Patrolman Jam by Magistrate Hy the cas sidering MeCarthy, n of Broo cently, of not telling the tri testifying: in the case of John Henrich had been arrested vy M y and charged with assaulting o robbing the conductor of a street cx When Henrich was arraigned before Magistrate Jiylan he denied bot cha: han swore after the was hands fr After Henrich i the patrotman the act of taking pocket avy coins ne: who f nished t the Mayor trom th to-day, neh; L do not 1 he isn’ charge, hold ‘The officer hu by this unjust and @ uacalles for rebuke fr the wrote Chaplain Morrison, “that when he returned to the station house } talked of resigning from the pollce force. “A Magistrate thus treating an officer with a most excellent record is not only to my mind, has no 5 of his oMfce, + ny appreciation of the nature of {ie aus thority reposed in him, I lay this mate ter before Your Honor, hoping, on be- halt of the officer, for some redress, an with the conviction that you would no more overlook a wrong done to & policeman than a wrong done by him to any citizen.” Mayor Gaynor woulg make no com- mont on the Rev. Mr. Morrison's letter. He was informed that a fellow police- man wos In court and co:roborated MoCarthy’s story. FAGES SENTENCE FOR CONTENT IN ANEX-MAID'S SUIT Mrs. Boas, Claiming to Be Common Law Wife, Pushes Case Against Seaman. Frederick W. Sherman, a wealthy rea! estate broker and ona of the founders of | the East Side Republican Club, must @tow cause in the Supreme Court to- morrow why he has refused to turn over his property to a receiver or bo puntehed for contempt. Juatico MoCall t directing Sherman to @ppear before hiin on c Ohristiaa Boas, formerly Sherman 0. 209 Bart Thirty-fitth street, laims to be Bherman'’s common-law wife. Mrs, Boas started suit recently a Alvoroe from Sherman. The Court grant- ed her motion for allmony for the sup- port of herself and her ten-year-old son, Robert Sherman, and when Sherman falleé to pay the alimony she got Justice Pendleton {o appoint Jonas J. O'Lrien| recelver of Sherman's property. Mrs. | Boas complains that Sherman refused | to obey the order of the Court tn the receivership proceeding, Mrs, Boas was employed !n the Sher- man home when Sherman's first wife died in January, 1898, She said she then ‘became Sher! common-law wife, In August, 1908, she said, she became fll and! had to go to @ hospital, While she was) there, she alleged, Sherman married Miss | Jano Gleason, with whom he ts now| ving. Mrs, Boas names the former Miss | Gleason a# co-respondent in her suit for) divorce. ato a maid in the| —__— | WOMAN TURNS AGAINST MAN WHO TOOK HER FROM HOME. Young Ironworker Held by Green- wich Court on Six Charges. Creamer, a young tron-worker arrested at South Norwalk because d taken M Minor John who was yesterday Jonn D. away from her home kimona, t after nds in a unde was nwieh made against him--disor¢ {ntoxleation, kidnapping, « deadly weapon concealed, the life of Mr, Minor and suag He was helt for a later # in $730 ball. His companion, | White, was held on swhstantlally the vamne charges, in $500 ball. Minor, after a talk with her hus ind efter hearing things ( Six th using abuat atening | dressed “aA baby is a ball and chain in @ dere! ie aa way," Mra, Norria admitted, “but it| “Poor child,” said one of the police- | naing a woman to responsltilities, to |™eM- “I suppose she's butchered too vy usefulness, to the sane, real things of NOW: Might aw well go after him Hs Policemen made a descent on the M* What docs a woman who {house and guarded every corridor and i exit, One went to each door spends the morning getting mani- | raved until a sleepy cured and combing out her puffs | But there was no corpse any on a pillow, and the afternoon Then they looked for the girl, but playing bricge, contribute to her there was no such girl in the house, 7 ‘ either, generation? Why, auch women, An open scuttle was the y solution every one of them, might be |that suggested tt he girl had dropped into the aching void and | played a joke on the police department the world would roll on exulting | and while they were waiting to put the in the loss of a burden, handcufls on her brutal father for cut- Motherhood means so much more than | tM her mother's throat from ear fust having a baby and turning it over @aT She had quietly slipped away over | to @ nurse. Suppose a man should ceme Joining roof# and gone where she} home some day and say to his wife; (could laugh without danger of Inter. “well, dear, ive found some | Tuption. one to run for $25 a Lewy month. Tha: +f rive me time to WOMAN WINS L LAND PRIZE, take German lessons and reduce my figure Gets ANotment Worth 810,000 tn! “Wouldn't she think he'd gone crazy? And yet that's what every Woman does | Government Drawing. oe ell tl THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, Weer en Mrs. Kathleen Norris, in Apotheosis of Motherhood, Says} Woman With Baby in Arms Holds the Strong- est Argument for Happiness Ever Found. She Urges Wives to Have Children for Their Own Sakes, Leaving “Gocd of the Race’ and “Duty to So- ciety’’ Out of the Quest on. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “The woman who has a baby in her arms holds the strongest argument for happiness that has ever bean found.” | At least Mrs. Kathleen Norris belleves so, and) she has put her arguments—save the strongest argu-! ment of all, whose name ts Frank and who {s just: eleven months old—into a story which ts called, “Mother,” and which has just been published in New York. Mrs. Norris's philosophy of motherhood {s certain’ to have a wide appeal, for she urges women to have! children for their own happiness rather than for the! “good of the race,” “their duty to society,” or any other high abstraction with which the masses of femininity do not con- cern themselves. | | | | NIXOLA GREELEY* SMITH if a bby ts an argument;happiness my baby brought. 1 would , the more arguments the | atv It up for him to-morrow If it Menea Mra, Norris be-|Necessary. | Why, even the adjustm: Mrs. 3 [of our weekly budget, the hundred little In tho large family, and her} details of tie house, mean more to me which first appeared in a Jeading| than writing, simple and b |. “But perhaps you are a born mother,” I suggested here are many women 1 who found f y ane dat to whom domestic Joys might not be #9 ‘ong, cas in ministering to her husband! sodyrying-t large brood, It tells, too, o Ten” Mre, Norris admitted, “wut 1 the revolt of one of the daughters from | think all women are born mothers it! the old {deals and of her ultimate return] they only give themselves a chance to ‘find it out. My mother had six chil- sd Mrs, Norris's story tn the! Fen and she brought them all up to a Lintore 1 saw her yester.|"ealthy, happy maturity, and they all Lacie D par ‘i “+ jor Delieved In thetr mother more than in quite certain that her anything else on earth. What ™ore escr! for happiness was atl ©h® could a woman accomplish than that— believed jany woman?” But when [ saw the Norrish And tn the face of Mrs. Norris's smil- irgling and smiling in his ing and efficent maternity and the very I was willing to admit that 2 friendly reception accorded me by! a ip-euetied to: her Gpeten ank Norris, aged eleven months, I had nothing to say, ame here with ed s than a year ago, has JOKE ON | ON POLIGE nat prorat region, \“He Cut Her Throat From Ear KNOWS THE HAPPINESS HER, OWN BABY BROUGHT. to Ear,” Child Sobbed at Station. who young woman, “1 don’t want to seem opinionated,” Mrs. esterday, “but I find by has brought me more hapiness’ than anything else in life, and when I see the number of ue in N told me ey are missing. o triumph of society, of @ professt or an art cam give « woman the intimate tender joy | that comes to the poorest mothen, | with even the most unpromising, | Arooling baby in her arms, | “L gee poo nen with badly ubway some: | ik at them and nave found the key many wealthier | w Any one who notices @ nine-year-old nirl mourning for a murdered mamma to-day will confer a favor by calling up the Fast Fifty-first street police station. There are soveral policemen there who Batons. Levi. Onen y came I used, want to have her perverted sense of ssod sometimes by the in- | hu operated on, the perpetual un-| Jacob Brilles, janitor of the Night everything to! Court, was standing on the steps last times, an th “The Poorest Mother of a Child Is Richer Than Any Childless Daughter of Luxury’ 1911. HOT FOOT BATHS ‘TO TREAT COLD OF BlG POLAR BEAR Wife of Jim, at Central Park, Calls in Doc Snyder for Hubby’s Sniffles. UNWILLING PATIEN Blankets Strapped Round Him | and Medicine Poured Down to Save White Hope. Jim, the big polar bear at the Central | Park Zoo, Is aitting in his cage wrapped in blankets—several of them, His great pawe are intermittently soured in a hot mustard bath, and enough castor ofl to |ereate havoo tn ali of the nurseries tn ‘New York has been poured down his | throat. For Jim, the potar bear, has a cold. When a polar bear of something I!ke @ thousand tons, more or less, epee | ment gets “er misery” in his head and | begina to kick because the janitor won't send up more steam there 1s some trouble In the Zoo, And, beattes, Jim {s peevish through long residence in the | park and {s aot {n his bearish ways. Usually a polar bear can't stand more than seven years of New York | climate. Jim has been on the enter- | tainment Job for atx of the seven, and Billy Snyder wanted to break a record | with his White Hope. So this morn- | ing when Nellie, the companion to | Hm, who married him and came to | live in the same bear flat three years | if ago, complained that there was no liv. | ing with Jim because his disposition was something awful Snyder started | to make a cure, + THS “TOOT TOOT!” WAS FALSE SIGNAL TOSLY MR. CUPID Hubby Wasn’t on the Limited, but on Rock Overlooking Wifie, He Swears. Ascending a dangerous ledge of rock on a dark night, and looking down to behold one's wife seated on @ bench, kissing and hugging another man, might upset the mental equilibrium of most husbands and cause them to come tumb- Iing down on the heads of the amc pair, Not so with Russell whose nerves have been stead work as pilot of the Lake Shore parted. through he o others, But a/n ght, when the girl ran up, crying etter than that. | “Papa has just killed mamma!" she “ believe firmly that the poor- | Walled. est mother of a child ie richer Brilles, with a creepy feeling, took her less daughter of | by the arm and started on the run for iow any cand) win | the police station. OXUFY: | our women coming to if| “Hie cut her throat from ear to ear,” sobbed the child between jumps. At the station she gave an address in Kast Fifty-elghth street, and several policemen were sent on the run to the hey persist in shirking the respons!- wil es of life? Think of the thousands of homes in which there are no chil- in whien o sands ts Hs Mayes te unfair to a house. Polleemen O'Nelil and McCoy there one. N chiid not to give him Little brothers and ‘went Sone aan ane Ag sey girl, sisters to play and study with, Think nat e Lie vy ete of his loneliness, surrounded by grown enite bee leeds for her,” quoth persons, as he !s for the most part. ee (he) Reveataatinleleatey.itte Gua that f do not ‘a week should mean that wher- “St ts needless to say belleve a man making have nine children, I home. about five hundred persons ered, attracted by the e: th ed policemen, 4s strength to ever share:i88 * eep the people from overrunning the | ahould be a houseful of cy Hallway: NEARLY ALL THE WOMEN WERE: Tho girl gazed with interest at the CHILDLESS. ehifting throng and Urted her eyes. “And yet how many enpty houses) "Just wait and Tl go up and bring there are! We apent two summers in Papa down,” she told her bluecoated °: i puntry place near New York, peo- Corte. pied inoctly by families with Incomes! “Maybe it will be the eastent way to ranging from $3,00 to $7,000 a year, him," sagely decided a policeman. Nearly all the women were childless, ) "G0 ahead, little girl” ordered an and the others wished they were, Why, other. when my baby was born @ woman| Ten minutes passed and the policemen | came to me ad sald: ‘Well, I've come |>°sAan to become apprehensive, ‘The ‘crowd impatiently demanded the mur- derer. to see your Hittle ball and chain!” to | § one of the fastest trains in the world, H ; tan the entire traffic of the. bridge, | Here's the story he told in court to-day wapuy hegre Ruler i Nat 1h Manhattan bound, was handled by the Lampson left his home one “Pivdesay day Pebin : bigs BR. T. crowded under tensibly to board his train, ‘Ten min- crush to- Nt arr ih ica was walking up|@ral scrambling to see what Mrs. Mar- The B. at ? Le | . 6 McAlliste: Heged against Fitz s . n Riverside Drive with a dapper young | #l¢ McAllister BAT Ateae Lae pgleson | only ae far as the toonm at ¢he Delan ey | Beresford. there must body man. Lampson followed at a distance. On went the couple, until they reached MRS. MPALLISTER SUES HER HUBBY, FITZ BERESFORD pies ais Just Guess Who Owns This| Distinguished Name—Then Read the Story. and 1. ——— is THOUSANDS WALK BRIDGE. Fitz Beresford McAllister and his : 4 srite in| Barn Ont on Williamabure pretty wife, @ one-time fa South Carolina plantation circles, are Mra, five years of wedded Ife, to-day filed an action for a separation from Fitz Beresford In Justice Bischoff's part of the Supreme Court. Knight, asked fe ter had been sued, notable, There Is no such thing an reasoning with a polar bear as to the advisability of consuming castor oll, getting into blankets and paddling In hot mustard. Jim objected to any ich proceedings and insisted upon living nis bear life in his own way. Snyder gota rope and made a noone in it, Then he lassoed the big fellow | and tied him in @ cornet With this! starter he went into the ana | strapped the blankets over the huge, shaggy coat. Then he started that | foot-bath business and supplemented it | by getting the castor ol! down, | Honeat, Snyder could be arrested for using false pretenses on that castor oll treatment, but he got the ofl down, and | Jim gat back in a ead, dignified sort of way ta eniffie out his cold, even as you During Buatest Crash, Sp Owing to the burning out of cables McAllister, after only supplying the electric cars that cross Willfamsburg Brkite, about 60,000 workers in whe factories and stores of lower Manhattan were late at their places of employment | As no cars were running into Manhat- | power for thi Mrs, McAllister, r counsel, Thomas W. Me- suitable alimon There was a gen- plaza of the bridge and ooklynites who crossed on them hi the be scandal involving some- | lu’ ot ‘neath the ron to walk long distances or pay additio Hedda gh} ile way cautious. | Did not the name Fits indica A arfaren F aonal ly to tho other alde of the rock and gant train, the 10 nore: ot ee | see a pel tensee ean ee might mean relationship with Tora | WASHINGTON, Oct, 2.—A — iy Ay Dectes, and Lord Dectes ts lttle Vivian | rany Injunction Was granted to-day by ‘TOOT! TOOT!"—BUT HUBBY | Gould's husband. Or, there's Kitty United Gates Court ‘of Commerc WASN'T ABOARD THE LIMITED. | Gordon, once a Beresford, And as for ting aside Interstate Commerce “Toot! Toot!’ came shrilly from afar, , McAllister! rere were Ward and TMUAsiON a declan’ Gs Tale Roldan “He's off; that's the ‘Limited!’ cried| Lionel and a dozen others of this dla) Naw viite grain cane. The comnitssl Mra, Lampson joyfu Unguished y, family of sartortall giger prodilited railroads from giving ‘The dapper young man folded nisi celebrities, So little wonder that amaze tig Nay slash “pabililaie “Aiea ee arms about tighter and caressed| Ment spread througn th irt-Houae | shipping ea not accorded to her, Lampson, on the ledge of rock, | When It became known dealote points, hheaved a sigh and backed away, When | ford McAllister had been s he went h fe told his wife what hey Soon half a dozen reporters were had se re was a quarrel and|racing to Lawyer MeKnight's office to Ghuren, | fe ple pected | get a line on Fitz Beresford. Mr, Mee aay ha nat once consulted a| Knight treated them kindiy and gently re on | an was served wtth {5 ed them fi he ¢ For Fite to bel ns an int fn a sult for; and the of his rt nding while | 3 Mrs. Lempason charged that} name ts a clerk in a s An made 11, 110, dam avenue, and } 1 his rhe ar cit for divorce, | been Prominent in our best | destroyed by fire has been g the dapper eee aay | TIM society etn y 1 H 1 ears, man as co- | 30 came to trial be in the Supreme Ce Lampson told episode, Mrs fore Justice o-day, might Tho c admitted “went walkin esponde: but dented that she tmp She declared she know her husband was following and she wanted to "con-| vince’ him she was a dutiful wife in| ev nse of the word i} CHARGES WIFE WITH CHRONIC AUTO JOY RIDING, Fagan of ipson's attorne tt represented Mra, showed t IN ried Jan om tne ore to be absent or Justice ¢ uted for ¥ t Prom Lo} BERNE, Switeerlan who turns her house over to a § aun ane ara servant and her child to a $20 nurse, |. eeGORy BD, Oct, 24.—Mary J rs should ee arte. | Kendall of Rapit City, 8 D,, drew No, children to look acter thelr mental and{} at the opening to-day of the draw: | ea) ‘welfare ing for the 4,000 in the Rosebud isn't anything a mother! tana allotment i dg gaat shouldn't know, How can she help her | be worth §10,00¢ ne drawing will Isle “hoy Who seeing interested {i Aol! uke three dove | ence, her litte git) who has a talent, “** a | for music, unless she tres to be pro- | ficient in the things her children want oka at to know? We hear a lot about the! Oct Woman with the profession, and she, at |Culet of tie General Stat? and least, has some usefulness, some ihe cenaheee to the world, But motherhood is all who h a the professions when it ie practised achienents during the Kusso-Japanere Hy, 7 WOe preseite Wrday tu the rank | “Ady, Writing Baus pevar wyan vg nelat | Ma has been a myst gold of that f ite gold f. been eubstituted, nich bare of jead had 4 - ah aa POWDER Absolutely Pure Economizes Butter, Flour, Eggs; makes the food more appetizing and wholesome The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grap2 Cream of Tartar 'Crescent aiieaanal Rug—4xi2 Feet antes to Women’s High Grade Coats — Qroadway L lob Streot: PCH SEEDER ROME RE BE HORE HE BE HC 2C 2 CDOTS RT Witches’ Kettle At Has Not Boiled in Vain New Ideas Unique Favors Unusual Decorations THE TAG MARBLES 15 John St. 15 W. 27th St. New York. One of the Finest veh of Brussels peiswrlickted Profaced. NO. 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