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NAUGHTY FOLLIES |Old Idea of Sex Slavery Is Dying, but GETS INTO COURT FRITS CABMET “Turkey Trot” and “Salome” Have Free Run at Ten- « derloin Resort. CAFE’S CASE IN COURT. Two Detectives Made an Un- expected Visit and Were 4... Really Shocked. Some of Bome of them, wally seat therm- | ‘elves @t tables where strange men are : to dance the “turkey lance,” and similar gay ‘The other ploture is that of a stad and quiet eating place, where hungry men ang women go to dine and listen, in quiet sepectadiitty, to soothing and proper music. ‘;Teatice Brady must decide which pk- ture fe the true one. The Justice ad- meted from the bench that he was get- ting @ lot of new information about New York's Tendertoin. Among tho witnesses who drew the | Catdll and Samuel . Lemma, acting for Excise Commissioner »MeEvoy. They told of several visits sto the “Foties,”” ‘\ The eleuths, who for the time being ™ had diecarded the stern mein of minions “of the lew, wore a gay front. You could | net have told from thelr appearance when they sauntered thréugh Fort: fourth street that’ they were anything but eare-free chaps out on a Dit of “lar. They dropped into the ‘Follies, | Frances Evelyn, Countess of Warwick, received me in the drawing room of \ THE EVE More and More Women Are Awakening to the ‘Desire tor Economic Independence, Says Titled English Woman Socialist and Suffragist—If Majori- ty Really Ruled We'd Still Be in Jungle. Women Will Get the Vote in England Very Soon, but | With a Proper Qualification Such as Now Applies | to Men—-Window Smashing Is Foolish, but Nothing Can Retard the Movement. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. : Surrounded by her household gods, and very much of a goddeas herself, her suite in the RiteCariton Hotel yesterday morning | and talked of men and women, of love and marriage and divorce; of suffrage and socialism—in fact, of pretty nearly all the evils and all the remedies to which humanity is heir—or heiress. One might search the classics in vain for any men- tion of the hour at which Aphrodite rose from the sea. But the woman who has been the reigning beauty of England for a quarter of a century rose yesterday in time to keep an appointment at 9.30, and seaworthy as Aphrodite herself, Lore no trace of the stormy passage , ofthe Mauretania, which brought her to New York. RIXO! Lady Warwick is with us to lecture, and she will GREELEY®.SMITW make her American debut at Carnegie Hall to-morrow night. But meantime, perhaps you want to know what she thinks and what she wears, how she looks and what the color of her hair is. A long time ago, when the Oountess @ Warwick was Lady Brooke, English society christened her “the babbling brook” because, it was said, she had told somebody, who told somebody else, who told somebody else, of the famous baccarat game at Tranby Croft at which the then Prince of Wales was present and at which an English gentleman was accused of cheating. It was said too that Albert Edward never forgave Lady Brooke for the indiscretion attributed to her. ‘But the late King’s photograph, signed “Albert Edward, 1890,” Adorned the Countess’s writing Gesk in the Mitz-Cariton yesterday, ena, so fer as I could discover, Lady Warwick possesses just one quality of the brook—that of eternal buoyancy an@ youth. Her beauty might be called an apoth- eosized prettiness, for her features are smal! and extraordinarily regular. WHAT SHE LOOKS LIKE AND HOW 8HE 18 GOWNED. Her eyen are blue stars set under slim, crescent brows, Her complexion’ is the pale pink of English primroses. Her endum of women to-day I believe it would lose—there {s so much ignor so much fear of innovation. the cultured minority th | all reforms, “3f majorities really rule@ the World we might still be in the jangle, More and more women are awakening to the desire for ere 9 a marked tendency tn Eng- Ush fiction to decry the old tdeals of riage,” I remarked. 4s, and the new ideals will have a splen- . NING WORLD, MONDAY, MAR LAD Y WARWICE eppfoached the Customs House a salute of nineteen gyns was fired, the Sulva- dorean colors were dipped and the Stans KNOX GUARDED Zeenat SUSPECTSIN SOUTH man uncovered. A policeman strode up myself,” upon which the policema: saying, “Then more shame for yo knocked off his hat, which was blown into the water. ah literati mca hai ti candi Mae ic. eae Cn it, to him and shouted “Take your hat off! | That's the American national anthem,” | The man replied, “I am an American | 1918.’ ery Is Dying, but _\NRS.PANKHURST - Ht Is Dying Hard, Says Lady Varwick) (NHNGERSTRIE Suffragette Leader Who Re-| fuses to Eat Is Taken Sick and Put in Hospital Ward. —" LONDON, March 11.~As a result of her experiences in Holloway Prison, wh she has defied the authorities and orm yinedt @ mont effective hunger strike, Mra, | Emmeline Pankhurst, ohiet of the Brit. | jiah militant suffragettes, is in the prise on hospital to-lay, Her condition tn sald to be somewhat serious, Her malady, which her friends openly allege is due to her being subjected to solitary conflenement In a cell without heat, i) bronchitis, from which sho suffers in! an tnotpient form most of the time. ‘The prison offictals positively refused | today to make any statement regard- ing the illnoes of Mrs, Pankhurst or whether it was much that she will be | unable to be present in court next |Thureday when she Ix acheduled to be arraigned on the charge of conspiracy | growing out of the raiding of the retatl district and the breaking of hundreds of windows. Her friends are inalined to be anxious, us they say she will probably atick to her determination not to eat until ahe ts released and she may also refuse all modicines. i ‘The hunger strike among the followers of Mrs. Pankhurst who are in prison 40 stil 1a force, .NO information regard- ing {t 1s available, but it Is belleved the authorities are resorting to forcible feeding methods. Scotland Yard positively deniet to-day that the New York authorities have been asked to look for Cristobal Pankhurst there. It-was explained that her offense was not extraditable and that, anyhow, the police belleve that the daughter of the noted muffrasette leader, and herself a deoided exponent of militantiam, is hidden with friends here in the city, A warrant charging conspirac: \ismued some days ago, but the y | euffragette has managed to elude the | police. No, % Eighth jm. . Henderson, twenty- y probationary policeman attached to the Macdougal st station, living | at No. G1 Bank street, and Frank Weck- | roth, twenty-eight, a clerk, of No, 52 | STRIGKEN IN AL See tor cop een office at No, 150 Nassau street. 5 The son was with his father until af o'clock last night and he had then gon@ "0 to his own home at No. 123 West Ninety. 7 sixth street, having had a request ‘ his father to call him by telephone pe” o'clock this morning. At this hour he a Insomnia Leads Lonesome Man to Satelde by a Gas, A rubber tube dangling from a gas burner and father id on the floor Were what confronted Claude Valentine when he entered his father’s kitchen to- borrowed key. The dead nn Valentine, a eontracto: ed on the third floor Lexington avenue He had Sample Suits Must Go! To-morrow, Tuesday, $25 Handsome Serge Suits $22.50 Elegant Cheviot Suits $20 Swagger Mixed Suits. S10 oe Popular Unrestricted Shades Choice Here's an investment you can’t afford to miss. Our hand- somest tailored and dressy suits, reflections of newest styles, MUST GO! to-morrow, at $10. Think of it, everyone up to the moment in style and fabrics, and an array 90 complete and al- luring that you will positively find your heart's desire for a new suit. and see them! All Sizes—All Styles—All Colors Positively your last chance. Beautiful French serges, elegantly tailored mixtures, dressy, braided cheviots, and inntumerable others fashioned along the Intest prevalent lines, with graceful narrow skirts, short, trig jackets, handsomely lined and superbly tailor- ed, They will meet every want and be a lasting investment at this great value-giving Bedell price. \ ALTERATIONS FREE Sale New York Store Only 14-TBWt 14th Stet 6048462 Fulton Street BROOKLYN 64510651 Broad Steet LARGE STORES. did call, but received no response,” Thereupon he went to his father’s home and was equally Unsuccessful In getting — in. Mr. Valentine was fifty-seven yeare oid. According to hia son he had safe | fered acutely from ingomfila of late.” Buy at the Factory AND SAVE A DOLLAR A STEP Read This Special Offer’ Every family can now own a worthy Player Piano, took @ seat and looked thirsty. Ho. a !iair is so flaxen white you want to spin | hpenpllba cp ay it. She ts tall and wore yesterday « | TWO YOUNG WOMEN JOINED | gown of dull blue opening over a simu: THEM AT TABLE. jlated watstcoat of white, embroidered ! Presently two fair damsels, sald the Gdout the edges with oI Under thie detectives, gilded over to thetr table, | Simulated waistcoat was a very plain sat Gown and announced that they, also, | Walst of white laws with @ very email were thirsty, Hey! garcon! wine for the |turnover collar and a litte black tia giris—Deer for the masquerading ferrets | Lady Warwick wore with thie gowa & stot the lew. black patent leather pelt of ¢he kind “Catherine” and “Frances” were the |never seen in America except to make —_ " Lady Warwick agreed, cones | id influence tn changing our laws in| Tegard to marriage, which are archaic. | Divorce will have to be frevr with us— as free as with you, “IT don't mean that we muat have a: many divorces as you La Warwick added hastily. “I think ir haps English women are. slower® to | change, more steadfast, less volatile, | possibly, than American women. Bui the tendency of women ail over the | world Is away from sex dependence. Army Chief at San Salvador Says Troops and Machine Gun Are Not to Awe Natives. SAN SALVADOR, Republic of Salva- $2 for one hat.” hape to<merrow the American St partment will present us a | waiter hi Best & Ca, : Gen, Muller, when he was later rectt-| Bank street, were arraigned in Jeffer- ing the Incident, jokingly said: “Per-| son Market Court on charges of dis- 6 De; | orderly conduct. Hun Chin says Hen- im for dereon started the fight because the i him the check, Franklin Player Salome dancé and all the new fancied | | the conjunction of @ plain shirtwatet and| 80 long as ‘oman cannot earn her | dor, Ll = nemes given by the girte to their fe dl Harri Me Once Rind wa ta clown living fe dapeanent vane hs | r, March 11.—It was the turn to-day ge aia mous ploture hat with « flat, ciroular|®"4 there is no use mincing words | °f ‘h® Salvadoreans to extend « w r} “We can do the turkey trot, the pl . about it. The most signiticant move-|CoMe to Philander <, Knox, United ppecta ale $ dances,” gurgled and coved the girls “We wish we could eee ‘em, but cotta go home—there's company there, lamented the detectives. ‘And they saw “ladies smoking, the detectives did, and they heard ladies say | things st would make you blush to hear, and the singers warbled songs that the niee detectives thought were “‘sug- eative.” John Dietrich, manager of the Follt denied all that the detectives told. wouldn't permit such things in his place—my goodness, no! David F. Mayer, attorney, said he was agent for the building in which the Follies ‘a located And thet he was a frequent visitor there. + “Eve been all over New York,” said he, “and, as far as I could see, this place Was no better and no worre than any other restaurant in the Tender- lem" Aatorney Charies Firestone, for the Ramctsa Commissioner, mentioned the cabaret show in his cross-examination. “WHAT'S A CABARET sHOWw?7" AGKED THE COURT. this cabaret show?” quired Justice Brad: 004 deal about them. Ine “T've heard a trimming of blue ostrich feathers. “I—I haven't seen very much of Amer- toa yet,” began Lady Warwick depre- catingly. It wae evident that she ex- impressions of accumulated since landing late Saturday afternoon. And she seemed both astounded and re- Heved when I suggested that she tell me @bout the Horticultural College for Women which she cstablished some years ago in Warwickshire. “The idea of women farmers te new to us," I said, “It was so new in England when the college was aturted,” Lady Warwick re- piled, ‘that people thought It ridiculous. But there are a are unsuited to aplendid gardeners, bee keopers, butter makers, &, The not a charity in any sense. The students pay regular fees, and when they are competent we have no diMoulty in finding positions for | them as head gardeners, “A great many women who live in the condtry prefer having an edu- cated woman gardener who is really @ companion as well. “Our students are mainly daughters of professional men, lawyers and doc- tora who die leaving little property, and our ‘graduates earn much more than “Why, Your Honor,” said Samuel B. | ecretaries, typists, governesses, dc.— Pollek, counsel for the Follies, “it's a, 8nd these occupations overcrowded Parisian fad. Instead of doing their One of our acts on the atage, the singers and other her own home and { performers go out among the tables,|her own motor, acquired with the it ‘Trat’e all.” profits of vegetables. More and more “Oh,” said His Honor. i Frits Berger, a real estate dealer of Ne, M4 Eset Highty-ninth street, was called ¢0 vouch for the respectatflity of | the Follies. He admitted conversing one evening with a “lady,” whom he did/ not know, He could not reca!] whether | OF mot he bought a drink fot her. “Tt. was crowded,” he said, to aft Gown at the table where she was, | Ghe was teasing me hecause I wi drinking lemonade, and I ta'*ed to her | beeause she had such beaut'tui eyes." Frank W. Lyon, another cu tracter witeies, wore a fur lined and said he wee an electrical contr&tor and was asked where “In the garden apot Bronx.” (No, he wasn't fined.) | He was asked if he would take his sister to the Follies. “Bure,” he eald, “if her husband was ot New York—the | girls in England are following gainful occupations, going into the professions and trades," Lady Warwick added. IT 18 THE PROPER THING FOR GIRLS TO EARN MONEY. “Has the idea entirely passed that the earning of money {s socially detrimental * I asked. Lady Warwick replied, “Would you care to have your own daughter adopt a profession—become a lawyer or doctor, for instance?” “I would indeed, My older daughter married when she was very young, “Marriage still remaing the ideal of most young girl z have o Uttle daughter of seven I hove when she is grown up she will be ome of the really emancipated wom- en, that 2! may be able to look forward to standing for Parliament. with her.” “Of course I believe tn suitrage,” Lady Weta | you take ber if she were not | warwick continued. As a Social I married?’ q it ithe 4 mo” he eaid, “* but not on account | Deeve n adult suffrage without regard of the restaurant itself—only on account of the neighborhood it 1s in.” “Did you hear any suggestive songs?” ho was asked. “Well, I've heard of other “ Attorney Pollak stated that there was a “vice trust’ in New, York, and that the “trast” was anzio¢s to get hold of the Follies to make it a link in the big chain, The Follies management wouldn't sell, he Geclared, and the “trust” then started to “get” the Follies, That was the underiying motive for the attack upes the place, the lawyer asserted, weGints the same songs lots | to mex. Women will get the vole in England very soon, but witb a prop- erty qualification such as now applies to men. Window smashing on the part of euffragiste 18 foolish tactics, but it ridiculous to way that it will retard tie triumph of the movement, Nothing a retard it!" added Lady Warwick with a ringing note, “When halt the ni: race demands its rights, it has to heard.” MAJORITY OF WOMEN IN ENG LAND DON’T WANT TO VOTE. “Do you believe @ majority of woien in England want to vote?” [ inquired Mo," sala Lady Warwick frank!) Quickly *"8 qufroge worn pubiwliigd t¢ 4 4ssv jConsTi PATI Sn en SEAN oF HE TW RL ET eR ERR ment of the world to-day os the ri: republics everywhere,’ concluded, —smili tottering in th Gaynor Will Also Inaugurate Pre. vention Bureau at To-Morrow’s Ceremony Mayor Gaynor will present the medals for heroic work awarded to members of the Fire Department at Fire He quarters Wednesday at 10.30 o'clock. ‘The ceremony will take place before a audience of 200 guests, Commisstoner Joseph Johnson will Introduce the medal winners. Thirty-four medals will be given out of the Bennett, Bonner, Trevor Wer- n, Wertheim, Strong, Brooklyn Citi- Brooklyn Eagle, Hurley and &te- | on funds, and each winner of the the bronze medal presented by the de- partment. There will also be medals for each member of the company which has one the best work in drilling at th Fire College. The fire prevention burcau, across the street from headquerters, will be for-| mally opened by the Mayor, who will also inspect the new automobtie hook and ladder truck, the heaviest in the world. There will be an exhibition drill in the courtyard of head- quarters by probation firemen. EB sincies dino CHARITIES SHARE $1,000,000. | Allee A. Hicke Left Much to Chil. dren's Helpers. (Apectal to The Evening World), | MINEOLA, L. I, Maron 11.—The report | of the transfer tax appraiser was {tied | in the murrogate's court to-day disposing | of the $1,000,000 estate of Alice A. Hicks, | who died Feb, 16, 1911, two days after signing her will, Iler lawyer, Edward | L. Frost, recetves with his fees as exeoutor, nearly $20,00), Other beneficiaries are; Nassau Hos- ptal, Mineola, 61 Mineola Children’s Home, $20,000; New York Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, $20,000; Brooklyn ety for the Pre- vention af Cruelty to Children, $40,000 for a drinking fountain for’ horses, $20,000; Swarthmore College, $100,000, The residue, more than $200,000, goes to the adopted aon of her husband, Frederick ©. Hicks, ‘a Glass before Breakfast tones up the stomach, clears the head and you good. Water WATURAL LAXATIVE Relieves Diggest and| * States Secretary of State, and they did it royally. The Foreign Minister at the head of the Reception Committee met the State Secretary's party on its rival at Acajutla, where the police band played the national anthems of the two republics. A special train was in wait- ing to convey the State Secretary and the other visitors to San Salvador, where another committee, headed by the Finance Miniater, met and greeted the Secretary of State. When the special left Acajutia for San suitable for general wear. trains, the first of which carried 10) soldiers and the second a machine gun. When asked why such precautions were taken Chef of Staff of the Army Gen. Muller sald: “The precautions are against foreigners. There ts nothing to fear from the Salvadoreans, We have under surveillance twenty-five or thirty strangers, but they are all Americans.” Some amusing incidents have occurred during the trip of the crulser Mary- When she arrived off Acajutla a 84 to7 years. blue, pink and lavender. land. Brit ehip in her honor. 8 retary of State Knox and the others of his party when wolng ashore were, owing to the high Obliged to use landing baskets, the beading around neck an Becretary of Stat: Journey between the Ci vossel and the shore affording the pho- orsets tcsraphers an interesting picture. — As the launche conveying Mr, Knox somely trimmed with lace and Zest Plus Economy mark this tea; it's delicious, while double strength saves 50% WhiteRose CEYLON TEA Nt Sold in Bulk el White Rose Coffee, Coffee Perfection | ET 1 and 2 years... GRETCHEN DRESSES 2 and 3 years... roidery WOMENS BLACK LISLE_HO: WOMEN’S CAMBRIDGE GRAY lisle garter top, sole and heel, Finkenbergs §. BE. 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