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NF {Efforts Made to Interest Rich THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1912. FEED THEKIDDIES |How a Lonely Wife Can Keep Hubby Home GUARDS STRIKE AND MAKE BIG MEN -TOFEHT BATTLES yi Yours ttractive, Have Sym- pa at and a Broad Point of View for Your Own and Hubby’s Af- fairs, and You Won't Have to Worry About Keeping Him Home Plan to Place, a Luncheon . Counter in Every Public School in Town. ‘THOUSANDS GO UNFED. Some Judicial Heart Soothers, Like Chicago Judge, Talk Like Plati- tudinous Qld Ladies at a Sewing Bee, but They Do No Real Good—Just Think It Over! ‘Citizens in the Worthy Project. Mapeieon eaid thet an army moves 8 {te stomach. This fact, on a @mailer scale, has suddenty been brought life by Dr. Ira 8. Wile of this city, Who, tn an address before the American Academy of Science at Lehish Univer- a@ity, made the statement that better food for school children ts one of the Greatest educational needa, “A full stomach {s ae essential to mental growth as the development of muscles," declares Dr. Wile. “‘Avail- @dle echool lunches, not free lunches, are necessary in large cities, School lunches mean better digestion and less absences; better attention, less retarda- on; Detter education, less dropping from school," And his remarks have found a cham- Sfon in Mies Mabel H. Kittredge, chair- Man of the School Luncheon Commit- tee, PROPER NUTRITION FOR THE YOUNGSTERS i6 NEEDED. cipal reasons for domestic discord, “Without proper nutrition for the} “I don't believe a woman should young, how can the United States ex-|keep g man penned up all the tims, pect to make good, healthy, helpful Gitizens of the growing generation?” |2"%% Very few women are inclined to asked Miss Kittredge. ‘The majority |@0 80. A man should stop and think Raigad do not understand the ap-jof the lonesome lives women lead § conditions which exist among Sey Sickie Gnd dering Crags eb tm with their husbands away alt Gay ond Gay, We did not réatixe tt untii some |i" the greater part of the night, of the principals came to us and said| These are not the wordsof Dr, Anna thet many of the school children were |Shaw, nor of Mrs, Harriet Stanton Biatch, onetantly staying home from achool| nor of any other pillar of suffrage or account of iliness, and that invari-| domestic reform. 5 ke rae Se tee, hg ees They were yesterday spoken by a |. The only n for this could be the conditions| Dyer, vervaay Sudae of « Chicago mu- hich existed in the homes, and th pal court to a wife who ha ape the chiMiren did not receive a jr noonday mea. “Upon investigation we found thet by fer a majority of the children received So dinner when they reached home. Feceived a few pennies to buy bet usually bought trashy candy & puehcart or gambled their with other boys. The children constantly complaining of head- and the attenaance was deplor- By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “No man has o right to leave his wife atone night after night, r does, ing home. ‘A married man's place is by his own fireside, or clac he should take @ + his wife with him ri SMITH chen he goes out. No married man has a right to go to places he ie ashamed to take his wife, “Neglect of wives ia one of the prin- bac “We then conceived an idea to allevi- te the cause, and decided, with the| that fill hotels and apartment houses | of Dr. Maxwell, to instaii|#!ons Broadway must rejoice that at counters in le. We had funds for only seven | stands them and their “lonesome live: rer Jase atter a short tial,|NOTHING TO DO BUT THINK con lons improving wonder- a . Eivery child can receive a noon- WHEE HUBRANO IS. BUSY. Nothing to do but shop, and play meal for three cents. 1O SIDES TO THE FREE| ridge, or go to matinees, No way to LUNCH QUESTION. Kill time at home except to discuss the “You ask if It would be a good tdea| Moral calibre of the new tenants or have free lunches, thereby giving |the prosressive love afi of the maid ya chance. That} of all work. And meantime a carelea: two sides, First, we| husband is frittering away hie time that @ nation, to have strong| downtown earning a living, and entirely hting mon, must be properly nour-| forgetful of the lonesome life of his ed while young. We must begin| “neglected” wife. hile they are school children and sec| Sociologists @ thousand yeare from at they receive the proper kind of| now will reconstruct the faces of the jod and pienty of it, That is a good| women of 1912, and behold we will all ‘gument, and one which weighs heay-| be as falr as Helen, as aluring as Cleo- » Also, those who are too poor to buy|patra, in their eyes. For in no other 4 who svldom receive any breakfast} way will our colder and moi clentific ‘ould be well fed and would not be-| posterity be able to understand why thousands and thousands of men bound themselves in Voluntary an@ perpetus slavery to feed, clothe and adorn spec- tacul parasites of the species—the homele Hidless, occupationlers wom- en so plentiful to-day. And these soct- ologista will find {t extremely curious that the tnsbands of such sirens as they will La ve been needed to upon the. virtue t home. 4 they will anearth the astound- 4 of the New York husband s put om probation to go home other hand, by giving the Widren free ‘uncles, we would thus in the social conditions of the hom @ mother would find the responstb: of caring for the children tak om her ani would consequently grow reless, In many cases the mother 1@ cut down the breakfast moal, owing the child would bo well fed oon, *It is @ hard proposition. Our one now {s to get prominent citizens jerested in the movement and, with co-opiration, establish lunch ters in every school bullding.”” - > wife every evening before 9 1,000 ORPHANS TO MOVE. Jo'clock, who erled to carry out the decree of the court for a few weeks and The orphan asylum of the Hebrew| then Ktlied himeclt Sheltering Guardian Society in Broad- | the judicial curfew an ‘way, between One Hundred and Fittieth ‘Who snows but that this man dad One Hundred and Fifty-firat atreets will be vacated on May 1, Six hundred af the one thousand-odd children will be taken to Pleasantville, N. ¥,, and di- vided into “family groups’ !n seventeen detached cottages. The other orphans will be given to families, Friends of the tution will hold a valedictory diny'@ én April 13 and vid (arewell to the 4d building. On the grou .ds in Pleasantville wis be @ hospital and two technical ¢: besides the cottages, | Over 1,000 may hp V.atled by future ages a the .‘ts.n B, Anthony of his sex and slau? Certaitly the soclologist of the year 2,000 will consider {t an extraordinary evidence of the barbarism of our re- move time that we considered it pos- ulble to force the society of one human (ting upon another—to “sentence” a +usband to spend the evening with his w fe, Men aud women have beex get- ting married for a long, long tl and they will continue to mar: for wome years yet; but only om Bsccrusinl method of keepin, hustand at home has vised, ov will is miking him believe that home ie the most attractive spot on earth. Not uently this task isn the trouve and worry that women 2 on it; but till { ta the only way HE RIGHT KIND OF A WIFE DOESN'T GO TO COURT, An attractive wife—and an attractive Real Estate Offers Describing many Houe, |) Lot, Farm, Etc. Bargains, will be advertised in the i f Sunday World f To-Morrow . i ‘ood time to buy | “He means a woman cndowed with | bought Real Estite is ALWAYS | 0read human point of view—rarely has to worry about keeping her husband at home, She never commits the folly of taking her problems to court and ask- ing nome judicial heart souther to solve them for her, E have often wondered if the comparatively new custom in Amer. fea of the woariug of gowns by | Judges has had the efect of mak- growing in value. eyou will feel SECU! RESPON- i sisce and SATISFIED if you invest | wisely in one of the realty properties to be advertised in the Sunday World | to-morrow. But Act Promptly to Keep the Best Bargains trom Slipping Through Your Fingers ing eo many of thom talk Uke lf and Home! i} he} she is a! ‘chump’ for stay. But the legion of unappreciated wives | many buildings as| ‘4% @ man has been found who under- | Copyright, 1912, SOME wives HAVE NO TROUBLE | LPGePInG THEIR HUSBANDS AT M Platitudinous cld ‘adies at a sew- ing bee. Every wife knows that no husband can or should be sentenced to spend any more time In her society than he finds her agreeable and charming, and the same thing applies to husband: “A wife is a chump,” as the Chicago jurist remarked, if she spends her time In neglected solitude, but ao is a hus- band who lets a ball and chain keep him in when the gentier tlea of effec- tion have not proved sufficient. Why does not somebody propose a monument to the husband who dled rather than obey a curfew? He de- serves one. HURLED TD DEATH FROM DOCTOR'S CAR ON WILD JOY RIDE Chauffeur Out With Three Friends Drives at Reckless Speed on Jersey Road. | (Special to The Evening Wortd), DOVER, J., April 6.—Clarence Hed- den was instantly kiNed last night while on a joy ride with Harry Burns, chauffeur for Dr. George 8. Ridner of Succasunna. Herbert McPherson was badly cut about the face and head. Fred Spangler, another passenger, and Burns were practically unhurt. Burns had taken Dr. Fdner to hii home and returned to Dover to take his three friends for a ride. Just where they went has not been explained but they were in the village of Rockaway when the accident occurred, The car was going at a high speed to avoid a trolley car at the narrowest part of the street, Burns took a short turn to the right. The car skidded upon the sirewalk. Burns attempted to re: turn to the street without slacking the pace and the rear wheels of the car caught fast to a telegraph pole, Hedden was hurled from the car with great force, striking on his head in the hard roadway, He died without regain- ing consciousness, The others were thrown from the car. ae ACCUSED OF THEFT WILL BRING SUIT. Wife and Daughter of Brooklyn's Union League President “De- tained” by Drug Store Man, Robert J. Macl’arland had his attors neys draw up papers to-day for a sult of $10,000 damages against the proprie- torn of a large retall drug store in the Brooklyn shopping district Mr. MapFarland ts president of the Union League Club of Brooklyn, a re- tired manufacturer, and ives at No, 9 St, Mark's place Mrs, MacFarland and her daughter Mies iy visited the soda fountain in the drug store yesterday afternoon and ag they were lcaving were stopped, and Mrs, MacHarland wus accused, she says, of stealing an eyebrow pencil, A large crowd gathered and heard the accusation, Mrs. Mackarland asserts, ant she and her daux were de- tained itil able to prove their asser- tlon that they had not been near the counter from wheth the pencil bad been stolen. SEES HIS T7TH RUNAWAY TRIP.! |cuteano Moy With Bad Attack of “Wanderlust” Aw CHICAGO, April 6 —For the seventy- seventh time in elit years th polive have been asked to search fo ymond | Williams, twelve years old, who ran! ‘away from home yesterday. Raymond isappeared for the first time when he was four years old. In the following seven yours he ,departed seventy-five more times, is the frst time he had si d away for more an @ yeur, and his mother thought she had cured him of his "wanderlus “He's up to his old the poll ill, L can see & change tn | him, Before he left this time, he failed to eat a big meal, That's the first time he over ovemooked euch @ thing,” In Gone ioks," she told oe ee ‘in the management of the New by The Press Publishing Co. (The New Ome | a pe ernie Our OF NW FOR MOST ME: eae a NGAT Out KIDNAPPED BOY'S PARENTS IN FEAR OF BLACKMAILERS Heavy Bolts on Door of Fiore Home Indicated as One Precaution. A search of all the hospitals and char- {table inatituttons having falled to reve: & trace of five-year-old Joseph DI Flor: mising for nine days from his home, No. 183 West Houston street, the detectiv to-day began making the rounds of all the boy's relatives to see if he could have run away from home to visit them. The police do not admit that the boy has been kidnapped, and deny that his father has received letters demanding $10,000 or any other amount of ransom, so far as they have been able to learn, The parents refuse to talk about the to any one except the detectives, but some of their neighbors insist that « ransom has been demanded and that Joseph would soon be back at home if the money was paid. ‘The parents continue to make pilgrim. ages to the Church of St. Elizaveth, in East Fourth street, to burn candles to Bt, Nicholas, the patron saint of all children, and also have candles con- stantly Nghted at home, One wil! he kept burning there until thelr son ts} restored t@ them. Joseph 18 famous as a ~histler, and his left eye 's larger than the right, which will help identify him. His father is one of the wealthy men of old Greenwich Village, The police profess to believe that the boy has elther wandered off or took a sudden notion to start on a systematic visit to relatives, of whom he ‘as dozens in the city. The family has been commanded by the detectives to say nothing to any- body about the affair and to let no one but the detectives, themseives and their immediate relatives into the apartment, which by the way bears the unlucky number "13" and is on the second floor, front. ‘The outside door of this apartment has been fitted with three heavy iron bolts, one each at the top and bottom of the door and one in the middie, Besides these large bolta there are two smaller ones, vesides the regulation lock, wtteb | geems to prove that Di Flore took ex- traordinary precautions to protect his children after the receipt of the letters demanding money, aghlin, Funeral services for William G, Mo- Laughlin «were by the New York Press Club last evening in the home of his daughter, Mrs, Grace E, Dugn, wt No, 1017 Woodycrest avenue. Mr, Mc- Laughiin was born !n New Brunswick in 1841 and came to New York early in life, He was assoolated with John Kelly York Star, Mayor:Grant appointed him Su- pervisor of the City Record, For years was a member of the Consvlidated Stock Exchange. BT Senneterre ney York World.) “LONE SOME" DAY AT Wong (MISS MERCY WINS. SLANDER VERDICT IN UNIVERSITY SUiT Students Cheer When Jury Gives $2,500 to Girl Who Sled Chicago Woman Dean. CHICAGO, April &—The jury tn the case of Mis Esther Mercy in her sult against Miss dean of women at the University of Chicago, for $100,000 damages, to-day returned a verdict giving the plaintift judgment for $2,600. ‘The court room was crowded to the doora when the verdict was read. Sev- eral hundred students and co-eds, most of them acquaintances of Mise Mercy, were in the corridor and when the re- sult was announced a cheer was sent up that drowned the threatent: snouts of the ‘bailiffs for order. Mis: Mercy ‘was in court with her gray-haired moth: When the clerk read the words that girl or. meant vindication for her, jumped from her ch ing into her mother’ minutes later she sald:— “LT have been vindicated. Now no girl, no matter what her creed be attacked In the great Univ Chicago and ostracized from society, 1 am happy. I should have been eatlefied with a verdict of one cent.” The jurors, who agreed upon thoir verdict last night and went to their homes, left the Jury box amiling at the demonstration In the court room, A crowd of students th the corridor who tried vainly to get Into the room began shouting: “What’ the the matter with Esther? she's all right ‘Threats of arrest for contempt fatled to silence them and they were finally driven out of the buildin other Dean Talbot nor any of the “faculty group” were In the court room when the verdict was returned. The sensational slander sult had ite Inception In the disappearance of a bunch of algrettes from a $250 hat owned by Miss Mercy while she was living at the home of a relative of Dean Albion W. Small of the Untver- ality of Chicago and attending that tn- stitution as @ student Mins Mercy alleged that when she re- Ported the loss she was threatened with arrest {f she made the matter public. Later Miss Mercy was expelled from the university by Dean Talbot after an aileged stormy intery in the course of which the stude the oftclal made remarks re n her char- acter. Miss Talbot denied this charge and declared that Miss Merey expelled because her veracity had been brought into question. SOLDIERS SA\ SAVE TOWN. Mott Rrigade Helps to Bx- $100,000 Fire at Salem, Fire which started here early to-day tn the knitting miil of J. P. Sheppard, in Salem, N. J,, destroyed about $100,00) worth of property and for # time threatened to Wipe the town out of ex- jatence, Fanned by a high wind, the Haines spread quickly, and, In addition to burning the Knitting mill, badly dam- aged the Salem Opera House, the res\- dence and marble works of ‘Thomas T, Fort are Jacquette, the Friends’ School, the fur- ore of Ramsay & Donnelly, the Dance Hall and livery le af John W When ti nt of the fre was dls. covered the commander of Mot army powt, four miles from suiem, ov- dered to the town the fire fighting force of the fort, The soldiers fought the flames until they were extinguished. |from the Without Asking the Courts to Help Her’ FORMOREPAY 10 FIGHT STRIKERS 67 Deputy Sheriffs, Hired By Jersey Mill to Protect Work- « ers, Quit Themselves. WANTED $15 A DAY. \ , County Employs Them Now —Warrant Out for Hay- wood of I, W. W, Deputy sheriffs Foratmann & employed by the Huffmann Company at Garfleld, N. J, near Passeis, to guard their employees against striking mil Workers, Went on strike themselves to- day when thelr demand for an increase from 3 $15 a day wan refined. Sixty-seven deputies quit work and were reemployed immediately by the Bergen County authorities at 2 cents an hour The striking deputies claim they had made a contract with the company to work for $4.73 a day, but were com- pelled to work twenty-four hours a day and thus felt justified in demanding the increase, About sixty of the strikers Huffman mill, to work, by the per cent Forstmann & the storm centre, have returne according to a statement {nm firm to-day. A warrant for the arrest of Witla D. Maywood, the I, W. W. radical or- ganizer, following whore arrival from Lawrence, Mass., early this week came the outbursts of rioting and the shed- ding of blood, Is in the hands of Under Sheriff Heath. Haywood, who left Pas. faic hastily yesterday and was said to have returned to Lawrence, boasted be- fore he went that he would be back in Passaic within three or four days to start a campaign which woald “put Passaic on the map.” STRIKERS OVERAWED BY DEP. UTIES’ PRECAUTIONS. For the ‘first time in four days there wan no rioting when the 400 loyal work- ers assembled at the mili gate: wo to work, The fact that the extra force of depu- tles was stretched on both sides of Jowell atreet, leading to the mill, and it the 150 women workers were all assembled half a mile from the mill and escorted In wedge formation with armed & cordon before end wed the strikers, Also the circumstance of the day be- ing @ holy one tn the Roman Catholic churches and the demand of the pries:s for the presence o| all good at mass heretofore gi jacing force at the mill Friction between the special deputies under Heath and the policemen of ‘the borough under Chief of Police John A. Fores, which threatened to split the forces of law and order wide asunder yesterday were remedied over night, ference between Heath, Chief fayor Finnegan and the Police Committee of the borough, the Chief complained that yesterday after the noting some of Heath's deputies had undertaken to call down tho police be- cause of thelr alleged lack of effort to do anything to quell the uprising and the seeming partisan spirit they had shown in favor of the strike Chief Forss told Heath that one of the dep- uties, Garrett H. Fleming, had sworn at him and otherwise conducted himaelf In an unseemly manner. DEPUTY I8 SENT TO 30 DAYS. Today Heath summoned Fleming be- fore Justice of the Peace E. W. John- son of Hackensack, preferred charges of insubordination and drunkeness on duty against him and had him sent to Jail for 80 days, JAIL FOR Heath lectured his deputies before they went on duty to-day. He told them they must not draw their re volvers against strikers except upon direct orders from him and that they should not fire until he himself gave They were warranted, he added, | ing off all badges and inflam: mottoes from the front of strikers’ coats and dreanes Thin latter suggestion was tmme- lately followed, and every striker on the streets who dispiayed one of the “| strike for bread and freedom” badges was ) stripped of It dada Ea SLE MOTLEY AND MILLER BAILED. | LONDO! ‘, April 6.—Relense on ball of 905,000 each wan granted to-day to Al- fred 1. Motley and Clark A. Miller, formerly of New York, who were ar- rested on Wednesday in London at the request of the New York police on a charge of alleged larceny, At the first hearing on Thursday the police magistrate at the How court said that he was Inclined to ac- cept ball, but could not do so until he, had received further information from Ainerica. He wan now able to give them their Mberty pending the arrival of the necessary papers for the prose cution from New York Get the Original «x4 Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK “Ohersace Imitationg” TheFood Drink forAllAges QOH MILE, MALT GRAIN EXTRACT, IN POWDER any Milk Trust | = Insist oo on “HORLICK'S” peckage home. the order. As to their clubs, they should use thelr own discretion, but| temper that discretion with mercy, street | EASTER CARD FAD MORE IN EVIDENCE THAN EVER BEFORE Friends Expect to Be Remem- bered at This Season lust as at Christmas. SALES ARE INCREASING. —_——. Religious Sentiment No Longer Dominates as It Did Years Ago. An Increase 'm artistic sonalbilities and a larger measure of human good will lare the qualities that seem to touch more intimately than ever the purchas ot Haster flowers and the eonding of Waster cards this year. “We are selling more Faster cards than ever this year,” said a man on Fifth avenue with whom Easter cards in & specialty almont as precine as matha- matic T don't think there tendency to mere oxtri Purchase. There ia, of « finement in thelr conception and prod tion: they are arathetic, rather than sentimental, “But the most observable thing in the Paster cand this year—and it is more thie year than ever before— ing number of persons who are buying cards and the increasing number of cards that each person buys. “At one time,” said this man, who tours Europe every year in search of jovelties in the way of Easter cards, ‘all the cards were religious in their treatment. The pictures were religious; the insoriptions were religious. Now days everybody seems to want to be remembered at aster just as they seem to want to be remembered at Christmas, and the theme of moat of the carde we SHOWS THERE WILL NOW. ‘Tt'@ just more good will that there 18 MORE GOOD with a gleam of enlightenment—‘t's just more good will. We are becoming mo fraternal. more fraternal. all my friend: nobody, nobody.” And this story, set to another measu! i am careful ta. fo “Twenty-five years ago,” That's It—we are becoming I buy Faster cards for eruns and smelling sweetly of blossoming gar- | 4ens and cool hedges, was that of a eald the fon, Harold, to ‘he grocery store thirty-five cents about a week age, old did not return, His ther out @ warrant for his charge of stealing the thirty-five eamti. |About i o'clock this morning @e mother found the lad asleep im hallway, She took him to the Bast ty-seventh street police station, When the boy was arraigned Sefese Magistrate Breen in the Yorkville fee Court the mother insisted pik pea hl nae bg Ping Ll gant the bu; ven a chames, The mothor wis obdurate. Bhe the boy sent away. put the case over until Me he would investigate before takiogg ae top, eee Foand Mead, Gas On. Frederick Hohme, a tailor, was teamd dead carly to-day in the rear of Bip at No, 44 Fast One Hundred asd eighth street. A mas jet over the was turned on, waa a suicide, The pottce velleve Est 50 yeare Where Thousands Have Been 'Helped You Can Be Helped— tee rit if aiaseee—and n fitting g' we havehelped thousands. to better vision by the’: “Ehrlich” service. Isn't it logict) to assume that this fall century of experience has enabled us’ to KNOW how best to do: this responsible work? Our Registered Physicians, nese of tect, fete Fitting Glasses, 92.80 With Bifocal 04.50 I florist a his eyes took in the splendors of his stock, “there came Faster lilies and nothing but Kester lilies, And & gift of those lilies cost at least a dolla the @arden and plum blossoms and lilies too, and heath from hydrangea: houses an the Mediterranean In fact, with modern hot- anything you want. “That pot of ore plum blossoms {fs $3. And, if you have friends far away, iiities for handling ordei Haster you can buy snything you can pay fo ——— Jersey Autos Can Come Police Commissioner Waldo issued an order to all members of the Department yesterday, reading: ‘The Legislature of New Jersey having exempted automo- biles registered in other States from registration In New Jersey for a period the Motor Vehicle me recognition will be given ir New Jersey automobile Meennes.”” Offer in latest vailing fashions IN BATISTE BROCHE 1 Fifth Ave. at specia soila and grafting ind forced growths, you can get almost da,” eald the florist, “costs the giver 9100. That tree of in Europe or China or South America, we can handle your gifts for Raster by cabling to our » I do not think that, in these tie. And with the increase of this aesthetic feeling has come an increase in our Fe ing medium, low and belt ‘op, with long, straight hips, The “Besco” Corset Skillfully designed from finest materials; boned with La ‘Walohn boning, and daintily trimmed with lace and nbbons. A ten yard silk lace included with all corsets from $5.00 up. IMPORTED COUTIL BROCHE All Corsets carefully fitted by expert Corsetieres But the chemiat has come into the hothouse since then and the banker has followed the chemist, and now you can get Japanese from Japan climbing roses and wonetet ni The Army of Constipation Us Growing Sealer Every Deg, sua Pu, SMALL DOSE, SMALL FERED Gensine atu Signature Z Sal models for pre- in dress, includ- 5.00 6.00 9.00 10.50 to 15.00 Thirty-Fifth St,