Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
oA gy NG Se sa lasdes emocey a tone , ge (1912. j ¥ “THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 15,1912. - IE | B fur | Man Is a Sport of Nature, Says Mary Austin, "™%anuam Grecian- -Treca fl DETECTIVES HUNT ~ BLACKMAIL BAND | WINK CASE From Brother's Home. “I'm going to get a Job and support myself. I'm tired of being dependent on MISSING SECOND re. Although Supposed to Be a Natural Sport ™ fon Fst Dapper | burg on First Cinpnalints She Declares the Male of the Human Species Is In- & » other perso: ; tended to Fight For and Protect the Female, | poate) beventewncpearcpid’ Mity ANKePS " : Ee oe Therefore It Was Right for Primitive | of Cumberland, Md., put on her hat and | q walked from No, 27 West Thirty-seventh | street Friday afternoon. She has not | been seen «ince, and to-day the poftre bewan a search for her, on the soltolta- | tion of her brother, George, who, with | his wife, was taking care of the girl tn the Thirty-seventh street rooming house. | “According to her brother the girl had no money nor did she pack any clothes. She left after an argument with her | brother and sister-in-law, who had tried to prevent her from seeking employ- ;Man Who Held Up Cashier of oa 7 New Berlin Institution if The Main Business of Woman Is Being Good, and aa . _ Made Confession. That Ie Why It Is Necessary for Her to Vote, : Because She Would Always Vote for a Good Measure. Woman to Carry Burdens. HE new Bien Jolie Grecian-Treea Corset moulds the fig- ure into beautiful, natura! lines of youth and slender ness, yet does not hold with that “harness-like” strength of the rigid corset y Operatives of the Burne Detective : f Agency left to-day for New Berlin, AN. ¥., to appear bofore the Grand Jury “that is investigating the alleged plot to free- f ; i ‘The Grecian-Treco gives exhilarating { levy blackmail! from Frank D. Arnold, BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITA ment. She had been here only atx! ace, Grecian Teco es shar or ( eee “ome light, knitted material, an bl; oft, remarkably fens in ita construction, Practically all students of humanity are agreed that; “Once before,” sald Ankers to-day, * S ed Na- ‘et the funds of the wrecked Firet Na-| man ts @ natural sport, but there are very many persons * tena! Bank of New Rerlin, of which he “ghe left Cumberland and wa: almost bonel ne ideal corset for 1 | weeks. A detective found The Gree Treco is the ideal was cashier, It 1s reported that in addi- | who will want to dissent from the opinion of Mary | waltress in ike vein Tid powiue th iG tien to Charies E. Holland, who w | Austin, novelist and piaywright, who declares that the jthen she hi soak veptees 14.06; O00) 910.00 rested on April 1 on the charge of at-| male of the species is a sport of nature, | typewriting In various styles. “tempting biackmat!, others will be in- y@ieted on the charge of conspiring to “wlackmal! embezzling cashiers all over Bien Jolie Grecian-Treco Corsets may now Mra. Austin, who lived for seventeen years in Call-| be examined at the following stores: fornia among the Shoshone Indians, is very much of an | the ‘want ads’ in the pa Miss Ankers ts of mediu She looks the country. + have laid bare the workings of the al- “Meged “blackmai! trust.” Who is fecretary of the Sugar Grove O11 Company, tncorporated, Of room 108, Chesebrough Butiding, No. 17 State rtreet, Manhattan, has pisap- oye The offices of the company e not been opened to-day. reeks detectives admitted to-day that while they believed Holland was a mem- ber of w band that has levied toll from crooked bank officials, they would make Mo effort to lay other crimes at his door. DETECTIVE SAYS HOLLAND MADE A FULL CONFESSION. were retained merely in the Ar- ‘Mold case,” said Manager Dixon to-day, “and we are not trying to fasten any ether crimes on Holland, though, of ‘oouree, it may be necessary in this case to do that later on. We have a com- plete confession from Holland, and our Operatives are sure this will be suff. ‘elent to secure his indictment in New ‘Berlia.” Bi 4 Splelberg, attorney, of No, Broadway, who furnished the bail bor @m which Holland was released in Nor- wich, declared to-di would make ‘efforts immediately to locate the missing @eeretary and surrender him to the oMicials, thus securing release from the Holland is said to have Loonteased his part in the plot and to| authority on the ways and customs and philosoppy of primitive man and woman, and she surprised a group of suffragiate gathered by Mrs. 0. H. P. Belmont the other day by asserting that Woman at first was the only original sex, and later, when man, “a sport of nature” | Was developed, she continued to be the stronger sex. It is perfectly right, Mrs. Austin says, for the Indian buck to ahead while his wife follows with a sack of potatoes or a bundle of neeiih on her shoulder. The man's precedence does not imply superiority, but ts Justified by the fact that the male must»have his arms free to fight for and protect the female, - An Indian would blush and hi wife would blush for him if asked WALL STR to carry a sack of potatoes, just as The stock market offered strong re-| sistance to aelling pressure to-day. The| Mat opened very weak, The dear would be em- gested to him that he ought to do his wife's crochet work. Moreover, Mra. Auetin saya, the prim!- tive woman was stronger then the | ment, using the re: primitive man and was therefore the |aylvania primaries logical and proper bearer of burdens. | spirited selling attack Mrs, Austin, needless to say, 18 an| Steel, Union Pacific, neadiheaha Cop: emphatic suffragist, but she would like tumbled 1 point during the firat to have it understood that women are |haif hour. Other ea weakened in merely seeking to-day for @ restoration |@ympathy with the leaders. At the end of the firat hour a decided change developed when the early liquidation Was withdrawn and numerous buying orders came into the market. As the feasion continued the tone grew much of the octal rights whioh they enjoy stronger, and the best trading of the among primitive nations, For nature, day was in evidence in the final hour. according to the Austin theory, first and most militant of suffragettes. WOMAN HAS MORE ENDURANCE THAN MAN, SHE SAYS. ‘Yond. Spielberg was secured by Georgs| “My remark that woman was orixi- *Hotland, @ brother, of No. 1% Post ave-|nally stronger than man has subjected gue, to go on Holiand’s ball. Spielberg | me to a great deal of criticiem,” Mrs, was protected by @ bond given him by | Austin observed to me yesterday, “but @eorge H@iand and Burton R. Law, vice|the fact ia wetl known to students of Closing sales were practically at the top, with gains running from 1 to 8 Points, The American Can issues assumed tha, mont Conspicuous place in the up- President of the oll company. ‘The Sugar Grove Ol! Company, of Which Holland is secretary, is incor- porated in Naw York State for $300,000 ané owns of! lands in Warren County, Pa. J, D. Russell is president and Elly & Parker treasurer. The name of At- feed levied blackmail! upon them under @hweat of revealing thelr criminality. Seeeeentipeemmenre ‘OWES THE BANK $180,000. Asoused Ofcial Makes Admi te New Orleans Police. ‘QW ORLEANS, April .—Joseph H, chairman ©f the finance com- of the Teutonia Bank and Trust , under arrest with other of- terney John W. Collopy jr. of No. 10| fight and last prices of stocks Wall street appears on its stationery | ™aa ‘wets folowe pr €e attorney. ‘I merely secured the| tills Net Papers of incorporation for the com-| and clothes for the houssholé. ra pany,” sald Mr. Collopy to-day, “and| even gees Sshing and the catching ta have had no other dealings with it. The| of feh ts regarded by Indians ae Wt 8 fuse of my name 1s absolutely unauthor-| part of the woman's task. heart ized. 1 never permit a client to use my| ‘Woman's spirit de static, conservative. + 14 vo Ghe dedicates herself naturally to those is : 8 * Holland, the vecretary, it 1s charged, | employments where persistence and pa- fi + 18 forced Arnold to buy 9600 worth of|tience are the chief requisites. Man's We f 1? werthless stock, under threat of mak-| spirit 1s more adventurous. It is really 1S pies fag public letters which he not normal or natural to man to do met R , the same work day after day, year MN t°2 after year, He is naturally a seeker, iw an adventurer, a sclentiat. Eventually | (, hy 4 6 ‘Arnold was unable to raise the | 4! the emplaymenta which have to do 4 $1 fmeney and called on Burne detectives, | With the practical business of living, ig o> hl ‘erything concerned with the problems Si t 1B 3 1a of food and housing and clothing, will y + MNES Vis sccssioer, domssndes that he |B@ 18 the hands of women, 2 ot | _ Seeks de examined, and the immense ‘AN through Nature the female 1 hy to ele * qhertage was disc.2sed. fmore restrained, more controlled ie jee ti the male,” Mrs, Austin added, aah ; eg “GAVE GANG LEVIED BLACKMAIL more balanced, less hi “ By Pty + rh) ON OTHERS. e mother type and was originally mal S1p% Wie mst ‘Phe Burns detectives alleged that the|and-female. The male is merely a sport at Coir ta _ @itempt to extort $10,000 from Arnold |of nature and his original function was ie BS" Wty t | was only one of a series of blackmail reproductive exclusively. Women are Bis 1M db 1 Br that were being worked. iy |told to-day that they are born to be cee ae § pecullar arrangement, it was|mothers, but the male originally was | ft, ms ut 8 ed, a gang of blackmallers had |developed exclusively to be a father ery a Me > 3 : of a number of bank officials |and died when hie fatherhood was ac- aS 8 were short in their accounts, and | complished, mg +] 3 is % % % ‘| ite as to the bank's condition, ecoused of having sworn to false to the authorities to-day that indebtedness to the institution is Bugene F. Buhler, president of The common, by rising to 35, touched the price over entab: edhe made a new peace Pig 4 rong features were ij tee], Copper, and St. Paul. vai ethnology. Woman in @ natural or nor- mal resistance than mi vous, more fi She (es less ner- rt Es “In @ primitive state woman is the|{ equal of man, The differences in the| 0! relations of the civilized man apd his wite and the buck and squaw are all |in favor of the Indian. “The BaEe rence, '—Decline, — WILD WHEAT TRADING IN CHICAGO MARKET, CHICAGO, April 15.—Buyers and sel- = precedence. “Bo custome survive and ere distorted after their origin ts lost. CIVILIZED WOMAN WEAKENED BY SHELTER. “The olvilised woman has been weak- ened by @ Ife of eex parasitism and by &n inheritance of dependence from her grandmothers and great-grandmothers. Normally @ Women can bear four children and be inospacitated for work twenty months in a lifetime of |sixty years. 80 motherhood is no ex- cuse for the parasitism of the ‘shel- tered wonan.’ The only way we can reach her !s, in my opinion, by socal | ostraciam, “Zn this country a man who does mot work for his living is hela in contempt and eventually the wom- an, wife or not, who lives by her eex and does not work will meet the same contumely. | “Men and women aitke to the race only for what and above thelr reproductiy WHY IT IS 80 NECESSARY FOR | WOMAN TO VOTE. The genius of woman, her main busl- in my opinion, ts bein, @he bank, and Frank J. Braud, tormer _ Gaaiotant cashier, are under arrest, They fhave been released on bond. ‘The bank was crdered closed last Police are on guard to-day, keep- Unes of depositors who et into the bank Some estimates piace the loss bank will sustain as betwen §900,00 $400,000. However, no official state- ment has been insued. The company had “ @ capital of $200,000, reported deposits | ef $1,413,060.71, and its reported re- @ources were §,(39,07 Aa SHIPPING NEWS, ALMANAC FOR 0-Day, aoon ries, 4.38 | A For women will not be put off by questions of expediency as men are when It comes to deciding against the ems — | quor traMe or the white slave trafic. . Turk tend, |'That is why all the forces of organised "Galveswn, | Vice are opposed to women guffrage. A vote ie merely the registering of an opinion, The woman vote would be the registering of the opinion of that half INcomING “STRAMOHIP, Di a guna) + OUTGOING sTE STEAMSHIPS. GAILED TO-DAY. “penal Hamfiten, Norfolk, lere alike were whipsawed to-day in wheat. The market swiftly whirled up, then down and up again over « range of nearly four cents. ‘Trading reached a magnitude seldom equalled except in war times. rai and bottom pric: cents, The close was nervous and ragged, with May at $1.11 and July $1.06 @ $1.06 1-8, showing a net ad- vance of 11-8 to 11-4 piled up in a4 dition to the rise of 10 cents a bus scored last week. ———— JAMESTOWN ENTRIES, NORFOLK, Va, April 15,—The tries for to-morrow's races are as ol Deewont, Kat Wioallag, 100," Groaven “pink? Lady, COND 106 Rac MRS. MARY? RUS TIN DETECTIVES ARRESTED ON ASSAULT CHARGES. | Brooklyn Sleuths Said to Have} Beaten Complainant Against the Black Hand. | Detectives Raynor and Simonetti of the Brooklyn branch of the Detective Bu- | reau were arrested to-day by Acting | Captains Duane and Fay and taken be- fore Magistrate Vorhees in Fifth Avenue | Court, Brooklyn, They were charged by John ‘Agogiia of No. 163 Twenty-first street, Brooklyn, with having assaulted | him in a ealoon at Fifth avenue and) Twenty-fourth street early yesterday. | Willlam McDo No. 1% Prospect | avenue also charge nett! with hav- ing threatened him with a revolver when he interfered to save Agoglia. Waters Upright and Grand Player-Pianos we will ma week of ‘Agontia, sald he had’ recently eom-){] Of many different makers, plained to the Police Department that Raynor and Simonettt were not mak- ing any progress in finding the writer of a Black Hand letter that had an- noyed one of his tenants, The deiec- tives were paroled In custody of Acting Capt. Fay for examination next week. As soon as the disposition of the case wes known at Police Headquarters: Commissioner Waldo suspended both men, pending their trial, | ELOPES WITH A NEGRO. without interest. on some Baby Grands and Moecial to The Prenine World ATLANTIC CITY, April irs, Kather Galarzo, twenty-one years old, of No, 2% Sixty-fitth street, Brooklyn, N. Y., was held to-day under $1,000 for the Grand Jury charges, preferred by her husi Peter Galarzo, a cigar dealer Davis, a reero, twenty-nine year with whom her husband alles THREE eloped to this city, was held under sim- y far bail STORES Galarzo testified that his wife iad taken $600, He trailed them to Phila elphia and than to this city After the authorities here are through the couple they will he taken to where vy York, will be_ pre! FINDS A CURE FOR LIBE After Spending Over $100 on Various Remedies, Resinol Proved Efficient. Sp ecial ‘Sale! In order to oi rcom for our large new stock of 60 Used Pianos perfect order, some as good as new. $50 to $190 for cash, or payments of only $5 down and $5 Monthly Also special attractive low prices NOW IS THE TIME TO GET A BARGAIN. Horace Waters @ Co. 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th Street. 127 W. 42d St., near Broadway. Harlem Branch (Open Evenings), 254 W. 125th St., near 8th Ave. ERAL CREDIT Evenings Until 10. PERSPIRING FEET Persie Caves, Bw aren $65 Worth, $1 Weekly; sit Worth, ‘1. 50 Weekly and plump. older than her age. —< CLARA BARTON BURIED. the OXFORD, Mass, April North Cemetery in this town, a short distance from her birthplace, the body of Clara Barton, founder of the Amert- can Red Cross, was buried to-day. On the arrival of the body from Glen Echo, Md., where funeral services weré held, {t was taken to Memorial Hall. | The hall was draped with flags and bunting and contained a picture of Miss’ Barton, Graped with an American flag, The local posts of the Grand Army of the Republic and Bons of Veterans escorted the body to the hall. ‘The services were conducted by Rev. William E. Barton of Chicago, aswisted by Rev, Percy H. Epler of Worcester. Pianos and Waters-Autola ke a special offering this all full sized uprights, in Prices Player-Pianos. at We Close Evenings ate Are you troubled so luniey teste perspiring feet ration elsewhere? If ple treatment: Wash the affected eer twice @ dey with cool water and Resinol Soap, followed by a light application of Resinol Ointment. Here are a few words of proof from bead whe tried Resinol for thi tt began the use of Re about ten years ago for piles, results sat- isfactory; finally used for all local troubles, and leatly for perspiring feet, and it was more than satisfacto that after I had spent ov for different remedi nd oth- ol Ointment} 5 piece Parlor Suite, M. y upholster silk plush, Val. $50, like cut ommended Resinol Ointment to dozens of peo le and it has never {i Killian, Memph » Tenn.” ‘And suggest still further the wide | plication of Resinol, let us quote thi. M. Lansdowne, Pauls- had ; crust come 1 did and it © | now as smooth as velvet. [shall| Vernis Iways keep « jar on hand. My hands | (old and, Ro ere cracked and bleeding. I used Res- Inet $37. Fae nol Ointment on them, and the next] from I ROOMS Comoietely ‘ler | Chat Pp i ealing application for eczem other skin apt enes pimpl kbeads, burns, sc boils, ul and piles, Your druggist recommends |r and cells Resinol Soap (#5c) oad Ree: | inol Ointment (50c snd $1.00), but f ous free ore le of each, write to Dept, 17, Resinol Chemical Co., B 75 gases We Pay hee and| 2m 1489 3% Fare. Frames, top handsomely painted, | ale Cabinet ernis-Martini | aun $7.98 $2488 i 125 5 ease "150 ia, ew Sere LIBERAL te ply also to Long | 1 imbel, Bros, John Wanamaker Gimbel MeCreery t Stern Bn. |i Saks & Co. oi Corset Co. Bimpaon Crawford Rioomingdale Bros, Abraham & Stes “P "eating 6,68 &. ty Beat & Co, ctatning smooth oat 2) % en Cernet fe foued. ie wauMnN: @ JOHNES Newark, N. J. “i James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street 66 39 Onyx ”’ HosiERY TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY SALE On Wednesday, April the 17th Staple lines of desirable weights for Men and Women, at especially reduced prices. 23rd Street 34th Street } James McCreery & Co, 23rd Street 34th Street On Tuesday, April the 16th HOUSE DRESSES & APRONS. 1m Both stores, A variety of House Dresses of Percale and Gingham. Low neck and three-quarter length sleeves. Size 34 to 42. 95c to 1.75 usual price 1.25 to 2.00, Lawn Aprons, with or without bib, usual price $$c to 1.25, 45c¢ to 950 MISSES’ & CHILDREN’S UNDERWEAR’ Complete assortment of Gowns, Skirts, Drawers, Combinations, Princess Slips, Kimonos, Bath Robes and Guimpes, at very moderate prices. Misses’ Silk Petticoats in various colors, 86 inches long. usual prices 2.75 and 4.00 2.25 and 3.25 STAMPED UNDERWEAR At reduced prices, In Both Stores, Gowns.........50c, Drawers.-.7..77, .30¢ Chemises.......35c, Corset Covers....15¢ Stamped Towels, Pillow Cases, Bady Garments, ete. Cretonne Sets for Scarfs, Covers, Pillow nets and Trays. Summer Homes, Slips, Boxes, Cabi- 55c to 3.50 James McCreery & Co, 23rd Street 34th Street SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDER Fail