The evening world. Newspaper, July 6, 1912, Page 10

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‘MADE IN| Its Use a Guarantee of Good Texture—Second Letter From The Evening World's — ween ‘ ‘ . +42 ' Special Correspondent. Fecond of a scries of articles on the great tranaformation now In progress in Ireland, which ia fast taking the Green Tale out of the misery that caused her to be described as “the most diatreasful coun. | Other articles will be printed from time to time describing industriat, patriotic, artistic and educational | try that ever yet was acon.” changes in the four provinces of the country. (Special Correspondence of The Evening World.) Special Commissioner from. the Gaelic League to By MARY SYNON, Report on the Irish Revival. At the custom house in Queenstown, that low, red bullding that affords the American trayeller hie first experience of European baggage-smashing, ‘there were to-day a half dozen Irishwomen of the type made famous in the if Sweet Little Buttercup” of “Pinafore” waiting for the tender to take them wit to an anchoring steamer for the disposal of the goods they carried in iPhetr wicker hampers. jto the tender. lo determine her fate. ine. They told her in i Condensed, their i the one word, tof the scorn an Irishwoman can CORK, freland, June 25, ‘They were so busy with their talk of t ip of the shops, their domestic narrations, that they failed to see a sev- énth woman, also laden with a hamper, until she had almost passed them When they did sight her, they waited for no council of war They moved forward until they had her at Irish their exact opinion of her. idea of the other woman might be “Sassenach,” if print were able to give put Into that term of hatred of the RFLAND’ LABEL ~ WORKING WONDERS FOR TRADE REVIVAL IN ERIN _ THE BVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, THES Trish Workers and Their “Erin-Made’’ Goods Bring Trade Revival and Prosperity to Ireland' cenial ‘6, 1912. . : GIVE MEN RIGHTS, IS THE DOCTRINE Her Husband’s Wages, Says Mrs. C. A, Hughston, They Should Earnings Out of the Fam- ily Fund. EG UN EME: INDUSTRIAL SCH: lected person, the American wife, in to the fore, 1912. of “The Women of To-morrow,’ in San Francisco, earnings should be- vehemently vocifer- Hard. “There is just one | case in which wife should be charged with her husband's eup- port—when he is infirm and un- able to work, “Husband and wife should have pre- rade, thetr| the water's expressed [their children,” he adds. have eqaul rights to the earnings of their children, “They sh any {dea ey should and to the OF SUFRAGSTS No Wife Should Take All of WIVES OUGHT TO HELP. ot Keep Their Marguerite Mooers Marshall. That much-abused and grossly nog-|serted warmly. is Now it {se Willlam Hard, magazine sociologist and author who mits a legislative programme in be- aif of married women to the General Federation of Women's Clubs, meeting cisely equal rights in the custody of |! rvices and | lunches, Perhaps she rune up extra bills; {¢ she does, he struggles meekly to pay them, and consoles himeelf with the that Mary and the girls look ‘better'n any body in town.’ He breake down from overwork {n his early ma- turity, and nobody has anything but pity for his family. . “This isn't the right way to a ) either. “The only fair and square settle- mont of the vexed question of mat- rimonial finaace is the three pook- etbook system. That is, the hus- band should have his private al- lowance, the wife hers—an exactly equal one—and the rest of their oa shonld go into the joint fand for home and children. “Hf a woman continues to go to her office after marriage her household ar- rangements must be o1/a different scale from that which they would be if she stayed at home. One or more extra servants will be required, Or perhaps it will seem best to live In an apart ment hotel or at a boarding house. WIFE SHOULD BE HER~ HUS- BAND'S HELPMATE. “Now it would be manifestly unfair for that woman to spend all her salary on her own clothes, or deposit it to her own account at the bank, and let her husband pay rent or servants’ wages or board for the two of them, and per- haps, later on, for the children. A. woman who marries 1s upon herself certain obligations. She is to be her husband's helpmate, and that most em- phatically does not mean that she should sit back and jet him pay the bill “Then you belleve in men's right well as women's?” I suggested. “Indeed I do!” Mrs, Hughston as- “So do all suffragists, We have always said that things a: too hard for the men. If they weren't, Kipling never could have written his bitter bachelor’s creed— “ ‘Strong hearts faint by a warm hearth- atone. travels alone.’ werywhere nowadays you hear men saying, ‘I'd like to marry, but I simply can't afford it.’ So they put marriage off year after year, delaying thelr own and some woman's happiness until per- haps It disappears altogether. Because, other things being equal, people who marry in early life are apt to be hap- pier than the couples who walt. The young husbands and wives aré more ly adaptive and grow together with diMculty. ‘The remedy for the delayed marriage simply the popular chorus, ‘Put Your Wife to Work.’ Only the self-respecting He the fastest who t: 4 | wife to-day doesn't have to be ‘put’ to riton, As she was not English, she! than the Irish peasant. He has more to DISPLAY ayanagement of their children's prop-| work. She was a wage earner before answered them in kind. But they |!0se: he is dependent for his livellhood a OF IRISH erty ever sie met her husband, and she asks 4 On the rules of the land, and he is, in oO THE WOMAN GETs HERS nothing better than to continue doing sere seven to one, and she had to) ii, protected ny them to some extent. aA OS) al WHETHER OR NO. Wie Were US hee cumne 0 -16v trail the banner of defeat. \Therefore, his attitude toward the [rish aM | It-seems to me that most sensible Sara Ere ry ” ‘ vi P " - t ' ‘3 i eg ‘What did she do to you?" I balasd pve ae was Poy chiarure) ea uee of 1 aieiv sane WORKS Ino HNL Mune TR [fashions never change, so perfect are |e" and women will agrce as to the DEAF AND DUMB BOXER | patriotism, except in Isolated instan can wol ne! mie ‘ashio eve e, 80 DH tice c a one of the victors. v{it was the reward thoso isolated in- making of exquisite laces and em-| they fi themselves, “and every thread 2UStee of this latter paragrapa. But] HELD FOR KILLING IN RING {} All of them answered. “She hadn't |, isnccs reaped by thelr use of guarane | brotderies, In one of the Queenstown | made y checked guide WAY Should a wife be entitled to the ——- * BEATEN WITH BANIO BY WIFE, DECLARES. ~ BROOKLYN MAN Charles Says She Used Pitchfork at Other Times. i Hinman, Importer, (Rpecial to The Evening World.) MOUNT VERNON, July 6.—Banjo@ And pitchforks, not as musical instres ments and implements of husbandry but as weapons of strife, seriously marred the domestic harmony of the Charles Jay Hinmans, according to the testimony that !s piling up before Juse tice Tompkins in the White Platng Sue preme Court. Mrs, Hinman, who lives in New Ros chelle, appeared before Justice Tompking as plaintiff in a separation sult, and asked that her husband, a wealthy Brooklyn importer, be compelled to pay her allmony and counsel fees. Justice Tompkins dented the motion on the rounds thai Mrs, Hinman was well able to support herself. The wife alleged that the importer deserted her in October, 1910, taking hie daughter with him. Mrs, Hinman des jelares that when he left her Mr, Hine man said he was “tired of supporting | the bunch.” This is her only allegation | against her husband. On his side, however, Mr, Hinman declares that his wife posseaed a tere rifie temper, which sh» manifested without provocation, He declares that she frequently beat him with a banjo nd when the banjo "t handy vhe waded into him with a pitchfork. On one occaston, says the importer, |Mrs. Hinman threatened to kill him ,and the child with tic pitehfork. He refers to & number of instances when |his wife “administered inhuman beat« ings” to their child and he her “cruel treatment” and upon him, MANY OFF TO EUROPE. Nine Steamers to Thetr Cap’ jail To-Day with Ful is ps 2s > ple of her earnings any ! f " f H 3; trade- a’am, She w } HY shops 4 ablecloth of Irish croc who r earnings any more than a es F fhe trade-mark, ma'‘am. i he WAR) teed Koods that have brought about its TWeitine CAKGINEAE. le ca aeae eks of fairy fine Connemara| husband is entitled to the whole of his? New York Youth Dies From] ne tiae of transatlantic travel te at ying to cut across us.” “Never a) use more generally pete daparniant atures TU reault es Wrought into magnificent bric- | Even If thers are no children, @ man Effects of Blow in Fight high tGe to-day, ‘The Olympic, Palle ign of the trade-mark does she ever| PRIDE GOES WITH TAG THAT'S 7 jator on tw s r and quaint jewelry, pottertes has to give a certiin percenta his 1 Tonk, deiphia, Vaderiand, Berlin, Friedrich der as abor of o girls working year to @ colo: 6, Jewelr' is Dy ago of his nkers, 7 , Bes cathe Weare! ita Selaga ON THE GooD! SOSTUME OF IRISAL | Mimptete te iemenbering. this, its] are, Olerines, Jewolry of charming set-| wages to the woman he marries. ‘The in Yonkers, __[Srome, Moltke, Columbia, Martha Washe “What trade-mark?” I had to ask.|, There ts no denial, however, of the) POPLIN AND CASH= price seoms low, and yet to-day I saw] vived designe best known tothe om, |OUnt® have so decided over and over}, Joseph Dragons, ninetedn, of No. 143] ington and Pennsylvania will leave with why, do-mari of ireland, | °c" thet patriotiam bas encouraged the MERE EMBROIDER: the cottage where the two girls are at! side world through the beauty of the |®84in. A man may be separated or} Thompson strect, New York, a wagon cabins full. } y, the trai je-mar' of Ireland, | use of goods marked by the symiot of! BD IN TYRQVOIS ANP work upon another such cloth, and 1| Book of K Uy finest iuminated [even divorced; he has to divide his pay |driver when not fighting in the prize} More than 6 first class passengers ™Ma‘am, they chorused. f the trade revival, The case of We SHADES OF GOLD | saw, too, the brother who did not Barry n the world steam {a the ravaidee just the same. The only ex-| ring, was arrested in Yonkers last night, | are alee Shadut Contaiontert vesting en the le tet 0 women on the Queenstown quay might ere ae aibilen | ah 3 r genuine impor-|eeption ever made to this Y 1 : he Mo ‘ ontert, Itali ‘Then they made haste to show the Dateien te tae nitiaetret score Rae have to go to America because Of the) tance thetinena.from theatheer nandkers a eh ed, ails {s when | following his fight with George Nussem, | smiassador to the United States, with Uttle triangular pennant with the : ‘ beet home and began to supply the sister, Teward of thelr labor. chiefs to the satiny tabiecto!os, prom=| ccnauot and Bullty of gross mis-} known as Young Ducey, before the|the Marchloness and their daughter, dircle of Gaclic letters and the words, |£00 T!#h salesperson toward the goods, ot ii, cured provisions, A sece| For the brother, too, @ strapping|ise the greatest future poplins, | co and, presumably, will be looked [Getty Athletic Club. Donna Beatrice Cusan! Confatonter! Tteish Trade-M that Sl aenen te 6 pride Gttashes to, OOlWRR ced ict of Pariia | pronthe {lad of twenty, the industrial revival | the balbriggans, the Yough sl ‘oo! atter by some other man, In the second round of what was to|J. Jusserand, the Fvench Amba; ish Trade-Mar' at mark the! the goods so marked. “Will you be take | 10) Me envat The hides|im accomplishing something. ‘The Cork| light as thistledown and warm The “gentle grafter’ has always been|have been a fo ound bout Dragons|and Mme. Jusserand, Henry ©, Id foncreteness of the country's indug-|!nK that back to America with you /Hors Julies on salina Meme NN tne | schools have taught him market garden-| Danket, stand for heavier service atid n [one of my pet aversions, the laty who|hit Nussem a wicked punch in the |mercan Minster to! Spain, and M trial rehabilitation. now?" one of the wom oun aot ame Influence soon put a atop to the! ing, heretofore neglected in Ireland] More lasting fete ate as lace Hit ~ that while it may be more |stomach and the latter toppied over with | resinald Vanderbilt and Mise Kathleca , inquired of a buyer, “Then would you i ' he eof the custom that any im-|%° cate, + ap tly, | blessed to give it is certainly morela crash. The injured fighter was rushed the Pl tion of leather. pecaus h . : 0 y e Philadel MUST HAVE THE LABEL ORjimind jeaving on tie mark to show ROLE TUAGR: RLLED Hey | provement made on the land by a phat i ely te MBoy) OF: the |comfortable to recelv Suspecting {to the hospital, where Dr, Krull found See bee Paine Se THERE 18 TROU the fine people on your side of the world |tenant forced him into payment of | rrcaucis, Just as whe caugie the fancy [nat T might find a sympathizer, I] he had a fractured skull and that he | horothy Camden, Justice and Mra, J. Wr Tt was very unbusinessiike, this tag of | that ‘te Ireland that can make lace; TURNED TO SHEEP. [higher rent to the landlord, tv hus i of the Eterary world by the beauty of |@8*ed Mrs. A. C. Hughston, chairman pea suffered fart He ted at 12.20] Gerard and Andrew J. Onderdonk. ir dle, and in a country that originated Mike thin?” ‘ prOur cattle trae abolished, we trtea| came s pout that Ireland, endowed With | hor poetry. y of the Public Demonstration Committee | (M& morning without regaining con- pe TRNAS the boycott Its effectivenesa promixes| In order to understand Just what the Sheep farming, The sheepbreeders of | clima 0 em All through the district covered by the of the Woman's Suffrage party, if she 4 1 © of Europe, had no y the party, Fight fans sitting around e to become almost sinister, For the| industrial development of And has gland immedietely took alarm wna] pre, eae bpd Tee Ph bas Pee line, | [ndustriat Davelopmele, sotie +, schools | thought a married wage-earner shotl4; had yelled to the Fetaree to Pep it MISTAKE LEADS TO ARREST. . Gaelic words that translate ini been in ‘hese jate years of her re [Irish wool way declared contraband by i Wien the man Who raises excellent|,0" lacemaking have Been in operation, |tet her husband pay all the househo'd| fight right after the second round cuclaia & ; in Frin” represent the national idea ex-lone must inake w brief review of & Parliament of Charles 11, Headed ini yeachen finds his rent #o raised that| soli nom there are very few girls in| pits, opened, as Nussem was getting much | 407 Riders on Bridle Path Charged Presped in industry as well a And, 4 resume of Ireland's this din ¢ tried to work Up the} he has to emigrate, his neighbor has |) with Wiest Seach seen ae “& wife ought to be as valuable | the worst of it With Grand Larceny. language. All the women who es:iy jeconeinie hi Ye sec down as pre-e Taw ni Fat home, but this created) no desire to go through @ similar ex) hile Gmoial visitors renort a gsne| aM economic factor as her husband Wolioe Gapesin Lane algo pisoed Under il) oo ciies two young man\twhel Went EVs. warts tu. the. transatlantic ecause of any Celtic aympas|the greatest out of all Ever ence, But now, with the changed) (Anne. OMecll vistors report a e°0-| fm qhe partnership of maria arrest Referee Thomas Broderick of No, | Vecuies Ove youae men wee, went Steamers that make stops at Queens. it would te wiser take the; Moker of fustion, flannel and broad-| rental system, Ireland has the land at) oii Helnehanee Neild Mrs. Mughston declare \ {3 Vineyard avenue, who once fought : ay | 1 vand there are schools to] uiting from the increase of work and \Joe Gans; also the manager of the |@atly hours to-day mistook the bridle town carry only the goods that are!sununary of “Irisi industrial Destrue-/cleth in England rose up in arms, aad coe ae ce emake. the best. of |t# consequent emolume ite, through improper club) States WiKing, of Now 68, Purese |path for an eutomodile drive they ace Imarked with this Jabel, ‘The outst ter|tion’” oy the Mavuuia of Dufferin and) Dy an act of WiQiain IHL the woollen | Wten her now MO" |, Notleeable throughout the Cork district] mot Bis economio equal, she should |piace. ‘They were both charged with |under arrest on the oharge of grand Who breaks in upon thely monopoly finds! Ava thus industry of tretaRd was extinguished | RANSFORMING FARM METH. |" the fest t bey hte ‘re the language] give as much as she can, Certainly | violation of the State Boxing law. larceny. They were Peter O'Conner \ hefeelf in tbe position of a atr From Queen Klizeveth's relen until] and 20,000 manufacturers left the! T HE COUNTRY {feviyel, 208 ibe aratrial revival are) 4 ghe is » wage-carner she has no Capt. Lent notified Coroner Alfred | No, 22 West One Hundred and Thir breaker, and, worse than that, ashe! within a few years, ail the known and, island ODS ALL OVER T! ‘ oo Weeeiamels allied than merely in cine.) sore right than her husband to Mies, Nussem lived at No, 36) Went ainestsandvA Flatidas: maURaNtan { taker heraelf an expatriate by her act. | authorized commercial confraternities | “And it was so atong the line of other! Aready the results show in the mar | OY beteaty Lie Mike ote me phase | keep all her ealary out of the com- One Hundred and Twenty-ffth atreet, 0. 9 ‘Third avenue, employed. in Im Ireland of the passing traveile: to sell| relaxed thelr relentiess acip on the AMERICA'S AIO KEPT WHOLE {Mi Nondrous lusclitnless vii, wea-|tage just on the outskirts of the “Probably the money question is reo] Dragons is deat and dumb and has! Mounted Policeman 7 articles that are © ting with irisi| trades of Ireland. One by one each of DISTRICTS GOING. jeeese ready market gardens are tak-| reveals tiis distinctly. ‘The father sponsible for more marital unhanpiness| eee tae eae en weinnte Satan automobile speeding a trade, And ty these days of the Gavle|our nescent industries was either siran-! hero conditions, intenuified by the| ink prizes at the fairs, Modern methods | mother knew no Gaelic, having than any other thing, There are (Wo) javersary was a welterwelght. Sipath at 3 o'clock this morning, Ho | League and the Indusirial Development| gled in Ite birth or handed over gagged | yoy of the conwested districts, | of farming have been introdficed, Mod- taught at the time that Gacilc was ban-lvery wrong out very common ways of males ali [gee pead: fe, oak Rad amas the driver i Society, competition with Irish industry [and vound to the Jealous custody of the) .o ‘Hot in bu Se aeeetchinery is being installed, In the|!shed from the schools, They had re-lsoiving this problem. In one ease the : pth Say Te oe \ ’ Mt in people but in the ine} 5 . ne . m, probably the-wrong road and wante f | ; b muste ‘onducted by the Brothers of Pre ve | cause eas to Pl ete reer : , H Ae any in the ad rack-rent times, And{every fountain of wealth was hermet to the p who tied it, continu inducted Dy tHe aro i tamous for ite {grate rather than any hope | Wife works for her board and lodKINg) 9.44 9 Giance Name of Owner of | STWVINE, he had lett It’ at home. i the Irish trademark jn its banner feally sealed, and even the traditions of even after parliamentary measutea| le etyaeant hop sote hundreds of for a brighter uti thelr calle | ORC SHER: (FO Obes 88. Fhe: OGn When taken to the police station it | The emblan, secured by an Act of |commorcial enterpriees perlahed through | jad given relief—-on paner—to the mart bace ace ning for good, dren have something to loos forward vheedle out of hen: terd when Ae t8iln Passing Ca was learned that the automobile was i member for a Kerry district, at firat|iand's factories opened the jf Ireland were largely supported, not | eanee of 8 alning dee ae eee eninus. “the third, a {swaggers about loudly deciaring that| enable pertons touring to tell at a ped ae RL i marked only the goods produced under| As early ax the commencement of the! more thin five 1 he unde ndustetal Dp-|son, has just transformed the farm jato|‘women ain't fit to handle money.’ glance the name of the owner of a pass-! FIRE IN HOTEL ST. D i the immediate direction of those schools | sixteenth century the beeves of Ror) remittances, ‘Tl CS ea psp sata Leap es oe taught by his induse] MANY WIVES TAKE ALL THE|!2# car or cars has just been published . DENIS. , @tarted by the League for the encour | common, Tipperary and Queen's County; aimost the only industrial centre [Gueaee rman itanethen that | college training of methods and ND RUN UP BILLS, | 2% James Robbins of No, 1777 Broad- bare rmcrs j agement of cottage craft. Its usefulnoss, | undersold the produce of the ish | But to-day, hetwuen Queenstown and| ainw aa Mine wae eA EL BN, |values, And the three younger children HONEY 4 SORiGEHUs etata lars anes, Ts tativ at Luna Ret ML Borie, Manan hey A Wwever, Was so apparent, stand co h mark r1 Co ho pansenge ain bell ps stately SN Ren aria, cuneemacil ave ding schools and learnin “This {8 of course an abominable st ‘ark. e directory, the first of ite of . Denis Hotel, Eleventh ‘ oe JP Ae heRiye eg iP etal (2 collem ead Sekai hk well diiibed ARS A al tat ta LL eh | sould Cot fashion, a contingeney | are aUmnANS pouschold the father and | of affairs. But the wife is not always) kind ever issued, contains a list of more | street and Broadway, saw smoke pour- } k r ine an act of the twentleth of Kilzaveth /@ country that is finding compayative | not ant @ by those who Know the | Gaelic. tte meen taught thelr native [the patient, uncomplaining victim, | than 69,000 cars in New York State, thelr |ing out of the main corridor and dlnin kane, that shopkeepers titer Irish cattle were declared w “nniaanc rity through the industrial] MOY varieties and the exduisite beauty | mother na? oir children, as well as y an American husband turns over) Hcenge numbers being given numerically | room of the hotel. He turned in 9 fi i Patriots began to tare it up bi and (aeir importation was pronib the market for Irish waren} onan ce ngeniin A fie egal tyer: it methods of Industry that are [every penny he makes to the woman he| with the owner's naine and address op- | alarm and the blaze was put out without i ite uy of quality, ‘The T Forbidden to send our veasie alivelat Queenstown Cork has opened! Que sethack. For there are’ here diac making the family comparatively pros-| marries, receiving dack from her ‘The new book js known as the | any of the one hundred and elghty-twa Keeper is natucully inore conservative }acroms the channel, we killed them at up ths cottage industry, Women and oy nens and embroideries an perous, meagre allowance for carfare and) Robbins Motor Car Directory. | guests knowing about it, “Down Into Vesuvius.” DO YOU Read Magazines? In Next SUNDAY’S WORLD MAGAZINE: “Not Enough Real Homes.” “Why City People Are Fat.” “My Greatest Battle.” “The Astronomers’ Trust.” FREE with Next Sunday’s World: A P A Signed Article by Hon. THOMAS R. MARSHALL, A First-Person Narrative by Prof. ALESSANDRO MALLADRA, A Signed Article by JOHN L. SULLIVAN, A Signed Article by Prof. E, C. PICKERING, Democratic Nomince for Vice-President. The Daring Italian Scientist. ; ; “The Hermit of A Signed Article by Prof. DUDLEY S. SARGENT, Director of the Harvard Gymnasium. America’s Greatest Fighter. World Famous Astronomer, (CUT OUT THE COUPON) :—: — In Which of Them Can You Find a Better, Bigger, More Interesting List of Articles Than This? “Alone on the Road.” A Real Experience Story by FRANCES M’DONALD, Girl Drummer. “Is New York Kind to Women?” Answered by HELEN CHRISTINE BENNETT. Street.” A Fiction Story by ANNA KATHARINE GREEN. bry pel perry aciemagt i “Platonic Friendship—Not.” A Kitty Cobb Picture by JAMES MONTGOMERY FLAGG. “A Yankee Millionairess.” Words and Music of A ROSE MAID SONG HIT, “A 16-Page Joke Book.” The Funniest Issue of “FUN” Ever Printed. iN attern of a Child’s Romper Suit anton. Designed by May

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