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| eg Serer a. MON DIEU! (SNIFF) EETEES TERRIBLE, (ONFF) THATOOOR! But to ore oh to Court Over) Neighbor’s Bugs! Parbleu! | Zat Ees Too Much! LE PROFESSOR'’S ANGRY. | And That Dear Hoboken Is All| Stirred Up Over His Feud | With the Everlys. ‘The highly sensitive olfactory ner of Monsieur le Professor Francie Trich of the Hoboken High School, the} pecuMarly penetrating aroma of the | bug medicine employed by Mrs. Lillian | Everly, who lives next door to M. le} Professor, at No. 13 mfletd street, | Hodoken, and the sensitive the French professor and Mrs. husband, ail combined to engender a | neighborhood scands! which war only settled, to-day, In Recorder McGovern’ | court. | Now, it happened, a few days ago, | that Mrs. Everly, whose mother Is « rin the sume school that M. le Professor graces with hie presence, made a terrible d overy in her home— & discovr: at which every careful hourekeeper shudders anid grows pale. Needless it would be to grow too definite here in s¥tting forth what that dis- covery was; suifice it to say that Mrs. Kverly hastened to a drug store and Walepered a word in the eur of the clerk, Back to No, 1,00) Bloomfeld street and down on her kuces went Mrs, Everly, wiih & bottle in one hand and a little camel's hatr brush in the other. A pungent odor ? cypress or tincture of osage orange drifted up from every stroke of her brush and was wafted by vagrant alis out of the Everly windows and into the windows of the professor's house next door. MON DIEU! EET EES ONE TER. RIBLE SMELL! OUI! That night, which was a still, hot! night, saw the Everly and the Trich famiMes on thelr reapective stoops, M. le Professor, of the sensitive olfac- tory nerves, sniffed the heavy alr once or twice and then he spoke to his wife, In words toud enough to carry across the fron railing to the Everly stoop. ‘Mom Dieu! Perhaps it ees the morgue! perhaps it makes of itself only A Pent House, Mats oul, she ees one} nell, grand, ter-rible'” | A response came from stoop instantly. ome pe: too long for convenience the e had | the burden | of that response, M. I@ Professor was! unperturbed, He =o murm to his family. “Pardieu! 1f ong shal! smell thie so- @rand and so-ierrible smell always must one make le deductions tres simple? She ees one smell for murders ing bedbugs. Voila! Now, bediougs is a fighting word in Moboken. Mr. Everly rose from. his place on the stoop and addressed re marks, pertinent, succinct, to the French professor, The French profes: sor replied in kind, The scent of battle was in the a NEAR TO BLOWS CAME MADAME AND M., LE PROFESSOR. Tien, on the following day, M. le Professor, walking with his wife on the street, met Mrs, Everly. Ue blocked her way and insisted with voluble ges- tures that she retract the word “scoun- dre,” which she had passed over the valh of the adjoining stoops. Mrs. Everly tried to pass the excited Pro- fessor, #0 she testified before Recorder McGovern to-day, but he would not per- mit her to do so, It was only after she had dodged and dovoled that she man- aged to break away. So one thing led to another, as they will {In Hoboken, and to-day M. le Pro- fessor appeared before the Recorder on & summons, The whole horrtd tale of exterminator and expletives was un- folded before MoGovern and tn the end he found M. le Professor guilty of dis- orderly conduct. But he released the French professor on @ suspended sen- tence, So now nothing remains about Nos. 108 and 1005 BloomfeHl street but uo pupgent odor and a etete of armed truce. Don't Fail! To acquaint ee ae with the vari- ous attractions offered vacation- takers at the great diversity of sum- mering places ‘round about New York. , About 1,500 Sunday World ‘Summer Reso. Ads. To-Morrow Besides reading these announce- ments, get a FREE copy of The World’s | “Summer Resort” Guide for 1912 Obtainable, for the asking, at any World office, or sent by mail to any address upon receipt of 6c. to defray (Address: Summer actual postage. Resort Bureau, World Bldg, New York City.) Make Your Vacation Count || THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY a SSODUERIORDGUOOR RIOT GLOSTER RSC & ANALYSIS Clift ittst their Lotte Peer eC ecee coe tras, ‘Attempt to Justify the Conduct of Men. | OF THE NEW YORK JOHNNY 2434 HH BO OR OOO » Who Act Offensively Toward Women O “RED CORPUSCLE GREATLY MAGNIFIED WEEPs MIS “I Have Found All Men VERY MAN Wit RED CORPUSCLES IN His VEINS Copyright, 1912, by WEATHER EVE OPEN" wirEs*PESSIMIST MUSRAND® « Alike,” Writes ‘‘A Pessi-, mist,’’ Who Adds: “The Present Civilization and Laws in Regard to Sex Are Making a Race of Hypocrites, and Wo man Is the Prin- cipal Sufferer—-Not Man.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. NIKOL& GREELEYSMITH lems we are discussing. And now we are beginning to hear from the married men and women on the “Johnny” question, Thursday’s mail brought me an astounding letter from a New York husband, a letter written in reply to “A Discouraged Girl,” and in its way as candid and sincere as hers, Yesterday I received a letter, signed “A Faithful Wife,” which I am sure will furnish food for thought if not for repentance to such married men as have become steeped in the materialism which is some- times called “the New York spirit.” But let us read the letters and then consider how much 1s true in each and how much is vital to the prob- The man's letter is interesting because it admits and evea attempts to justify the allegation made by “A Discouraged Girl” that “men in New York are all alike and that for a few dinners, flowers and | theatre tickets a man expects a big return,” CIVILIZATION MAKING A RACE OF HYPOCRITES. Dear Madam—"A Discourages ( hits the nail on the head, know her, if ne I've bumped up lasses of life, from the panhandler to the millions the minister, the gam . the sport, the convict, the souse,"” the ex-tank and the man of leisure, I have found them all allke in the matter of womel Some ac- knowledge it and gloat over their success, others deny it; some go boldly, others sneak. Some beat the game for a while by avoiding tempta- tion. This class become perpetual grouches, But nevertheless eve man who has red blood in his veins keeps his weather eye open. I'll put myself, too, in with the bunch, I'm married (eight years), successful in business, young, love my wife and have always been true to her, I'm getting in the grouch class I've killed a lot of temptation (given by the dear ladies themselves) and will continue to fight the game. But it's not man's fault. Why was such a Job ever put up on man? It's an !m- position, I think the whole mess is simply a result of so-called civiliza~ tion, It isn't natural for a man to Hye with one woman all his iffe, no matter how much he loves her. Tho rule does not exist among others of the animal kingdom, Why should we, self-appointed wonders in the animal kingdom, pe any different? Just because we are “civilized” and “educated,” and because our heads are larger and our bodies weaker and , the present clyil- in regard to sex are making a race of hypocrites. A dog can't talk, but at least he Is not a hypocrite. And the great sor- row of it all {s-woman !s the prin- cipal sufferer, not man, The woman gets no blame from me who fights the devil (7) with his own weapo A PESSIMIST (I suppo: AN APPEAL FROM A FAITHFUL WIFE. “A Faithful Wife's” nearly so clever as “Pessinist's' in fact, it is not clever at all, It is sim- ply the appeal of a woman unskilled in letter 18 not phrases for advice upon the most tragic problem of life, Incidentally {t prevents a picture which ‘Pessimist” and others Mke him will do well to ponter, She says. Dear Madam-Too mi space have been given t! and the masher, Now, Tet the grieved, hard-worked, faithful wives have a say. 1 mean the wives who work and save and struggle for the welfare of the family, and who are constantly worried and hareased by the actions of their husbands of fitteen years or more standing, who cannot walk the streets or ride on cara without ogligg every more or time and Johnny" less, generaily less, attrac wo- man, and who constantly embarrass thelr refined little wives by thei actions, Ayd if this were all! EB during the Wifc's illness this ty man gives mementoes men he admi feels violent lo: rr women of lax behavior, hese faithful wi four child away to will be whom Often he er married Is one of the mother of justifled in not going the able erring ang weak, though otherwise vuntry, so that she to protect and guard an good hus For the above I am called insanely Jealous. Once guilty and weak, al- Ways guilty and weak. A FAITHFUL WIFE, First of all, bo it n2id to the ai tressed wifo, that one might as well undertake to guard and pro- tect the east wind as a husband of the type described as weak and erring, A wife is not, or should not be, the Cerberus of her hus- band's morals, Moreover, even though she undertake the task she will surely fail at it, Then, why not go to the country and take a ‘The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). YOURE INSANELY | | JEALOUS - You OUGHT To! Ge TS THE COUNTRY “SHOULD A WIFE REMAN IN AN ERRING HUSBAN! men and women on the ways anf cus- toma of the New York Johnny: THE JOHNNY CONTEMNED BY ONE OF HIS SEX. Dear Madam: The letter signed “A Discouraged Girl” te very true. I 4o not wish to reflect on my sex, but in all falrness I wish to say that there !s a type—one cannot call them young men—and thin type does not so with a girl unless—as wae stated— a git! is GAME. What the young lady says 1s absolutely so—this type expects a ble return just because they buy her a few meals and prob- ably a few theatre tickets, But there are thousands of nice, clean living, find young fellows who go with a girl because they respect her and enjoy her soclety, and probably feel as I do—highly honored—when a nice gint favors me with her soctely of an ning, It {s unfortunate that @ girl encounters the other type. iH Ww. THE JOHNNY HAS NO USE FOR DEMURE GIRLS. Dear Madam: From “A Diacour- aged Girl's” letter I take € she ts of the coquetilsh type (paint and powder, &c.), the kind that leads her many admirers (2) to expect great things of her, The average New York Jonny will not waste his attentions on the plain, demure girl; It is the powdered and painted damsel who aims to be the queen bee that has the Johnny following, 80, if “A Discour- aged Girl’ will open her eyes she can readily distingutsh between the Johnny and the real man, who is by nu means scarce, and is not always attracted by flashy clothes and kalsomined faces, which you are doing so much to abolish, J, F. He LINES FROM A JOHNNY WHO 16 long vacation from the erring hus- band and the worrtes he inspires? The best sort of vacation from this type of husband is a perpet- nal one, but not every woman has the moral force and the courage to take it. WHYFOR OF THE MARRIAGE INSTITUTION. Tam sure no woman of much self: respect would care particuiarly for the devotion under 4 Meult man who calls himself a “Fi t’? and admits he is a grouch, The very good jreason why the sexual association of men and women lasts longer than that }of animals, stace a “Pessimiat” starts jthe inquiry, is primarily because tt takes so much longer to rear human { offepring to maturity and tndependenc ata because the strictly human institu | tion of property, h primarily die. | tates monogamy, res a limited number of helrs, « the fam- ily, consequently one and, that }man may be sure of Iraving his prop. erty to his own blood, that the wife shall be of drrepr thle morals and conduet— hence the “double” moral standard Religg@us persons may have bet- ter reasons for the institution of marriage, but the cold-blooded an- swer to the quvstion, “Wily was such @ job as mworriage ever put up on man?” is that man devised it | aw the best means of pregexving and extending his cternal fetish— well for often as his fancy dic ‘entail a box dox b! urrow bone in trust for the puppies an who invented pre ia respon: | sible for the inevitable corollary—per- manent marriage. Heve are @ few more ange tates. cults or put letters from DIFFERENT. Dear Madam: Allow me te con- gratulate "A Discouraged Girl” upon her most remarkable letter concerning the New York Johnny. I am @ young man just twenty-one years of age, and while I always am a true patriot to the “Billy” se (Johnny, as you term {t), neverthaleas admire this “Betty” for frank but true statement, “for her the little they expend on you they expect ® big return,” and even though ‘It biteth like an adder and stingeth Ike @ serpent,” I must agreo with her. Am a weak defense of the “Billy I take this as my motto, “When in Rome do as the Romans do," and by that I mean to imply that I regulate my con- duct according to the company. When ou for a ‘so-called good tlme” a ly dressed, painted and powdered “baby doll’ for me, but when I reach the period when I will consider matrimony, @ “Betty like scouraged for me A DIPFERENT JOHNNY WANTS SENSE KNOCKED INTO OUR BOYS AND GIRLS. Dear Madam: Having read all the “Powder and IT would say that your articles long om succeed knot ing some sense Into our boys and girls. On my way to business each morning I meet some girly whose yaitively shameful. If her of some of them he cat o' nine tails would come into play. I am a girl of twenty, considered pretty (although I doubt it myself), and in all my short life 1 am glad to say. that I have used nothing more than a litte rige powe! i} | | TOWN AND GUARD 2 wheres *PESSmise Wires | aor to take the ahine from my nose, No one likes to have « shiny nose I have many men friends, but none of the kind mentioned in your re- cent agrticl 1 can find no fault with the average man. For the brain- less fools who stand on street cor- ners and filrt, words cannot ¢x- press my contempt. BR. A. FIREMEN BADLY HURT WHEN IRON STAIRS IN HIGH SCHOOL FALL Jersey City Chief, on Vaca- tion, Is Buried in Debris | at Point Pleasant. Fludson H. Lovell, Assistant Chief of the Jorsey City Fire Department, ana Johh Moora, a member of the Point | Pleasant, N. J., department, were ser- fously injured early to-day during a fire | that did $#,000 damage to the Point | Pleasant High School, ‘The fire was discovered on the fourth floor of the butiding at 4.90 o'olock, and ia supposed to have started from elect wires. The building hed not been tn us! since the close of the school term in June. It was one of the finest bufldings | of Its kind on the whole Jersey coast. | chief Lovell was in Point Pleagane en a month's vacation and anewered the larm to af the local and Bey Head \firemen. He and Moore were working jinelde the building when an tron stair | frame Durned loose and in felling etruek them, Chief Lovell was hit on the head and some minutes before they could be 4 out and rushed to the Spring Lak Houpital. Chief Lovell ts sixty years of age and Ives at No, 181 Randolph street, Jersey City, His condition ts gra Moore, who ts thirty-four, 1s not so badly burt ‘The entire equipment of the school was lost and its walls are about the only part of the building that oan be used again, — BANG! THEY BLEW INTO HOTEL LOBBY. ‘Three hundred pounds of musician, | with a cello, a big bass violin and sov- |eral portly rolls of music, saved the crowd thronging Broadway and Thirty- third street from possilie injury when a gas explo- sion in the vasement of the Hotel Mar- tinique blew & manhole cover inio tae air. |The three hundred pounds of musician | was divided into two parte: Stesau Pagano, who plays the cello and had It jwith him, and Luigt Cirlelll, who was ac- companied by hin faithful bass violin, | These members of a cafe orchestra were lon their Way to thelr night's work, and | ‘had got as far as the manhole cover on| |the sidewalk when the explosion an- nounced Itvelt W.th @ loud report, Inside the hotel it announced itself in another way by hurling the Signore Pagano and Cirielll through the Thirty: third street entrance into the lobby of the hotel ‘The m i} clans recovered their instru- ments eeveral rolls of music that were scattered, and bowed them- oglves awry, | will reongntee. [in the condition of | WOMAN MU6T CHANGE HER! late yesterday afternoon | WOMAN 1S URGED TO TAKE BRUTE “The Real Women Are the Furies,” Cries New Leader | of the Futurists. FEMINISM A MISTAKE. Mile, de Saint-Point Wants All | Women to Be Fierce, « Jealous Mothers, (Special to The Brening World.) PARIS, July %—A new war cry for women and ® new leader has just ap- | peared in the person of Mile. Vaientine de Saint-Point, grenddaughter of the \Dect Lamartine and herself @ poet and ‘novettat of first rank, She ie the frat | Prominety woman to identify herself | With the Futurist movement, and she! hae just lesied a manifesto addressed to aii women, urging them to join in| \Ane complete revelt from past traditions which Futuriem smpites. “What is most lacking in m orm women, oo well as in imen, io vieility. “Et is the brute which we must take for our mode}.” ‘These are the two declarations of Mile. | Saint-Point witch have aroused a storm [of @igougsion, even among the Fem- | intots themeeives. In fect, the young woman does not approve of Feminism. “It ig @ Dolitioa! mistake,” she saya ‘eminiem ie in truth @ mental mistake of women, ® miatake which her inatinot Tt 1s not necessary to give woman any of the rights eleimed by the Feminists. To grant them te her would not bring disorder but, on the contrary, an excess of order. To give pudiic Guties to woman ts to make her |lose all ber natural powers.” “But what changes would you Loahd womant" M! Saint-Potnt wi asked. ELP, SAYS MLLE. SAINT-POINT. @ must change hereeif,” was the | rep: “To gtve back something of manliness to our reces, swamped in femininity, we must train them in man- Mines even to the point of brutality. Every woman ought to possess not only feminine virtues ‘but manly qualities, | without which she te @ weakling. The {man who has male etrength without Intuition fe only @ brute, But in the period of femininity in which we live ouly the opposite exaggeration win be ef any help. It {eo the brute which we must take for our model. “Enough of women who perpetuate the qualities of weakness and old Knough of women who domesticate men for thetr pereonal pleasures or thoir material needs! Enough of women who rear children for their own selfish pleasure, keaping them from all adven- ture, that is, from all joy; who deny thetr daughters to Love and their sons to War. “Phe real women are the Furies, “Because woman ts totally lacking in moderation she is fatally apt to be- come too wise, too peaceful, too good, during any stagnant age. Her intuition, her imagination, are at once her atrength and her weakness. “But ehe has always known how to reward the strongest, the conqueror, he who triumphs by reason of his escape that superiority which imposes Mtaelf brutally. Let woman regain her cruelty, her violence, which cause her to trample on, to mutilate the con- quered, just because they are con- quered! Let woman peocome sublimely unjust, like all the forces of nature! WANTS WOMEN TO BE FIERCE AND FURIOUS. “Let women be the flerce and Jeajour mother, having ail rights over her chil- Gren, performing all the duties owed to them, so long as they are in physical Deed of her protection. Let woman be the proudest of trophies for her race. And let man, freed from the cares of @ family, lead @ Ufe of daring and con- quest, up to the iimit of his physical strength ‘and tn spite of hie being @ eon father. “ern woman who, by tears and sen- timentality, brings @ man to her feet le inferior to her who urges her lover into the battle of life. Instead of mak- ing him @ slave, ® woman should in- spire ber husband or her son to sur- pase himself, A woman owes heroes to the word," Ae El ent o Reesveres. (Prom the Washington Star, I'm afraid’ you have lost tiiterest in your art cotlection,”” Yes," replied Mr, Dustin Stax, “You | see, mother and the girls went around | and removed all the price tage and now 1 can't tell whtoh to appreciate most.” “Just Say HBSS MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages, | More healthful than Toa of, Cefn, | Bich mil, | POETESS WHOSE NOVEL VIEWS AROUSE STORM OF DISCUSSION ‘HER THROAT il , ~ MOTHER OF FUR” CRAWLS TO DEATH Drops From Window and” Tries to Reach Aid on Hands ,, and Knees. Mrs, Lizzie Fineat, twenty-five years old, crawled out of @ window of het home on the first floor at No, 18 North Seventh street, Williamsburg, to-day with a mortal gash in her throat, She’ died whilo making her way slowly and painfully on her hands and knees tow- ard a three-foot fence that encloses the courtyard back of the tenement in which @he Itved. ‘ A few minutes later Wiliam Nolan, twelve years old, of No. 1@ Nortl Kleventh street, passed the place and casually gianced over the tow fence. He #aw the woman's body on thel+ ground, The boy ran to Driggs aver: noe and North Eighth street, where he found Pottceman Ferguson of the Bedford avenue station. aw By the time the policeman reached the courtyard In which the body lay’ others nad seen it and a crowd was) cMected in the #treet. The policeman summoned Dr. Retbstein of the Easter District Hospital. The physician sald) CHILD MISSING: Fo Fincat had been dead but @ few. , | owen ? lf Gisorder. Furniture had deen knocked over and there were many” blondataine, ‘The trail showed from where the woman bad crawled te the. window sill and dropped the twe or three feet to the ground in her 4ying effort to procure ald. In the four rooms oocupled by the Fiscates were found four children, the o'dest six years, the youngest monthe olf. The children were unable to tell anything about how thetr mother her death wound, but the oldest ASA AKONPPER satiny leer Search the Woods Around Wantagh, L. I., for Little Mary Staunch. dead woman had quarretied “before papa went to work.” ‘ Neighbors said that they had seen the husband at the house as late aa 8.20 o'clock, Mra, Fiscat was found dead” s shortly after 9 o'clock. Fiscat te employed at an tee plant in Brooklyn, Capt. Flood of the Bed- ford avenue station and Detectives Kennedy and O'Connor of the same sta- sion atarted out at once to locate tht ‘husband and question him, WHY vy hom for fan when vonteiliy ta to buy hi pie Tele’ Clesouh ‘atima Turkish Blend—“Ne;, s, bu est wong 20 for 15c. o “*Distinetioely Indiciduel®® Charles Spooner, an aged hermit, who lives in a hut in Wantagh, L. 1, and who makes a meagre living by dome farm work, ts in jafl at Mineola, charged with kidnapping thirtesn-year- old Mary Staunch, daughter of Mra. Katherine Staunch, a widow, whose home is near hie hut. ‘The Staunch child disappeared Thure- éay morning, clad in @ gingham dress and hatiess, Neighbors say that the hermit left his hut about the same time. He 414 not return until! last night. The little @irl ts still minsing and the woods are betng searched for hor, Mra. Staunch acarched the nétehbor- hood for the child last night, but could find no trace of her. She then procured & warrant for Spooner. The warrant Was Iseucd by Juatioe Corodon of Free-| port and was served by Policeman | Thomas Murray after midnight. Murray found the olf hermit asleep in his bed, Ho protested loudly that he | knew nothing of the girl's whereabouts and the policeman could discover no signs that there hed heen viahiora to the hut. When Spooner was arraigned before Justice Corodon to-day, Mra, Staunch was asked why she thought the old man might have been responsible for her Gaughter’s disappearance. “He used to come over to my house for water,’ sho said, “and I learned that he had talked with Mary when I was not present. I rebuked Mary for this and told Spooner he must stop try- tng to be friendly with my daughter, “Mary told me he wanted her to work for bim and that he offered her # @ month, but 1 know that he was earning only $10 a month himself at that time as a farmhand.” Juatice Corodon sat he would holt Spooner until Monday to give the police | time to investigate the girl's disappear: | ance. ! ° add ° at The Andalusian Hat “m “Tha Hat of Distinction” gah 4 —Tavishly adorned with Paradise or Ostrich or more modestly t embellished with Pompons, Tulle or Feather effects of becoming but less costly materials—ts especially appropriate for a gift by w @ vieitor to New York. It would be @ souvenir of taste confer- ay ring distinction alike upon the giver and the recipient, The 4 prices vary according to the trimming—trom $120 to $20. “as Be SEASON PRICES NOW PREVAIL FOR ALL a CLES _OF DRES I “PASSING ZTASHION, MER GOWNS, WBAPS AND NECKWEAR, &e, Special Sale of Summer Hats of extremely ae light weight and seasonable appearance White Straw Hats trimmed with Scarf, $2.00 and $3.00 each, White Panama Hats trimmed with Scarf, $6.00 each, White Manarama Hats trimmed with Scarf, $5.00 each, Two-tone Summer Felt Hats trimmed with Straw, $5.00 each, Automo- bile and Steamer Hats in combinations of Straw and soft silken ° fabrics, $7.00 to $10.00 each. Automobile and Steamer Hats in mais combinations of fur felt and fine taffeta silk—reversible—sinu- ous—tlexible—pliable—stylish—$10.00 to $15.00 each, LATEST STYLES TAILORED HATS P Paris Models Just Received for Outing AITKEN, SON &Co (FOUNDED 1835) IMPORTERS, MANUFACTURERS BROADWAY & |8= STREET a a ee