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OT $1 340 FAIRLY, | BL OF MYSTERY ~WSSTSINGELL Mathilda Neiman Says Her Rel- | atives, Prominent Warsaw | Folk, Gave Some of It. ia | ONCE SERVED JAIL TERM. | Then Reformed, She Declares, | and Saved—Won’'t Tell | Family’s Name. Aq am no thief and T came ho the police found n they arrested me,” sobbed G, Netinan to an Evening as she sat in the; room of the Tombs Prison to-day and related her story—as much of ft aa she would tell, She = #aid to belong to an aristocratic Polish family of Warsaw, Ruusia. She ts 4 woman of mystery to the Police and, curtously enough, although the bas been held in $3,000 vail, all that they have against her @ past con- vietion and a suspicion that she did not come honestly by $04.87 found in her handbag, which also contained bank- books showing deposits of $738 in two vache. “How dia you get all this money?’ the woman, who is small, dark hair ang@ about twenty-tive years of age, was asked. “Some of it I saved out of my earn- dngw,” she replied, “and eome of it I got from relatives in Russia. I had the bank accounts aince 190% before I was accused of etealing at Coney Islan@ and was sent to the Bedford Reformatory. I am a good honest «irl en@ I have friends to say that I am. “But before I will give the police wames of my two elsters in Russia » have them know the disgrace I fim in I will kill myself. My home wae im Warsaw. Our family has been there for many generatioins ‘ can remember my grandfatier. My iather Gte4 vafore I came to America and :ny mother bas died since then, I am Po- ‘We are Catholics. @HE EXPECTED TO BUY A NEWSSTANO, ‘Muere came a sad inckieat ia my lito aad I left Russia. 1 cannot tell you whet t was. My people gave me the money ¢o get here. My father had been @ business man known to everybody in ‘Waeaaw. From time to time after I reached here my mother sent me money, emt after her death one of my asters eeut me money. “My fret job wae in the office of a gentleman who recommended me to Mr. ‘Beeger of the Hotel King Edward. At téme of my laet arrest I had been working as cashter in the dining room of that hotel. I had been there for two weeks, and one of the envelopes found in the handbag contained {287, and was my pey up to Friday, as I had quit. T | did mot speak ve: od English and it was hard for me to understand the or- nd “Before ¥ worked at the King Daward 1 wasa floor maid at the Martha Wash- ington Hotel. I nover stole anything in "WE THINKS © CHANGES MANNER TO ORDE PUTTING RITISH \BIES Insurance act begin to-day. fully tmsured, are entitled payment of 30 shillings ($6). Ing confinement. born in the United Kingdom respect of about a them, generally, operation. SHE'S A KUMAN MACHINE THAT (s Anew BaTrerr” AT BIRTH NOW BRING $6 TO THEIR PARENTS. LONDON, Jan. 13.—-The mater- nity benefits under the national every ohild born after midnight the parents, provided elther is mother ts also entitled to sickness benefit during the period follow- More than a million babiles are year, and ft is estimated that the insurance benefit will be patd in million Sickness benefit may be claimed also from to-day, and, speaking the Lloyd-George act may de said to be at last in full R oY For toa » The every of ‘either place. I handled much money at — = who had plenty of{ +] had a room at No. 47 th places me my meals, and I/ nat for my landindy. As to the police say T stole Saturday noon I picked up from the side- walk at Broadway and Thirty-fourth et. It did not contain a penny." “Whero were you going, and why I expected to buy a newsstand into business.” HOTEL MAN CORROBO! S YOUR CHILE'S. TONGUE COATED? If cross, feverish, bilious, lstomach sour, give “Syrup of Figs” to clean its little clogged-up bowels. “I did wrong at Coney was punished. Please do not the g Mr. I Ka Ea Berger, girl was true. ently received lett in Russia, and that tered and ‘3 from ontained money. Mother! Don’t scold your cross, peev- ish child! Look at the tongue! See if it is white, yellow If your child is listless, drooping, isn’t sleeping well, ia restless, docsn't eat heartily or is ¢ irritable, out of sorts with’ everybody, our, feverish, breath bad; has ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, or f cold, it means the littl stomach, liver and 30 feet of be filled with poisons and foul, constipat waste matter and need a gentle, thorous!: Reansing at once. : ea teaspoonful of Sy and in a few hours all the clog, C ste, undigested food and sour bile il! gently move on and out of its little waste clogged bowels without nausen riping or weakness, and you will sure! ee ‘a well, happy and smiling child ain shortly. With Syrup of Figs you are not drug- ing your children, being composed en- irely of luscious figs, senna and natics it cannot be harmful—be: containing $3.87, vas given to her on Friday, Phe and elete valued at 8) 1 Mrs, Sarah Kelly of ‘ourteenth street, Brooklyn, sw: w ney IMand moving pteture property Was found in the of the Woman when she ested. >— File Su! ch and Elixir of Senna,” California Fig Syrup Co. lelic tasting, genuine old Refuse anything else offered. a ville, N. ¥., against Minnie E, also on nd inday World Wants Work Monday Morning Wonders, Five sane rbout the 6ad events of my life. not care to talk about them, before furnished room at No, & West Twen- tyefifth atreet was searched and watches, an were New York and Jersey Pin the King Edward, and I took care of} were you carrying around the money?" it Twenty- Martha Washington. | ninth street, and I went out to buy a why I and go 7 hvea every cent I earned. The card-| carried all that money around with me nd RATES PART OF HER STORY. Asked how she came to be sent to the Hedford Reformatory tn 1909 she ead Island, and I ask me Ido It was nen that I worked @ year for onan who recommended me wo of the King Edward,” manager of the King @ and the Normandie, eaid that so far as he knew the story told by the He said that she fre- & aistor y were regis- He the man who recommended the woman to him was P. J, O'Connell, a guest at the Normandie, and that an envelope balance for services, No. 508 ore that | girl stole a watch and chain from je she was htanding In front of palace, posses was are FOUR SEEK RENO DIVORCES. ing Desertion, will save a sitk]} (eater of New York City, on grou of desertte Poll directions for children of all ages|— aibert B. Gilinan of Rochester againat nd for grown-ups plainly printed on the} Jessie O, Gliman, alleg desertion. package. | Jacod B. Wort zalnst Flora Wort- Ask your druggist for the full name, 1, charging desertion at Seabright, Melvin Peterson, connected with the Standard Oil Company in Mechan Peterson, | trinsic | hey dearly love its delicious taste. HPN v., Jan, 18—Among most re- | Mothers should always keep cent diverce suits recorded here are Fi y. Itis the only stom those of Anne MacDonald against | Charles RB, Mae Doni a@ provision {the woman who agree that the hus- band shall rule the home. @ man and a woman meet on the prin- ciple that the husband shall be the lawgiver in his home, the man basing his argument on a supposed superiority of his sex, the woman urging man's negligibility. I believe home and have no regard for tyrants of either sex. I must admit also that I am unable to weigh properly trines advanced by “J, §." in support of his c be the head of the home. with which such delicate matters ad- just themselves to the accomplished fact has alway admiration, became late of the Golden Gate, so far as I am aware, has raised his voice against {t, and others formerly opposed or in- an in the home and asks what women have to say about it, 1 must observe tuat women are not worrying at all on} that seore, ity becomes a f interproters of texts will elucidate their new meanings. CHILDREN THE SECRET OF A} THE EVENING WORLD, POOAEESAOOSASEERAEAOERERELSOSESEROEEEED BOO OOSPAHEDOESEDORSOAEROSEDAAAEESESOOSAEREES OHSSEE SHOE ESOS ER ? SHOULD THE WIFE BE THE BOSS? GERFOSSISSSSESIES FOV9SOISTSSSSES ES BEFITS IOTSFOVESOHIISSIVSISES FOSTSS FUSISSUUSETGSSOOS VOSEVOOGISOSITSG® (the New York World) Copyright, 1913, by the Press Publishing Company, THEY SAY SOFIA tS PERFECTLY BeauTiFuL! a=) —— ; ed *IMuUST MAKE OvER MY OLO CLOTHES AND BE UP ON OPERA, POLITIC AND “THE BALKAN QUESTION. *‘Let the Man Govern the Home at All Times—Most Men Can’t Be Endured Unless You Humor Their Every Whim—The Average Man Wants a Human Machine That Will Never | Tire,” Writes ‘Adele L.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “There should be a head to everything, even in partnership, a court of last resort, and that, in the case of marriage, should be the man, because his intellect and knowledge of the world should be greater than those of his Such a thing as two bosses Is an absurdity.” So a masculine reader of The Eve- ning World disposes of the problem of dominion in the home, and in a very unusual communication a mar- ried woman reaches the same conclu- sion, though for reasons far differ-' ent from those stated in the man’s| “Let a man rule at all sho says, “It is the only way it {8 possible to endure him.” This feminine advocate of mascu- Ine authority has many ideas which most of us may regard old-fashioned, but she reaches, never- theless, a startlingly modern con- A class of feminists with) whom I have absolutely no sympathy exist In New York and Risdned who maintain men as such are in- 'y uninteresting; that fatherhood {s their only excuse for being. | And here we have an old-fashioned wife urging other women to have chil- dren because “you can forget a lot of trouble while you are rocking a baby to sleep, and most men are cruel, selfish and not to be trusted. |family well and their love and reepect will repay you for all your trouble. | There {s always a allver lining to every cloud.” COMING TO A POINT FROM OP. wife, letter, times, clusion. NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH ] POSITE DIRECTIONS. So from opposite poles of argument opinion; @urely there must be some friend of the modern woman who will break « lance in defense of her claims to ralership. Since Mary Garden has said that the American woman is an autocrat in her own home there must be an autocrat or two with the desire to take her pen in hand to assert and justify her authority. I do not feel competent to do so as in the democracy of the ar them; treat her, the theol eal doc-| from him, ention that the husband shall The facility Kelted my wondering Since suffrage for women the law in California no pre-| time. have more. because the moment equal- the better qualified | Eliminating the assertion that ‘the authority of the husband is of divine origin, what is its founde- tion? Naturally the man's financial headship. But if the husband is the head of the home because it 4s bis special function to maintain it while the wife oares for it, then the relation of husband and wife Association of two or more persons with equal rights and responsibil ties, there fs @ division of duty and | of au Here at hority. the views of the man and What do WOMAN'S LOVE. Dear Madam: Let a man rule at oll times, Mos) men Of jo-dey can't “You CAN FORGET A LOT WHEN YOURE ROCKING A Bany TO SLEEP” be endured unless you humor their every whim. hands under their feet all the time, lose all your reason, backbone and self-respect you will do, But if you try to assert any rights, volce any you are all wron ‘The average man of to-day wants @ human machine like an Edison ia- vention, one that will work om and mover tire, never get out of order, ont of patience. One who can change her manners to order by putting in a new battery, There ar women to-day who to keep peace in the family lose all pride, backbone and self-respect Just to keep men tn @ good humor, many—gain nothing by brutal ways. fear them and hate them, The average Matter how badly her husband may if she has cbildren—and 1 have—loves that man, and for her childref's sake she No woman boss after she works hard all day with her home and children. #o lame at night that it takes all her energy to work up a amile and keep up with the average man, They want you to be al your's clothes for yourself and chil- dren and be up on opera, politics and the Balkan question at the same We don't mind working hard for a man and doing our level best, have five and sincerely hope I shall You can forget a lot of trouble while you are rocking baby to sleep. Only, all women, look MONDAY, ADELE L. GET UP A SMILE IN THE EVENING" rf | out for yourselves, and fret over men. worth it. and not te trusted. spect will rr troubles, lintng to every cloud. bluster around, and his health ts gone 1 a little} WHY A MAN THINKS Raise your If you kee your France, hundreds of married riage ceremony? Such men. d they their No woman respects be ‘and Mra. married woman, no nent to aak tho clined to bom andes anything sks to be She ts servants, to remodel leat successfully in Ned, Ho deserves to him, including th fellow men, and taciud those of the wife. two bosses ia an Su abs Doctors and Druggists also the contempt of the fem part Fifth Article of a Series, "SHE 15 SO LAME FROM WORK IT TAKES ALCHER ENERGY TO Ld ® ° * 7 r > ARAICA Most are cruel, Don't worry They are not selfisie Raise your family well and their love and re- y you for all your day has 14 always @ sliver Let a man ne nd he Waterloo in deceitful friends he Will be glad to come and bow to the Little woman he ruled and bussed. ADELE L. ‘ A HUSBAND SHOULD BE Boss, Dear Madam: Kaiser Wilhelm, who belleves that he i# divinely commis- sioned to help the Delty in regula’ éng the affaire of the untverse, 1s reported to have recommended wom- en to cultivate the three K's— kuche, die Kirche und dle kinder, Englished, the kitchen, the kirk and the kids, which are certainly more important as “first principles" than those of Herbert Spencer, All wom. |} en can chatter, but few can \ and {f & man is fortunate | enough to have a wife who ts a fausfrau and a Hypatia at the same time he 18 to be congratulated in possessing an enviable treasure, for usually peauty and brains ha bond of unton except that they both begin with the letter B, But to come back to our muttons, as they say in If @ woman really believes in her religion, how can she desire to be the boss, since her Bivle tells her, in Genesis iL, 13, that it w man's choice but God's should “rule” over woman? does this explain the refusal of many to marry unless the tn eliminated from the mar- no word All this talk of the American hen- pecked husband has a basis of fa: Where there 1s so much smoke there e fire, and most every one has met the prototypes of Mra. Ni Jarr in real Dropping the religious aspect of the question and basing the matter on ordinary common sense, it ts port!- ladies who are tn- Why do you think that you are competent to rule your husband when you have never shown the slightest ability to rule your own which most any man of ordinary tntelligence is able to do his own business?” Of course that does not ex man who allows himself iife, JANUARY 18, Bible Forbids Yoman to “‘Boss’’ the Home, — Says Man Who Thinks Hubby Should Rule | | | | “ 1918, TELLS WORKING GIRLS NOT TO “APE LADIES OF FIFTH AVENUE” Rose Pastor Stokes Predicts | “Peaceful Rising of Labor Against Capital.” | given to them by the capttalist-owned | Legisiatui Mra. Rowe Pastor Stokes | ald yerterday at a vestmakers’ mase- “The meeting at Clinton Hall. {st class,” she added, “has but the working it much th however, papital- t up a claws ger. The will be} revolution pea 1he power of capitaitem, with navy, ite militla and withstand the organized movement of You munt bo free of the wane system.” working not its ite police the working class from the miserte Mra, Stokes ady whom sh wed th * addre avenue.” > - GOT HER DUCKY BY AN EGG. Shell, and) There's to Ne Wedding. + Wrote to Addre Another emg that mht have aided! humbly in the construction of a prosate omelet and been lost to fame has pros duced a romance. This am wador of Cupid, who often plays this kame, came from the home of W. 8. MeCarter, & tailor of Broken How, Neb, to the court of Miss, Lime Lane of Middle- town, N. J. Here is the story told by the young woman who found « beau in Broken How by way of an exe time ago L fou te with Mr. MeCarter Just for fun f wrot pecting answer 1 got a nitty, wh very nive things, as well as tn his pleture and business card, He asked me to 1 my pleture. “After thinking tt all over ft gent the pleture. Billy proposed marrt will wed Just tht ‘| we corresponded ted mint cull h'n Case No Tent, hall in the Court to-day announced millinems who had nd Mrs, Helen Ht . 40 West One Lawyer Loule M for offering algrettes for sale, had tn- structed him to withdraw from the case, Mra, MeCulloch, Mr. Marahall ex. plained, Was not a milliner, ‘The evi- dence that sho had offered algrettes for » which had been in her family many A not be ere had ne in gain by Noch w i nentence was judged gullty pended. Spartana tried a double line of kings and there never wan one of ¢t that amounted to a row of pins asa real king. A man should rulo his Dusiness, and the wife should rule the home, and netther should Inter- fere with the other unless things go wrong, when, of cou » there should be @ mutual discussion of the best way out, and, 49 @ last resort only, the decision must be left to the man. If the woman refuses to abide she Is the wrong kind ot wif 4 if the man 1s unable to decide he te the wrong kind of a husband, and the sooner the two separate the better. , as L understand {t, t# the only ning of “rule” as applied to a husband, Have the ladies something better to offer? Is Half teaspoonful, little in oe! spoon but plenty in a cup. | c “The rich have no real wealth of} thelr own but they have taxing power, | } Ram FUE~ASCASLU Grand Coat Reduction 2,000 Coats Included At Half Price and Less In two lots specially featured, because they constitute the bulk of our useful, serviceable coats of handsome appearance and unimpeachable style—long, aristocratic garments which may be worn over the smartest costumes. Choice of Any Coat Choice of Any Coat Formerly Priced Formerly Priced $18, $20 and $22.50 $25, $28 and $30 10°15 Not to have admired these] Tuesday will be a veritable richly tailored coats at their| holiday in coats, when this as- original prices means that you] sortment is spread before you at have not seen them—have not| $15. ‘The $28 coats might well compared them with the best| have been priced at $32, and the obtainable elsewhere at the same] $30 coats at $38 Every coat prices. They bear all the in this collection is a gem marks of refinement of tailoring] Silkiest of plush and astrachan and exclusiveness of fabric. coats—Parisian boucles. $22.50 Warm Ulsters $30 Coverall Models $20 Chinchilla Coats $25 Seal Plush Coats $20 Mixture Coats $28 Tourist Coats $18 Cheviot Coats $30 Astrachan Coats Over forty different models} In line and lining, trimness and twenty-five distinct ma-| and trimming, these big, fash- terials—every one in the very| ionable coats fill every require- best taste and correct in style. | ment of the smartest women. Free Alterations Free Alterations TUESDAY SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES. 44-16 West 14th Street NEW YORK 4604462 Fulton Street BROOKLYN to651 Broad Street ‘ of ; 4 LARGE STORES mtn ps BNUSY AS—" AS VASP AITKEN.SON &Co BROADWAY, corner 18th Street FIFTH AVE., corner 39th Street LACES Announce the arrival of an early importation of Laces and Allovers, including many patterns that will be used on model dresses this Spring. Complete sets of Cluny and Valenciennes Lace in new designs, suitable for fine lingerie. SPECIAL Venise, Alencon, Shadow, Net Top Laces and All- overs at 1-3 to 1-2 off regular price: REMNANTS at half price during this sale. 18th Strect Store only. REV. MADISON C. PETERS who is conducting a campaign to reduce the high cost of living, demonstrates daily in the basement of Mahlers Store, 31st St. at Gth Ave. by selling the following food products: Strictly fresh Eggs direct from the farms, per 39c As Sremm SRR Da 17¢ fancy. Oregon Apples, ... 20 & 25¢ of different are now loud tn its pratse.| but we want @ little kindnes herself. There must be Only to “JS. ." who cites chapter} thrown in. I say to wives, ha Sree, even tn . ; i court of last resort—and t and verse against the equality of wom-| children. They are @ comfort. 1 AGU OF IRN, reat anid, (RK Mecause his intellect and knowledge of the world #hould be greater than that Is eontng 6 ampt of his a thing as ity, Give Their Children When in Need of a Physic _ EX:LAX | the Ideal Chocolate Laxative The Because they know, as doctors and druggists should j know, that Ex-Lax is an efficient and harmless remedy for all ean ihink about ict jstomach and bowel troubles and does not produce any griping or constipating after-effects like many old fashioned thartics. Try a 10c box to-day. At all drug stores, “The Malicious | * Microbe” Never discriminates be- | tween man, woman or child, old or young, rich | or poor. | Ever ready to attack it! is a deadly menace to healih, and even life it-| selt. | ‘The most dangerous ol | S28 microbes which enter | the system through the mouth can be rendered practically harmless by the constant use of “ODOL” as a mouth. | wash. | Pleasant to the taste and « “ODOL” will also herd: the teeth in a healthy There is just as Good 50 Cents. ant Department Stores htfully refreshing | the gums and keep "ODOL.,” | At all Druggist GEO.BORGFELDT & CO, NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO WHO WANIS WITHOUT Cost \ set at Bur pragit Plano, handsome 3 DI Singer sewing Pi het of Bure, Vic ‘arthoulary, ELEN. Siite 808. 45 West 4th St Best Florida Oranges, per dozen, 15e> 20c & 25¢ Choicest FloridaGrape Fruit, each at,.... 5c&6c Other things to eat at a saving of 20 to 40 per cent. The best guaranteed stor. 25 Cc The best Creamery But- ter, per Ib. 39c age Eggs, per dozen,. Good eating Butter, per Bes iarericrncs * 33c The Book That Satisfies GET A FREE COPY TO-DAY in TheWorld’s Winter ResortGuide FOR 1913 AT ANY OP THE FOLLOWING WORLD OFFICES: 2 Yark | Brooklyn Oftice, Washington treet, yn, lem Office, 249 West 125th St, 10 Bast 149th Bt | Presents hundreds of descriptions of Winter Resort | Hotels, Boarding Houses, Steamship Cruises, Railroad Routes, ete., at home and abroad. | MAIL ORDERS FILLED. Address: WORLD WINTER RESORT GUIDE, World Building; | New York City, N. Y. and | roux Omics,