The evening world. Newspaper, January 17, 1913, Page 22

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"— GILSOF BARNARD TO GUARD WOMEN INCARMENTSTRKE Mayor Declines to Appoint Special Female Policemen to Foil “‘Slavers.” WILL FORM OWN BODY. Women Strike Leaders Disap- pointed, but Won't Be Blocked by Gaynor’s Refusal. Following a curt written refusal by Mayor Gaynor to permit women sympa- thizers with the strikers in the white Geode trades to organize & corps of special policewomen, ag protection against the activities of the “cadets” aad white slavers among the girte of the ‘picket lines, a volunteer corps of female detectives and “strong-arms’ detng organized for the purpose to-day. Barnard College girls, settlement work- 4 enthusias' Classified will constitute th guard,” which will begin ite labore on Monday. Miss Gertrude Barnum, daughter of a Dreminent Chicago jurist and one of the volunteers in the cause of the striking girle in the white goods and shirtwaist trades, appealed to the Mayor last Monday to appoint « special policeman to guard IT WOULD UNLAWFULN: MAYOR SAYS. j To-day the following letter from the ' ‘Mayor, addressed to Miss Barnum, Miss Rose @chneiderman and Mise Josephine Casey, the latter two organisers in the International Ladies’ Garment Makers’ Fecelved at the union head- Mayor I cancelled all the appointments of private persons to act as policemen. Such persons hired themselves out at #0 muoh a Gay and took sides and per- petrated all sorta of unlawiul things. They were used in labor etrikes to commit violence and disorder. “Now, you eek me to featore that condition of things, Permit me to say that you don’t know the grayty of the thing you are asking me to do. : If I deputize people on your alde, the other side will ask for by scalpel aleo, and the ce and disoner, ‘said Mise Barnum, after she had read the flat from City Hall, “I do not want to eriticise Mayor, but I cannot be- lieve he und nda the gravity of the situation we have to combat.” PROMINENT WOMEN TO BE MEMBERS OF BODYGUARO. Miss Barnum said she would not Publish the names of the fifty women who have volunteered to act as guar- ] ecanty wages and perhaps bring over other members of the family from the assacre districts in Rutsia. They are lucky, but cannot exist long without outside help when-no wages are coming in, 7 have no union, but are al- ready organising one, with the help of the Women's les Union League, Tast night Nathan Stubuiker, 3. Po- lakoff and 8. Bladeck, representiig the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, went to Philadelphia to address & mans meeting of 2,000 workers of that organization on the subject of the strike New York. The promise that the strike would spread to Philadelphia, if unfinished work from the New York shops ts cent there, was put in @ reso- lution. ‘Thomas H. Fitspatrick, a probation- ary policeman attached to the Mast ‘Thirty-Afth street station, was sue- Dended to-day by Commissioner Waldo and chargen were ordered preferred against him on the complaint that he had beaten, without warranj, a atriking tailor who was doing picket duty yes- terday. Samuel Friel of No. street went to Chief Inspector Max Schmittberger yesterday and complained that while he was doing picket duty tn front of the Franklyn 8: m manufac- tory, on East Thirty-sec atreet near Firat avenue, one of the employees of the place had come out and kicked him on the leg. ‘While he was running away, vore, Pollceman Titzpatrick b and struck him over the head #o heavily that he had to go to Hospital, 166 Broome Giana of the striking shirtwaist and white goods workers until they went on the job next Monday. She did admit that Mre, James Lees Laidiaw, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt and Mre. Rose Pastor Stokes will be among the vigil- antes, but she would not confirm the eport that the daughter of Dean George Kirchwey of Barnard College was to be one of the number, ‘That very young girls, averaging not ore than sixteen, make up a large prow a @ortion of the strikers in the garment ‘workers’ war was asserted to-day at the headquarters of the white goods workers, (No, 17% East Broadway. These of work they may drop as low a $3, ‘They are asked, amgng other things, to eew on 240 white ruffles for 17% cents. are supporting @ rand meveral yttle Drothere and sisters. Others are alone in this country, trying ¢e live on their i} renult will be viol “1 am deeply disappointed at the Mayor's refusal to grant our request,” ONE DOSE. MAKES ‘WOVGESTION Heartburn, Gas, Dyspepsia and all Stomach distress ended with “Pape’s Diapepsin.” You don't want » slow remedy when your stomach is bad—or an uncertain P one—or a harmful one; your stomach is too valuable; you mustn't injure it with drastic drugs. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmlessness; ’ ite certain unfi ing action in regulating sour, gassy stomachs. Its millions @ cures in indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and ot>er stomach trouble have made it {amove aie world SNe j Keep this lect stomach doctor in ur Home--Lee handy—get y which docsn’t with them: eat lies by lead, ferments and and forms gas; causes headache, and nausea; eructations of acid ee, poorer, as s00n in comes in contact stomach, all such distress van- ishes. Its promptness, certainty sod in o the worst stomac! Misceders is a re and _« tion to these who “Wonders | FATHELIOHIS MEDICINE, “SHORT CHANGE ARTIST” ‘DENOUNCED BY COURT. Mrs. Feigenbaum Preyed Upon Poor Girl Cashiers Who Had to Make Losses Good. In passing sentence on Mra, Feigenbaum, fifty years old, o of attempting to “short chan; tradesmen, Justice Moss in the Court of Special Sessions tg-day brarided the Prisoner as & menace to the community and @ woman unfit to be at large. “You too old to be doing ings of this sort," maid Justice Moss, “You have tried this despicable trick on young sirls in small shops, who have to make up the loss from their emall earnings This is one of the meanest and cheapest kind of larcenies, The sentence of this Court is that you be confined to the penitentiary for three months.’ The woman offered no defense. She waa accused by three cashiers of Third avenue butcher shops of offering f! dollar bills for change, and, on ceiving change, withholding @ dollar, aiming had been short changed. The charge on which she was convicted ‘was made by Margaret Lennon, a cashier at No, 347 Third Ue co RL ABESSINIA SPURNED HELP, $0 CAPT. JACOBSON’S MAD. Commander of Armenian, Which Went to Freighter’s Rescue, Says He Received Shabby Treatment. A deep-sea quarrel was atred along the wharves to-day when the White Star freighter Arme: arrived from Liverpool, The Armenian was the vessel which tried to the Hamburg- American ine tr er = Abessinia inday when was drifting helpleas, with broken shaft and rudder, Capt. Jacobson of th rmentan is in- 4 nt because, he the divabled e offers of asaistance, ald Capt. Jacobson, ‘stood by the Abesaint firing bombs and burning ‘ut receiving no answer, arose in the steamed away, fax it was learned she had been able to make temporary repairs and for thie reason found it unnecessary to nc- cept the ald for which she had signalled. “Tr thi it was eshalby treatm ‘This is what we got for returnin, lone distance and spend! time in their service.” a ing considerable expresses her opinion of a letter wi stan soul as it is for the boy. The surest way to win a man’s lasting respect 1s to oppose him when he is in the wrong. For men are just if they have to be, though they prefer to be chivalrous when they feel like it and tyrannical w DANGER OF YIELDING HER Ment in w serious matter—that is, one involving a question of right or w or legitima: reepect—ia surely pri self a future of toady-eating. thoroughly with the views of “A Real Mother's Daughter’ contention that a woman must be | the folly home where is @ atral be brought into a home where the ques- tion of headship has not been settled for all time. whether the father or the mother has been established as final arbiter. point ts that till the dec DIVORCE COURT LIKE A BUSY An interesting theory is advanced to- day by another reader, nm prising salespeop! lawyer is enterp! and drum up bu ‘They follow the con Real Mother’ COOEES OOOE OOO OOEHEDEEEEORESCOES ER SEERES ES ERSEEE SES ALAC S ROSS ERE TON O | SHOULD THE WIFE BE THE BOSS Ninth Article of a Series. ‘SROCEE SENSE LOROLEDEOLEORINNN000 Coprright, W913, by The Prose Publishing Co. (The New York World). Man, for Woman Was Upon the Earth Forever, and If You Fail to Find Your Back Writes a le Not Bend Your Back Under the Abuse of a “How Can a Husband Love His Wife When He Is Afraid of Her?’’ Asks band or Wife That Is Strong Enough to Take the Initiative Will Be the Autocrat,” Says “A. B. D.”’ BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “I have found it an invariable rule that a man always respects more a woman who will not bow down to him.” So “A Real Mother's Daughter” hich appeared in this discussion the [Nixoma GREELE' Ena | which conta! hen they are disagroeable. JUDGMENT, But any woman who yields her juda- but n exaggerate aring for I agree not only in her he little god of harmony Cy ® home children are merely chains holding together human beings who would be better ana happier apart, Where love reigns children are the crown marriage; where harmony is ab- seat they are its thorns, i] One thing ts certain, No child should It makes no difference The ive battle has fought end the armis aligned olive inch is out of pl STORE. who declares he divorce court, like a store, would r thrive if it we ot for the enter- but the views of | worth reading untcation of “A / "who writes SHOULD NOT serious and & e In telling “unhappy wives to have children; it is utterly selfish even to think of bringing little children into a home where the ittle god of hanmony te @ stranger, simply because *: forget @ lot when you're rocking a baby to sleep.” Almost any woman &@ mother; but it Is the In the world to be a with @ capital M. 1 have Mother, known those whose families of littie children would average from two up to ten, like steps in a stairway, yet knew not Motherhood; have also known those who had no little bables of their own, and they knew Motherhood, Is is decidedly wroag ~ ‘‘A Man Always Respects More a Woman Who Will Not Bow Down to Him or Cringe’’ Not Made to Crawl bone, Grow One,”’ Reader. 'THE DIVORCE COURT WOULON’ THRIVE BUT FOR ITE ENTERPRiISe “N. D.’—“The Hus- THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JAWUARY ING SALES~ PROPLE® witTes*MD! him, $ There should be no “bosses,” for where there je @ teal home om: aed of intereste abolishes ‘‘boss- om,” ; 4 REAL MOTHER'S DAUGHTER. FEAR AND LOVE DO NOT MIX WELL. Dear Madam: Col. Bob Ingeredll wisely asked “Hew can you fear and love the same God?” This is also true in the married life. can @ husband love his wife when fhe le afraid of her? Again, where there is no penalty there certainly is no law! When the wife has a stievance she rune to the court. But it ts very unbecoming and un- manly for a husband to pour out his heart of the shortcomings of his (independent) wife to a (judge) magistrate, The divorce court, Mke a store, would never thrive if It were not for the enterprising salespeople, The newly-baked lawyer is enterprising enough to create and drum up busl- ness of his own, He looks among ‘bis relatives and school chums for dusiness. ‘When a young woman pours her heart out to such » lawyer, he Usually makes mountains out of molehills, for business is business! Whether he is selling 9 brass watch for gold in Baxter street or destroying a family in a Broadway law office. He is like the doctor who advises an immediate operation because he knows that her husband will pay a good fee, However, the operation of the doctor will heal up, while that of the lawyer may never be whole again! Therefore the number of practis- yers should be limited and ion cases specialised” to experienced, conscientious jurists, who, instead of for the sake of “busines other day in which a married woman declared that unless the husband is allowed to be supreme in every- thing, it {s impossible to get along with him. Now, notwithstanding all the ad- vice of the “turn-the-other-cheek” variety that is offered to wives, this observation of a young unmarried woman {9 profoundly true, There is little doubt that in his soul the aver- age man still thinks himself superior to his wfie, an opinion which con- stitutes one of the difficulties of mar- riage, and where the wife joins with him in his fatuous belief it is no wonder that she soon becomes the victim of his tyrannous contempt. ; Men prefer amiable, india rubber Women just as children prefer pud- ding and ice cream to more sub- ins too much sugar is as bad for the for any one in whose home the ment of love {s lacking to have c dren. Firat of all it is not fair to the little ones, and in the second Place husbands and wives are not true to their best selves aving them. Aw long as the world extsis Jove will have @ firm foundation of Tespect; In fact, cannot live without It, “Adele L." evidently overlooked that fact when she says “The aver- age married woman, no matter how | ! badly her husband may treat her, If she has children—and I have—loves that man, and for her children's sake she stands anything from iatm,” dissuade, discourage su: Does she really believe a real and patch up the differe: Mother would feel and think that tween husband and wife. For sep- way? A thousand times aration 1s vexation, reunited is de- Mother (and there are so lighted, N.D. refuse to live under the same roof | THE FIRST CAT THAT CQMES with @ man that did not treat her OUT Is IT. as a man should his wife, while Dear Madam: As the venture into children would lend ai mpetus to nonial fleld is in the nature her determination to | him, for or is @ lottery, so is the practical working of the government of the home. Determining who {s to be the autocrat therein may be likened to the shaking up of the “oats in the bag,” the one to leap out | first is it, The husband or wife that #he would take them a home that is not a hom things which are “Home, oft b Do not bend your back under the abuse of » so-called mam until your head touches the dust, for is strong enough to take the initia- tive in household affairs will be the sutocrat (7), and in my opinion that CONSTIPATED, BILIOUS, HEADACHY we LIVER TORPIOYGASCARETS SURE Turn the rascals out—the headache, biliousness, constipation, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases—turn them out to-night with Cascarets, Don't put in another day of distress, Let Cascurets sweeten and regulate your stomach; remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and that misery-making ges, take the excess bile from your liver and carry off the decomposed waste matter and constipation poisqn from the bowels, Then you will feel great. A Cascaret to-night will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your head cloar, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and make you feel bully and cheerful for months. Don't forget the children. 17, 1918. is equivalent to the democracy of the hone. Where one of the twain predom!- nates, the other either passively, through fear or under protest, ac- quiesces in the ruling of the more Powerful, No rule or theory can be made to apply to all cases, but nature can be depended upon +o take its course. A. B. Glasses do not relieve ALL cases of headaches. If you suffer headaches, ask our Oculist (Registered Physi- cian) to examine your eyes. Should he find that Glasses will relieve your headaches, he will tell you so—without . cost or obligation. We have re- ieved thousands of headaches with properly fitted glasses. Harris Glasses—if needed, cost $2.00 or More, depending upon the quality of the frame and the kind of denses your eyes require. -st.. Stannis ‘and GAidons 54 East 28rd St., near Fourth Ave. 54 West 125th St. near Lenox Ave. 442 Columbus Ave.,8 1st and 82nd Sts. 70 Nassau St.,near John St. 1009 Broadw: 489 Fulton 597 Bro: near Willo’by, Bklyn spp. A. & Se Bklyn On March Ist, Mr. Georges, Sr., retir from the Georges busi- ness, which he founded away back in 1879, and I take over complete ownership. My Final Reorgan- ization Effort, the Climax of Value Giving in High-grade Clothes Value has been the corner- stone in the foundation of this brilliantly succese- ful business since its very establishment. The really shrewd men of New York know this well. And when I say that my resent values are abso- lutely unapproached else- where in New York it is not boast or bombast, not a repetition of a well worn Ihrase, but the actual ase based upon my in- timate knowledge of clothes values in America to-day. I am sacrificing the pres- ent for the future, and New York's response to my apj is the finest demonstration I’ve ever been tendered. REDUCTIONS: 5, $18 & $20 $ es, her 10 ), $22.50 & $ Se nw 12 , $28 & $ tly fede 15 ,$3250&$5 F§ OTR tata New 18 so on upward, includi ane dest valliclined, sults an overcoats, formerly $35 to $76, now in Reorganization $20, $22.50, $25, $30 & $35 Embracing Merchant Tailors’ uncalled - for = garmenta for which Georges has been the recognized clearing — hot since 1879—also — Geor; model clothes, my own cri tions built by’ custom tail in gull seasons; from ready-mades, distinctive NEW YORK 42 West 34th Bet. Broadway & Sth Ave, ALSO STORES AT PHILADELPRIA Boston 15th @ Chestnat 884 Washingtes BUFFALO PROVIDENCE 357 Male Seo Ww dames MeCreery & Co. 34th Street On Sale Saturday, January 1¢th Special Offering. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC NECKWEAR. Jabots,—neatly hand embroidered, trimmed with Real Irish and Cluny laces. 38¢ to 6Oc each ‘ values 5S and 850 Guimpes of Shadow Lace; also plain net; sleeve- value s0c 38C each’ Fancy Stocks with jabots. New French models in the latest color combinations. 85c each value 1,25 Yokes of Shadow Lace, plain ‘and tucked Nets. values 58c to 1.95 38c to 1.25 each less. SUITS, DRESSES AND COATS. , For Small Women and Misses. mt ‘Spring Suits of Eponge and Bedford Cord; draped skirt; blouse coat trimmed with silk. 32.50 New Serge Dresses trimmed with silk; two models. White, Navy Blue and Black. 18.50 Remaining stock of Suits in various models and materials. 9.50 and 14.50 value 14.50 to 25.00 Winter Coats,—several styles in a variety of materials. formerly 11.50 to 15.00 9.50 JUNIORS’ AND GIRLS’ APPAREL. Spring Models. Juniors’ Suits of Navy Blue Serge, cutaway Norfolk model, satin lined. Sizes 14 and 16 years. 22.00 and 27.00 Juniors’ Suits of Mixed Fabrics,—semi-fitting and Norfolk models. Sizes 14 and 16 years. 18.50 Values. Girls’ Wash Dresses. White Dresses of Batiste,—hand embroidered and lace trimmed. Size 6 to 14 years. 2.95 and 4.50 Wash Dresses of Gingham, Linen, Cordaline and Percale in Russian, Middy and one-piece models. Size 6 to 14 years. 1.95 and 2.95 WOMEN’S SUITS AND GOWNS. Tailor-made Suits in a variety of materials; plain and trimmed models. 16.50, 25.00 and 29.50 value 32.50 to 45.00 ‘Yailor-emade Dresses of Velveteen in various models. value 35.00 to 47.50 16.50 and 24.50 Dancing Frocks of Chiffon with accordion plaited tunic,—an assortment of evening shades. value 99.50 22.50 Decollete Gowns,—attractive materials and models. value 45.00 to 85.00 32.50 and 59.50 Special Sale. BOYS’ SUITS AND OVERCOATS. (Incomplete lines) Norfolk and Double Breasted Suits of Mixed Cheviot. Sizes between 8 and 17 years. formerly 5.00 to 7.50.....0seccecsecvecrd OB 9.00 tO 18,80..10050cecrscoecend Polo Overcoats,—sizes between 3-and 8 years. formerly 5.00 to 7.50 3.95 Overcoats in a variety of models; sizes between 11 and 17 years. formerly 5.50 to 7.50... .. 4.50 "8,80 to 10.50...., - 6.95 11,25 t013.50.......seecereees OVS 14.50 t020.00...........++0...13.50 84th Street 23rd Street eeeee ry) ry) vA

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