The evening world. Newspaper, March 26, 1913, Page 20

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Ky A ia 9 + INSNEENEY CSE 20! MAY NOT EXAMINE ‘WALSH AT BEDSIDE Justice Seabury Modifies His Order Calling for Emer- gency Testimony. George Gorton Battle and Alfred J.) Talley, representing former Police In- epector Aweeney, now under thirteen in- dietments arising out of the graft in- vestigation, argued before Justice Sea- vuny in the Supréme Court, Criminal Branch, to-day for a setting aside of the Justice's order for the examination of ex-Capt. Walsh at hia bedside defore Gweeney comes to trial. After hearing the defendant's counsel At leneth and Assistant District-At- ee eee SE ‘THE EVENING W + stot torney Clark, Justice Seabury ruled that he would temporarily amend his arder, granted at the urgent behest of District- Attorney Whitman, so that the examinas tion of Watsh should take place a week from to-day if he did not set aside the order before that time. In the mean while Justice Seabury ordered both sides to submit briefs on the matter of setting aside the order, saying he would reserve decision until later. ‘The condition of former Police Cap- tain Thomas W. Walsh has become #0 much worse since he appeared af a wit- ness egainst John J. Hartigan, it is doubted to-day that he will live to appear at the trials of former Inspector Sweeney and others. The probability of his death is understood to be one thing that has caused certain of the grafters te “stand pat,” Cor without Walsh's testimony the prosecution is likely to PORTED DISPUTE BETWEEN WALOO AND MURTHA. A story is going the rounds to-day Shedding new light on the recent visit ‘te the District-Attorney of John J. Mur- ‘ha, former inspector reduced to a ca- taincy recently and suspended after ex-policeman Wrenn had said he col- Iécted graft for Murtha, Thompson and Gluseey, The story ie credited to a friend of Murtha, and in effect is that about @ week before Murtha's susfen- @en he was called to Commissioner Waido's office and asked the condition of the Willlamsburg district, which he commanded. He is alleged to have replied Mer Commissioner insisted that the In- epector was mistaken, but the In- @pector was equally aure that he was not. After a stormy few minutes, the Inspector was’ told he should hotfoot back to his district and begin to clean house at once, -f any places remained open after one week he would te die- rated and placed on trial. ‘Maintaining that the first order he had lo Seoancay” stories SPEAR DIES WEEK OF MAY 5, Wife Glayer Asserts brutal murder of ced by Juatice Sea- bury to-day to die in the electric chair time in the week sc May asked if he had anything to Was passed on him the mi fonately amserted his innocence. | Smuraki killed his wife with a meat axe end razor in their home at No, 347 Eldridge street on Feb. 8, then tried to take his owe throat. When, he came to trial his} twelve-year-old son, who had heard the murder being done in the next room, was the chief witness against Smuraki, paanllt Lies lla stay poison. gooa-bye te corns | Are absolutely guaranteed to Gives fe ordinary cases, the in jired, But in every by % Jon iy Pierce's Com corn you thins one | be cut store ou. corn, root 48 hours. With corns of long-standing 5 days cure is eure and lat Nastere on that painful pers’ ( ante Mi THE GIRL WHO WORKS AND WIN deter Home Influences Held Responsible Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). J ») 7 — *oonit agen TRASH. AGOUr WONDERFUL CowBOrs WHO WILL SHOOT UP A Tou POR YOUR SANE. THEY DONT BHIST ANY MORE THAN “Many a Girl Finding Her Home Unattractive Goes Outside for Enjoyment, and the Inevitable Hap- pens—She Goes Astray, Gradually, So the Whole Great Problem Lies in the Home,”” 4 Writes “‘A Working Girl.” in this series. $100—IN PRIZES FOR LETTERS BY REAL WORKING GIRLS—$100 . Cash prizes ambunting to $100 will be given for the most help- ful letters from REAL WORKING GIRLS on the subject dealt with The money will be divided as follows: Two prizes of $25 each. Five other prizes of $10 each. ‘The seven letters which, in Nixola Greeley-Smith’s judgment, are best and mést hetpful will receive these awards. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITB. “The one and only thing necessary to keep girls good is a pleasant, interesting home, and it is the home the reformers should get after. The home ia interesting because mother, my sisters and myself i R]NXOLA GREELEY SMITH FF dren, There is one way, however, in which parents are Prone to impose on the girl who earns her own living, and that is in the expectation that she must do work about the house as well 1 it so—because it is a home, not @ boarding house. To most girls an evening spent at home means intolerable loneHness, so they make engagements for every night in the week. The home should ‘be given up to girls for their parties, at least a few nights in the week. Most mothers can’t see this They are middle-aged or old, and can't stand the noise, or there is scathing criticiam of the company after they leave.” There is an interesting sidelight on the problem of the girl who works and wins. The young woman who furnishes it believes, evidently, that # ts the mothers of to-day who need reforming. It has always seemed to me that more mothers err by over- indulgence than through undue criti- ciam or severity toward their chil- support herself. Mothers do not dream of exacting this double toll from their sons, and the self- supporting daughter should be on exactly the same footing in the family. Tt 1a need! to add that th who gives her mother $3 or 4 a with which ghe Is clothed and not wholly should be willing to make up the in any way that Is required of Undoubtedly there are some ;Who drive their daughters away Ife by gashing “hia {home by unnecessary and bilghting re-|into homes. where a atrictions, The Safe Way to Remove Corns Paring a corn with steel is danger- ip of the blade means a oO gash which may result in blood Treating a corn with unguaranteed rem- ies is uncertain. again they may not. you are money out of pocket. # Pierce’s Corn Plasters hey may cure--but And if they don’t, cure, If they don't, the druggist lying the first Plast all, can be removed N\ red, Remember, If | | ind 25c per box At ell ‘or by mail) A thin ware é je mint week fed is self-supporting and she deficit f her, parents frou ‘er or Hing only during their working hours. , many of them leave their eal thoughts and feclings at the door of the home as though they Saw inscribed qbove ite portal “All YOUTH sbandom ye who enter here.” On the other hand, many of them bring self-respecting mother presides the ragtime morals, and s#peeoh whioh pass for WHERE MOTHERS MAY MAKE A MISTAKE, Any mother who tolerates friends of her children when she has serious reasons to criticise Is making a grave mistake, But every question should be open to discussion and argument be- tween a mother and her daughters. The assumption of arbitrary authority {8 both silly and ineffective. It mak jenemtes and hypoorit: Magistrates who deal every day with the white slave problem have told me and others ‘of parents ao brutal and benighted that \they have locked their doors upon !young girls who came home from a ‘party later than midnight and ao driven them to the streets, There is no offense possible to humanity which is great jenough to justify a mother in shutting ‘her door to the child for whom ahe {of Evening World readers follow: et TO MOTHERS ON THE ART OF HOMEMAKING, Dear Madam: This talk of low | wages being the cause of the down: fall of a majority of girls ts abso- lutely wrong--and ridiculous. The one and only thing necessary to keep uirls “good” ts a pleasant, interest- ing home, and it Is that, the home, Which tle reformers should get af My home is interesting. Why? | cause mother, my s! self make it #0 ~bec not a boarding house. e ning we are all together and chat; even if it is only gossip, somehow we make it injeresting; shas opened the door of life. The letters | ~ me ME MILLIONAIRE WHO Racy ‘AUD cREAMCONDL EN cee “GIRL FROM wane” 4 tf T do happen to an engagement I find it an ef- fort to break away. Now, an eve- ning spent at home to most of my Girl friends, and to most girls, means intolerable loneliness, and so they make engagements for every night in the week, and after a while it Is any kind of an engagement, just 90 they won't have to spend an evening at home—and it ts that which leads them downward. ‘The home should be given up to the girls for their in the week. A girl 1s entitled to {t, although most mothers can't see They are middle axed or old, t stand the nolge—or there {s scathing criticism of the company after they leave. Naturally, a girl resents that, and resolves never to have friends call again—and not finding the home attractive or inter- eating to her she goes outside again for enjoyment, and the inevitable happens—she goes astray gradually. ‘The whole great problem lies in the home. A YOUNG WORKING GIRL. Dear Madam: At the age of seven- teen I came to New York trom Idaho, After learning that I could not earn © fabulous salary just because I was well educated, but would be paid what I was really worth to my em- ployers, I took @ position in a dress- making establishment at $3 a week and by close observation, diligent ap- pitcation and a determination to win 1 worked myself up to the position of outter and fitter et 613 a week. Owing to overtaxing my eyes I had to give up sewing temporarily and am now employed as a governess for @ Wotle chitd. I em earning $5 a month with my board, room and faundry. I am saving money to take @ dfesn design courso next year and even have visions of trips to Paris for some establishment. I am sure any girl with a degree of in- telligence can live on $8 a week and reas plainly but presentably. . I belleve it is mot #0 much a ques tion of what a girl is\pald as it is what she !s capable of earn! Many of the girls in the es he ment had been there for years and were very dissatisfied with their wages, yet they made no effort to increase their earning capacity. They seemed to dislike hard work and steady application to thelr work as much as they liked finery and good times. Many of them came Into the shop #0 dull and tired from lack of sleep owing to the late hours they kept that they were unable to apply them- selves to anything properly save a | discussion gf the swell fellows and many, tions for us working girls to meot and conquer and many times I was discouraged and felt there was no FOR THURSDAY AND FRIDAY. Perfect-fitting Eyeglasses, with this graceful Gold Shell Mount- ing, on and off Only $1.00 with one hand ‘he Te, includes @ scientific examination by T ‘doctors, Pitre. cha fet lindgre e ‘Dr. opportunity, | | | ORLD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1913. Thirteenth Article; of a Series. r= For the Fate of Girl Wage Earners use in trying so hard and denying ‘myself eo many dances and dresses, both of which I adore, but to-day, after three years’ effort, Iam mighty thankful I stuck to the better and harder way. My advice to girls is don't read trash and don't imagine you'd like to go west where the moving pic- tures show wonderful and brave cow- boys so gallant and daring they'd shoot up an entire town for your sake. ‘They don't exist out West any more than the millionaires who are always falling in love with your eaches and cream complexion, etc., on Broadway, and most of those plo- tures were taken on Long Island, anyway. A GIRL FROM IDAHO, Be tain Rn “THE LAST SHOT GOT HIM.” So Sang Mr. Bi Stopped Mr. Connolly, Three friends carried Lawrence Con- nolly—who was p-evented from walk- ing by the presence of a bullet in his foot—into Harlem Hospital early to- day, Connolly sald he had een cross- ing Fifth avenu One Hundred and Thirty-ffth street when the bullet came flying from the darkness. John Barnett, one of the ‘friends, ‘@ this explanatton: “There's @ song called ‘The Last Shot Got Him,’ and I was ainging {t in Herman's saloon at No. 150 West One Hundred and ‘Twenty-fourth street. John Murray thought he'd like to help in putting the song over, so he began to shoot, Just as I sang the catch line about the last shot getting him, Con- nolly yelled, The last bullet in the ‘Gat’ had struck his foot.” John Murray, one of the three, was arrested, He ilves at No. 2% Eighth avenue, t—and Bi three teachers, He gave them thirty-five min: After an interpreter, the detectives apd Magisti to call Dernian Quecdonpzoich yesterday, the Mag! put {t down as “John” and held him for extradition to Ghicago. Physicians’ congress in Rome, Italy, declares “fashions {n women's dress" con- tribute to the spread of tuberculosis ami urges tnternational regulation of cos tumes, has sued Bertha Cohn Grossman for sop; to pay Ns counsel fees. former for a Givoree in White Plains, charges @ fort of peck on the cheek,” and eriticl in an omelet. On his side Bell deciared was the boss.” An artificial eve saved Job Owen from death at Shamokin. A rifle bullet fired by an unknown hit the eye, Dut was turned asite. Mra. Grace Lucas of Brooktyn has sued for a separation because her husband has “assumed the attitude of @ harsh schoolmaster. groceries and send them out to their country home by parce! post, ‘so she would have the handling of no money but her Capt. George Page of Sag Harbor, L. I, an old whater, after fifty-five years at sea has been denied admittance to rates are dead. and he can’t prove he aailed ten years under the American flag. ‘He began his career on an English boat Boartman got a d:voroe decree in Philadelphia yesterday, she Weiter in te Me fo Bureau with George L. Turner, a New York within waited for tt In the Marriage Lte salesman, and they were marri POLE TAKE CHARGE OF HOTEL AND ROUT SHORES OF GUESTS The Avenel, Hostelry Frat Fig- ured in Police Graft Scan- dal, Is “Closed.” The Hotel Avenel, at One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street and Lexing- ton avenue—of old the Baltic, where George A. Sipp, its former proprietor, says he paid police graft—is presided over by a policeman to-day and guests that scek to engage quarters there are firmly turned away by the officer, though the clerk stands behind the desk nominally in charge of the office, Between 8 o'clock last night and an early hour this morning fully fifty couples entered the hotel and asked for accommodations only to be told by the policeman on duty that the hotel, for the time being anyway, had suspended business, The descent upon the Avencl was made as a result of a watch kept upon it by Capt, McElroy and half a dozen men of the East One Hundred and Twenty-aixth street station, They took notes upon the number of guests who had no baggage, upon the number of women who engaged rooms there more than once a day and upon other mat- ters mentioned in the Raines law. When Capt. McElroy and his nix sleuths reported to Chief Magistr..te McAdoo what they had seen the Masis- trate directed they make oath to the ac- counts they gave him of the goings-on at the Avenel. When that was done he {ssued a warrant permitting the police to close the establishment, Capt. McElroy and Policeman Rappold went together with the warrant late yesterday afternoon, The Captain took charge of the office, while Rappold went through the hotel ordering the guests to depart forthwith on pain of arrest, ‘There was an exciting and lively ex- odus. Some of the guests—almost all of whom were young men and women—did not stop even to put on all their clothes. The debouching army of transient lodg- ers was greeted with cheers and hoot- ings by @ crowd which assembled in front of the hotel, GRANDMOTHER USED SAGE TEA TO. DARKEN HER FADED OR GRAY HAIR Mixed With Sulphur It Makes Hair Soft, Beau- tiful; Cures Dandruff. The use of Sage and Sulphur for re- storing faded, gray hair to ites natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She kept her hair beautifully darkened, gonry ‘and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for this ready-to-use juct—called “Wyeth's Suge and hur Hair Remedy"—you will get a jowadays skilled chemists | 1 large bottle for about 50 cents. Some druggi ea Loot their iby which is ly too sticky, so insist upon gettin, yeth’s,”” which can be de; ended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the bair and is splendid for dandrufi, ary, feverish, itchy scalp and falling air. A well-known downtown it says ‘his customers insist on Wyeth's Ses and Sulphur, because, they say, it dark- ens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied—it’s so easy to use, too, You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw it through ig one strand at a time. at night, and by morning the gray hair dissappears; after another application or two it is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and abundant. It Has the Long Points waxane cr fave ware 7000 ASK FoR “THE RED-MAN” Tas RED-MAN BRAND 2 FOR 25 CTS, News Oddilics Prestdent Wilson @ald he wouldn't be a White House “handshaker,” but he shook hands with 1,600 yesterday. They Here's a woman's rights man with a vengeance! FE. Grossman of Manhattan He waives alimony, but is suing her children by a riage for $100,000 for “alienating her affections.” GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE.—Annte C. Bell, suing Charlies H. Bell of this city re young and pretty schoolgiris and utes, te Corrigan had vainly tried ate, who had said “Dernit,” “My nose was never intended foreyeglaseds' is an expression we frequently, hear. Nonsense—the makes it possible for any one to wear eyeglasses. ‘ They do away with all fitting and slipping, and hold 9s come ae and as rigidly as spec tacles. "| Altached to vour glasses, 35 conks, Sold only in our eight stores, aration and the court to compel her at he didn't even kiss her, “except for ines her extravagance in putting five exgs his agged" him and “insisted Also he planned to buy the own."* Sailors’ Snug Harbor. All his old com-| $4 {ast 234. Street. near Fourth Arenas 54 West 125th Sireet, ear Lenox Ay 4: umbus Avenue, Sist and So. 4 70 Nassau Street, in Street, New 1999 Broadwar. pear Willoushoy, Brooke 480 Fuiton Btieet, opposite A. de 8., ‘BOT Broad Street. near Hahn's, News hour, James McCreery & Co 34th Street 23rd Street TRUNKS & BAGS. On Sale Thursday, March 27th. Steamer Wardrobe Trunks, — berth high. Made on best veneer frames, duck covered, bound in hard fibre, bronzed steel trimmings, hand riveted throughout. Wardrobe tray will carry six suits; body section has compartments for hats, shoes, ete. Suitable for men and women. 19.50 regularly 25.00 Dress Trunks,—boun3 and strapped with best leather, bronzed steel trimmings, hand riveted, fitted with waist, millinery, and shoe compart- ments and dress trays. Sizes 36, 38 and 40 inches, regularly 12.00 to 13.50, 9.50 Steamer Trunks,—bound and strapped with leather, hand riveted. Sizes 36, 38 and 40 inches. regularly 8.75 09.75, 7.25 Russet and Brown Sole Leather Bags,— saddler sewn, reinforced corners, leather lined, fitted with inside pocket. Size 14 to 18 inches. regularly 6.75 to 8.00, 5.50 Fur Storage — (Dry Cold Air) Vault on Premises Latest Scientific Construction Furs insured against loss or damage Moderate Rates Words and Music of a Song by Charles K. Harris, the Famous Song Writer, Will Be Given, Complete, in Next Sunday World Magazine. Order. from Newsdealer in Advance #& w&-

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