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| \ ‘ FOUR MORE BMS FFT BY MILITANTS, ONE NA CHURCH Library, Post-Office and Bridge in London and Edifice at Hastings Endangered. MEN AID THE WOMEN. Police Hunting Infernal Ma- chine Squad Believed Hired by Suffragettes. LONDON, May 16—The militant suf- @agettes’ campaign of coercion by means of “bombs” placed in pubite tn- etitutions, in order to intimidate the Bettish Government into granting the Paritamentary franchise to women, was Garried on in different quarters of Lon- @om and the provinces to-day. Four Bombs in all were planted. A very workmanlike canister of ex- Diosives with a clockwork attachment ‘Was found in the Rotherhithe Public I4- in the southeast of London this Senin It was labelled “Votes for in.” The bomb was placed, ac- @ording to the belief prevailing in some quarters, by men, many of whom the 4 olice suspect have been engaged by the @icers of the militant suffragette so- @oty for this work. Another machine was found to-day in Be letter-box of the Wandsworth dis- trict post-office, in the extreme south- ‘West of London. It consisted of a glass abe containing fiuld. A partly burned ‘was attached to one end. The po- Mee declare that the placing of the bomb was apparently the work of the militant suffragettes, Still another canister of explosives with a partly burned fuse was found te-day in Holy Trinity Church, at Hast- “quge, a popular watering place on the . @puth coast, where the militant suftra- ‘ gates have been most active during the past week. +0M8 FILLED WITH CARTRIDGES FOUND ON BRIDGE, & bridge over the Great Western Railway near Westbourne Park Sta- .tton in the west end of London, was dao the object of a suffragette “bomb” attack. The canister in this case was @ larger one than those usually em- It was filled with live care telfiges inclosed in cotton wool, which wee eaturated with parefin oll. The @ttached fuse had deen ignited but had gone out. The whole machine was ‘wreppeag in aiilitant suffrage litera- ‘Miss Zetie Emerson, the militant euifregette of Jackson, Mich. was on to-day for appendicitis, ‘which is eaid to have developed owing te dhe privations she underwent while @he was carrying out a “hunger atrike"’ fm Holloway Jail. She was released on April 8 on account of her weakened con- @ition and eome time afterward was taken to @ private hospital in the @vemry to, prepare herself for the mashing shop windows. & defeat has deen inflicted om the Government by the “wild in their fight over the question After Archibald Bodkin, counsel for Treasury, had announced that the ‘nment ould prosecute any one the newspaper in the future the preas and some of the Liberal ff i g | the publication of the fut the suffragettes declined offer with acorn. + Bmereupon the Home Office issued a @tatement declaring that Mr. Bodkin's “premouncement had been misconstrued end that the Wowen’s Social and Politi- eal Union or any publisher could issue the Guffragette so long as tt did not con- ‘faim any incitement to crime. QUFFRAGETTE NEWSPAPER ’ AGAIN APPEARS. ft ‘Papers frequently come into collision ‘with the Government. This te the case fm vegard to general conscription for the army, and in the event of this be- coming the policy of the British Govern- it, which the Labor party fears, the of newspapers propose to urge the workingmen of the British Isles to re- wiat it This week's number of the Suffragette appeared today and was freely cir- culated. ft was printed ny te firm af Edward Francis, Ths newspaper saye “Though he has constantly depre- cated what he calls our methods, undertook the work b2lieving that the freedom of the press was in danger and also gravely doubting the wislom vf those who seem dent on depriving the euffragettes of their legitimate forms much milder than it was before wala on the militant suffragettes head- quarters and printing office, —_— The Hright Side. (Prom the Chicago Record-Herald.) “Borden is always optimistic. He was “That didn't have a tendency to cheer him up any, did it?” “Yes, As soon as he recovered con- ectousness and found out whet had struck him he brightened up and eald: ‘Gee, I'm glad it wasn't a locome- uve” a ‘ “« WHY IS IT A FAILURE? WHY IS YOUR MARRIAGE A SUCCESS? * tf t Copyright, #12, ty The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World. Marry and Last Article of a Series. Make the Best of the Bargain, “rwey AU Overt TO MARRY RICH HUSBANDS * Perhaps the Nearest Approach to a General Rule for Married Couples to Follow Is the Golden Rule and the Exercise of Common Sense. We May Inherit Felicity as We Do Red Hair or Dim- ples, and After All “‘We’re Here Because We’re Here,” as the Classic of Stag Dinners Says. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Why Is Your Marriage a Success? Why Is It a Failure? There have been many interesting replies to these queries, but among them all none from which in my opinion a general rule of marital suc- cess or happiness might be deduced. Perhaps there isn’t any rule. Per- haps it fs impossible to separate the elements which together constitute a happy marriage. It {s certainly dif- ficult for the ‘outside observer to de- termine which marriages realise what the participants hoped for them and | which merely preserve that exterior | of content that good breeding or good taste entails. Perhaps no one really knows why he is happy or unhappy. | We may inherit felicity as we do red | hair or dimples. It may happen about happiness as it docs about life. A! great many persons are fortunate | enough to have and to belfeve in in-| herited formulas. But for those of us whom the ancient gods have disin- herited, certain disquieting questions are sure to present themselves sooner lor later regarding the purpose and end of existence. To these perplexing in- terrogations I have never succeeded in finding any better answer than that embodied in the words of what is, I belleve, a classic of stag dinner par- ties, “We're here because we're here—because we're here—because we're here.” And being here, we might as well make the best of it. And the best of it for most of The letters of Evening us is to marry and the best | follow, of that, if there ts any best tobe EXTRAVAGANT GIRLS NEED made of it. Of course, very often RICH MEN FOR HUSBANDS, World readers | this doube standard of experience, but |I am not considering ite caus |its results, One of them fs that a wife .|@ twin, but there 1s good reason to be- over by an automobile the other) Gees daa Dear Madam: I have a iarge ac- In Maud Churton Braby’s int: quaintance among the falr sex, but Uttle book, “The Loveseeker, would desire none that I know for a @uthor observes that in her opinion bes bases of their extravagant men are less disappointed in marriage | {0 mee ee Md are than women are, husbands, Ke WORKINGIAN. MEN MANS STENOSIS OF EX*/LACK OF REFINEMENT BREEDS ‘There is every reason why this should Dear soe Inna, be 20 for men Mtanderde Of 6%) of cists as & whole, rane Derience and comparison, They know! ‘or the failure of marrii RaanEh something about women before they are| there are many individual ‘cane nn married, while women with thelr second | the contrary. Usually girls whe aco hand expertence of Ife must take as| not accustomed to ‘refining ins tte alpha and omega one man, the hus-{ fluences, are inclined to be narrow. band who js the beginning and the end, Minded, are extravagant, and they of emotional experience, For instance, | eee shine brilliantly, no matter if @ man finds that his wife te falsifying “got ‘he coats the grocery bille to pay for a new EOWA) tor hor mother and self one genes he at least has the consolation of belng| of $19 per week, residing in a email able to say to himself: town accessible to the city, We are “This ts just exactly Ike that girl! considered by our friends and ac- down in Tennessee, Women are all the same.” Bo he becomes more reconciled | qualntances as people of refinement. I am constantly amazed by the de- to his fate through what he conceives to be its universality. But a woman sire for show, the snobbishness and doesn't know exactly what she has. the lack of high ideals among the girls | know and by the indifference and rudeness of ¢ When the domestic machinery ts run- of the young men. ning smoothly she may feel that she In the consort of the king of men. When . & WHAT IF NINETY PER CENT. OF it fe out of gear she may wonder If such another brute is to be found on earth? MEN REMAINED SINGLE? But in neither case does she KNOW Dear Madam—If the ideas of @ome of your contributors regard- ‘og the minimum salary for a man anything, She can never be certain a8) to marry on were carried out, over to how much or how little ahe !8| ninety per cent, of the male Ameri- blessed, The xcellent reasons for | can population should remain aingle, ‘ding to the statistics on aver- rnings (even allowing for a lower coat of living in some parts of the country, It is not diMicult to forsee the state of affairs arising under thie arrangement. A mon- strous decrease in population, a cor- responding increase in immorality, and a terrific wail from a» larger Percentage of unsupported and struggling women would be included among its effects, . nd ‘The trouble with these readers is that there ten't very much to be dene! that they do not consider utility to about it. the proper degree, They stop at Bo after all there may not be the proposition that ci forts can only be obtali merely knows no one with whom to compare her husband unless it be the dream hero of her youth with his many misty perfections, and naturally the husband suffers, often most unjustly. Byron sald that happiness was born eve, nev happy as by an riage unless it be the Golden income based on their own caleu- Bule, Wo man or woman can be lation, without striking @ balance wholly unhappy who carries out between this individual standard and that’ supreme principle of human the remult of ite edoption. econsuet, as ; ‘ ae ~ | bie Internat If There Is Any Best to Be Made of fi SHWE SALUANTEY NO MATTER WHAD is CosTs” FALLS FIFTY FEET INSIDEWALK HOLE; LANDS ON TWO MEN Three-Year-Old on Way to Matinee Disappears Before Her Frenzied Mother, A three-year-old girl, Jennie Goody, stumbled into a hole in the sidewalk over the excavation for the new subway at Fulton street and Rockwell place, Brooklyn, this afternoon, fell Afty feet to the bottom of the trench, landed on; the shoulders of two workmen and es-| caped with a fractured leg and possi-; injurtes, The doctors t Cumberland Street Hospital think she will recover, Tho little girl had Just alighted from! a Fulton street car with her mother,| Matilda Goody. They had come from thelr home at No, 1088 Fulton street to attend the matinee at the Orpheum The- atre, Jenny, full of life and the joys of anticipation, broke from her mother's Grasp at the car track and ran to the dewalk. All that part of Fulton street Is out and boarded over and hundreds of workmen are engaged tn building a subway beneath the temporary surface. Just in front of the Majestic Theatre there ta a hole in the aldewalk, 80 by 18 Inches, clone to the building lino. Through this hole sacks of cement are lowered to the workings below. There was no protective ahleld about the open- ing this afternoon, John J. Cardelll way in charge of the work of lowering tho sacks. A bright poster in front of the theatro attracted the attention of Jenny Goody, She ran toward It heedless of what might be in her path, Stumbling over a sack of cement she dived headlong through the hole under the eyes of Car- dell, ° John Dillon, of No. 501 West One Hundred and Seventy-fifth street, Man- hattan, @ timekeeper, and a workman were stooping over @ blue print at the Dottom of the ditch under the hole in the sidewalk. The Kittle girl landed on their backs and knocked them down. Dillon was the first to recover. He picked the ittle girl up in his arms and raced up the ladders with her to the mirface where the hysterical was strugglings in the grasp of @ police: man. ‘The child was losing consctousness when she was brought out and ap- peared to be very badly Injured. An automodiliet who stopped to inquire the cause of the excitement tendered the uge of his car and hustled the lit- tle one to the hospital in violation of all epeed ordinances with a policeman witting on’ the front seat. The mother was also taken to the hospital, —_>- Conflicting Advice, (From the Chicago Recont-Herald,) “Is your son going in for an artistic or a literary career?" “We haven't been able to decido yet. Crities who have meen his drawings rece FREE OF BURGLARY CHARGE, HE GOES FOR A “JOY RIDE.” John Gormley Orders Automobile and Rides Away From Court With Wife. John Gormley, who has served s terms in Sing Bing for robbery ang who WIFE TELLS COURT) LIONS IN AFRICA) BY MAYOR GAYROR Mrs. Simmonds No. 2 Upholds Her Right to Send Notes to “Other Man.” TILTS WITH LAWYER. Denies Writing Is Hers and Is Compelled to Make Sample for Court. ‘The legal wrangle over the affections of Philip R. Gimmonds, son of a London banker, in which Mra. Marion Elizabeth Bimmonde—Mrs. Simmonds the firet—ts and her succeasor, Mrs. Jee, and the stake at iasue, $25,000, pro- ceeded right merrily before Supreme | Court Justice Gteerich to-day. Mre, Simmonds, the second, epent the morning in the witnoss chair while the attorney for Mra, Simmonds, the firet, discomftted her with prying per- sonal inquiries, Mrs. Simmonds No. 1 @at hard by and chortied with gl over the discomfture of her auccessor at the Bimmonds hearthstone, And Mr, Simmonds, whose affections are prized s0 expensively by rhe who no longer has them, ant atill and blushed with becoming modesty. The Simmonmis “triangle had ite inception ae follows: Mra, Simmonds No, 1 obtained a decree of divorce in Virginia in 1903 after Simmonds had left the plantation on which they had ‘been living. Several years later ei e | came tto New York. In 1900 Sim- monds married Mrs. Emily Caldwell, the widow of Dr. Mathew Stewart Caldwell, a physician of Far Rock- | Yy, Who had diet three montha be- fore. ADMITS SHE SENT PICTURE TO MR. SIMMONDS, Last fall Mra, Simmonds No, 1 be- gan another sult for divorce ins Simmonds In this State, naming Mra. Simmonds No. 2 as corespondent, She claimed that the Virginia court which granted her previous divorce decree had had no legal jurisdiction to do so— & contention which Justice Giegerion overruled, throwing her divorce suit out of court. Mra. Simmonds No. alienation of affections sult against W6F| securities, the alrccessor was commenced at the same Ue she instituted her unsuccessful lew York divorce, Simmonds No. 8 was called A. Barton Hepburn Says For- eigners Will Not Invest Their Money Here. A. Barton Hepburn, chairman of the executive committees of the Chase Na- tional Bank, returned on the Maure- tania to-day from @ six months’ hunt- ing trip in British East Africa on the Juja farm, the ranch of William H. MeMillan. He bagged two lions, a hip- Pepotamus, two buffalo, elands, ante- erything that roama the xcept a dik-dik. Mr, Hepburn im grieved because Col, Roosevelt, who hunted the same grounds, beat him to the dik-dik. A thirteen-foot crocodile which he killed had @ big water buck in ite tummy. Mr. Hepburn te of the opinion that {f he had not got the second lion the Hon would have got him. He had just killed the first when the aecond, which he had not seen, came growling up on one aide. He aimed patiently and landed a bullet tn the beast'a neck. The Hon dropped dead. The bullet had ranged down the backbone and lodged in the root of the tail. Mr. Hepburn made a brief eompara- tive atudy of European and American finances in passing. He said he found unprecedented promperity in Great Brit- ain with factories running to capacity | and paying overtime freely, One hun- dred ordera for 10,000-ton steamahips| had deen placed in France because Brite {sh mhipyarda were too busy to make | them. The English only fear, Mr. Hep-| burn sald, that It ts all too xood to Inat. Germany he sald is exerting every | ounce of her governmental corporate and personal resources to extend German business home and abroad. Foreign States eink Ananced by Germany to cultivate new and better markets. All the forces of prosperity are un- selfishly working In harmony for pros-| perity. France, Mr. Hepburn observed, has become the banker nation, Readjust- ments In Southern Europe and the great industrial development all over the world | require enormous quantities of money. France has the money and is prepared to collect the largest ponsible price for it. | lepburn, with | pros- Perity wherever a means to prosperity shows ite head, When we seek a market for our read and indusietal r pointy at te are! actual and pending Government of all ; tions, and asks why capital in uncertainties when he can use to the witness chair M. L. Maléevinsky, hia money to certain advantage at home, faced long imprisonment {f convicted of | attorney for Mrs. Simmonds No. 1] 1+ is time f tT seek to) the robbery of an apartment at No. 679/ showed her a picture of e woman and ae way ‘ot ‘working eens peioltod Lockwood avenue, Long Island City, was released by Judge Humphreys in the Queens County Court to-day be- cause of lack of evidence. The dismisea} of the charge was brought about by the faliure of the principal witness against him, Miss Anna Boyce, who tives in the house Gormley was accused of robbing, to Identity him in court, When Gormley heard the order of the dismissing the charge he imme- ‘ed an automobile to meet eps of the court-house and, with hig wife, he started out on what the former prisoner promised would be the “finest joy ride what Is," <paanineiaiaicnresaies. DUGAN ALBANY LEADER asked her {f it were her picture, “I don't know,” she replied. Justice Glegerich studied the portrait eqrefully. Now, really, madam, isn't that your picture?” he insis “Well, Judge,” she answered reluc- tantly, “L guess tt is, and then she went on to admit It Wag one she had | mailed to Simmonds in 102, while she was atlll the wife of Dr. Caldwell, “to replace one Mr. Simmonds had stolen and to which @ look of my hair was attached.” Another furfous altercation arose when Mrs, Simmonds refused to admit she had written a certain letter addressed to “Dearest Phil.” The attorney made her write in the presence of the jury, but Justice Glegerich refused to allow the Jury to see the two ex of hand- Sulace WI Reco e Him tn ad) writing until two handw ns experts | Of MoCane. had possed on then. | tite SHE'S NO SLAVE IF SHE 18 ALBANY, May 18.—Gov, Sulzer has MARRIED. decided to recoKnize State Committee-| ,, ‘ : man Dantel J. Dugan as the Demo-| ,i@ you send money (9 Simmonds in cratic leader in Albany County, accord- attorney. Ing to a statement given out to-day by responded, “I sent him the Governor's direct primary publicity committee, Horetofore Patrick E. Mo- Cabe, Clerk of the Genate, has been re- warded as the loca! Democratic leader. Mr. Dugan is a member of the Gover- nor's campaign committee. “There {o no reason to believe that the Governor will not pursue the samo course in every county where political Patronage has hitherto been at the dis- posal of the party bosses,” says the statement. It 1s believed tn political cir- cles here that Gov, Sulzer will shortly deprive those whom he regards as bos of control of patronage in other counties, This would be @ severe blow to political bosses in Erie, New York and other counties,” ————_— LAWYERS TO AID STILWELL. Two More Im Addition to Senator McC! jand, Robert M. Moore, criminal lawyer, tn- formed the District Attorney's oMfce to- day that he and William T. Byrne, an Albany lawyer, had been retained by friends of Senator Stilwell to aid Sena, tor MoClelland in the defense of 8 well, A Mr, tant District-Attorney @ott told Moore that he understood Senator priced counsel, “No man ts poor who hae friends," remarked Mr, Moore Mr. Moore's name was then entered As trial counsel in the case, a spectal panel of talesmen for which has been summoned for next Wednesday. en on al AS TO WATER-FED CHICKENS WASHINGTON, May 16. — Ingenious methods for cheating the public were lald bare at to-day's session of the National Weights and Measures Con- ference. One speaker told of poultry dealers ord ei ‘was too poor to engage Meh mo: wre hou addressed a too.” ‘Didn't Miss Stevenson, th the first Mrs. Simmonds, write begging you to let Simmonds alot Mra, Simmonds blushed a flery red, “L remember getting a letter from Mine Stevenson some time after they moved down to Vinginia," he replied. “IL was very much shocked at it, She spoke about Mr. Simmonds and she asked me if I would—she told me I nad been at the Grand Union Hotel un- chaperoned and asked what Dr. Cald- well would say if he knew his wife, the mother of his children, was dining at the Grand Union imes for his family. He She told a divorce and she would give my nemo with that of some other woman, the wife of a rich man that Mr. “immonds came home from Europe with, and agked would I not cease corresponding with him. “[ showed this letter to Dr. Caldwell and he tore {t wp and vowed he would make Misg Stevenson eat it, If ehe ever wrote another like it.” “Did you write to Simmonds after ated the lawyer. Simmonds ai ed Mra. ‘1 made up my mind that no frigidly. other woman should Interfere with my friendship “You—a married woman?” cried the attorney sarcastically, “IT am no slave, neverthale Mra. Simmond rt_ reply. For Constipation EXLA tunities without weakening ourselves by nagging and petty persecution of each other.” SSeS GOV. SULZER VETOES FOLEY COMPENSATION BILL. | This Measure, It Was Argued, Was Really in the Interest of Casualty Companies. ALBANY, May 16.—The Foley-Walker Workmens Compensation bill, advocated by the State Insurance Department and | opposed by the State Federation of | Lator, wa svetoed to-day by Gov. Salter ' The opponents ofthe mers: that It was a n wees the desires of the “1 companies of the State to exploic thelr own business by putting all compenna- tion of workmen for Injuries in the) hands of the compantes and thus enable the employers to shift the burden and | responsibility to the legal departments | of the insurance cerns, which would | be free to fight claims as they chose. ‘ged that the real pure to head off the| Murtagh-Jackson measure, which would ; put all responsibility on the employers, —-————— MRS. WILSON SEES SLUMS. WASHINGTON, May 16.—Mrs. Wood- row Wilson went “slumming” ‘ate yes- terday with @ party of social workers and visited "Goat Alley,’ inow Court,” ‘Ragland Auey,” and other equalid spots of the capital. Her trip did not become known until to-day when members of the party let out the secret. The President's wife entered several tenements and talked with mothers and children whd had no idea of the iden- veyerted ommend literature for him, but judges who have looked over his writings strongly urge bim to try to be an ar. ent 74 . who Increased the weight of chickens 1M pounds by starving them two days then feeding them salt to create thirst and finally allowing them to drink large quantities of water, resulting In the ine creased weight in five days, Federal supervision of weighing machines wae ueged, ae ‘Whe Delicious Laxative Chocolate Lauds Waldo and the Police Force and Lands Hard on “Corrupt People.” ASKS FORBEARANCE. Says Attempt Was Made to Stampede Him Into Dis- missing Waldo. In pinning honor medals on the brenats of seven policemen to-day Mayor Gaynor made a speech in which he was more than usually emphatic in defending the Police Department and hia administration of it through Cem- missioner Waldo. He equally defended the Commissioner, frequently referring to him by name and then challenged “those corrupt politicians and corrupt people’ to attack the Mayor over the shoulders of the police. As he spoke in the presence of the honor men, the Commissioner, Deputy Commissioner McKay and a number of citizens who crowded Into the reception room where the ceremonies took place, the Mayor pounded the desk in front® of which he stood until it trembled, Incidentally, the Mayor, In telling of the effective work of the Police Commis- aloner in proceeding aga! ‘srafters”” in the department and the exposures of rafting made by the District-Attorney, intimated that other grafting cases afe to come to light. He used the word "imminent" in this respect, but made no further referenee to the statement. HE GOT AFTER THE GRAFTERS RIGHT AWAY. Ho wald that for thirty years grafting had been going on in the Police Depart~ ent and that when he took office among the first things he did was te write to hie Commissioner about the rafters and took steps then to “spot"== he used the word—the men who were undermining the force by systematic grafting practices. It was the result af this work, he added, that undesiradies had been gotten rid of, and he pointed to the fact that the four men recently’ convicted were not inspectors at the time acs them, they demoted to captainel added, substantiaily, “these corrupt people’ continued to explolt the state- ment that these men were full-Gedgel Inspectors, It was a ler to him, Be said, that because of infamous corrupt to the very core, It had been demonstrated by actual figures, hew- ever~sent him by a distinguished citises, ~the Mayor sald, that ninety-nine ene. hundredths the men on the fore were brave and honest, TRIED TO STAMPEDE HIM INTO DISMISSING WALDO, Some of the things the Mayer eal@ were: “If corrupt people want te strike me over your shoulders, stoop down ‘and let them hit me and the Com- missioner—if they can. But don't strike back—although tt might be good to give them a good thump." “We ary willing to bear our own and wounds.” m glad to pin these medals on brave men, but no one will Waldo and me a medal and I don't want one elth “I want you men and the fores to bear up against thie attempt te defame the force and the head of -! but I defied those corrupt people for the good he has done.” 5 “There hasn't been of graft while I ha us credit for whet we have done,” The men who received the medals were Walter J. Thornton, Willam J. MoMillen, Thomas J. Lawlor, John T. Sheehan, Peter J, F. Murray, Patrick FP. Acting Detective Sergeant (Prot \adelpbts Heaord,) Wiss-Guasler alweys claims he ts driven to drink. Waxe—l notice he never takes @ chal SALE: Instead of $18 or $25 These Suits Are 10/15 Because these suits are worth $18 and $25 is not the most important reason why you ought to jump at them at our special price of $10 and 916. The best reasons are that they possess that smart, ele, ‘ 3. ots tae a (=e rene