The evening world. Newspaper, May 19, 1913, Page 3

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MASSPANRHURST HEARS FRANCE IS TO SURRENDER HER Suffragette Treasurer, Hiding in Paris, Prepares to Seck New Refuge. HAS MILITANT FUND.| Extradition Seems Assured if “Vates for Women” Bomb Should Explode. | i i : i | ry file by But it ts believed that 4 be immediately arrested should ef the euffragette bombs explode in England with loss of life. As this con- tingeney may arise at any moment, It is understood that Milas Cristabel 1 is inte: close concealment either in Brus- sele Or Hamburg. ‘The offense for which she ts under in- dictment here, malicious destruction of Property, being only a misdemeanor, she is not subject to extradition, It is be- ved, however, that the British Gov- ernment is about to apply again to the trench Government for her extradition, and will urge that the shelter afforded ser tw enabling her to incite felentes with impunity and is therefore un- iwendly toward an old friend ke John all None of the speakers could make hemaeives heard at suffragette mest- pa here yesterday and all had to be aved from the mob by the police, Another attempt was made to: burn e church of St. Anne at Bast- ich was set on fire Friday. rrest under the so-called “Cat and Mouse” bill was made yesterday when Annie Bell, a hunger striker, was taken into custody at Brighton. She was sentenced in April to three weeks’ imprisonment for carrying a pistol, but wae released on account of illness caused by refusing food, atu ee JUSTICE BLANCHARD BACK. Return to Dety After Three Months ef Miness. @upreme Court Justice James A. the philosopher of the returned ‘being in constant attendance. ‘was @ heavy, be left, He ‘ceturned to-day dn appearance, the loss of forty pounds accentuating his six Richard Rowland, seventy years old, ® oentractor’s watchman at the new ‘Thirty-thira street post-office, was killed by accidental asphyxiation in his room at No, @S West Thirty-fourth street last night. Rowland's wife w: friends in Yonkers last night 4 small flame burning for hy Kept in Yonkers by. the The gan apparently blew out and t ‘oom filled. ——_—_—_—_ »- DAY, {aloon” seta, 9.48 ALMANAC FOR, tam risa. 404: 6 Soft and Silky After Washing As Before SILK-LISLE HOSIE Wears Like ‘‘60" Looks Like ‘‘50” Costs But 25 THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAY 19, 1913. IS THERE A HUSBAND FAMINE? 3 | Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). Do the Girls All Want Millionaires, or If There Is a Dearth of Raw Material for Matrimony There Must Be a Reason for It, and the Explana- tion Cannot Fail to Be of Unusual Interest. “In the Last Five Years I Have Not Met a Single Man Whom I Could Wed and Feel that I Was Getting the Love of a Morally Good Man,” Writes Z.E. D. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Is there a husband famine? Do you know a number of attractive women from twenty to forty who are single because they have had no really good opportunity to marry? Are you one of them? Or are you of the type of young man who goes about saying and per- haps believing that he cannot afford to marry because to-day every mod- ern girl wants to wed a millionaire? On one hand we seem to have young women who entertain a nor- mal ambition to carry out the con- cluding paragraph of the fairy tale and marry and live happily ever af- terward, but who insist that no po: ble proposals have come their way; and on the other hand, young men who while professing to yearn for the joys of family life, declare that their incomes are iuadequate to meet the demands of the modern wife. I am prompted to the present inquiry by a letter I received some time ago from a young business ‘woman who asserted that among two dozen girls of her acquaintance, some of whom had been in business ten years, no one had received an offer of marriage of any kind. Yet the girl who stays at home {s heard to ex- claim, not infrequently, that the self-supporting woman has much greater opportunities than she herself posse! for meeti: ind attracting men. 3f the eclf-supporting women | “Not at all,” was the reply. LED TO HER MOTHER; |GIRLIS FINED $2000 @ First Article @ of a Series. Are Men Deterred by Cost of Living? SHAME OF IT DROVE | FOR SMUGGLING GEMS HER TO END HER LIFE} AND FRENCH GOWNS After Asking Forgiveness of Parent. Cecelia Jankowsk!, pretty and blond and sixteen years old, lived with her Cecelia Jankowski Takes Acid | Custom Officials Refuse to Be Lenient With San Fran- cisco Woman. (Special to The Drentag World.) TRENTON, N. J., May 19.—Mrs, Agneg parents in a big tenement how No. | Mangele of San Francisco who tried to 102 Morris street, in Jersey City. She/bring $10,000 worth of undeclared mer- was employed at the Lorillard tobacco! chandise and finery on the steamer factory untll a week ago. The work amerika at New York, May 10, was was distasteful to her and she was fined $2,000 to-day in the United States unhappy in surroundings, so corpulent | », “| whether they are overwhelmed with complain of a lack of suitors, and them their opportunities, end if Rone of them marries, one is led to inquire what has become of the young men. Is the genus husband growing extinct? In the United States there are sev eral million more hi ‘We have no million surplus Mage! to bear the matrimonial marke! they have in England. Yet there is a slump in the stock of Cupid & Co, common and preferred. Now, why? ARE YOUNG MEN INDIFFERENT TO MATRIMONY? Does every American girl yearn to marry a millionaire, or are our young men employing this allegation merely to cloak their own indifference to mat- rimony? The age of marriage is, wo) know, advancing with the cost of liv- ing. A hundred years ago a girl who ained unmarried at twenty was re- garded os a well nigh hopeless old maid. To-day many women continue unwed way into the thirties without | occasioning the matchmakers undue alarm. 1 Another factor which complicates tuation io that not only the and the age of mar- en more im- ndards of men. and there girls exist who refuse | to accept the warmed-over scraps of! spent omotions, Thi rechauffee of any man's heart, One these young girls of the new ge! tion contributes her viows to The ‘en- | ing World to-day, I would like to hear from other young men and*women aa to whether or not a famine In husbands actually exists, and if it does, to what mon causes they attribute It. Young w certainly know whother they are married from choice or ne posals of marriage or are panic stric at the lack of raw material for m mony. Young men must know why they refrain from marriage, if indeed they do’ go. Only the other day one of my personal acquaintances announced col that she was sending her fift old alster to Minneapulis to spend the next few years with some distant rela- | tives, j IT 18 THE EARLY GIRL THAT | CATCHES THE HUSBAND. “Dorothy ought to marry and bring) up a family," she declared calmly. “There Is not a chance for her here. New| York {s no place for a girl to find a husband. If she stays ‘nthe West af few whe may meet some nice young follow, marry him and ultimately ce him to come Kast with her,’ | “But surely you're beginning rather so6n to worry over the matrimontal fu ture of @ girl of Afteen! I protested. “Tf 9 girl waits until later she will find the men have all been snapped up. The time to catch a husband ie when you are going to high wchool with him, or even before that.” Here was an avowed matchm with the mask do no husbani New York. Yet the: young unmarried men here. Why do they continue unmarried? Is it the fault of the young women, the young men or merely of our expen- aive times? One young woman exprenses her ideas as follows: GENERAL RUN OF MEN BELOW THE MORAL STANDARD. Dear Madam: I surely agree with you that the girl who duesn't wait for men to propose to her, granted that she has an ordinary amount of physical attractiveness and intelll- gence, will always have enough suitors, but—just what does that moan these days? For the last three years I have been living In dear little old New York and have met a great many men, but It seems to me that the average kind of suitor does not appeal to the right Kind of girl. The code of morals for a “self-respecting man" seems to be #0 different from that of a respecting woman, I hold that » girl who has always done the right thing and been true to herself and her friends does not feel that she can give herself to a man whose viewpoint morally has been on a different plane, In the last five years I have not met a single man to whom I have feit that I could give my life and love and feel that ,I would be getting in return the only thing for which a true, pure longs—the love of a morally good man, I was engaged for aev- eral years to the best man in the world, but since that time there has not been a single man, no matter from how good a family he may have come, to waom I could con- sclentiously give my Mfe and feel that I wanted him to be the father of my children, I have been told at 1 was not “human,” that it d Impossible for > many times becau 1 did not make love to t ent mon; but that still small voice has always told me that no matter if I felt that I did care a great deal at times, the world know them bet- ter than I did and that 1 must not marry them, +I like a good jolly time as well as any girl that ever lived; I lke theatres, parties, and enjoy seeing & man enjoy a good cigar, but I do not like common- ness In any form whatever, It has meant a Kvod deal for me, for like dow and lots of other girls with quit, Fearing her mother's di ure, she continued to leave home at the usual hour in the mornings and to re- turn at night. When Saturday night came she realised the absence of the pay envelope meant an explanation. She did not co home, Instead she called by telephone her brother-in-law, Roundsman John Ryan, whom she knew was at the house. She asked Ryan to meet her at a nearby drug store, which he did, and then she told him of her distress ment with her for half an hour later, Ryan kept the appointment but Ce- celia failed to put in an appearance. Remorseful, she stayed with a girl friend | that night, and all day yesterday her relatives hunted high and low for her, Only her brother-in-law was in her se- cret, and he kept faith with her, hoping to meet her and relieve her financial em- barrassment. Late last night the little girl deter-| 4 mined to go home and face the music. She got as fur as the hallway of the big tenement house and then her heart failed her. Early this morning the first man to leave the tenement on his way to work stumbled over a prostrate form in the hallway. It was the bady of Cecelia, The girl was hurried to the City Hospital, where she died a few min- utes later, A vial of carbolic acid in the hallway told how she died and a note to her mother lay close to the bot- tle, reading: “Good-by, mamma, I lied to you, something I never did before, and I hope you will forgive me. I have asked God's pardon.” nl BURNS KILL COUSIN OF TAFT. Butler, Weak From Ill- Upset Lamp in 4lome. SYRACUSE, N. ¥., May 19.—Lewis A, Butler, fifty years old, first cousin ex-President Taft, died in St, Joseph's Hospital here to-day of burns he re- ceived when he upset a lamp in his apartments last night, Weak from !ll- ness, he fell against a table when he arose to get some medicine and upset the lamp, Butler, who was once possessed of a mofest fortune, had recently been em- ployed as @ canvas Lewis A. Perhaps less intense natures than mine, I have been tempted, and oh! how often. I have thought how easy the way would be to just marry a man with money, but then the better thought comes to me, and 1 never—no, never if I live to be a thousand years old—will marry any but a good, morally clean, intelii- went, refined and honorable and one who can make our | king that my mother and have made for me LED man, ne the District Court. The young woman paid the fige with an expression of indigna- |tlon, The case against Miss Agnes Till- |man, niece of Mra Mangels and |daughter of Frederick Tillman jr, of San Francisco, a millionaire merchant, was dropped. i The case against Mre. Mangels had ‘been placed in the hands of United States District-Attorney Vreeland of city, who consulted with Surveyor y and Assistant Surveyor Smythe of the port of New York. Strong repre- jon was made in behalf of the on the ground of thelr inexper- fence as travellers and lack of know- ledge of the custom laws, The Federal | authorities refuned to scompromise and all the undeclared “rticies in the women's many trunks were confiscated and charges of smuggling placed against them, 2's, Manges trunks contained only $810 worth of declared articles and @ Breat quantity of jewelry and fine ench gowns and lingerie not men- tioned In her declaration, Miss Tillman declared $740 in dutlable goods, but her dutiable property was appraised at $4,000, > GIBSON AUTOS TO TRIAL. Lawyer Lose! His Smile on Way to Second Orde (Special to The Evening World.) GOSHEN, N. Y., May 19.—Carrying @ dress suit case from the cell he occnu- pled in the county jail here to the auto of Shen Sayer that was waiting for W. Gibson started for Newburgh at 920 A, M. to-day, Gibson wan palo | land nervous, The smile th he fore |merly wore has disappeared, Mra, Gib- son #pent Sunday with her husband and returned to Ruthertord on the « }ning train, She will be present when the second trial starta in Newburgh to- morrow for the alleged killing of Rosa Menschik Szavo In Greenwood Lake on duly 16 last by strangulation Gtbron shook hands with former Sheriff Sutherland, who gave him @ cigar, and also with the newspaper men who were present, He wished them al! | wood luck. He accompanied on the tip by | the car. O14 Man on for Marder. ‘The oldest man ever tried for murder in the firat degree in Queen's County |was placed on trial before Judge | Humphrey to-day at Long Island City, |Hia name js Osteglio Maratea, aged | aixty-elght, and he ta charged with hav- |ing murdered his wife. Maratea Is re- | Karded ae Mayor of tho Itallan distriot in Long Island City, and his country. 1 hired men have raised a fy mer District-Attorney Witt for bis defense, \ him in front of the court house, Burton | Sheriff Sayer, Deputy Sheriff A. | L, Decker and the Sheriff's son, who ran | Frederick De | (LD HOME WEEK| “PENS FRELY OUR OWN LAR Flag-Draped Greenwich Rallies Brilliantly and in Force to the Celebration. |May Even Talk at Ceremony | To-Night That Starts Ball | Officially Rolling. WILL LET MAYOR COME. Aa the mere ordinary New Yorker scooted through Greenwich village to- Gay on elevated or etrest care or afoot he was made aware thet an old home week, aa real es that in any rural com- munity, was going on right in the heart of New York's Babylon—to quote en eminent whinkered citizen whose busi+ ness address is the City Hall. ‘Mayor Gaynor may attend the opening |meeting of tho big show tn Public Bchoo! No. at 8 o'clock to-night. ‘Then, again, he may not. It fe just as he feels about It. Greenwich Village, in dla day of flag-decked homes and stores, parades and general hullabalooing, takes | the ground that It has asked the com. | | paratively unimportant head of the rest | jof the government of the city of New York to come; and if | will simply show that |iae, oye Greenwich Village, where the; ‘mainspring of his jurisdiction ta bolted to the main shaft. Borough President George MoAneny will be there, He has whiskers, too. | MANY NATION®’ FLAGS BENDED IN VILLAGE DISPLAY, From Broadway to the North River, from Fourteenth street to Canal—from the foot of which street lighters laden ‘with the «municipally robbed tobacco of Wouter Van Twiller (Manhattan's first aratier), floated out to the clumay Amsterdam cruisers of three hundred years ago, Old Greenwich was abiate ‘with flags to-day. Four out of five were American flags. The rest were the crowned tr-color of Itely, with @ fre- quent splash of the good green and the gokien harp of Erin, The impromptu auggestion of a Village Week by the Greenwich Village Improvement Aeso- ciation, which ta a by-product of Green- had taken a@ @ emallpox inoculation joMeially, until to-night, with a meeting at Public @chool No. %, on Clarion Near Hudson. It will be in ¢he nature of @ rally to wake up sleepy residente of the village to the import- ance of the rest of the week. Mrs, V. GQ, Gtmikhovitch, the President of the Greenwich Village Improvement As sociation, which would 6e knowa in villages less oppressed by their environ- ment as the Board of Selectmen (or in advanced villages as the Board of Gelect Men and Women) will predide. wif the Mayor comes he can talk about anything he likes except the unfitness of woman for the ballot. Everett P. Wheeler is gving to be there, and in view of his predictions, Mrs. Simkho vitch has established an “Alice im Wonderland” rule: ‘Book One, Chapter One, Gection One, Paragraph One, Seo- ton “A, Anti-Suffragettes can't talk." SOME OLD LLAGERS WHO WILL HELP BOOM THE WEEK. Other spenkers will be Edward E. other barbarian outlyl Eaward R. Finch, who took the wa out of the milk trust; Mornay Williams, Charles A. Lamb, O, V., th® sacred glans manufacturer; Prof. Charles 5. Baldwin, O. V., of Columbia College; John Vanderbilt, G. V., whore lineage for three generations runa back with- out @ blot of residence outside of Green. wich Village and begins with hia Kreat | grandfather, Samuel Wight, In 1779. Mr, Vanderbilt was a student of the ve erated Robert Ogden Doremus at Pt Me School No, 3 at Hudson and Gro streets, To-morrow night there will be great parade of Gr wich Village ganizations 8 o'clock, It will at Grove and Christopher = str Lieut.-Col. Jonn J. Byrnes will marshal, be A provisional battalion of the, Ninth Regiment, National Guard, | will be escort of honor, It will he followed by the Exempt Firemen's As- ociations The parade will be re: | viewed at Hudson Park, where ther will be @ band concert with good old | tunes by the Ninth Regiment Band. PROGRAMME FOR FOUR MORE DAYS OF PLEASURE. | The programme for the rest of the | week will follows: WEDNESDAY. —Socia! Service Day— ‘wich House, the Jones otreet settlement, | 4; GAUZY WAISTS, LATEST IN PARIS, OUTDO PEBK-A-BOO. Afternoon tea will be served from 8 to 6 oo'clook at the Charity Organization Society, No. & Morton street; the D. Y¥. N. 1%. House, No, 16 Leroy atreet; Greenwich House, No. % Jones street; Jewell Day Nur- sery, No, 0 Macdougal street; the Mar- g@aret and Garah Switser Hon, No. 7 Christopher street; Richmond Hill House, No. % Macdougal street; Spring Street Neighborhood House, No. 24 Spring otrest; Gt. Agnes's Day Nursery, No, 1 Chartes etrest, and Waverley Howse, No. % West Tenth street. Trow- mart Inn, Abingdon Square and Twelfth Gtreet, will be open to visitors. An en- tertainment will be held in Hudson Park Litrary, No, @ Leroy street, at § P. M. In Public School No. 41 the Social Cen- tre will have dancing at § P. M. The Washington Gquare M. E. Church, Fourth street, near @ixth avenue, will hold its social at 6 P. M. THURSDAY.—Church Day — Social Gatherings at § P. M. in Bedford Street Methodist Church, Bedfom and Mortoa streets; Chapel of the Comforter, No. 10 Horatio street; @t. John the Evangel- iat Chureh, Waverley place and West Bieventh etreet; Gt. John's Lutheran Ohnuroh, No. 1 Christopher street, and St. Luk s’e Chapel, No. 463 Hudson street. FRIDAY.—School Day—#ongs, dances, Dinys, exhibits of olf articies, historical sketahes and addresses by old residents at Public School No. %, Grove and Hud- | Foot fon etreets, 3 P. M.; Sohool No, 16, Thir- teenth street and Beventh avenue, 9 A.| 5, M.; School No. 41, No. % Greenwich avenue, 10 A. M.; School No. %, Clark- #on and Hudson streets, 3 P. M., and Sehool No. 107, Weat Tenth and Green- wich streets, 9 A. M. In the evening Ed- ward H. Hall of the American Scenic- ‘Historical Society will give a historical ilustrated lecture on Greenwich Village in School No, %; admission free, GATURDAY.—3 P. M.—Chiliren’s pe- gennt presented by Greenwich House at Hudeon Park. Reserved eeate on appll- cation at No. % Jones street. Park Commissioner Stover will review the pageant. 6.20 P. M.—The Ol4 Home Week dinner’ ‘will take place in the playground of Gohool No. 6, Clarkson and Hudson otreets. Tickets are $1 each. District- Atorney Whitman bas Geen asked to SONGBIRD ARMY REISTERS HI a ae ON WALDORF ROOF. Patron Wakens to Find Them on Windowsill and Com- Plains to Office. Tweet—tweet—orrrrrrr-r-r—tweetle- tweet! Mr. George O'Donnell, late of Wash- ton, but now very much of New York, forced open one eye as he lay in hia bed on the top floor of the Waldorf to-day and blinked dublowsly at big window ail, morning eyesight. ‘Trrer-rrrrr-eotio-eetie-ka-sick. Pieap' Mr. O'Donnell jimmied open his other eye, took another squint at the window @ill and then floundered to the tele- phone. His gyrations caused e @utter of wings and a cessation of the oon- cort. At the phone Mr. ‘Whashamarre: winksleep. Million nerahill. Bring shot-gun.” Subsiding, he made » sharp tura and @kidded into bed. Assistant Manager Stewart went wu to investigate. He fuund Mr, O’Domnell etill incorherent, but through the open \window came such a chorus of “ Fe and “Brerrrrsrr’s” as to lead ther inquiry. He went to the there came upon a lelled in the history of the eapecially that fis i eee ir mage gilnting ta dull red cedar birds of brown thrurhes, Stewart scl hievaat eseiay alee S°& TO-MORROW, TUESDAY Big Coat Event Latest and Most Effective Fashions of Entire Season, $10, $15, $18, $20 Values Beautiful Bulgarian Models High Class Cutaway Effects Our great desire to offer something extraor- supre i tr at a sensationally low 8 have crowned hensive dinary—somethin, price—is fully reali: the height of the season's fashions. Color, Every Modish Are Represented. This is one of the really big coat occadions lar coat season, ing, seaside wear, the values are show you their beauties. One price for all. Remember—Alterations FREE—Continued Every boeliy Mixture—All before closing out our Sale at 6 to 4 off AITKEN, SON &Co FIFTH AVENUE, Cor. 39th Street. Sale of Real Laces Real Irish laces and insertions at 44 off regular prices. Odd lengths of Res! Cluny laces and bandings suitable for Summer dresses, Formerly 75c to 64.80; reduced to B0e to $8.00 Alencon, Shadow, Venise & Net-top laces & bandings REMNANTS AT HALF PRICE. 56: 75 that sna bread ithe |loweaes of tae of all the exquisite gems of For motoring, out- simply incomparable. Let us om nt regular prices.

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