The evening world. Newspaper, May 20, 1913, Page 3

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BUGIS AGANST MOTHER + S500 ST Se. Mifton Wanted Daughter! $@- Quit Hubby for “Good Time,” She Says. Second Article of a Series. IS THERE A HUSBAND FAMINE? 3 |. Copyright, 1918, ty The Press Publishing Ce, (The New York Wer! Let Uncle Sam Restock the East . With Eligible Men if Supply Is Short Margaret Writes “There Ie a Famine of Desirables’’— ‘*Mies New Yorle Dresses Vulgarly, Gambles, _ Drinke Cocktails, but She Can’t Get ome OB MEN Ou To fur? wartes <onpmganer” those registered again and again by the | OF SAND ARE DYING = S2s's=22 eee i Without an organisation the market- | market ta open. They said to-day that individual chicken buyer, who objected ‘Ot uvelem sand and @ravel, for which | Crates Filled With Fowl That ™e *te heipiess to prevent the shtp- |New York was the only city of any | eeainet the stuffing process, and their fo when the dressed fowl he was preparing he had paid the pric chicken meat ment across the eiver of 60,600 to 125,000 Dealers Refuse to Buy Are Prominence in the country where there FED WITH SIX TONS ‘sirens ts for heme consumption Magorged under of equal weight. | gravel etuffed birds o when the Piled Up at Market. were no laws or ordinances governing v ef Me. 5 Washington avenue, Mount Weraen, is a star performer of the wehemin-lnw eorority, i¢ the story 08 ty Are, Milton's daughter, Rose, im @e Supreme Court ts to be relied on. Mra Milton ts the defendant in a euit fer GOO drought by John D. Burns, (& eal merchant, for attenating the af- testions of Burns's former wite, Cath- @ine, who ie Mrs, Milton's eldest daughter. Move, whe eloped with George Siviter from the Mount Vernon house Dec. 4 1911, new lives at No. 310 Shawmut avenue, Besten. She wan served with a oud- peena in Burge suit while vistting New York yesterday with her husband. Burns alleges Mrs. Milton enticed his ‘Wife from him. Burns recently divorced er, Gaming @s oo-respondent a Wai {tgon business man, “Mr, Harrison,’ whem Wire. Burna met at her mother’s heme, GAVE MOTHER WANTED HER TO “HAVE GOOD TIME. “Wi you ever hear your mother ask Femr sister to leave Burns?" asked Col- Ya_C. McLeod, Burns's counsel. “Yes, several times. I heard mother eM Kitty to keep away from Burns an@ to put their child, Vincent, tn an asyhom, go that Kitty and mother could have a good time.” “Good time with what?’ “Why, with the boy mother mew many of them and wanted Katy to meet thom. She told Kitty he would buy her clothes and give her all the mone, she w of course; “Dil your mother r promise you enything 4f you would leave your hus- band?” “Yea, she told me she would give me $1,000 the day I deserted him and he offered me clothes and made me prom- fees, but I love my husband and would ampent ¢o it.” "What references, her emake to Burns? ‘he eaid Burns was a runt and a rat and sovera: times I heard her call tera ehrimp in Kitty's presence.” WEFE'S SISTER HELPED HIM GET DIVORCE. Wire, Giviter stated she was her brother-inaw's prinoipal witnoss aga! her own elster, Mrs. Burns, when Burns's divorce case wee recently heard tm the Supreme Court. ‘The court award- e4 Bums the oustody of his child and gave him a decree. Mrs. Giviter test!- fied to trips up the Hudson and to New York meade by Mra, Burns with men whom ehe had met at her mother's home, Ghe named a “Mr. Jacobson” as a resident of Mrs. Milton's home. Burns lives at No. 3 West One Hun- Grea and Forty-third street. The trial of te alienation sult is manked for an eamly Gate mm the Supreme Court, when Mra. Siviter's testimony, against her mother wil Ge aubmitted to the jury, —— PURSE-SNATCHER CAUGHT TRYING TO STEAL 19 CENTS. Martin Maronofsky Escapes After Grabbing $2,000 Bag and Is Cap- tured in Petty Robbery. After escaping capture after an at- tompt to ateal $9000 Martin Maronof- eky, @ big powerful youth, twenty yeare 014, was arraigned in (entre Street Po- ‘lige Court to-day, charged with trying to steal 19 conta. He was held to allow detectives to round up a number of women who have complained recently that @ man anewering the description of any, did you hear Meronctaky was positively identified in cowre as the man who, on Saturday pigm®, tn a crowd at Henry and Rutgers ,@treete, snatched a bag containing $2,900 trom Mes. Tenac Gellse of No, 188 Henry street. Mrs. Gelion's daughter, Mra. Gegvia, grabbed the bag out of Maron- hands and, although he struck | ® Sight Maronofsky tried to get ‘with the purse of Kate Putschin- chara atrest, whom he Bast Broadway and Pike street, and was cap- ture& he purse contained only 19 cents, ents, FIREMEN SAVE FACTORIES. Wlames Threnten Couflagration and BWieotric Wircs Add to Danger, iam unoccupied two-nto:y factory tniid- ing @& Haywood strect and Borden ave- ue Long Island Cis, ow the American Druggists’ Synileate and dea@ed t the Long sand Con iracting Company, was burned to tie ground tor fay, Althoug) the firenen were unadle fo ame the factory, they prevented the fleas from spreading to the many » Verte and tallow factories about, ‘ iy pal threatened Gremen's work was endangered @eetric cables of the Lis atid Compans, bur the pow was \ ¢ @@ just before the wires fell to (RD @pwend. The cause of tho fire 8 Mieked, he could not regain posses- | Nall why girls persist In such practices. But perhaps some men do like it. hear from a young womi have become too sophisticated, her letter is interesting. She writes GOOD LOOKING GIRL OF THIRTY CAN'T FIND A MATE TO 8UIT. Dear Madam: I cannot remember Ddeing at an age so young that I ata not want to be married. I think up to the time I was ten or twelve I id not know there was such @ thing as an off maid in the world. Get- ting married seemed to me as natural and inevitable as doing up one’s hair or wearing skirts. It was a neces- eary part of growing up. am an old maid myself, am thirty and men and women who don’t Itke me ca!l me an old matd behind my back. The people who Mike me say I am a very handsome ‘woman, and I am for those who take regularity of feature and bodily pro- portion into account in estimating deauty, But how many men do that? I have never made up my face, I wear no hair but my own, and I do that simply, 1 wear corsets and shoes and gloves that are comfortavie. I don't flat- ter. I won't flatter men nor truckle to them. I don’t buy flowers and candy for myself to pretend to one to me. men oail at the same time for the Purpose of stimulating their inten- tione by jealousy. I never permit familiarity of which I would be ashained. 1 don't le to men or pose to them. I don’t coddle children in public places, 1 never pretend to be shocked when I'm not shocked. 1 never give an Insult unprovoked nor take ona, however polite It might be to do so. I have no money except such as f make myeelf—$0 a week, which Is enough to ve on comfort- ably. Now, how many proposals of marriage do you think [ have had? bi mber { am considered excep- tionally! good looking. Just exactly one! And that from @ poor widower of fitty with five chiidren all under ven!! Is there a husband famine? should say so, if » woman has any fastidiousness and persists in looking for THE man after people have begun to think she shonld be satisfied to get any olf husband at all, Perhaps you think [ have been too particular, All T asic is that life shall send mea mate as clean and honest mentally ax I am myself. [ do not expect him to be without eos es. We reader that the men worth marrying seek only to flirt and don't want to marry, that they Perhaps she 1s unduly cynical, but at any rate) A young man to-day proclaims himself a militant bachelor. attacks the New York girl with a sweeping bitterness. On the other hand, &® young woman informs us that there is a dearth of desirable men here, Dut that the other kinds abound but are not worth considering. Once more we hear that the New York | sir] makes up her face, wears immodest clothes, gambles and drinks cooktaits, If the young men don't Itke i one wonders males from the Western States? Why ehouldn’t Massachusetts end Wyoming arrange an exchange— men flock Bast and girls go —tor the promotion of domesticity? Tt there is a husband famine fm the Bast, why te * not as much the duty of the West to help ue ont save Westerners from the conse quences of earthquakes and torna- does? I don’t eay that a husband famine exists here, though from the com-' munications of several young women I have been led to suspect it. But ff it does, why should not the mayors of Western cities where young men abound organize rettef expeditions and send a trainload of cowboys or other eligibles to break the corner in hus bands established in New York by heiresses and chorus girls? way THEY DRINK, They Gannig His letter Derience, although, like every other decent woman, I would prefer to have him #0. But [ think that eo long as women are #o protected from evil and boys are wo driven to it, it ‘e impossible for the single moral standard to prevafl. I don't want @ particularly handsome man. My ideal husband, whom I have begun to feet 1 #hall never meet, must be well duilt and well kept and must have personality, I don't insist on a rich man, but I am oertainly not going to give up a $8-a-week job such «s I have now for the privilege of doing housework and bearing onfldren for any man who wil remain all bis life @ petty employes, I could have mar- ried at least ten men of euch vail- bre, but 1f Tam worth $90 a week tn a law office I @hould certainly be worth something. to society us « mother, and if [ have to take ma- ternity at the price of floor scrub- 4 dishwashing and endless hy, I simply won't Without ghildren marriage eeems eo pointless and un- nocessary, and with children woman | certainly has an occupation for which @ should be paid without having to waste her strength and her tife on househola drudgery. I have not lived to thirty with- out “meeting @ number of men whe realized all I could expect im @ hus- band—but these men dia not want to be husband: They were unforte- nately of the lene-pirate or masher type which has created the husband famine—the young fellows whe re- frain from early marriage from pru- dence and by the time they oan af- ford a wife don’t want one Guoh men seek only to flirt, They have No use for a serious-minded woman. Many of them have begum by pay- ing me marked attention; but they all finished by considering me « waspish young erank, as I have found euch men generally hod this epinion ef any woman who is too ty to be called @ trump and too er to be made @ foo) of, MARGARET. HE'S A BACHELOR BECAU: GIRLS ARE FADDIETS, Dear Madam: I am @ bachelor of twenty-five and I expect to be « Dachelor of forty<ive. What's the Qnewer? Little Miss New York, with her paint and her powder, her ridic- Moun, crazy, vulgar clothes, her gam- ‘Diing and her tangotng, her teas and ‘her cocktails, her cabarets and cham- pagne, She thinks perhaps all these Gute little tricks are just the thing to get | husband. Maybe #q Dat ahe won't get me. My slatere walked in the euftrage parade, My mother Delonge to twenty clubs. All the gtris 1 know are either bughouse about eome crasy iam or else they are painted ninnies, and T dont want to merry either rank or @ fool Where t the sweet, olidashioned Sint Wee wes 0 Epuints te ter ber am. {t has been tmeumbent upon us to| | hie prediction would be fulfl!ied, i { cama BOSSES BARRICADE BARBER SHOPS FEARING WOLENGE BY ST RIKERS Walkout Reaches a Crisis and Employers All Over City Prepare for Trouble. ‘The next teow days in the opinion of oss barbers and the striking. wiollers of razors anf ects: will prove the Grisia im the barbers’ strike which has endured now for a week, and barbers all over the city whose ahoba remain open, are preparing for trouble. Heavy tron @ratingw were placed to-day over the Windows in Erff'a shop in West Fourt!i street Just off Jroadway and the pro- @rietor admited that he feared there | Would he « general resumption of win- dow breaking. According to the boneos the atrikers are at the end of their funds and must win the atrike quickly now or not at all. Therefore they bdelleve violence will be trie in an effort to bring « apeedy settlement of the differences The homsen base their opinion on the fact that the strikers have failed abso- Intely to draw into thetr ranke the employees of the big hotel shops and the no-called “short-hour shops" which are open only tn the day time. Joseph J. Ettor, the Induatriat Work- ere of the World lender, who took com- mand of the sirike a few days ugo, @nnounced this morning that all the hotel and short hour men would attend }@ mase meeting to-night in the Gari- valdi Theatre, No. 3 t Fourth atreet, the new headquartére of the Gtrikere, but even the strikers them- selves didn't seem very hopeful that They fo hardly attrac ‘ive to men who have short hours or who make big tips whenever thay ara called to work overtime. Bttor aid he would fead his com- mittee to Clty Hall again to-morrow to gee Mayor Gaynor, but ne declared that there would be no erbitration by out- widere. He ald the strikers would wel- come an opportunity to discuss the ait- uation with the bosses, but would in. st on doing their own arbitrating, ie ‘Teataing School rT Mayor Gaynor will hold « pubite hear- DAL ing this morning on the Lewislative “authorising the selection of the > York Training School for Boys and tablishing the said gohool.” The would transfer from the State to city property on Randall's Island, the Btate getting the Jand in Brooklyn now occupied by the New York State Hos- pital for the Insane and Potter's Fiai Ee Rem4 and put her shoulder to the wheel with him? 1 read about her wkitl, but 1 have never met her. 1 don't know what position the modem irl wants to fill in the great game wnless ghe thinks she ts the mascot. Maybe she is and beings eome feb lows luck, but I'm not superstitious, and eo tar es I oan age things now when our old friend the Reaper gete @m the fod he will still find me pley- mee LGN MAND. \ ‘ON WITH THE DANCE! LET TURKEY TROT BE UNREFINED! KICK FAILS Mrs. Jones Tries to Stop It, Is Tangoed Into Court and Put Under Bonds. | | “To Mnoh Mustard," ‘Wmovkey Ooke- |ame,"” “Here Comes My Daddy Now". all thts on the second floor of the fash- | tonable apartment house at No. 1083 P% ‘and the 8. P. tone of gravel and sand, are dying ting- ering and painful deaths at the West Washington Market owing to the deter- mined etand taken by the whotemle dealers in Gve poultry against taying everweighted, “fed-uy’ fowl For @ week the crates of live fowl have deem piling higher and higher in the market as the gales began to drop off, The climax came yesterday and to-day not a live chicken was bought. ‘The fowl in the market represent only @ amail portion of these oooped in the live stock cara eorose the river at the Jareey freight terminals waiting to be placed on the market. ‘The tlevp te complete. There te an abaciute famine in live poultry through- out the oly, and the New York ohiok ater can order his pet dish with the deolute aesurance that it te the enr- | case of @ Bird long in cold storage or at least one of those dreseed fowl alaugh- tered Lord knows how long ago out Weat and shipped here tn refrigerator cam. HEALTH AUTHORITIES LIKELY TO ACT SOON. Action by the city health authorities A. may be expected following the exposure of conditions in the chicken markets on West street. ‘The odor from the thousands of coops in which the euffering fowl are dying ‘Dy hundreds reaches for blocks down the wind. Tt {9 Imposstble for the market men to take proper care of the great num- her of birds left on their hands, The fowl, with their crops atuffed full of gravel and pand, can nether eat ner Grink enough to keep them altve, and While the nervous system of a hen may not be as susceptibie to suffering as higher orders of the antmal kingtom, the erueity of the thing te admitted by the market men, ‘The stuation te blamed by the whole- eaters on the jobbers and by the jobbers on the Weatern shippers of live poultry. From investigation it would appear that the jobbdere—the men on whose hands the gravel etuffed brde are unloaded— have @ good argument. “When we formed a little aanociation two years ago,” eahé ene of the leading recetvers in the market to-day, “we were prosecuted for violating the Ant ‘Trust law and Alssolved the organisa- tion, with jail sentences staring some of usin the face, Our association was adie to put a stop to this feeling-up swindle whtah coats the people of the city some- ARE lelfic atreet, Brooklyn, and Mra. Long- ‘guffering A, (for Anna) Jones on the | floor below Petite wi precocious Miss Mary | Sheridan, aged thirteen, » girls and budding high doing the turkey trot, the “shiver dance’ to the above mei tloned tunes on @ harmontoa four bi every afternoon and five hours every | night—and Mra, Longauffering A. (for | Anna) Jones on the floor below. } Bam! ~"my daddy now’—sing! mowiel | —"ev-ery day he calle her’ —tlddly-up- ump—tiddiy-te-dump! luxtt from her rooms on the Gvor at! an ugotized hour yesterday Mre. Lone: | auffering A, (xt!!! for Anna) Jones. Bhe| makes a hasty flignt to the second Boor swoops upon the junior turkey trottes and thus declatms You young savages’ I'll blow your hends off if you don’t atop this turkey | trotting indency. Have you no consid: | oration for rempectadie peopl | ‘The in the Pietbueh Magistrate jorenaid Mre. bly for Anna) | Jones, to answer fo a summone drawn by Mian Mary @heridan, assisted and abetted by her father, James Sheridan, wherein {t wae charged that ‘she did threaten to shoot, maim and otherwise bring bodily harm to relator.” "Webi, Your Honor," sald the victim of the infant trottery, ‘I'm afraié I did threaten something like that-wr wort But if you had to Uve where I itv dozen other | school boys the tango and, you have my sympathy,” put in Magistrate Naumer, “but never- theless, I will have to hola you tm $100 bonds to keap the peace.’ The bond was provided and Mrs, Long- moffering A. (for Agony) Jones returned to her blasted apartment oo GIBSON DEAD BROKE, HE TELLS COURT. (sipncint to. NEWBURG, tng that he was without counsel, with out mouey and without friends, Burton | W. Gébson broke down In court this morning, and esked for thne in whlch ution to the Court, * he eald to the Judge, thing tire $1,990,000 a year. Asan organ- ization, we wore ti @ position to refuse to buy poultry that wan fed with sand and @ravel just before being aold to us. PUTS THE BLAME UP TO THE POULTRY SHIPPERS. “The shippers are the guilty parties, ‘They eand caretakers along with their tock with Instructions to keap the Dirds hungry all the way to Jeraey. Mont of the poultry comes from as far Went as Missour!, ‘The day the ohick- ens are to be sent across the river to market the caretakers feed them of bread and meal and gravel, our great qnantitt mized with eu ohteken rd of additional weight stuok tn tte @rep, and when you figure there are t car you can eeatly eee what @ dig proposition thin feeding-up process la Hach up it wae every man for himeeif, and those of us who tried to stop thie process OY refusing these stuffed birds would have been run out of business by the other fellow® who were willing to Pass the extra weighted poultry along to the, wholesalors, paying for the extra weight and getting pa'd for {t In turn. “Now the wholesalers have struck ‘They refune abpolutely to buy @ pound af live poultry that has been fed up, I can't blame them, but I can't see where I'm q@otmg to wet off, My market is piled high wath crates of poultry, and although I have ordered my men to do ail they can for the Minds it 's true they are steiening and dying rapidly,” JO! R& SAY THEY WERE FORCED TO KICK, It waa learned from the jobbers that thelr stand amuinst the gravel stuffed ——— sober beautifully ches jot! utiful VANS NORUB—the & oo Me, ” Sa e “Lone Hand.” thie method of swindling the pudiic. ) | RBOHARGES ALIENATION — HEALTH BOARD MAY ACT oye MANY OTHERS IN: Fr ant rene ARELOTET Sa MUTANT THREAT by tr has been all fis! it it to the Mother Offered Her $1,000 if dereeumsat pier er tas you. Then, too, ‘ian are aad connenben Indignation Over Suffering} Fumes From Cellar Blazer She’ d Leave Spouse, Gitl periods in which chase or capture fs fan ar Pa pagar beu ye Caused by Efforts to Increase TERRORIZES TOWN: Upper Floors and House: Sto. eles Snes Weight of Pouty | Next Door, ib ees Sree were em meee! 000 ON GUARD) sexs aw wt 1° Government , 9, thetr 5 WHR @ deciteair ius aneoon —eay, with some of the cmpertaees rope qralted with something over sit ’ of ther, @ woman pensar eal a People of St. Andrew’s, in Scot- land, Watch for Women Who Would Destroy Golf Links. ST. ANDREW'S, Scotian’, May ° Thin Nittte town ‘imost in a etate of alee an the remult of threat ut- teFed by the militant suffragettes that they will destroy the putting greens golf championship which ie to he competed for here next week. ‘The moat Intense excitement prevails among the townspeople, who depend largely for their prosperity upon the golf inks, while the members of the Royal ana Ancient Golf Club also are nztoue, They end theciti- organized @ vigt! com: mittee whore menibers, together with 5,000 volunteers, will guard the greens night and day. ‘The general anxiety becomes keener every day as it is thought that the Militant @uffragettes may refrain trem Aelivering their attack until the last moment when tt would be impossible to Gamage. whi use vitriol to destroy the greens all the eentrien stationed there have provided thomeeives with large um- brellas to prevent the corrosive fuld being thro into thelr faces. ‘The River Tay routes by which the Minks are reached from Dundes, which ta mounted on the railroad Nght from which eweepe th roads and the river nightly. pcb: 7 coin CANCER VICTIM DRAWS WILL, THEN KILLS SELF. Carl Randrup, Bronx Real Estate Man, Commits Suicide in Bathroom. Carl Randrup, a wealthy real estate broker, who had been for twenty years & resident of the Brona and had done much to develop several of ite tracts, took hie Tife with @ bullet in the bath. room of his home at No, 48 Kast One Hundred and enty Mth etreet early to-day. For « ye ing with @ cancer spite an operation, he fon that he was doomed to dle. A week ago Mr. Randrup called a lawyer to hie home and had him draw Vint, the up hiewill. Since that time he had bee more cheerfill and his wife believed that th tal depression under which her husband had miffered hag been lightened, At 30 o'clock this morning ahe heard a plato! report and found her husband dead in the bathroom. ‘The sul- ide was seventy-five years old, the only In alt loathe everybody. farce pee yourself how are made, y they are warranted to hold any other make for ‘Tho Best $9.00 and $3.00 les at Broc! CAUTION f:.0- W.L. DOUCLAS STOR Bresawey, comer och \way (Times Square) venwe, | y wife, Louise, daughter, Matiide, Su ‘windows and you will see shoes for $3.50, $4.00 and $4.50 thatare styles and si if you tould visit carefully um would then understand wl their shape and wear we pa oe ‘were rescued from death by | O'Brien and Thompson in a re 414 9500 damage carly to-day ot Hungarian restaurant of Max at No, 92 Lenom avenue and the upper floors of the house | No. 34. Moscovite and hie faanitp employees were also saved ty Gap leemen. Passing about 2.15, the two saeriaan saw flames coming from the citar @ | the five-story building which ts enivaly cocupied by Moscovits, the fret Geer for hie restaurant, the secom® ap Ge living rooms for hin family ang Der floors for stores of linen am@ sleeping rooms ef bis employess, The policemen burst in the frem-@eer and soon brought down Mossovite. aa his family, On being tel about the emplegess die policemen ran back into the smoke House and got all out egcept Mra Sinka, seventy, governess to the Sneep vits children, After sng was miseed Go two policemen had gsveat dificulty & Teaching her room. The transom over the door wae epeB and smoke hed filled {he room. OByieR and Thompeon broke open the door, Bat Mra, Sinka did not answer thetr nor was she tn bed. floor In the darkaess polfeemen her unconscious near the window. They carted her down and she was revived ta the street by mesma of artificial reapire> | tion. ‘The emoke soon filled the alrahaft en@ entered open windows of No, 34 Leo Zelmok, a cutter, forty-tour, Be teen, ané son, Stiney, nine, were sleap~ fing on the third Geor, Zeinck awehs and while trying to epen @ window te get to the fire-escape severely ous Bi right band. On the fourth floor of No, 9% lioemen found Mrs, Robert A. her two. daughters, Ann: Mrs. George Secor, and the daughter, Margaret. All were partially overcome tp @e smoke and to be carried out’ ty way of the roof. After the pollcemen's busy fow % utes the firemen, under Depaty MoCartney, soon put the fire out origin In the cellar wan not pts BALTIMOL ment was sanne Howell Carroll, laughter of J. Howell Carroll of New York, to P Hill, United Mtates Distr sea teammagy | here. i is ‘. ¢4 yor ‘ton, Mass, and see for . Le Douglas shoes tit better, look better, longer ‘ban the price. Boye’ Ghees in the e WY ped om World, N CREATER NEW YOR ROOKLIN tae?

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