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TWOBIGYACHTS . qs BLOWN OUT T SEA WAY BOTH BELOST Palatial Pleasure Craft Laden With Sunday Excursionists ‘ Missing. CAUGHT IN TWO STORMS Barnegat City Inlet Life Savers Search All Night for the Vessels, * The Barnegat City inlet life savers re- turned to their station early to-day weak frqm exposufe and exhaustion after an all night search for two motor yachta that were blown out to late yesterday during the storm, and are be- Hevea to have been lost with dhelr twenty or more occupants, The van; iehed vessels came from the direction of New York City. The storms—there were two of them With & forty-five-minute {ntermjssion— were the worst experienced ite by _ the rugged fisher folk of ridden Jocality, and ff is feared that tate tidiegs will bring in a sad story of @eath's toll from owners of small craft. The motor yachts about which Inter- ‘est centres to-day were about forty-five and forty. feet in length respectivel; They came cruising down the coas from the direction of New York, filled wiges merry party of men and women, about ten or a dosen in cht as well as those on shore could guess. Both craft rode high in the water, and ‘At the distance at which they were seen appeared to be palatial in design and furnishings, such @ very wealthy man might posse STORM COME uP AS THE YACHTS ARE SIGHTED. About 5.90 o'clock yesterday afternoon, ‘soon after the handsome yachts with their gally dressed pleasure seekers were sighted, a storm came up. The ‘amall boat® began to scurry to cover, and in an Incredibly short time the waves ‘und spray, hurled high by @ 90- wind, blotted out everything from the view of those on sho For two houra the win ‘howled, during which ti @isappeared. There was a lull then Yor “almost an hour, when a@ second storm, much more severe than the first, hurled itself on the heels of the first. A wind of terrific velocity was accom- panied by an unusual electrical dis- play, and as s0dn As it was possible Capt. Cornelius Thompson and his life- savers from Barnegat City Inlet launched their boat and went ineearch of the yachts. The storm had started in the west and shifted to the north- east, and from the time they.got be- yond the breakers it was @ battle with wind and waves. During the bombardment of giant waves there were times when the life- aavers gave themselves up for lost. ft all through the awful hours of the hight they continued their search, burning Costan lights and doing ev- thing possible to attract ¢! itention of a disabled vessel or any of ite survivors who might have been clinging to wreckage, NO TRACE OF THE MISSING BOATS COULD BE FOUND, For miles up and down the coast and as far out as their boat could live, they searched, but not a trace of the yachts @ould be found. After dawn they con- ‘Alnued the crulse with no better results, Capt. Thompson believes both vessels were lost. If they were not swamped in the first storm he does not belteve hey could have withstood the second. And he has no doubt in his own mind ‘that evéry person aboard perished, The yachts apparently had been duilt more for,pleasure and show than for safety, ‘and: it would have been almost impos- wible for craft of their design to have lived through even one of the storm: Qn his return with his worn out crew, Capt. Thompson reported his foars to the revenue cutter sefvice, and boats ‘wore immediately despatched to resume the search farther out at sea, ‘No yachts had been reported missing 1g New York to-day, but it 1s possible the occupants of the two seen at Barne- gat had started out for several days’ cruise, and no word was expected of them. ee STRICKEN AT HIS POST. Police Lieut. Funston Suffers From Bpilepsy ac He Reports fer Duty. Gieut William H. Funston, better known as “Handsome Bill,” and for years the Beau Brummel of the Police Department, was stricken by an attack of epilepsy in the Mercer atreet station Jy to-day. Funston was treated by Dre Bawyer of St. Vincent's Hospital and sent home, During the recent heated aepell the policemen on duty in the Mercer street tion suffered severely because the ction of heat from the gas under the low metal ceilings increased the prevailing perati by several de- grees. Liout. Funston did the late tour on Sunday mornii but when he re- was attacked ported for duty to-day he by epilepsy a.niost Imm: Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening OMAN INFERIOR TO MAN? * + , THE EVENING. WORLD, MONDAY, AUGUST “*Creative Intellect Belongs to Man, Fifth Article of a Series. | Women Even at. Best Can Only Imitate’’ So Insiste One Reader, but If She Ie Inferior to the Male It Ie the Onle Case in Nature and She ‘‘the Solitary Dunce of the Universe.” Women Just Beginning to Reveal Mental Ca- pacity Because ‘‘Har- em’s Veil Has|Remained Over Her Mind Long ‘ After Custom Had Tak- en It From Her Face.” Backwardness Not Due to Lack of Leisure, Insists «J. S.,’’ Who Says She Always Has Leisure for Bargain Hunting. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Woman is not inferior to man intellectually because she supplies what man has done.” . F, who quite evidently knows Schopenhau he lacks. Nevertheless man has always hid and still possesses a monopoly of creative intellect. All that woman can do at her best is to imitate what A reader of The Evening World, his and his Weiniger by heart, offers the summary I have quoted. He tells us, also, that when- ever a woman like Geor Eliot or Georges Sand exists she owes her talent to a predominating masculine element in her nature. Doesn't this bear out what I said the other day about that sex com- Placenee which prompts men to say of a work of art that if: it's good it's male, and if it {sn't male it isn't good? The author of this very interesting letter observes that women have always had more leisure than men and therefore he assumes more time for intellectual development. He does not believe, as I do, that the cares of children and home have diverted many women from the Straight and the narrow gate of Art. He may be right. It seems (o me, never- theless, that if there were any essential, ineradicable difference in the intellectual possibilities of men and women a similar difference would exist throughout the animal world. And this {s obviously not the case. I don't think it is contendedeby any one that the male pigeon possesses an exclu- sive endowment of creative intellect, nor that the female buffalo is pre destined by her sex to half wit. If women is taferior mentally the she differs from and is the sollt m is Eg E Hh el ie i if i 1 i | Ly rE | s a | ! : i fE é i re rfl Every time a child is born so many months are taken out of @ woman's life. That ts why I said if Shal peare had been a woman and had had from ten to twenty ohildren, as was the custom in the Elisabethan era, he could not have written any plays et all, One cannot cre: phystoally and mentally at the same time, because the mind depends for its creative en- etgy on physical conditions—to @ cer- tain extent on bloog supply—and it should be obvious, I think, why physi- SAYS SHE'S INFERIOR IN CREA. TIVE INTELLECT. The letter to whidh,l have referred, and another in defense of woman's in- tellect, follow: . Dear Madam: Your question “Ie woman inferior to man intellectual- ly? has interested me for years, But you do not state it correctly. Neither does Prof. Starr. What you both mean ts not intellect in general, but only one phase of it, tive intellect, You, agree with the Prp- fessor that ent. The future holds out @ poss!- Dility that woman may be man's equal if the handicaps are removed, namely, homes and babies. That ie cal and intellectual creation are in- compatible at the game time. WHY WOMAN WAS IMITATIVE IN THE ARTS. Za the great drama of race pro- Guction he has about the import * emce of the briefly seem character tm the fret act, discev- ered when ly to explain what io why we some soles velop a fatheriess that the : for man himself knows leteure in treating? How man: role nstare hes sssignag to him is have been born among the + Uttle better than that of s super- letsure cli The argument will numerary. not stand the test of experience. Practically all creative work ori, nated among the world's worker As to woman's imitativeness in the arts, chat was true for centuries. For at the gateway of every form of in- tellectual labor stood # man, and to Please him woman had to, rite as men think women ought to write; ex: rese euch thoughts as he deemed beac to her age and sex; paint euch more than @ man's work. Tal Shakespeare, for instance. He wi @ successful ma jer and an actor. He had no education to speak of. No help from heredity, *Yet he has produced thirty-seven masterpieces. “CREATIVE INTELLECT BE- LONGS TO MAN ALONE.” Y creative work that lives and the answer ts the same. pictures as consorted with his notion of the feminine. It is only now that women are begin- ning to reveal themselves in their work, for the harem veil remained over wom- an's mind fong after custom had re- moved tt from her face. originated » single thought that ad- contribute ancaymousty, ‘Woman | vanced the world, Cookery bas al- has o passion for self-analysis, for ways been her specialty, but never ectf-revelation, When she loves a once hae she been able to lighten her work or reduce it to @ science. ‘When man took the matter in hand he revolutionised it, as he does With all woman's work. When wom- en ga into business, either commer- lad ov social, they simply imitate \ : Cee PrentikuL® warms “3.5.° man’s methods. Even such imi- tative creative work done by wom- an eo far is due to @ larger per- centage of the masculine element in her composition than normally falls to her, There is a feminine element in man, and a masculine element in woman, but when t! proportion is greater than avi age it creates @ hybrid that ceases to attract, The feminine man be- in feature, like George Eliot dnd Georges Sand. @ense I should and never has intellectually. 8 he lacks, Nothing stand alo but needs ite opposite and comple- ment. A centrifugal force implies @ centripetal force. <A creative in- tellect requires a practical intellect. A perception of general and ab- atract facts requires an appreciation of the particular and concrete. Woman supplies this need. But that is another story. I hope you will welcome all expressions of opinion and encourage free discussion. It is really a most vital custo. 8. “ONE WHO KNOW86” KNOWS BETTER, TOO, Dear Madam: 1, for one, do not think women te man's infertor, in- tellectually or otherwise. ‘We may not have feminine Shakes- peares or Edisons, but t are some real smart women in this world, I know one woman who not only cooks, sews and does all her own housework, but etill finds time to write song lyrica which have been successful, I know there are @ great many men in this fleld who think they ere won- dere and will not believe @ woman can write a real popular song. But show me one man eong writer who is @ good cook and housekeeper, who has to worry over the pennies to make them reach, who makes most of the clothes he wears, and in the aupplies what iF song hit, aa this woman @ has @ husband, too, that ne @s much care as gen children. Well, then and only then will I be- Meve that woman Is inferior to man, ONE WHO KNOWS, ———= SUFFRAGE CRUSADERS’ HIKE. Four Start Te-Day to Preach the im Up-State © Wour “Crusadera” of t! Political Union, bound ona the up " Women's e through State to preach the cause of suffrage, will leave the Mice of the Wanen’s Politica! Union, No, # Hast Twenty-ninth street, at 3 P. M, to-day on the frst stage of their Journey. Mounted on horses and G. Porritt, Miss Mas Laure Crozier will ride nue to Broadway, down Broadway to Franklin and thence to the pler at North River, where they take the boat for Fishkiu, raincoat manufa », 43 West Sixteénth street, was fined $60 in the Court of Special to-day for having doors place locked while omployers were at work, turer, of “IDLE Rice WOMEN HAVE _ DAMOHDD CHICAGO, Aug. 11.—Harol Inger, and ‘Joh formally charged with the CLEARS MYSTERY IN MURDER OF EALER Woman Bares Chicago Crime a Puzzle Eight Months— Two Men Arrested. jd Sohneider, nny” Faith, murder of the McVicker Theatre building eight months ago baffied the ‘The Logue murder was one A@fficult of solution in history. death and hi fe robbed of the thicago’s crit Logue was shot and beaten while thou- sands of Christmas shoppers were pass- Ing hie offices at the lunch hour Deo. “We have the murderer ef Logue,”|a# simply proposed and declared Assistant State's Attorney Johnson to-day. The two men were arrested a few days ago on inform: been given to the poll Mullin, Faith's aweetheart. an said Faith knew that Logue was to be crime Jered several days in the affair. After the said, Snyde? told Faith that he “did the job,” and that he got monds and other jewelry. “Snyder told Johnny that when he went into Logue’s office he Jeweller that he had wom sell,” continued the wom: immediately stepped over to the wi dow and drew the curtain. turned about he was Snyder'a pistol. ‘I am a logue said, ‘why do you pi He was becoming excited fearing an outcry, fired. leweller'a body. safe, te he It occurred to him ‘ould be able to identif: victim's eyes, the office and mingled with Girl Whe Says She Was sult for $6,500 damages’ fo; promise, filed in the Suprem dred and Bighteenth street, to-day by Deputy Sheriff Ju arrest was ordered by Justi jheye that the county. Mine Diamond swears she Kirachenbaum committed. She pi Faith, according to her story, to keep away from Snyder and to take no part covered He also plunged his knife into the Then he rifled the Ing that tf Logue ever recovered wedded Kirechenbaum Aug, 1, sald nay when she anirr the ceremony, The wom- oe the mured, she several dia- said to the stones to “Logue . When he with poor man,’ ick me out? so Snyder, as he was y his asnail- ant, so he took a bottle of acid from hin) pocket and tirew the contents Into his | tempt He then walked out of the crowd.” der circumstances, that | #e00nd ¢! moat | blaing place,” posites eB JAIL OR BAIL FOR JILT. | Altar Wants 95,500, Henry Kirschenbaum, defendant in a r breach of ne Court by | Clara Diamond, No, ® Fast One Hun- was arrested skowita. The ice Guy, who | wax informed by Misys Diamond's attor- Mgnt leave Ball was fixed at $1,000, wes to have but he 11, 1918. “SITING NGANE NOW AND THEN 1 ECA, HY CURT Even Inviting Detectives to, Play Poker Doesn't Make Man Common Gambler. ‘ UNLESS YOU DRAG ’EM. Littell’s Captors Said They'd Like to Play, So They Were Not Persuaded. Suppose you play poker once in @ while, or occastonally sit in at a “nice Nttle game.” Are you theretqre a “common gambler’? Magistrate Breen says not. If you approach a total stranger, eny, In @ street oar, with the suggee- tion “Would you like to take @ hand in @ nice Httle game?” And if the hat kind of a gameT” “Why, poker,” saye you. Do you there: by become a malefactor within the meaning of the Penal Code, Section i? Magistrate Breen onde more to the front: You certainly do not. Especially if you are @ Feapectable citizen, even -though you have a mild case Of the! grows liabilities of G£18,748 with easets was settled tn Yorkville poker habit. The matter Court to-day when William K. Littell of Bllzabeth, N, J.. @ confidential book-| keendr for @ tobacco concern, wi raigned on complaint of Detective and Miller, and for having violated Section 980, SAID THEY WERE MADE “MEM- BERS OF THE CLUB.” ‘The detectives’ story wi % Littell approached ¢! poker?" The detectives said they 414 and that they acconypant Littell to a Mat in Teenky-arnt atte whete they wore | eae etn mee atraightway elected members of a clud.| gievens’s contracte is under fire now Erb sifted in a $10 atack of chips and] ¢rom John Purroy Qditchel, who, with the two polloemen left. Three weeks! Rorough President MaAneny, is Aghting on thelio prevent him from putting through later they arrested Littell charges mentioned. Littell’a version of the occu: embodied in Magistrate Breen’ fon diecharging him: “The defendant, Littell, is a man ef] and te using the Steyens Company ‘@xcellent standing in the business coms | the actual, whith involves about $97,000. munity. He had been celebrating Ris|/ A contract has been drawn allowing Birthday on July 2 and, going uptown en} John F. Stevens 1 per cent. for extend- @ etreet car, he accosted these two Ge-| ing and third-tracking the elevated eye- tectives and asked them if they would | tem. ‘They didn't mind,| The Board 6f Wetimate held ever de- aid, and went with Littell to the} cision on these contracts. Ce designated, where, it"ls admitted,| John F. Stevens hee had a remark- Nke to play poker. he and they took part In a gam “The defendant admits that Not appear that he has been the: ing the three weeks which the de! ed him. OCCASIONAL POKER “COMMON GAMBLING.” “It is quite clear that the defendant world character, were to-day | !# not a common gambler, His conduct as an occasional player does not bring him under the purview of the law. If Joseph H. Logue, a wealthy diamond! you piay poker only occasionally you merchant, who was slain in his offices in| are not ® common gambler. “Nor in there any better basis for the harge, that the defendant “per- fuaded these off! inter @ gam- wi definition of persuade ite ‘to influence by argument, advise, entreaty or expostulation; to convince by argument or reasoning.’ “According to the officers’ testimony, there was no need of pefsuasion or argument in their case. The game they cepted at once. In @ word, the defen- dant was not a ‘capper’ for @ gam “This view of the case, especially in connection with the good character and high business standing of the defendant, leaves no doubt of my duty to dismias this complaint,” Bees vio sae EVELYN THAW OIDN’T KNOW. o Was Ancth: jaits, Not Court Or Evelyn Nesbit Thaw told Justice Green in the City Court to-day how she sailed for London May 3 last and disobeyed an order of the court di- reeting her to appear in supplementary proceedings on a judgment obtained against her by the Gorham Company, of sllverainitha, ir,” ah id, “a mgn came to my house on May 2 and hafided me a sum- mons, I have had so many suite brought against me that I thought this wan just one of those suite and ghat I was not in danger of being din- obedient to the court in turning it over to my lawyers, aw I have done in all such cases, A week after I arrived tn London I learned that I was in con- or disregarding it." dismissed the con- Justice tempt order. Best Table Sauce Housewives know it for its rare quality and rich flavor, LEAsPERRINS' SAUCE THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIAR Resste, Chapa, Gravien tee JOHNE. STEVENS ‘ar-| Company found iteelf possessed of in r\ rp] cash Saturday to meet this call was lees ‘ @ “common gambler’| than $1,000. In a few days there is due 11 W. Mth Se. that on July m in a Sixth! sational Surety Company, in asking to avenue car with the propoaition: “Dol he sepointed one of the receivers, atated you want to play a nice game of) 2. he had | contractor. been there before ‘on two or three oc-|the Panama Can casions’ but at long intervals, and it does | vice-preskient of the New York, New dur- tives | later rejoining James J. Hill with the ¢ | allowed to intervene before they arrest-|Great Northern. Theodore P. Shonts of (ONT | commission when Ste | rescue of @ girl who wae bang tacked by Joseph Berander, knocking Brander down had’ caused fatal fracture of hig skull, was wana CONSTRUCT On, ==: EE W BANKRUPTCY behalf Miss Mary Burns, a telephone operator, of No, 35 East Fifty-third street, join Can’t Meet. Payroll of the Laborers of Bronx Section on First avenue, between Sixty-f .; and Sixty-Atth streets, when he & woman scream. He ran to where & man was trying to drag ao girl inte hatlwi Wren Cut ordered him te stop the girl's assaliant threatened 0 shoot Mm. Cuff atruck him on the and in falling Berander cracked i ghull. He died in a hospital. 3 5 , Assistant District-Attorney skinmer | of Subway i! to-lay told the court he had investi- gated Cuffs story and was convinced | of Its truth, He added that the Grand oJ Jury would probably refuse to consider the charge. RBCBIVERS ARE NAMED. Big Profits in Sight, They Will Carry on the Work of Bronx Contract. Finding tteelf unable to meet the pay- roll of laborers in the Bronx section of the subway, che Jobe F. Stevens Conatruction Company of Wo. & Wall street fled 9 voluntary petition in dank runtey in the Federal Court to-day, and Judge Mayer apointed Joel Rathbone and Frederick Melle vecelvers under ond of $80,000 each. ‘The decision to go inte bankruptcy was reached Gaturday after the Board of Dirgotors of the company found they must have time to pay pressing debts, although the company stood tp make a quarter of @ million clear pra on con- tracts, ‘The petition filed with the Court ose CEYLON TEA — of $901,281. Parts of the liabilities in- cludes wages due amounting to 630,08. AlN the John F. Stevens Construction to the company from the city sbout $70,000 on that part of the subway work already completed. Other claims due ageregate $133,281. Joel Ratihone, Vice-President of the that his company fe backing Stevens and knows the contracts now under way will net @ handeome profit after all ex- The matter of handsome profits on struction work in the Gteinway Tui ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY AND PATENT GROATS ‘Wer Infaats, Mothers and inveliés. ty je career as @ railroad official and He was chief engineer of for two yeare and Haven and Hartford Rallroad in 190, the Interborough was chairman of tho was chief en- @ close friend of Shonts, who Influence ft eve tting contracts. Work the subway con. tracts held by Stevens in the Bronx will be continued by the receivers. SAVED GIRL FROM THUG BAILED ON MURDER CHARGE Prosecutor Urge Release of Man In Cell a Week: After Hitting Fatal Fist Blow. William Cuff of No, 843 Kast Sixty- fifth atreet, who has been in the Tombe under a homicide charge since last Monday because he had gone to the r~ t u ERGAY RY sh} Ti fe 5 Regteteved Esaghttshed Toods Merk Heb « Contay / Clearing Sale of Men’s Furnishings Silk Half Hose, $4.50 half dozen—Pure Silk with lisle feet, in Tan, Navy, Gray and White. Silk Shirts at $2.95—Regular price 4.50. Negligee Shirts at $1.00—fither soft or laundered cuffs. Regular price 1.50, Pure Worsted Bathing Suits at $2.75, 4.00 and 5.00—Regular price 3.50 to 7.50. Beach Robes at $5.00—Made of Unshrinkable Flannel, Cotton Crepe, Silk and Cotton Materials and Ratine. Regular price 7.50. Washable and Silk Scarfs, 3 for $1.00, for Bows and Four-in-hands. Regular price .50 each. Open-End Scarfs, 85c—$5.00 per half dozen. For- merly 1.50. James McCutcheon & Co., 5th Ave., 38d & 34th Sts. fe Oh Ay aS SS fi {; |e am) ea ae pes se