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_THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, FUSION DOESNT FUSE EXCEPT ON __ HEADS OF TICKET All Night Scqinttietn in Executive Committee Indicates Splits and Bolts, @RNS VO mth AMBITION “FIGHTING FOR BONES.” Regular Republicans and Bull Moose to Have Own Bor- ough and County Slates. One Fusion nominee for Mayor, but @overal party tickets for borough and) @eunty offices are the probabilities fo the anti-Tammany movement. Unless troubles in Manhattan, Bronx @m@ Brooklyn can be adjusted to-day amd to-morrow the Republican, Pro- Gressive and Independence League fac- ons will break the Fusion combination @@ borough offices and put two or more Socal tickets in the field. @orman Hapgood and his exeontive | struggled over night almost as ate as did the Albany Legislature. It ‘was principally a scrap between regu- Yar Republicans and Bull Moose Re Dudlicans. Half a dozen times they Jest tempers und denounced each other Wntil reminded that they were imitat- Qing the Democrats in Albany. Geveral committee members expressed ‘Gegust over tho scramble for offices “Wet befitting the dignity of a non-parti- @an reform movement. One said in @ @Peech: “Thi is like lot of hungry @ogs fighting for bones.” OMcially the Executive Committee ap- Pointed three sub-committees to try to Smooth out the troubles in Manhattan, Bronx and Brooklyn, with instructions to report-on Thursday night. After comparing notes to-day Fusion Yeadera found that there is no proba- Dility of disaffection toward th ¢ity ticket. John ‘Purroy Mite Mayor, W. A. Prendergast for Comp- troller and George McAneny for Presi- ent of the Hoard of Aldermen will have United support of all the allies. But as to the boroughs, there is danger ©f bolts, rolits, new combinations and all manner of changes. Non-partisanship ané common purpose end with the three general city nominees. The scramble for oval offices is as partisan and personal @ machine leaders can make it. peace GAYNOR SOF’ PEDALS “NOTIFIERS” WHO CALL TO EMIT ORATORY When He Has Time. taking: Mayor Gaynor gave a committee of Brooklyn nominators to understand to- Gay that It is wise to keep of own Counsel i politica! times, so after the @elegation had left his private room in the City Hull thoy maintained uniform wilence. one would say how the Mayor had received thelr notification that, at @ big mecting in Arion Hall last nigh' the Citizens’ League of Brooklyn had unaniinously tudorsed him for renom!, ton. A The Committee of Twelve called at j 7 publics, Instcaiy the Mayor sentcfor| (KOLA GREELEY SMT publicly. Instead, the Mayor sent for IKOLA GRECLE: LT Chairman Henry Weisman, an old time oor leader, and had a quiet talk with Then the other members of th committee were ushered into the Mayor’ Mice for a few minutes, Henry Wels- ™map had prepared a nice little speech, which was not delivered, " _ Onthe Square i The World’s Fall Renting Guide for 1913 ] to be ready for FREE | distribution at all World | offices and by mail in | about 10 days, will be about the greatest vol- ‘The Aifference in the world’s Point of view toward men and Women is that it permits » mascu- Ume genius to be a genius fret and a husband and father after- ward, IP and WHEN he has time, But it expects a woman to be & wife and mother first of all, and @ genius after hours and between Bousehola cares. MAN GENIUS CODDLED, WOMAN DISCOURAGED. It concedes that the masculine genius muit go about in society that he may listen to his praises by other women while his wife stays at home darning his socks, making over her last year's hat or teaching the children, But if « man is marrieg to 8 woman genius does sur party to another to receive the sweet {acense of adulation? When the masculine genius is at home hushed that they may not disturb his inspirational mood, and they and the wife and the neighbors all fall in with the motion that father's inspiration i# the central fact of the universe, Suppose the case of a woman genius who is also a wife and mother and who spends a portion of each day practising or composing. Isn't it the ume of its kind ever of- fered the homeseckers of New York. \ On the Level This guide will be printed on_fine coated _paper_a present illustrations and ge- scriptions ~_ of — Apartment Houses in various sections of _Brooklyn_ _and that it ls repre at she should waste her time on music when she might be mending the children's clothes? If the neighbors call and little Johnny's face is dirty or Mttle Edith's dress {s torn, don't they go away and talk of the genlus's short- comings a8 a mother and housekeeper, overlooking altogether her rights as a musician? Even to-day the world expects women, first of all, to be affectionate and men, first of all, to be force- ful and Intelligent. ‘The difference between the man's brain and the woman's is the dif- ference between the specialist and the dilettante, Women were taugat for centuries just enoug: of all the arte to make themselves agreeable to man, a little music, « little danc- ing, a little conversation, ‘The daughters of John Milton. were taught to pronounce Latin, but not to underetend it, merely that they might read aloud to their father words mean- ingles ta Thie case le typical ‘Manhatian, This will prove a guide to present and Fall Apartment vacancies that no homeseeker can afford to be without. Watch for it! S$ MIG FPAamoey IS WOMAN INFERIOR TO MAN? + + Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) Woman is Expected, First of All, to be a Wife and Mother, and a Genius After Hour Genuis First, and Husband and Father, if and By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Since civilization began man has been encouraged in all his unde: woman has been discouraged and from birth her talents and genius treated with Cola Even her own parents would advise her to keep her ‘woman's place,’ and the girl with mental fibre was married off as coon as possible. Rousseau put each of his five children in a foundling asylum, so that the care ‘and support of a family would not interfere with his pursuits. woman genius could follow this light- “ful eelfishness she, no doubt, would achieve equal fame.” If the So a woman reader of The Evening World undertakes to defend her sex against the charge that woman is, always was and always will be in- terior to man intellectually. Though it {s hardly fair to cite the example of Rousseau as typify- ing the attitude of the male genius to his offspring, since his case is unique in lterary history, this reader is indisputably right in her asser tion that female genius has been discouraged since civilization began. “Genius of the male species must be coddled asa rule,” she says. of all feminine education—of the whole point of view Or seventy-five years ago. TWO bout women until fifty INTERESTING LETTERS FROM READERS, Besides the woman's letter to which I have referred there ls a very fair and Interesting communication from @ man. Dear Madam: Since clvilizatiom be- gan man has been encouraged in all his undertakings; woman has been discouraged, and from birth her talents or genius treated with con- tempt. Even her own parents would advise her to keep her “woman's Dlace,"” and not fly in the face of Providence by aping men, and the girl with mental fibre was married off as soon as possible, Even wom- @n who discovered talent in them- selves sacrificed their hopes and ambitions to their families’ welfare, while in the case of the male genius he sacrificed the family to his own 4 put each of his five chil- dren in a foundiing asylum so the care and support of a family woula not interfere with his pursuits, If the woman gemlus could follow this delightful eelfishness, she, too, no doubt, would achieve equal fame. There must, even among men, be many of genius who will never be heard from because they will not for- ake A sure business income for the uncertainties of the arts and thereby endanger the comfort of wife and children, The genius of the male species must be coddled as a rule, and the greatest of them could not write an “Uncle Tom's Cab’ bake, sew and care for eight chilaren, as Mrs, Stowe aid, There are many weak-brained women, and all of them have a mat But all the males believe themavlves to be all genius because of the few among them. LM. I. WORK 18 NO PROOF OF SUPER. JOR MENTALITY, Dear Madam: Woman ts not mai inferlor intellectually. Be- cause Edison's im hapi to &rasp ideas to put electricity to use does not imply that it 1s greater than the mind of the woman who nursed hing, taught him and practically ma ic him all'that he 1s, We marvel at the wonderful uses of electricity. But it really bring us any happiness Man to be}, Masculine Genius Is Always “Coddled’”’ While the Feminine Meets Only Frowns aT EAC Mis Pive CHicoRenW 1M AN ORPHAY ASYLUM MARS. UM 0 or make our lot more worth while? I come to my room and turn of the electric light. Does that mak happier than the man who used to Ught his tallow candle with a flint stone? If the man of the tallow candle was broad-minded, brotherly- loving, honest, truthful, ambitious, Wille I lack these virtues, what does my electric light add to my life?. 4 comparison of the acoomplish- oF @ philosopher, just because cannot jo hig work. Where would at trying to do theirs? Why not say that the mind of man is inferior to that of a woman be- cause he cannot take a child from Its mother and give % the same teach- ing and care that she could gife? care and teaching of the child? We know it 1s the all important work and it Is woman’s work. The man may love his child and be ready to give his Iife for it. Should he plunge into water to si tt, he {s hailed as @ hero and medals of honor. Still he may deen a good ewimmer and undergone Uttle risk, The woman was forced to undergo a far greater risk to her own life and to suffer untold pain to bring the child into the worl. Her risk and suffering are not even thought of, Why? Just because it 1s common and happens often while the man's deed of heroism 1s rare. Woman may be imitative. If we 414 not have uniformity to some ex- tent the world would turn topsy- turvey. What about the man who buys a drink that degrades him, not be se he wants it but J the other fellow did the same, no exception. We can count his class by the tens of thousands In Greater New York every day. Man may ap- Pear to have a monopoly of creative intellect; but where did he get It? Who did the most toward shaping his mind, @ man or a woman? ‘The man who says his mind te greater than woman's should get out and ,take some fresh air. Yo has lived too closely within the narrow mits of his own occupation. INSURANCE AGENT. ee COOLEST SHiP AFLOAT. New si Plying Tropto Se amer Designed Eepecially ~ enth Article of a Series. OI WOMAWSTALARTS © ARE DISCOV RARED FIREMAN IS KILLED, LONG ISLAND CITY Fi UGHTS UP MANHATTAN] New York Satins Rushes Help—900,000 Gallons of, Oil Pumped Away. Fireman Brereton EB. Johngon, attached to the freboat Abram 8. Hewitt, was) Instantly killed to-day while fighting o fire at the Standard O11 Company's big plant at Long Island City. ‘The blaze started in the company's box factory at 4 o'clock. The fire cauged @ loss of 80,000 and threw out of work 1,600 of the 2,600 men employed at the plant. The flatnes were under control at 6 o'clock, but the fre lasted for several hours longer. ‘The plant runs along the Long Island City water front for several blooks. The box factory, eomewhat isolated from the other bulldings, was between Bighth and Tenth streets. The company’s fire fightera were firat on the acene, but the fire was too swift for them, The Loug Island City firemen on their arrival sent in other alarms, and the fourth brought Acting Chief Martin ‘|from Manhattan, five city fireboats and the company's fleet of fire fighters. Within twenty feet of the burning three- etory building was @ steel tank that contained 900,090 gallons of oil, There were eight other tanks in the yards, Ali the oll, as & precaution, was pumped to Greenpoint and Bayonne, ‘The fire was confined to the one bulld- ing. This box factory had a sepecity of 000 wooden cases a day. There was No oll about it, but the wood made such @ blaze it could be seen all over Man- ss jan. Not a gallon of oll was lost, ine Company No, 262 of Long Isl- and City Was answering the first alarm when the engine hit a sand pile in Ver- non avenue, Lieut, John Farrell was thrown off and taken to St. John's Hos- pital with a fractured skull. Johnson and two oth: w gun,” as it le known among fire- men, This tr a metal hydrant weighing about 1,000 pounds. The water is sucked up from the river and sent through this turret out of the nossies at tremendous pressure. This morning there was 2/6 pounds pressure to the equare inch. While the firemen were directi: stream from the foot of Beekman street to the hot walls of the burning bullding the "bow gun” suddenly parted near the deck. As it Ifted under the force of the water the firemen jumped back. Johnson slipped and fell and the “bow |gun came down on his head. e the fire was still raging two alarms were sounded from a box near St, John's Hospital and Chief Marvin re- ved word that the hospital was on | fre. | He sent several companies to the hos- pita, which was observed to be envel- oped in smoke. The fire was next door, in 4 house owned by City Magistrate James J, Connolly and occupied by Mrs, Alfred Schnell, Only one engine com- pany remained to handle the bdiaze, which caused $409 damage to the third floor, There was no panic at the hos- pital, due to the quick action of doctors and nurses, who reassured the patients. The steamer Tenadores, the latest —— addition to the United Fruit Company's A Cody Died Pe =. ‘White Fleet," reached here to-day| LONDON, Aug. 13.—Samuel F. Cody,! after her maiden voyage from the yards| the AnklavAmerioan aviator who beds of her builders In England, She Is al killed at Aldershot on Aug, 7, a 1 1000-ton vessel especially designed for] practically penniless, All the prize m plying the tropic neas, he had won waa spent by him in p According to the officials of the com- fecting his machines d his wife and pany, the Tenadores 1a the coolest ship | fathily were left in such @ dependent afloat. A refrigerating device has beva| position that the British Government natalted to keep the alr within the ves- | is making an investigation with @ view sel sweet and cool under the most bias-| to providing for them in some way, ing skies, She will run between New Cpe gape York, the West Indies, Panama und! MAY FEVER 4 * Central American porte, ams at al "bl ia, 6 “ Re ad SUFFRAGISTS RUSH |“ONLY A MISS,” " FOR ARNIGA WHEN |S JULWS WON'T THEY GET OFF BOAT MAKE TER DEPUTY . Quartet of Horseback Rideis Had Sorry Experience in New York. 4 quartet of Buffragist “horeedack hikers” who started from Forty-sco- ond street and Fifth avenue on Mon day afternoon for @ tour of the mid land counties have crossed the North River and are ¢.0w engaged in their campaign. Their amusing expert ence riding through the city etreete on unaccustomed mounte and through the early stages of their journey ore here related by their captain, Mre. Nora Blatoh de Forest, in a vein which shows that through all mon ner of physical dtfloulties the “hik- By Mre. Nora Blatch de Forest FISHKILL-ON-THE-HUDSON, Aug. 13—It took so long to get the enddle bags strapped on and the photographs taken that the suffrage crusaders had Just three-quarters of an hour to reach the foot of Franklin street and catoh the Fishkill boat. “Senater Root,” rid- den by Mre. de Forest, had been be- having so badly that Jim, the stable man, was delegated to lead him. Jim 414 not look forward with pleasure to the walk and himself te that effect in no unmist le terme, Jim have been paid on reaching the boat, but made the mistake of letting Bo of “Root's” bridle at Thirteenth treet, and “Root” was delighted te have @ chance to catch up with the other crusaders, The last seen of Jim he was bescbting wome headway down Eighth enue, gestioulating emphatically, but hie words were fortunately inaudible. “I'm afraid we've lost one vote in sald Capt. de Forest, “but that er be paired at out first meeti FIFTY~ VARIETIES, GAITS 'Parkhuret,” which Lieut. Poirett rode, has four gaits, one of which closely re sembles the turkey trot, while ‘Reot” had all the fifty-seven varieties and put them all into practice, including a stand for half @ minute on his hind legs. Neodiems to say, the flag K fishing pole had to be furled. West street was taken at a fast gal- lop, which was considerably accelerated by the shouts of the ‘longshoremen. and “Frawley” behaved like by | mounted policeman, who sald they had caught the boat by one minute. All theqerusaders seemed glad to get out of the saddle, especially Miss Potrett and Mrs, de Forest, whe had not ridden ey several years, None of the party ver ridden in the crowded city BUT NO HORSE BLANK’ ‘The euffragists’ first thought on reach- ing the boat was for the horses, They were terribly hot and there was & strong wind blowing. Though well sup: piled with suffrage filers, “Votes for Women" pencils and buttons, no o1 had horse blankets. The captain, mate, engineer, &c., were appealed to in vain and at last @ council of war wa@ held by the crusaders, sitting on banana crates, There was ee for tt but the bundles and use the coats in which they were wrapped. Powder, combs, hairpins, with a sifting of suffrage buttons, made. their appearance and we waited on banana crates. ‘Root,’ “Frawley” and “Abbott” were at last wafely stabled with thelr saddies and jes off and the sole and only coats of the suffragists on their backs with the aleeves tied around their necks. The crusaders were just going al board en @ nasty, strange horse started biting Abbot. Mra. Fenn went on the strany An old cai being removed. horse was eo much in- Mths that he his halter and made a bee line for Mise Crosier’s extra shirtwaist which was one packing case, Mise Crosier to the rescue, ‘The crusaders then returned somewhat nervously to the upper regions and sat coatiess on the deck, They intend to apply to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animalia for a medal. GOT THE CAPTAIN AT Pl R MOMENT. After supper the crusaders invaded tho captain's cabln, Like wise women, they had waited until then so as to catch him at the most auspicious moment They reappeared armed with his sanc- tion for # full-fledged suffrage meeting on deck, Miss Porritt and Mre. De Forest spoke and Mrs. Marie Fenn recited. Micture postcards of the crusaders went like hotcakex, Two men promised to vote for suffrage in 1915, Mra. De Forest was satiefied that Jim would be out- voted, MET BY A BIG DELEGATION AT FISHKILL. The Fishkill suffragis force and all ie Union auto party that been tour- ing Dutchess, Putnam and Columbia, among them Mrs. Stanton Blateh, Presl- THE came out tn Political dent of the Women's Political Uniiny | Mra. Florence Cooley, Miss Eleanor Er ing, the chauffeuse of the union, ae Caldwell, rman of the n bt shkill Branch of tae Women's Political Union. But the crusaders had only one thought—to get to the nearest drug store for arnica and witch hazel, To-day the crusaders will bold. an open air meeting in Newwurgh and and at Chester in the evenin; vided “Senator Root’ does not om bis bind jess once teo often to the rescue of hor steed and insisted) | Besides Miss Mathews Doesn't Like Gaynor and Harburger Proclaims He Does. “It you ever get married, which f hope ‘Will be goon, and in the course of years gather a happy family of boys and gira ana grandchildren, as I have, with you will, Ike me, pay no attention to thie supposed turbulent element and let them have thelr way in yodeling tp thie land of milk and honey. Yea, the Sheriff, Jullue Harburger, Pe the author of the above ® man, no, to Frances Aymar Mernessy and she le an authoress, The Aheriff Gifa't know who “F A. Mathews’ was | when he firet saw the nan affixed to @ letter asking him to curd eome of the | folees in the vicinity of West One Hun- | Miss dred and Eighteenth street, where Mathewe dows some of her writing. SHE'S MERELY A WOMAN ANO A Mi88, AT THAT. ‘Miss Mathews wanted to be a Déuty Gheriff and go after the nolse makers, but, as the Sheriff explains in Ms latest MR. FORTUNATE MARR “OTHER MAN” IN SUIT Willeman Charges Wife Was Too Friendly With Rival, Who Is Luckily Named. tt may prove unfortunate for Mre Angelo Bardey Willeman that ehe ever Fortunate Mann, Bmile ‘Willeman, her husband, succeeds im Proving the charges he made against complaint for divorce filed te the @upreme Court. Theresia - Mr. Fortunate Mann is named as e met Mr. her tn day Fespondest. ‘The were fo brief and relates thet the Willemans were wedded in London on Jah. 10, 1901. They came to Amerign shortly afterward, when, the husbaad jusband’ Lat thelr nolses, pandemonium and ms Miller of No. & Raeee ‘street. TRY POSLAM OVERNIGHT FOR PIMPLES let wr, he can't make the appointment |i, because, to use his own language, she ‘4a merely @ woman and only « Miss, at that.” Of course the fact that the autheress {o not an admirer af Mayor Gaynor (yet her great grandfather founded Tam- many Hall) cut no figure with the Sheriff when he made up his mind not to appoint Miss Mathews a deputy. “I'd like to name some one to be ap- pointed ae @ ‘special patrol, but I know no suffragettes, and all the men wrote Mise “It has uisance laws pi ate on atoiS cards and insist upon their being nailed up in the rooms of these quasi apart- ment - lodging - house- hotela up here Also, insist upon the various janitors, whose families really quite usurp the Dlock sometimes, pondering upon these lawe and occasionally recognising the Fights of tenants to pence “Mayor Gaynor'’s letters? I only read one, in which he engouraged the boys to break the ball laws, and I thought, that while American officials were bad enough, he was rather ahead of Tam- many Halli (which, by the way, was founded by my great grandfather) even, and deserves a monument as the most unflinching vote hunter I ever heard of. “It'e not Aristophanes, Mr. Shertff, nor Darwin—Il am merely a woman, and only @ miss, at that.” (Side remark: This te the blow that almost killed J Mus.) ‘About now, ae I write (6 P. M.), the votce of the vender is heard in the land and might be over the sea, so strident are his motes. Appreciating your good will and courtesy and hoping for an early hegira of many boye to some bet ter land—eay close to Mayor Gaynor’ study—I am Youre faithfully, Frances Aymar Mathews, No, 418 One Hundred end Bighteenth treet. ong 1ON'T “HIS FAITHFULLY,” iV A LONG SHOT. “Not by @ long shot ie whe ‘yours faithfully’ to me. I haven't appointed her," commented the Sheriff, just be- fore he dropped into bis swivel chair and penned the following: “You can imagine my surprise in find. ing you of the feminine gender. T! anti-nolse crusaders could put up stout cards as you suggest, and perhaps the Dublic might look seriously upon this Proclamation of no authority subscrib- and might listlessly and in am en- mention that your grandfather was the founder of Tammany Hall. I am sachem of the Columbian Order, where patriotic themes erif? of thie county, carry them into effec And then the iff, concluding, tells Mathews, politely indeed, to get married—when she may find music in the noise of the children on the atreete, —_—_—_—_—_—_———_—_ = Lost Between “We ied, t Hreaktree Ate ‘aa Janond scr Of The WORLD Geing out of town for the eum- mer may hav World sent to 23 3 Jewelled Gold At Grocers and Delicatessen Stares.10g .| Made bby E. Pritchard, 351 Spring Se, NT August Sale 9 For ew y acd Constipation BS *