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NEW GOVERNOR TRAMED FOR WORK, SHS OWN oss Forsook Law for Journalism, and Politics With Him Is Only a Side Issue, RICH BY OWN EFFORTS. Studious and Conservative, He Has Proved Most Efficient in Public Life. By Martin Green. When conditions arose in Albany a month ago that put Martin H. Glyna im power as Acting Governor, many of his militant friends insisted he should eject William Sulzer from the Executive Chamber in the Capitol. Mr. Sulzer had been impeached by the Assembly and, by the provisions of the law, should have abundoned the active duties of his office to the Lieutenant-Governor, Mr. Glynn. Mr. Sulzer had not abandoned the physical duties of hie office Nor had he turned over to the Lieutenant-Gov- ernor the chambers in the Capitol as- signed to the Chief Executive. Indeed, Mr. Sulzer insisted upon being Gov- ernor—in fact, defying the Legistature ~and Mr. Giynn was holding forth in quarters just off the Senate chamber, his position being aomewhat of a joke. As has been said, his militant friends advised and urged him to forcibly eject William @ulser. The eame Sulser had refused to deliver to the Acting Gov- ernor the great seal of oMfce and was progressing along as though nothing had happened to pat the slightest dent his powers. er Wear the Trousers? Well, Not if They Want to Look Beautiful ishing Con.pany. (The New York World.) THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, VUTUBER 18, ISTR, Will Women Ev 'ADMIRAL’S DEATH "WAS A SURPRISE Katons Miss Callamore eald that Mra. Haton had asked her to appear in court and testify to having been annoyed by the attentions of the Admiral. i nly other witness of the day was Charles H. Hrooks of Hoaton, @ @eoond cousin of the Admiral, who Identified mirat line of some rare volumes which the A CANDIDATES AT IRISH BALL. —_—— Meat to Attend the A ‘it Affair. Both of the candidates for Mayor, Hd+ Distingatel L tettera written to him by Ad-| "Aft E. McCall and John Purroy Mitch= Aton requesting eff in Glapon-|¢h Dave given positive amsurancen to the committes in charge of the big an Copyright, 1913, by the Press Publ Feminine Objection to Trousers Is They Make Everybody Look Alike. A Frankie Bailley Would Have No Advantage Over Dr. Mary Walker or the Statue of Peter Cooper. One Girl Who Tried Wear- ing ’Em Gave Them Up, Saying That Her Legs Couldn’t Breathe. No Actual Perfection of Body Can Equal the Imaginary Venus a Man Wi. Build for Himself Out of Any Draped Figure and His Own Imagination. . By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Firat the sheath, then the slit, now the trouser skirt. “What are women coming tot asks the mreculine prophet and then answers himself with the dismal dissyliable “Trouser: And all the; fossils in tho Museum of Nat- ural History, and out of it, MISSED “ADVISERS.” Giynn kept his own counsel against the eoliciations of his self- conatituted guides until one afternoon when about a desen of them had labored with hin for en hour. ‘They had advanced the argument that the longer William Sulser was allowed te occupy the execative offices, flouting the Legisiature and adverti himself as en oppressed a2d injured man, tho otrenger he was making himself with a8 unthinking pubic, “Gentlemen,” sad the Acting Gov- ernmor, “the law 3as put me in this position. 1 didn't peek it The time is when Mr, ‘Sulser will recognize of governmest as he is usurping. mot seek to hasten his action. “and now I am going to put on my and take a welk around the block. en I get back back I want to find office empty.” Mr. Glynn put en his het and went fer & walk around the block. When he get back his frends had departed. Some time later Mr. Sulzer voluntar!!y passed over to Mr. Glynn the executive powers and privileges he had been exer- etging in defiance of the law, Then Mr, Giynn'e militant friends eame back and shook his hand and ad- mitted that he hed been right and they been wrong. RARELY WRONG ON MATTERS OF PUBLIC POLICY. Right there is one of the characteris- tgs of the new Governor of New York. On matters of public policy he is rarely wrong. His judgment is sound. There isn't @ public office holder in the Gtate that has had eo many men voluntarily admit to him thet he was right and they wore mistaken. He can see ahead, but at the same time he keeps his each side of the road and remembers what he has passed, Mr. Glynn is the youngest Governor New York ever had, except David B. Hil. Mr. Glynn was exactly forty- two years and one month old yesterday when he took the oath of office. Mr. Hill was a few months younger when he was sworn in. Mr. Glynn ig also the first Roman Catholc Governor New York has had in more than two huadred years. Thomas Dongan, Catholte, served as Colonial Governor of New York from 1083 to 1688 by ap- ointment of the Duke of York, In appearance the new Governor gives the impression of solidity and stability. He is about five feet six inches in height, very erect, broad of shoulder, deep of chest and alert in bis move- ments. His voice is strong and pleas- ant, his manner w engaging, end he has a combingtion smile and handclasp that wins all who meet him. He is rich his riches having be: time when he worked ig a mill for % @ week, supported his mother and put by ten cents a day as the foundation of fund for his own education, EARNED HIS OWN WAY—WON HONORS AT FORDHAM. Mr. Glynn was born in Kinderhogk, Columbia County, and got what prelim- ‘mary education be could snatch from the public schools. His university edu- cation was gained in Fordham Uni+ versity, where he was an honor man, He studied law and landed in Albany in the early %s with the right to practice at the bar and about $8. had studied law," said Mr. Glynn ‘The Evening World reporter yer ‘tpecause I wanted to be a lawy: Thad an idea I would be a good sawyer. But when I came to Albany with my gheepskin and looked over the ground @iscovered that the way of @ young wyer toward the goal of success is w and painful. “I was in debt for money advanced te enadle me to prosecute my studies, I had obligations that called for my peat efforts in the direction of putting wail and gnash their teeth. Undoubtedly trousers are the logic of the present situation. But when have women been logical about their clothes? Pessimists, mainly of the male pe lon, are waiting fear- fully, they say—but whether fear fully or impatiently doesn't matter— for the appearance of the missing link between the tango skirt of 1918} All women are not born equal, but and the plain, unmitigated trousers bicseryiby would make them eo—destroy- of 1916, Maybe there will be one,| {1% the divine right of beauty. For but I believe that the only safe pre- vou a elas oul LL diction to make about any missing! "Y= !MAGINARY VENUS 18 THE Mink fs that it will always be miss- POEULARIONE ing and I don’t think women will that no actual ever get any nearer bifurcation than | equal the imaginar: they are to-day. Wevertheless, there are husbands to-day who say they sleep with their trousers under their pillows for fear their wives will transform thom—the trousers—overnignt tate @ party Gress. While nothing is lees supported by facts than man's elaim to s monopoly of trousers— oince stole the fashion from women—still he is unnecessarily worriea by the fear that we will take this borrowed badge of mag- oulinity away from him. If they want to wear our cast-off gar- ments we shoul worry, WOMAN'S BRAIN ENSLAVED AND LEGS EMANCIPATED, %¢ seems almost unnecessary to sup- ort this statement by cating attention two trials, saying frankly that hor “legs couldn't breathe.” I didn't blame her. Another objection to trousers— from a feminine standpoint—is that they make everybody look alike, There is an intimate rela- don between trousers and democ- macy, In trousers neither Prankie Bailiey nor any other pillar of tha chorus has nny advantage over Dr. ‘Mary Walker or the statue of Peter fection of body oan build for himself out of almost any draped raw material and his own imag- ination. ingenuousness of women in their belief in the power of revelation, no matter what it reveals. They do not appreciate that the omnibus driver who declined to | #0 to @ ballet, saying “legs ts nothing | to me,” reflects a gener# masculine sophistication, Quality in anything, plc- tures, pooms, dinners or legs, \s the only thing worth while, Quality, or the illusion of quality, And surely a woman in trousers ts the most dis- iilusioning spectacle on earth, 3t ig @ mistake, of course, to think that trousers are immodest. They are far too matter-of-fact, ‘They tell too much to be effective ip any direction save that of com- mon sense. ‘The genius for clothes ts too Generally diffused among women to the fact that in the ancient ctvilisa-| Se" anems Weite vevteeg tlon of China and India, of Persia and if man wants to keep on wearing the north coast of Africa, women have| them—well, he is a utilitarian animai always worn and still wear pantaloons.|and tt doesn't matter. Woman, how- In fact, by one of those delightful in-| ever, is naturally far better fitted for congruities of history it {9 established| th: eines @ can keep them on with- thy’ wherever woman's brain has been| out suapenders or without that per- most enslaved her legs have been moat| petual anxiety which caused an operatic emancipated. Ie, if you consider] tenor to pause in the middle of a rent!- trousers emane!: ) And so many/ mental aria the other night and hitch Dersona do. The oniy foolish thing that|them—the trousers—up. But woman the great champion of woman's eman-| won't wear them. She cares too much cipation, Susan B, Anthony, ever did/ about her good loo! If any one was to put on bloomers. To me, at/doubta that trousers are unbecoming least, it {8 incomprehensible that any|to women, let him look at the picture woman should seek to sentence herself} which accompanies this article, which to life imprisonment in twin jails of] shows the same pretty girl in the three serge or tweed. A young woman I knew| stages of dress. From the sublime to once sought to impress her complete! the ridiculous we know there Is only emancipa:'on upon her family by adopt-| one step. A woman who wears trousers ing pajamas, She gave them up after’ has taken it. newspaper property that is now the Albany Times-Union. “Mr. Farrell offered me an editorial Position on his paper, The salary he Nothing yellow about Gov. Glynn's pap- er. It tm» easentially conservative, It makes a point of mentioning the name of about everybody in Albany and with- Almost any intelligent woman knows | 'y Venus @ man will! But a part of the widespread | Sulzer, last November, As State Comptroller in 1907 and 1908 Mr, Glynn made a State-wide reputation 4s an Investigator, He went into county after county and smoked out @ small army of embezalers, thieves, fers and Just plain, ordinary fools who had been misappropriating public funds, ATTENDS STRICTLY TO BUSI- NESS OF HIS OFFICE. He ran an efficiency vacuum cleaner |over the musty affairs of the counties of the State, RIthered up the refuse and threw it into Jatls, prisons, graveyards or exile, Of Mr, Glynn's course we Acting Guv- ernor it le unneceasary tw speak, He attended strictly to the business as- signed to him by law and let Wiliam Sulzer have all the Jimelight. During his term @s Acting Governor he has studied the affairs of the state, and is now in position to Jump rght in and endeavor to bring order out of the chaos that began to pile up after the first of January, 1913, Although he hus never practiced law, named did not appeal to me—in fact, it ‘was not enough to satisfy the needs im- posed upon me by the indebtedness I had incurred. I asked Mr. Farrell for just twice what he offered me, never thinking he would conaider my demand, AND 80 HE LEFT LAW FOR NEWSPAPER FIELD. ‘The next day be met me and told me he had decided to pay my price. I never had a prouder or happier day than that. But when I entered the newspaper business it was not with the expectation of sticking to it, I hoped to remain only long enough to get on my financial feet and then to go into the law. “We don't always know what we chould have. When I got the amell of printer's ink im my nostrils, and the rumble of the presses got to be music to my ears, I forgot my ambition to be in one hundred miles of Albany at| Gov. Glynn Js esteemed vy lawyers a3 least once a year, and such notices are | one qualified to lead in thelr profession, alwaye friendly, It is a legend ju Aj- | !1e lias not confined himself to study of Dany that when a r bscriber of | the law. He has delved into imedicine the Times-Union falls to get hia paper |#id art. He is @ persistent and en- of an evening he calls up Martin Giynn | ‘husiastic student and a master of terse, on the telephone to inquire about it, simple, hic wish. ie has gone Sa nto the problem of the dit. Gov, Glynn has an extensive business a between iabur and cupltal, cra organization, Every man, woman and|has clear and easily un boy in his employ swears by him. He|on the question. It is said of him that He| ne haw never been found unprepared to knows not only their capabilities a: discuss any atter of contemporary ployees, but thelr numan traite interest and that hie information iw ul- 4 an ways up to date, tangs. There Bre Ro ‘knockers’ Pertinent to these few remarks about lartin H. Glynn's payroll. the Governor is a paragraph about his r ra, It was natural that Gov. Glynn should Bet Into politics, He is a fluent and con- vincing talker and a student of affairs, It waan't long after people began to in. writing when secretary’, Frank Who has been many yes wittient in res and he Workinan ag bis is that he haw never turned fy @ most as capable a boss. Ills reputation never broken his word ‘HEAD AND NOSTRILS @ lawyer, I felt that in journalism I was closer to life, closer to the people, you might say, than I could be prac- ticing law. J think I must have been e newspaper man, for I loved the game and I love it yet, and that js why Tam not @ lawyer.” Gov, Glynn aid It had ao happened that certain pow- erful interests in Albany had been un-_ able to handle Martin H. Glynn, Thes ‘Imterests opposed his re-election and he Was defeated, But he ran away ahead of hie ticket. And it is significant that in every race for office in which he has pesticipated he has run away ahead of He polled @ auch cunning mats, | was/down a friend and never hirked on @ Rominated for Congress, He was elect-| job. ‘The presenve and influence of 04 in 1898 and served his district so well| Frank Tierney in the Mxecutive Cham= that he was renominated. ber are destined to lift a great pall of g)00m from the corner of the Capitol in which that spacious office is locuted. Mr, Tierney is also 4 good baritone singer. hi the last day of registration, h it sole is ibe Tas) Say. af ro from 7 Compeunde which costs only 85 cents Registration places are open A.M. to 10 P.M. If you do not regis. ter you cannot vote. s STARVING, SHE GHOSE. LESSEREVL, GRL SYS WHO STOLE FROM STORE Could Not Get Work and Ate Her Last Cracker on Wednesday. Bertha Litzo, according to the story Ghe told Magintrate McGuire in the Adama Street Court to-day, ate her last cracker in Wednesday and then, when the gnawings of hunger grew intoler- able, she went into a Fulton atreet, Rrooklyn, department store yesterday afternoon and stole a coat, worth 825, As she walked out Natalle Arlett, one of the store's detectiver, tapped her on the shoulder and told her se was under arrest, I had only two choices,” was th way tho halting atory fell from ¢ Mpa of the blue-eyed, flaxen-haired girl an she atood before the Mi her shabby clothes to-day, “I had the same two choices that any unprotected girl haa in New York when she is arving. I chose the one that w leant “[ uned to live with my father and stepmother on Schaefer atreet, but my stepmother was cruel to me, and three weeks ago I left home and took a little room at No. 777 Bushwick avent wan working in @ store the enough to lve on, ‘The ai quit my father’s house I 1 “Since then I have walked tho atree in Brooklyn and New York, asking everywhere for work and ‘nding none at all. My little money went for food once a day until on Wednesday I had one cracker left, 1 ato that, ‘A mouse had nibbled on one end of it ‘vefors me. Then yerterday when 1 could hardly stand from weaknosa I do- cided to steal something and pawn it, f thought when I got a position I could got the thing out of the pawnsiop and give it back to the The girl told her story with forward candor that Ma; je Home and there kept could have her tate Inventigated, she was led from the courtroom Mise Conley, probationary oMicer at the Adama Street Court, took her to a place where she could get food and the gir! ate ravenounly. STUFFED FROM COLD “Pape’sColdCompound” ends | a cold or grippe in a few hours. Your cold will break and all grippe misery end after taking a dose. of “Pape’s Cold Compound” every two houre until three doses It promptly opens clogged-up nos- trils and air passages in the head, stops nasty discharge of nose run ning, reliev: ick headache, dullness, feverisbness, sore throat, sneesing, —---- 4 soreness and stiffness, Don't stay atuffe { up! Quit blowing Ae your throbbing else in the world gives lief as “Pape's Cold naval offleer had collected. Tha intent] ball of the United Irish Soctetios of Ne * the latter testimony was not made| York, that they wll be in attendance af i HUSBAND WAS DEAD. | | At 6.60 o'clock the following morning, jo clear, TOEATONDOTOR So Family Physician Notified Coroner When Told of Husband’s Demise. ——>—— “NAVAL HOLIDAY” AGAIN PROPOSED BY BRITAIN TO GERMANY Willing to Agree to a Suspen- PLYMOUTIT, Mara, Oct. 18.—Dr. Joseph G. Framme, whe attended Rear- Admiral Joseph G. Eaton in his Inet |{liness and later reported the case to jthe Medical Examiner, was called a ~ otra, Jenole Stay. Hater for tne Sion by Both Nations of War- |murfer of her husband by poisoning | | was resumed to- | ship Building for a Year, a The witness that he had at- tended the Katon family 6 Febru- ary, 1911, During that ¢ Mra, Baton, LONDON, Oct. 18.-The Invitation to | had frequently told him that her hue! Germany to indulge ina “naval holiday” band was insane and addicted to dru a ope day by on= He, however, had never observed any) “** repeated to-day by Winston #p symptome of insanity or of the drug cer Churchill, Firat Lord of the British habit in the Admiral, Dr. Framo said that he was eum.) Admiratty, who In the name of the Hrtt- ad Government ma ectfie offer ta moned to the Eeaton liome on Marah 7 * delay the fulntmen Great Britatn’a | and found the Admiral tn suffering, | Te ea rent on Sane eta be salG, “exctulating peine | naval construction programme next year MRS. EATON TELEPHONED THAT!!! “ermany would consent to do the fame, 0 Mrst Lord was addressing a groat TAberal meeting at Manciester when tn the middle of lamentations over the “nerlous mixdirection of hunian ener glen” Involved in the enormous expendi- on armaments, he remarked that the only way of effeoting retrenchment He explained that he had eaten frealy pork the night before and| added, “No more roast pork for Joseph.” | In aptte of his pain the pationt seemed cheerful. Dr. Frame said, Mra. Eaton telephoned him that her husband was dead She was along the lines of an international seemed uncertain about the time of jagrosinent. Then he uttered the men death, but finally placed tt at 6 A. M.|orabie proponition: Tho witness sald that he at once deter-| “The proposal f put forward In the mined to turn the « | Examiner Osgood over to Medival me of te British Government for » he explained, val holiday {8 quite simple, Next j“1 could not understand why the Ad-| your apart from the Canadian ships, oF | mirat should T did notthink ne their equivalent, and apart from any- would die when I saw him the day bo-| thing that may be re y fore.’ 5 vel pent in the lediterranean Later Mra. Eaton told the witness | shall lay down four Rreat #hipa to ¢ that she had | husband any 4 ach would not retain it. ‘The witness described the autopsy which he made. When it was completed Mra, Baton asked him whether the Admiral's brain had peen found “all right.” In his cross-examination of the wit- le to give her many's two, Now we say to Germany: ‘If you will put off beginning to ulld your two ships for twelve months we will put off in absolute good faith the building of our four ships for exactly the same period." Mr, Churchill then expressed the opin- fon that if Great Britain and Germany nee wisoa fe eyes attorney fF} rao tie lead all the other great coun- the defense {nqutred particularly aa to - 0 r what had aroused the suspicions of Dr] ' ba anit pape Fhe) the ball this evening, at the Lexington Opera House, Fifty-eighth street, near ‘Third nvenue. District-Attorney Whitman and most all of the other prominent candidates are also expected. A host of dintin- guished Irishmen, John D. Crimmins, Patrick Egan, Morgan J. O'Brien, Timo- thy Healy, Justice John W. Goff, Fu. ward F. O'Dwyer, John F, Delaney, Mathew P. Treen, William McAdoo, Vic- tor J, Dowling, John V. McAvoy, Col. Louls D. Conley, ex<ommissioner Lan- try, Dr. Josaph P. Brennan have been invited. Tt 1s expected that thie year's Trish Dall will be the xreatest held In years. The fleure and atep dances of Irelané will be big features. <— ——- Mre, Adolph Kasner Dead. Mra, Adolph Kaaner of No. 10) Bask Elahty-rth street expired suddenly lacp night. She will be !nterred én Bayeida Cemetery to-morrow. Mrs, Kasner wa: very popular tn social and charitable circles in Yorkville. She was the mothe: of Jacques Kasuer, the brilliant youn, violinist who made his successful debv' in Aeolian Hall recently, The rest « her eurviving family consists of George Henry, Bolomon, David, Diana, Saran and Mra. 8, 0, Richman. —<———— cnt 182 tn largest consignment evar brought ¢4 thia port for deportation, was starte!l back to China to-day on the steamer Porsin. The Chinese entered Mexico some time ago, expecting to find em; ployment as la Because of ut settled conditions there they could ot+ tain no work and crossed the borde? into California, They were picked wf singly and in groupe by immigratiey officers. ‘ Frama regarding the cause of the Ad- miral’s death, but nothing of a positive character was developed, all be Just aa creat and as sound as If |it % they had built the ehips at present pro- | set, et, Jected, while acores of millions would | sag trate in) ‘The! witness admitted, however, that] 1m rescued for prior to the autopsy he had said to Mra, | "@ ce! Eaton's mother, Mrs, Virginia Harrison:| “That ts the proposal I age bya the “There ls something behind all thin] Year 1914 oF rags year ts thought to He was not cortain whether the Ad-|¢ toe near, mirai had complained of pain in the| Mf Churchill thought the fact that abdomen or in the legs. the situation in Zunspe was much clear- Dr. Frame thought that Mra. Eaton’s| ¢r now than it had been for some time, expressod opinion of her husband's| the strong evidences of a desire for mental condition was based upon what| Peace and the greatly Improved rela- ahe thought {t was an excessive use of| tions between Great Britain and Ger- drugs and liquor. many rendered the moment favorable WANTED GIRL TO SAY ADMIRAL | ‘°F the resumption of the connideration gestion of “a naval holiday,” HAD WINKED AT HER, a high filandliy Patetares (Wap side | The prosecution next Introduced tes- in @ speech by the German Imperial | timony tn support of Its contention that | Chancellor, | Mra, Eaton's Jealousy © husband —_—_<»—_——. helped to form the motive for the crime, International fi ae Club, | Miss Grace Byram Howard of New| wasHINGTON, Oct. 1%.—Women of Bedford, a young woman who was for- many tongues are to bo included tn an merly a nelghbor of the Eatons at As- International suffrage club to be ot ainippl, Wdentifed @ letter addressed to | eaniged here within the {mmediate fu- her by Mra, Eaton on Aug. 13, 009. ‘The | tire. Plana for the new organisation writer Miss Howard to send her | wore laid to-day, and tt Im to be pat- a letter saying that the Admiral hal |terneg after simlar clubs now auccenn- continually winked at her during church | eaity founded in London, Paris, Herlin services, Bhe made the request, sie ex plained, “to prevent this poor, deluded, man from doing any greater and other Important capitals of the world, Men who are favorably dis- i toward assisting their @istern to | capture the right of franchise may be admitted to mer Hie was ashe wald. On cross-oxam- ination, Misa Howard sald rhe had apoken with the Admiral ony once, Mra, Eaton laughed aloud during the The Duten government to-day selected Chevaller W. F. LC. Van Rappand, testimony of the next witness, Minx |¢ormerly Dutch Minister to Morocco, to R. Calamore of North Hanoy eed Jonkheer J Toudon as Dutch bad been a neighbor of the ‘Minister at Washington, ' Today You iano—Do it now—here is the ave been waiting for—you will h Will Buy —a PIANO You have been promising yourself a piano or player- buying opportunity you never get a better chance —the small monthly payments won't inconvenience you —let us put one of these splendid bargains in your home Big Reductions on Pianos and Including Too many pianos have accumulated at our uptown store, Most of them are instrun.snts that have been rented or used at concerts during the Summe: ths Some have been used for demonstr Purposes only. There are two or three “exchange: few of last year's Kranich & Bach models, and several brand mew Pranos-—§§ instruments in all, They take up so much space that we have no room for fresh styles, ‘To move them quickly we have arranged this Special Sale, and we have ' dition and $450 for only § bargains offered, All of these 5 ance and conditi —get the enjoyment you bave been anticipating, . Player-Pianos KRANICH & BACH Stodart, Gordon & Son, Sterling, Huntington, Mendelssohn and others Prices from $75 Upward 45% Less dy gwaranteed, originally priced at 24§. This is only one of Think of getting a bean- tiful Kranich Bach Upright, im perfect con- the many instruments are perfect in appear- jon, The n Pianos are just as Cut the Price of Every I HARLE I cash deposit secu jat any ores | sath, Th oats without | aoviste: nice, inoca' Accept se KRANICH & BACH Fan as on the day they came from the factory. Most of the used styles look as though they had never been out of the store, Every instrument nstrument, is fully guaranteed by Kranich & Bach, 4 Sale starts at 9 o'clock this morning at our M WAREROOMS (only) 16 West 125th Street any plano in thi ale, Monthly payments arranged to suit your convenience Store Open Evenings hey 4 16 West 125th Street, New York City