The evening world. Newspaper, November 17, 1913, Page 16

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$172,291 NO ‘PUSHES “LOGKS TO $2586 26 Record for Y. M.-Y. W. C. A. Fund Arouses Cheers at Woman's Day Luncheon. TELEGRAM FROM WILSON Mr. and Mrs. Perkins An- hounced as Givers of Anony- mous $50,000, ‘The largest single day's collection in the 4,000,000 buliding fund campaign of the Y. M,C. A.-Y. W. C. A. was an-| fRounced during to-day's luncheon at the @ampaign headquarters, No. % Broad Street. When the official statistician nad Gntshed adding up the contributions re- Ported by the various committees and thetr ‘teams’ it was found that $172,291 fad been added to Saturday's total of $2,884,185, bringing the hands of the cam- Daign clock around to the $2,636,428 mark. This was “Woman's Day" in the whirlwind money-raising campaign, #4 “Government Takes More Care of Cattle Than of Children,’’ Says Mrs. Alice Hubbard \“The State Owes Relief to Every Needy Mother in the Business of Rearing Citizens,’’ She De- clares Strongly—Advocates Pension- ing of Mothers. “It Seems to Me That as Intelligent Human Beirgs We Are the Most Foolish of All the Creatures of the Earth—We Don’t Want Charity for Children, but Their Rightful Chance.” By Sophie Irene Loeb. Mrs. Alice Hubbard, author, editor, farmer, who has been for several years a stanch advocate of the State's duty toward mothers, came to New York to attend the Twilight Club dinner, where the subject of discussion was “Shall We Pension Mothers?” Mrs, Hubbard was one of the speakers, At this dinner the State commission appointed to investigate this whole question and suggest proper legislation was present. This commission consists of three Senators, five Assemblymen and seven laymen. Here are Mrs. Hubbard's views as to the duty of the State to the mother as she gave them to me: “Iam glad that at last a commission has been appointed to go into th's question thoroughly and that the State has been wise enough to devote $15,000 to the investigation of a measure that has long been solved by-older countries and in which we have lagged behind. I consider this the most important piece of | acted next year. the 1,000 eager workers, well as a Gosen or more distinguished guests, took an extra half-hour of their thou- sand-doligr-a-minute time to do honor to the memory of Mra. Janet MoCook Whitman, one of the founders of the Y. W. C. A., and to Mies Grace H. Dodge, the noted philanthropist and di- rector in the Y. W. C. A. Miss Dodge, who was present, was accorded many teatimonials of admiration by donors of large contributions, who sent word that they gave the sums in her name. ANONYMOUS $60,000 GIVEN BY THE PERKINSE: Henry P. Davison, of J Morgan anda Company, treasurer of the fund, spoke encouragingly of the progress of the campaign and announced the dona- tien of $2,000 by the New York Teie- Phone Company. Loud cheers greeted this announcement as well as those of @ther large subscriptions, which in- cluded $25,000 each from the Cyrus MeCormicks, senior and junior, of Chi- cago; Mre. Morria K. Jesup, 910,000; L. Gorton Hammersley, %,000; Stokes, $15,000; Mrs. Benjamin Bre fam D. Sloane, $10,000 and Gorham and Company, 92,600. It was also announced that the anonymous donors of the 800,000 gnnounced Friday were Mr. and Mrs. George W. Perkins. Mr. Perkins, who presided at the huncheon, modestly per- mitted some one else to make this an- mouncement. A guest of honor to-day was Edwin Markham, the poet, who read a short he had written in honor of the 8 workers in the Y. W. C. A. cam- ‘The verses told of the organiza- purpose to provide homes and edu- for working girls, and closed with following rtanza: ‘And then at the end of the ways that wind One joy will stay throughya world's deteat— To know as you go that you left behing A friendly door in a friendiess atreet.”* PRESIDENT WILSON £ ENDS CON. GRATULATIONS. A congratulatory telegram from Pres- Ment Wile@n was received with much applause, It read: “May I not express deep interest in your campaign and convey my sincerest Congratulations on your very promising evccess 0 far?—-WOODROW WILSON.” ‘The publicity department of the oam- eign received the cheers of the work- @e when it was announced that the heads of the firm of Kt. H. Macy & Co. Tad been induced to lend one of their Jargeat show windows at Broadway and Talrty-fourth street for a display to- Morrow in which wax fixures of girle WH be costumed to show the various ectivities of the ¥. W.C. A. Among the prominent guests at to- Gay's luncheon were Miss Dodge, Presi- it and Mra, Burton of Smith Col- ae. Mra. Cleveland H. Dodge, Mrs. aries R. Crane, Miss Libert, daugh- ter of Bir Courtenay Ibert, Clerk of Mrs. Dave Hennen Morris, Mra. Whit- magn Hoff and Mrs. James Talcott. It wae predicted this morning that Defore the end of the week the people @t this city would know a great deal more about the seal of purees in its fifteen training schools, in Me-elumace associations of those in- @itutions and in the hospitals. Part of he work dane by the nurses was told at campaign headquarters to-day. It de- veloped that they had deen extremely active and‘that, working quietly, they hag siven large assistance to the joint campaign committee, TRAINED NURSES TAKING AN ACTIVE INTEREST. Mise E. J. Crawford, General Secre- tary of the Central Clu, said this morn- fmg “that three of the busiest trained Burses in the city had devoted all their Gime for the two weeks of the whirl- wind campaign to efforts in behalf of the fund, having cancelled all their pro- enkagements to that end, “The nurees have made person: tributions of from $% to $10 wach, Miss Crawford. “I know of several who have given $100 apiece. In addition the treasuries of the New York County Reg- istered Nurses’ Associauion and the New York Hospital Graduate Nursus’ Asso- @ation have been emptied into the ¥. W. CG A-T. MOC. A. fund.” ‘Thirteen of the alumnae associations the tra.ning’ schools for nurace ia York Giving $100 apiece to the W. C, Ae, M. A. fund. Personal comiributions from members of the Cen- al Cluo itself already have reached @hree figures and it is thought this body Will make @ good showing in the next or three days. All the nursce in the | ° big training schools of New York ‘ere to have an opportunity rhortly the total. The frat contr © auree was (0 “Although there are twenty-two States in the Union now granting pen- sions, the great work to he done in the State of New York will naturally set @ precedent which the others will follow and consequently reach out in a national movement. “Z cannot see why this legisiation |developed and her individuality con- ae been so long retarded. It is |eerved. only one step to what has already SHE WANTS ALL MOTHERS PEN. been done, A mother’s pension doce SIONED. idea that not mean the mistaken “I do not think that this proposed te who need help in the rearing of their © service that she bas done but | children should be granted that help for | Mote’ what she will do, She ts not put om |uny reason. @ List like 014 soldiers for some work “The mother 1s the only person who can take the vow of constancy. Hus- Given a jod. “We ony that the school teacher's | ‘Nem part, or they may hate. And the work is free to the children, yet the tate pays the school teacher for mother for a similar service im |her affection. Her last earth memory fl baby. ‘Until death do us part.’ Pn Lape “I know two women who are moth- ers, and I knew them first when their cr iwueswipoed” wien, mater “ove | TERROR IN NATAL AS EAST INDIANS RIOT father love. And they had obeyed the Troops Called to Check Raids Started as Protest Against Exclusion Laws, “Now these mothers have been eo for-| DURBAN, Natal, Union of South Af- as to find employment. 1 con- | rica, thelr employers on having se-|of Natal trike, Hach mother would fight to the death to keep her inherent rent of caring for her child. The fathers of these vables? A force had tuken possession of these men which was greater than ete greater force, and are now neither vis- ible nor available. Neither of them sives anything toward, the support of hie child, i at the real “Up until the present day we have been actually paying more attention| ured the services of these women, for one They would work loyally, faith- of cur eles: . to way, | Uy to thelr death for the right of “Pudeieee cumstances who gives her heart's love) ther,” continued Mre. Hubbard.!es the bables, cares for them during iY the day as some poor in sore diffi- jatior rh wae ft Was ce wenn laren of | culties know how to do. fmto the world. She is not paid for y mothers! spectors inspected and criticised ve them their choice be-| tween their prescribed care and the! alternative. cried one mother. na ane would neglect my baby? I have nothing cand and wife may love until death 40| ise on earth to live for but this baby. T am giving my life for it’ ohild may f nother never forgets, Te the dey ue| “But tf the State had adequate means her death ehe lovee hor babe: Thoagn 1a| %0 Keep these mothers at home and they the children's education, It 18 | dies, she does not forget. Mistortunes, | Nu ya morming ifthe world ker eas <* rng ere world they wou! a) So Lad mistakes, aing, crimes, do not annihilate| io: Jo in return to the State in the way jtizens. We a - proper clothing, feeding and rearing, |may be the first lullaby she sang co her| 0% 8° Cltnnns | We do not want char it ” chance.’ ‘Do you think I v. 17,—The East Indian residents to-day declared a general they ape givin which was accompanied with to the welfare of our cattle than that @ & service second to no] rioting and the burning of sugar plan- ‘The police force is insufficient the rioters, and tations.’ CHINESE IN PANAMA FIGHT GOVERNMENT LAW Close Their Stores as Protest Against Edict Compelling Them to Register or Be Deported. PANAMA, Nov, 17.—The Chinese ques- tion assumed a serous turn in the Republic of Panama to-day when all the Chinese merchants, wholesale and re~ tail, in this city, In Colon and at points in the Interior, numbering fifteen hun- dred or more, acting according to @ pre-arranged plan, closed their places of business after posting notices stating that the doors had been shut for the purpose of taking an inventory. ‘This was the first time the focal Chi- nese have ever closed their, places of business for such a purpose and in view of the fact that their laundries and market stalls also were closed their act is regarded as an effort to compel the Panama government to recede from its announced programme relative to the en- foroment of the now registration law which compels Chinese residents to take nut new certificates of registration on yment of @ dee or render themselves ble to deportation, The Panaman Government to-day an- nounced its decision to stand firm and orders were to all provincial THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1918. PUTS 180 “ROOKIES” ON FORCE TO TRAIN | AS MODEL POLICEMEN After Six Weeks’ Instruction Waldo’s New Men May Be Detailed to Harlem. Police Commissioner Waldo appointed | 199 new policemen to-day. They wil! report at once for the usual six weeks’ course in the school of instruction, and | hocause of the success of the Commis. latoner’a experiment in sending 600 | “model cops” into one tnapection die. trict, he announced that the same plan would be followed with the present “rookies,” all going into the same dis- trict at the end of thelr achool course, ‘The new men ai likely to be sent to Harlem or into the lower east side, for @ new station wae opened in the former territory to-day, and one is to be opened on the west side before the end of the month. This will incorporate | the present Leonard and Macdougal | street stations in one, with the pre- cinct hous at Spring and Varick streets, The old Fifth street station, at Fifth street and First avenue, is to | be abandoned also for a new building \* few doors away in Fifth street. The boundaries of the precinct will not be | changed Capt. John J. Gargan was transferred from the school of instruction to the new Harlem precinct, which is at No. ‘229 West One Hundred and Twenty- | third street, This precinct splits the old Lenox avenue precinct approximate- ly in two, including the territory be tween One Hundred and Tenth and and Thir' ‘h streets from to Manhattan and St. ues, WHY LOVE Won'r DIE. (Brom the Florida Times-Union.) “Will your love f-. me ever die? asked the fellow who sits up nighte with Maude. “Oh, no,” replied that young woman tactfully, never as long an you ices to its head and ‘rocks’ to its jrence, and with yet POLICE ARE SEARCHING FOR MISSING BABY GIRL Child Disappears From Sidewalk in Front of Home as Father Turns Away. The _anexplained disappearance of @ three-year-old baby, Winifred Byrne, from her home et No. 48 Hast Thirty- Agnth street, dusted the police of all the greater city to-day. Little Winifred had been walking up and down with her mother in front of her home, Mrs. Byrne left the child when Mr. Byrne appeared on the step, calling to him that she was going across the street to a store and asking him to watch Winifred. Mr. Byrne, after a moment, looked acroas the mreet as his wife returned, When she reached the steps the baby had disappeared, The parents did not call for police help until they had searched the streets of the neighborhood until late into the night, calling from house to house. They could get not the slightest trace of the little girl. Lieut. Wines of the East Thirty-fifth street station at once eent out @ squad of men, but they worked all yesterday and to-day without result. Prayers for the safe return of the child were offered yesterday at the services at St. Gabriel's Church at No. 310 East Thirty-seventh street. Mem- bers of the congregation were aaked to help in the hunt. Winifred was dressed in a white fur coat, white bonnet, a| blue @triped dress and white stockings | and mittens. Her complexion is light, and she has blue eyes and @ email scar on her left thum! “RAVING WOMEN’’ JAILED FOR ATTACKING JUDGE Four Suffragettes Who Threw Hammers in ‘Court Are Given Sentences. LONDON, Nov. 17—Two bands of} what Arthur Hopkina, the Police Magis- | trate, described as “raving women" ap- | peared in the police courts of London to-day in connection with Saturday's outrage at the Old Bailey Court, when hammers were thrown at Justice Law ay’s disorders near Premier Asquith's oMfcial rests dence in Downing street, The four women charged with agsault+ ing the Judge were sentenced to terms varying from one month to two \ months’ hard labor. In the second case Miss Boyleau and Kerr wert bound over to keep the peace, whi the proceedings against Misses Murray and Boyle were adjourned. It was noticeable that the police taf the precaution of depriving all wonfen of their baskets or parcels as they 4 tered the Police Court, e' ntly feart they might carry concealed weapons. mesa . Oil through the Jas tore and inflamed parts and « Gives quick relief. Trial bottle sec. GIRLS! GIRLS! GIRLS! B tented 1 wilt make thet” famisred, worn looking. flove-siling MESH BAG~ 9h Look Better Than New Have your allver bag gold plated —wilt then Wok. tke “goltd done Ghewhere—Dbring it at ence, SILVERWARE RE-PLATED Fe® John L. DesLauries’ JEWELRY FACTORY 110 We sate ean Wik ay, | CAUTION! The great popularity of the | WRIGLEYS © short time ago the Governor of this State signed » bill appropriat- ing $225,000 to pay farmers for their tubercular cattle, which it took from them. Yet we have had to lack of relief. taking care of their chil to deal is that right to pelea badly women and children are in a state of too hard for them. Do they quibble|terror. Troops have been ordered to about what they are asked to do? In-|#0me of the disaffected distri deed, they do not. ‘Bring on your work;) 1% Durban itself practically the whole we thrive on dt,’ de their atttude, *] ast Indian community struck work and “They have an incentive to work be-|Pecame so aggressive that a demand yond that of the game of business; it| Wa" made for the proclamation of mar- is to earn for their loved ones. They |t!#! law. In the country districts hun- cannot lay up money, nor make pro- {reds of acres of sugarcane were burne “It aeems to me that as tntelligent| vision for the future, neither for their|Th® revolt of the East Indians was human beings we are the most foolish of | Sitldren nor for themselves. They are|>rousht about by the exclusive lawa in fail the creatures of the earth. We take] Just living to-day, doing their pest and | force against them here. It had hitherto sovernors to proceed with the arrest of | Chinese not complying with the regis- tration law before the expiration of the present ten day period of grace which ends on Nov. 2. The Chinese shopkeepers in the Canal zone have not been affected. 2 GLASS NAMED SENATOR. clean, pure, healthful a is causing unscrupulous persons to wrap son From A careful thought and? make good pro-|With the deepest fish, our fowl, birds of the alr,| thelr bables and work through the day eae of the field and all Gomesticated |‘? provide PF ng ahelter and oloth' animals, And yet, with all our Loasted {for “nem aie bg hyper very great brain power, we have not taken into] 04) stay at home and tale beige Ai consideration the xteateat force in mH] \oveq cnew with thelr owa and they sey ted in human beings, and) her for it. ‘This ls a way that mother permanent provision |jove manifests iteelf under certain con- red of race bet: | ditions, terment or even of race perpetuity. have made general intelligence, thelr efficiency, ‘They must make themselves individuals] heen commanded to give wood in this world, They must understand | these children or they will be taken that nature's greatest power Ls working| trom ther Let wisdom direct mother) they are not able to pa: jemall, that woman cun carry, ahe alould| But they have @ woman in humble cir- w: carry, in order that her brain may be (ADIES! LOOK: YOUNG, DARKEN GRAY. HAIR’ Use the Old-time Sage Tea and Sulphur and Nobody will Know, y hair, however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of # youthful appearan Your hair is your charm, It makes o1 mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks dry, wispy and scraggly, just » few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur. enhance its appearance a hun red-fold, atitude that they |been passive, but developed to-tay into vision for our trees and for plant life, | Fe able to stay through the night with | Violent action. ins IT FOR CHAPEL. Frie atitation to G A charity beneft for chapel connected with the Metropolitan “Now the authorities of the atty| Hospital on Blackwell's Island will be What mothers most need is wisdom, |(n which these women are employed! held on Women must develop thelr brains, thelr | have ig tlre wk nite Toke irl pected und the mothers have} sonal vaudeville by the White Rats Dancing will Tickets can be obtained from 1b a ween] the Rev, Thomas Cryan, $. J., chap- responsibility, great and/aplece for the care of the little ones. | ain. Nev. 2 in Terrace at 815 BP. These women are poor;|!! P.M BIRMINGHAM, Ala., No’ P, Glass, editor of the Birmingham News and president of the Montgomery Ad- vertiser, was to-day appointed United States Benator by Gov. O'Neal to guc- ceed the late Senator Joseph F. Jobn- son, The term expires March 8, 1915, The Kind You tive Always Bought Bears the Senge COLLARS SHIRTS Our goods are made for the man whose demands call for some- BLACKWOOD Don'tstay gray! Lookyoung! Either thing i sore in a Collar and Shirt prepare the tonic at home or get from drug store a 50 cent bott! f Vyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rei edy Thousands of folk —ecommens this ready-to-use prepar. , because it darkens the hair beaut), vy and re- moves dandruff, stops scalp (ching and falling sir; besides no one can possbly tell, as it darkens so naturally andevealy, ten a sponge or soft brush with through the hair, taking ne datetime, By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, ite natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and EARL & WILSON MAKERS OF TROY’S BEST PRODUCT than can be supplied by the type of merchandise made in quanti- ties and turned out at.a price to meet merely a utilitarian need. NEW FALL SHIRTS $1.50 TO $10 lustrous, and you appear yease wounges. buy. - The rank imitations that are not even real chewing gum so they resemble genuine WRIGLEY’S of stores will not try to fool you with these imitations. They will be offered to you principally by street fakirs, peddlers and the candy departments of some 5 and 10 cent stores. These rank imitations cost dealers one cent a package or even less and are sold to careless people for almost any price. If you want Wrigley’s look before you Get what you pay for. better class Be sure it’s WRIGLEY’S

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