The evening world. Newspaper, January 6, 1914, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TEACHER INSISTS IN COURT ON RIGHT ~ TO NL HERSELF Taken From School on Com- plaint of Principal, Who Thinks Her Insane. PUTS UP A DEFENSE. Her Intentions About Death Her Own Business—-Allowed to Get a Lawyer. Because she has made frequent threats to kill herself, Miriam Bromberg, a teacher in Public School No. 154 at No. on One Hundred and Nineteenth Street, was arraigned in Harlem Police Court to-day for examination as to hor mental condition, The action was brought by Miss Helen Stein of No. 468 Kast Seventy-second street, prin- elpal of the school, and Miss Eleanor ‘Ashby, a teacher in the school, living at . 1109 Amsterdam avenue. Miss Bromberg was highly indignant @t the action of Miss Stein and Miss Ashby. She did not deny she had threatened to commit suicide, Sut said whe regarded such matters as her own] Dervonal business. Magistrate Cat.pbell, defore whom Misa Bromberg was ar- Yalened, adjourned the hearing to give her a chance to retain counsel. Later in the day she wan committed to Belle- vue Hospital for the ten day period of observation, a Miss Stein and Miss Ashby visited the police court yesterday afternoon and ¢alked to Magistrate Barlow, They ex- plained that they feared Miss Bromberg would do away with herself at any time and asked for advice. Both agreed that they thought Miss Bromberg was not exactly balanced mentally and the court Permitted them to swear to @ complaint of Insanity against her, A warrant wat fasted and given to Detective Haggerty, who waited in the principal's room of the school until Miss Bromberg ap: peared. She expressed surprise when told she was under arrest, but made no protesi. When she was arraigned before Magis- trate Campbell Mins Stein sai: “Miss Bromberg has teacher in the school for three years, She is &@ good teacher, but recently she has becn talking wbout the uselessness of fe. “she told me she didn't believe in a hereafter, and didn't see any necessity for continuing an existence that had become distasteful. She sald s' @franging all her affairs and would ijl herself when she had her plan Completed. Last month she told me whe would leave the school at the clo: of the year, but I begged her to s| s unt!l Feb. 1, thinking that perhaps she might become normal again, But she has continued to talk about killing nd 1 think she should be re- have drawn up @ paper transfer- ring all my money to @ charitable in- \stitution,” sald Miss Bromberg when the Magistrate asked her if she wished te make a statement. “Does the fact of my arrest here invalidate that trans- fer” ‘The Court told her that the result of the arraignment might have some effect, me excitement, ¥ “What right have these women to in- hemselves in my personal af- limuired, e been attending strictly to my own business and I wish they would confine them- selves to their business, rattles te WILSON PLANS:HIS RETURN. Expected to Start to Washington on #i y steht. PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss., Jan. President Wilson has definitely aban- doved his plan to make an informal visit to New Orleans before bis vacation dn the South is ended. Notwithstanding every effort hea been made to sift out everything but matters of the most im- portance from the President's mail, the deluge of letters has dally increased and to-day Mr. Wilson felt obliged to attend to many of them, It now Jn planned for the Presidential Party to leave here late Sunday night, returning to the Capital next Tuesday morning, As there 1s a diplomatic din- ner at the White House Tuesday night, there is gO chance that the President's ‘vacation will be prolonged beyond Bunday. ee * APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Michael Peiser, died Nov. 14, 1912; Edward Donnelly, died Sept, 13, 1913; total estate $85,797 value $84,862 Catherine Deviin, died July 2, 191 total estate $30,324, n James J. Branagan, a letter carr! @ied Jan. 3, total estate $5, met value Government to Ald Seabright. WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—Seabright, N. J. which was swept by the coastal torm o2 Saturday and Sunday, ap- pealed to-day to the White House for aid. <A telegram to Secretary Tumulty from P. Hall Packer of the Seabright ‘Chainver of Commerce and a former Meyor of the city said the community ‘yas in dire need. Secretary Tumulty teek up the question with Secretary Garrison and Congressman Soully and notified the Seabright officials he would Bak the War Department to do what- ever wan possthle, UNDAY WORLD WANTS ' WORK MONDAY WONDERS _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDKY, TRI = Wor.an a Jill-in-the-Box; No One Can Tell What's Inside So Long as the Lid Is Down THE FETICH OF THE “HIGHER BEING’ (Courtsnie) THE FeTICH OF THE “BONDWOMAN® (OPTER MARRIAGE) Made and Worshipped by Men, Are Sitting on the Lid, Says Rosa Mayreder. Woman at Present May Be an Angel With Clipped Wings, but None Can Really Tell. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “We shall be able to know what women are only when we no longer dictate to them what they should be." ‘There you have Rosa Mayreder's serene, audacious answer to the eternal question, and an answer that plucks out the heart of the mystery. Rosa Mayreder is a name which belongs with Ellen Key and Selma Lagerlof, for these three women are perhaps the most notable personalities in that notable feminist group of Northern Europe. Its leaders have acquired a habit of thinking in more than one dimension, and have never displayed the hectic temperature of certain English and American suffragists, Rosa Mayreder’s book, “A Survey of the Woman Problem,” just translated into English from the original German, must be judged one of the most important con- tributions to the literature of the woman movement. This author, unlike one of our Own suffragist-novelists, does not weep ‘over-unemancipated Woman ee @u angel with clipped wings. To Miss May-|° reder, woman a Jil!-in-the-box—no one | passes her by with indifference or with can tell what's inside so long as the | annoyance, lid {= held dowh. Sitting tight on It at “Another idea of the masterful present are three fetiches made and! lover, clearly not the outeeme of worshipped by men. There is the bond-| perience, is his conviction that woman, the “higher being’ amd the! he may conquer overy woman if he helpmate. According to his nature,man| 80 wishes,” the author observes, chooses one of these three fetiches and ‘This illusion of being holds it up as all that a woman irresistible is common even to men be who seem in no way qualified, FIRST THE “BONQWOMAN” IDEA| ‘Sither by personal appearance or by fortune, to oxerciso such re- WAS MOST WIDESPREAD. markable powers of attraction. Here 1g the analysis of the masculine} gowever tamo and f fixe’ ideas; , “The image of the bond woman, the sex-fetich cf the domineering lover, is the oldest, the most wide- spread and the most vulgar, and determines the position which the female sex occupies, if not in th social scheme, then at least before the law. Im confiomity with this external order of things, man must necessarily assign to woman & lace beneath his own. ‘or the masterful man woman !s & | re | “THE WOMAN WHO CANNOT Love Sie as aan euaT ARTIST; “THE EPHEMERAL NATURE” ither above nor below man but be- side him. Another sweeping feminine generaliza- tlon divides women Into two those who love and those who cannot love, For tho former “the one thing that determines life is their destiny as wife or mother, sister or daugh' friend or helper. Who cannot love are ranged “bewitching ephomeral natures, gifted art! souls, reat sorceresses of the senses.” But neither {Is this classification found satis- factory by the woman writer. Nothing 1 of greater importance to jWomen than to battle against the ab- stractions into which they are constant- ly being converted by masculine thought,” she concludes, earnestly. “It they wish to achieve power ai sons in the world they must battle Against woman asa fetich. That meana that they must emerge from their pas- sivity and break the silence that sur- rounds them, Silence may have its ad- vantages, But all the advantages in the world will not compensate a being who has begun to feel herself sonality, S.. being taken f thing other than really is. For her own sake, Jill-in-the-box must HIGH COURT UPHOLDS: SENTENCE. OF -RYAN AND 3 DYNANITERS Six of the Thirty-two Iron Workers Convicted at Indian- apolis Set Free. | Uke staze heroes, toying absurdly with the hilt of the sword which their arms are too woak to wield. “It would seem that the ordinary man of no importance would be the first to set woman above him, and that only such men u# have reached the loftiest suminits of human perfection would have the right to regard woman as beneath them. But the very opposite f@ the case. The lowest and most | | ; | F entially dif-| Miserable fellow usually Imagine them: | lenee sone Ce carentialty alfa | selves superior tS woman. Many of the| purposes, His relationship with her | Noblest aud most distinguished men ministers to his sense of superiority— | think of woman ag 4 spiritual con-| sort." ~ CHICAGO, Jan. 6.—The sentence of neven years’ penal servitude against Frank M. Ryan of Chicago, President of the International Association of Structural Ironworkers, was affirmed today by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. ‘There were thirty-two convictions in it him the sensation of power Jump out! the dynamite @ases growing out of the and possession, He cannot think of CAVE MAN AND KNIGHT ALIKE seme eeseessns Angeles Times woman except as belonging to him and IN IDEAS. Building at the trial held in Indian- dependent upon him. her only in so far as dient. Asa separate individuallty lke himself, with alms of her own, she Two of the convicted men did apolis, not appeal. ‘The court to-day reversed convictions MOTHER DEAD AT BEDSIDE WHEN CHILDREN AWAKE And then Miss Mayreder points out that after all there is no basic differ- ence between the cave man and the in six of the thirty cases, Defendanta does not exist for him, In Europe the meliaeval knight. ch oin his own in these cases ere Olaf A, Tveltmoe, primitive type of the masterful Way gloat, over the idea of feminine tile me “5 “9 San Fi La earlea ating husband, , Weakness. It ts true, 1 think, that tne Little Ones Couldn't Understand] 8 Mty, Mo; According to the pxychology of the modern wo:nan resents mupertluous eh! Tl: Richard) H. Ma Jhy § I 4 Speak masterful lover, the wife will always » When a man friend in difficulties Why She Wouldn't Speak Fred Sherman, Indianapolis, and Will- be the bond woman of the man. For refuses to let her lend him money, she to Them. |iam Bernhardt, Cineinnath 0, those who feel as he there has never 1s humiliated and not honored by the| |. Ng sivare will ta inde lke thal Gave been any doubt as to the right of a assumption that she Is a financial in-| Wiéle her three tittle children lay |ernment to compel tho return to prison competent. “The fetich of a ‘higher being,’ a fem- | inine ido! which man 6 husband to kill a wife who has been unfaithful to him HE ALWAYS FINDS A MAN IN HER SUCCESS. “It fo in the feeling of mastery that asieep and all unknowing, Mra. Mavd MeRea died this morning on the floor beside their bed at No. 42 West End avenue, She either fell out of bed in the night or as she was arising she dropped A doctor from Bellevue Hospital sald of the men denied retrial pending argu- elr petition for a hearing. petition WW denied it was an- by EB, N, Zoline of counsel nounced for the convicted men, that an appeal Association | with the female sex would appear im- the history of civilization, would be taken to the United States his illusion of w janding the Whole | posite to most men of tit higher Supreine Court. Pgs deta ite higher |that te w us Ha) Supreine Court. sex finds its origin, He finds nich | Masterful order without xome element jhe death ee MeAtt aed malice nere the one type of woman which | oe ciivaiy, With them the ‘strong att he know! He prefers to designate as pathological anomalies all aspects of womaniiness that do not accord with it, A woman who seeks independence, woman of strongly marked individue ality, in his eyes either a neurotic | or else & mass of affectation. He al- ways feteets the influence of a man in anything that a woman happens to achieve in the field of Intellect.” I suppose there is no married pen- woman of my acquaintance of whom | McRea, who lived in Newark with husband, who is a carpenter, had nin the habit of paying occasional visite to her aunt, Mrs hana mes in due course the * ing and,’ without which they: iin that women could rot stand alon this rough world. They would be loath to forego some measure of gallaniry in| 4 their attiinde toward the sex. It would |address, and yesterday she and the three be ngracious to insist upon th n{ehildren, Billy youngat arity over beings whom they con-| Anna, two sears younge Inferior to themselves, @ baby of three, “Thee ertheless occurs no ii) ' essential change in the degree of (th, Anna Doerner, | SORE-FOOTED HIKERS "MOVING ON TO ALBANY Frozen Roads Make Hgrd Footing | North of Catskill, but Marchers Are Hopeful. + living at the West End avenue seven, and Elleadeth, arrived to spend This morning Harry ‘# fon, wens to Doerner, wide the third floor | I have not heard it s “Of course) strangeness that existe between tedroom and there found Mim Mo CAPRKHA. MF dan. 6 ~Gem, her husband writes all her stuff.” the sexes. The idea of womauly lying dead. ‘The children ae ee | hia Joni Hepes out ot ‘ ash Misa Mayreder continues: woakness which sways the mind of == Wiicn ti AKaned and) ANON Wo Une| nt ubeneetew ine nee cae “Such a man 1s not to be moved to! the domineering man is the very derstand why thelr mother did not BE AE raneiie the le)eading to Albany, sympathy or appreciation even by the as wun aiumnnte to tanh Wo litte girly sought | The, Weather was crlap dnd cohl, but ight of tha Increased burdens and trou- the chivalrous man, refuge in tears. But Billy took the| (wet roads made hard footing and assumed by the woman who elects to follow the Intellectual life, He recog- niges no bonds of kinship with her, blistered feet are giving the marchers theit chief concern. ‘The hikers passed through Coxyack!e semblance of subjugation in the latter effscts a compromise with the feeling of superiority. It is a man's end of th pers, know a nd, between whim ‘they wanted to her and father anu «to Newark akin to him. Such an idea, to his mind, | is contrary to nature. HIS SECOND ILLUSION !8 THAT HE'S IRRESISTIBLE, sees a woman contending sam and anxieties | which he himself exper! a natural consequence of his intellectual activities, he regards her as the shock-| true understanding, a real approach be- ing result of straying from the right! twee, man and woman, Ia the ideal of | @né astural path of womankind, and the the idea that woman stands every fon that Would reach Havena early « . & wood night’e reat b Mibany at # A.M. te marchers nugh to Ket atarting for must be a fetich, Miss May- m: one chosen by difference with President » | EQUALITY ONLY BASIS FOR TRUE UNDERSTANDING. erhaps the only idol or idea whieh in itself contal4 a real basis for a Children Killed entre Panic, BAN JUAN. Porto Rico, Jan, &—Four children were trampled to death and teen others seriously injured ast ‘cadng when stampede occurred at the opening of the doors of the munic pal theatre, ers on the exposition grounds struck because an American foreman was Placed over them. Acavedo upheld the foreman, but the President reversed hj decision. ———— PARR PLERLES Ase, copome,,/ aa ENE TES ~ "| afire at one time, but quick work with 9 t oon to-day i better ve th through her lot being similar to his. | game tm which strength and week. {0 iuomo In Newark. After the Coron. at, nen to-day dit alter, ahape than On the contrary, thi Rove soem to change places, bus | ef'# arrival word was sent to the father! in, sGenural,"” Rosalie Jone, nd irritates him, for he regards aa inaup- And arrangements were made for taking Me “General” Keaalie Jones, wot’ portable the idea of a woman being I've, Moltea's cody bi break down had vanished, There was |} SX FREMEN HRT AT THEATRE BLAZE FFTEEN PER Trapped on Stage With Schumann-Heink’s Son in Paterson Playhouse. SMOKER STARTED FIRE. Scores of Families Nearby Driven Into Street in Their Nightclothes. (Special to The Evening World) PATERSON, N. J., Jan. ¢—Flames and emoke, aent flying out over the auditorium from the stage of the Pat- erson Opera House by @ back draught early to-day, trapped fifteen mewnbere of the Paterson Fire Department and with them Henry Schumann-Heink, eon Of the opera singer, Comrades dragged them out to the etreet, but six were badly burned. Schumann-Heink was only slightly hurt. The draught blew a policeman out onto the sidewalk from the lobby. The theatre, the finest in Paterson, with @ lose of ed in the must- ¢lans’ room under the stage, and te been caused by a or cigar in waste “CROSSED” ALARM WIRES DE- LAY ENGINES. Patroiman = Z.niinghaus, ding at the lobby and w: the street, fell on his knees, which were bruised. He was attended by Dra. Rit- ter and Riley and remained on duty for & time, but later was eompelied to go home. Except for a lodge room on the sec- ond floor and Joseph Dohahue's saloon, next to the entrance, the bullding was used exclusively for theatre purposes. Adjoining it on one side is the Lock- wood Furniture Store and on other @ building owned by Donahue, @ saloon man. The ground fi of that building 1s occupled by #oden's hut and furnieh- ing store and the upper floors are tene- ments, The fire waa discovered a few minutes after 1 o'clock by Night Watchman Witham Noonan, who turned in an alarm on the xillary box" inside the th re bulldi: When the engines arrived at Mill and Ellison st: and no fire was to be seen, Police Captain McBride tele phoned to Headquabters that o felse ‘m had been sent in. Police Tele- or Morrison had just Main and Ward atreet ™m, nd told the captain, so the apparatus dashed off to ¢! point, finding the thi ‘@ «burning briskly. Frame tenements in the rear of the theatre were emptied of occupants, who rushed Into the street in thelr night- clothes, Sparks and burning timbers were carried from the blazing theatre ‘on # light wind and dropped on nearby buildings, starting several other fires. The Daly Moving Picture House was who was blow: chemical extinguishers put this out, ‘The Paterson Opera House was built M'1wT. It replaced a house which had been erected in 18 and destroyed by fire in 1900. When tie Van Dyke fur- niture store burned on June 27, 1910, the roof of the opera house was burned off. <—~——-- HAPLESS JESSIE M’CANN IS LAID IN HER GRAVE Mother Weeps Throughout the Ser- vice at Which Her Good Deeds Are Recited. v the pt lw Tw funeral of Jessie Evelyn McCann, uty seclal an! church worker who peared from her home, No, 43 East ntyefirat street, Flatbuvh, on Dec 4, and whoxe body was washed ashore | at Coney Island in the storm of su day, was held to-day in St, Mark's M scopal Church, Ocean avense) road, Flatbush, where Miss | taught Sunday school. — | In a white canket, was carried from the McCann home and afterwards into and from the church by Albert J and Edward J. Heatn Charles 4H. Gorham, Raymond M, Wiis son, H. Norman Brough and Lester L. | Leverich, youn’ men of the chureh with whom Jessie had been friendly. | church was’ well filled, Robert ann cxvorted bis wife, who wept throughout the service, Ethel MeCann ind Harrisoh, # ster and brother of the dead girl, w together, and Robert MeCann Je, escorted other women rela. | con ng to do gvod, in the fu neral sermon, and then Mrs, Mayle Mor: risney sang two Chopin's Beet. and funeral marches he casket was brought | {nto and carried out of the church, | | Burial was in Cypress Hille Cemetery. ! | | SIR LIONEL CARDEN VE TO QUIT MEXICAN POST IN TWO WEEKS Washington Hears That Trans- fer Was Due to Reports Made by Tyrrell. NEW POLICE SQUAD. = RAIDS GANGSTERS WN CLEAN WAR “Big Stick” Policy of Commis- sioner McKay Lands 39 Prisoners in Net. —— 4 LONDON, Jan, :@—Charles Murry Marling, the probable successor to sir Lionel Carden an Beith “Miniter to| GAMBLERS ARE CAUGHT. Mexico, 18 now in London in coneulta- tion with the Foreign Office on the sub- Ject of his projected appointment to|Corner Loafers Snatched on The thea Carden will, tt is under Street and Fined in Night Court. stood, remain at Mexico City for an- other two wesks, as the term of dix months for which he was appointed Minister to Mexico does not expire fill ‘3 Jan, 18, The date of his departure may| The “Big Stich” policy of Mayer ti) by postponed til! after that ‘date in| Mitchel and Police Commissioner order that his successor may have time | Kay in dealing with the gangsters, Gum to arrive at the Legation to take Up Bi | toters and loafers of the elty otasted duties, WAAHINGTON, Jan, 6—It ts under | Th Vigor Jast might, and early today atood here that the transfer of ir | the four detectives of Inspector Mywwe Lionel Carden, British Minister at Mex- | staff, whe are one of the feo City, 40 Rio, Brasil, wag to come extent @ sequel to the o! fons of Sir Wiliam Tyrrel, private secretary to Sir Edward Grey, Britieh Minleter for Foreign Affairs, during hie stay in Washington last Noverober. , Sir William noted the impreasion in oMcial circles by the reported interview with Bir Lionel, in the course of which i} at el Hit! f t BRONX DETECTIVE CHIEF HAS A GRAVE OPERATION i A $30,000,000 HEIRESS WEDS. Daughter of German Coal King Bride ef British Neobleman. BERLIN, Jan. &—A simple religious ceremony here to-day completed. the wedding of the $90,000,000 heiress, Frau- lein von Friediander-Fuld, daughter of Germany's coal king, and John Free The olvil ceremony that began the marriage was startlingly simple, im contrast to the huge ball at the Fried. lander-Fuld mansion the it before, that lasted until dawn, where the tango was danced in regal splendor, in spite of the Kaiser's known opposition to the dance. —>—____ Dental Manufacturer Miscing From Home. A general alarm was issued from Po- Nce Headquarters this afternoon for Charles Byron Bostwick, aecretary and treasu: of the W. A. Watts Com, pany, manufacturers of dental gold No, 80 Church street, who has deen misning from his home at No. 19 West Thir'f first etreet since @unday. Ac- cording to the missing man's brother, A. Bostwick, ¢ Watts Company official had been suffering recently from neuritis. The missing man is about forty-two years old, wore « brown overcoat, brown fedora hat and black shoes. He was clean shaven, with brown heir and eyes, Acker, Merrall & Condit EST. Company 1820 The Utmost in Quality at Minimum Cost---We Give It MARMALADE-—Chiver's English—1 Ib. pots.........15 ; BACON —Boneless Breakfast—Crisp—Appetizing—ib.....22 MACARONI or SPAGHETTI............... 40 Finest French—a Ib, pkg. SARDINES —Aviator Imported—in pure Olive Oil—Ig. tins, 29 MAPLE SYRUP-—Fure Vermont Sap—Qt. Bot, .48—pts 26 PEARS-—Noreca, California—lg. tins.......,. saa +20 FINEST JUNECREAMERY BUTTER-—1b.37¢ ‘ j xe =i

Other pages from this issue: