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ee ‘SENATOR GORE BETS SURPRISE "as | ‘§foman Suing Him for $50,-) J 600, Alleging Attack, Sud- | enly Rests Her Case. ———_— OEFENSE MAKES POINT. ‘Washington Woman Says the ‘Plaintiff Wanted Publicity | OKLAHOMA CITY, Okia,, Feb. 18.—| Mrs. Minnie B. Bond's attorneys to- Gay unexpectedly rested their case in ‘her $60,000 damage suit against Sena- tor T. P. Gore. Surprised, the attor- Reys for Gore secured a brief recess while they planned their defense. J. Gravee Leeper, Oklahoma City lumberman, was recalled before tho plaintit’s side closed to testify under eross-exemination that Mrs. Bond at- tended the Skirvin Hotel banquet in January, 1911, when Bond's appoint- meat was broached to Senator Gore, but Bond himself did not appear. ? homs City testified that he had dim- eulty procuring service on Senator Gore when the Bond suit was filed in | “Oetober, 1918. He was unable to get! j Wecess- to the inner room of the! } Gore suite at the Skirvin from 5.80 to { \9 P. M. \‘Then he secured the assist- | ance of Sheriff M. C. Binion and both Tpached the Senator with the sum- mons, . B.A. Ballinger, Mrs. Bond's father, testified that his daughter had been ia a prostrated" condition since March, 1918. | Howard M. Kay, Mrs. Gore's broth- ington, refused to tell what Senator Gere said of the Winston Hotel oo- rUurvence, aecording to his deposition, \ reed into the record by Attorney Rogs N. Lillard for the plaintiff. Kay ‘ wai@ he turned Benator Gore over to ‘Mrs. Bond at the Winston and con- ducted him away later after T. 5. Robertson brought him down in t elevator. ~"& trife unusual,” was the way ‘Kay characterized Senator Gore's ac- tions when leaving the hotel. ‘Mrs. Ballti sadd Mrs. Bond, her daughter, been “extremely ner- vous” and “awfully mortified” since the hote: incident. Mre. Bon rest Judge B. Stuart of the defense read the deposition of Miss Ina C. | ang eee bed with whom 4 discussed the alleged as- it. “Waan't it a: the treatment I subjected to?” inquired Mrs. 4 of Miss Emery in the Winston Hotel parlor. “Wasn't it trampling an the dignity and honor of a woman?” if it's true,” replied Miss lent, asserted, with mounting color, “that the affair would be published Broadcast.” At this juncture, Miss Emery said, James R. Jacobs came into the parlor end told Mre. Bond not to talk. Jacobs said to Miss Em: that he would not need her assistanc of her brothe: man. Pabwe have 8 card Mp owe. sieeven gpd s e alone,” said Ja- cabs the, deposition read, “We'll get ie hg Emery lives at 2608 Cathe- avenue, Washington. She is au thor of the Emery course of study, director of the Inter-Continental Uni- versity, ramiaswo, and compiler of s guide. ‘ Given to Ami, = E Deputy Sheriff L. A. Exell of Okis-! |) er and Senate messenger at Wash- for to point out the most subtle peril in the existence of the female parasite, | the peril ignored by the superficial reasoner who argues that the number of professor told me, * women spend a great husbands’ money to have and give the.world nothing in return iP | for what they take. of the false standards of the few ia ‘Common among the many?" I axked. oy. " But I can't be! ‘Because a Woman Can Afford a Housemaid H Is No Excuse for THE Git: BatenD- THE -CounTER ONViES THE PaRASITs «iw. SRONT OF “Tye COUNTEER, ‘Every Girl, Whatever Her Station in Life, Should Be Taught to Be Self-Supporting, and Every Married Woman Should Be Made to Under- | stand That the World Demands Work From Her.’ By Marguerite Mooere Marshall. “T hope that the time will come when it will be as much of a disgrace @ woman to live on a man as it is now for a man to live on a woman.”! ‘That's how much Prof. Henry R. Mussey thinks of the female parasite. | 5 Prof. Mugsey is chairman of the Barnard section of | the Economic Department of Columbia University, and, ' like his colleague, Prof. Charles Beard, he is an all-the-| year-round suffragist. When I read that he had talked to the Equal Franchise Society on “The Parasitic Woman,"al thought that he might give an interesting! analysis of that female of the ‘species who ts the deadll- est variety of all. It fs my firm belief that one blue- eyed, saccharine-tongued limpet of a woman can ac: complish more woe and desolation than all the militant . , Suffragettes in Christendom. And nothing but chloro-! es “form can cure her. Even then, the evi! she does lives after her. cry Prof. Mussey was quick idle, frivolous women {s as yet small. . | INFLUENCE OF THE WOMAN|2dmitted. “But there are certain | Doasible alleviations. “Every girl, whatever her sta- | tion in life, should be taught to. | be self-supporting. And | » She | need not necessarily continue to | Pursue the occupation which was here before marriage. But she should substitute motherhood or tome other social fask. i { | “I belleve that most of the indis: | cretions, for which a gertain type ot | modern woman Is 90 hotly criticised, | ine due to the fact that she has noth- ing PARASIT! “I am not primarily concerged,” ‘becaure a few rich al of their mood time, “What déee matter immensely ie the influence of the much-ad- verticed female parasite upon the ideale of wemen in every of society. What does mat- ter ie that the stenographer, the ehep-girl, the daughter ef the emall clerk or the mechanic, should come to feel that the most desir in the world is ite.” “And you think that this imitation | “1 do," acknowledge’ Prof. Mus- course, I may be wrong. e that the girls of with which to occupy hernclf,| return to baking t _,Distinctively Individual THE STENOGRAPHERS 4.0 WANT TO MARRY Tus Goss | | | Fal fon to-day, ‘TRan 4 GQ To 68 Ser SuProrTNg | new | timate friends, | will was ope: |. laughter and | preceded her fath Another jist ‘Tiel Another gives $50,000 b the town of Newburyport, Mass, the testato: The wi five years ago, beq' fortune, estimated at several millior to the wife, Mra. Gertrude Cutter, No, Now THAT HER OLD WoRK (S GONE THERE tS PLENTY oF Néw woRr the mea THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1014. LEFT DAUGHTER ler to Live in Idleness $100,000, BUTSHE . DED BEFORE HM ~ 'DRUGBIST IS ARRESTED FOR ADVERTISING DOCTOR — ur Hundred Firms Affected by Action Taken by County Medical Society, Four hundred drug stores will be affected, it in said, by the deciston in NO BECKER DECISION Court of Appeals Adjourns Feb, 28. ALBANY, Feb. 13.—The Court ot ap. peal ijourned to-day withows mms nouncing decisions in the Becker amd gunmen cases. The Judges I Feb, whew until a, bruary term will vacation the Court is oxpeet cuss @ number of cases public decistons at 2 P, Le iy | of e as ver (etYs by the County Medical Society | Her Death— Lawyer Jin the Enwex Market Court to-day. | Loses $5 . John Dyer, counnel for the society, OSES $500,000 Bequest, |7inn 8 Lederman's company with ‘To my daughter, Annie ‘tT. Cuttar, from whom I have not heard in forty years, tho su when it was jearned that the daugh- ter had died throes yours ago had gone from her father's house, lived her life and died without ever | communicating with tho parent from | | Whom anger had estranged her, | The story which the rich man, 1 f case brought againat Morris Leders man, head of Me Standard Pharmacy ther, Estranged, Never Knew Company, Second atreet and the Bow. “advertising the services of a physl- clan” Misa Frances Benzecry, an agent of the soclety, told Magistrate McQuade that she had requested a medical ex- Henry ‘T. Cutter, the milt«| n, had been referred to Dr. ro drugeist, offered for probate | SMM Schulty, in the rear of the drug | was mado even store, and was instructed by him to pay the company’s cashior as she lett ithe premises, | Magistrate McQuade held Leder- man in $100, and his lawyers left at | once for the Supreme Court to get a! | writ of habeas corpus. ————aaaee / FAGINS IN NEW WORK. of $100,000." , Tange provision in the will] stranger She firm of Hegeman or exp! Dotectiven from Brooklyn Police Head- Quarters are looking for three young men who frequent poolrooma in the neighborhood of Clermont and Lafay- atte avenues, Brookiyn and, according to two amall boys, are Fagina of « new | type. The boys are fourteon-year-old | Hutler of No, 143 North Elliott Connolly, seventeen land street. to the camo out wh and Attorney Tichenor bogan a search for the urned that she had he beau “8 remanded Soclety by Justice utity ing, areate’c ta. mnan, wife of a lawyer jaza strect. He will be sen- athed the entire! tenced Monday. Connolly was held for \the Grand Jury ' The thre are birthpia: which was made four or S01 Lexington avenue. "1 before him, watoos Kot nothing but that the dead man make them rich had he died oF ced after them and all disaypeared into # flat houre. After a time Mrs, Brennan realized that the three youn men were confed- erates of the boys who confemmed that they were upon arrent. knowled ant CEYLON TEA SS aS White Rese Coffee, Nene Beiter ES) Decisions in the oc: u | thal murderers may be"Wiven theme Physically or mentally. Satan finds some mischief still for idle hands to do. The so-called dissipations of the women of the smart set are doubt- Tess, on the part of most of them, a vague and frantic attempt to kill or All time. | WOMEN WILL THINK MORE | WHEN THEY VOTE. «| “I don't want to give the impres- | sion,” Prof. Mussey added, ‘that 1 think all rich women are parasites. © many who realize their sp nalbilities, 1 believe there will be more when women get the vote, for when that happens women are bound to think more than they do now. “The well-to-do women working for rage have uw quite spectal influence off their comrades in the ranks, ‘The latter admire their leaders not merely for thelr money and fine clothes, but for thelr social conscientiousnens, for their work in the cause, A right ideal spreads, as well as a wrong one, Every rich woman who tnalste + on finding something to do in life ten. | May settle this dilemma remaing to wens just #0 much tho general ten-| Hut we must get away from the| dency toward parasitivin.” tea," Prof. Mugsey summed up in “You don't think,” I urged, “that | conclusion, Ed mat to escape that reproach women must | CB ford to hire her housework dono here is nothing left in the world for | ir own bread and to do.” making their own clothes?” “We ‘t turn back the hands of that clock,” Prof, Mussey reassured me, “and If we could there's no reason why we should. ig rec YH the world and do rn. There will al- something she may offér jommunit: performing a service for it, of course, when she has children, and under these conditions there is cer- tainly no stigina in her accepting financtal support from her husban} and the children's father. For it's still an undecided question as to just how far she can combine a personal career with motherhood. That ts really the great problem of the feml. nist movement at present. vidual instances women so shape cir- cumstances that they are at the samo time good mothers and good waxe- earners. How the mass of women Lacks Opportunity? Almost daify we read about some musical prodigy being discovered in Some blacksmith who trained his voice at the some unexpected walk of life. HaveYoua Musical ChildWhose the working classes would jnvent for themselves a lot W meretricious and harmful ideals. They are too close to! economic reality. They know, of their own experience, that they must work if they would eat, If there were hot | flaunted before them women who? Rever work, who eat whenever they choose, I do not think that these girls would desire a life of economic sup- port without eny equivalent eopial service.” But many of them criticise hotly the rish and idle women,” I argued. ] “Isn't their criticism often the re- | gult of secret envy rather than of self- | respecting indignation?” suggested | Prof. Mussey. “Imitation is the sin- | cerest form of flattery, you know. “And doesn't the girl Ind the counter desire to dress as nearly as possible like the woman in front ef the counter? In a room- ful of etenegraphere dosen't almoet | that the aeme | UR A MEN CLOGS THE KEYS Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Blade » . ) bothers. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts oceasionally, says a noted authority who beg w tase meat foreae uric noid het most paral A Ine in their ef- forts to expel it from the blood, They begome sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with o dull leery Ia the Kidney region, ap pains in the baok or sic! headache, disziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the ¢ often get sore and irritated, ou to seek relief two or three the night. ie thi inritatinn acide, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take # tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for s few days and your will then act fine. This famous \ pacid of ropes nd * with lithis, and tues piace annemtioe, ces imulate slu, aidneys, to neutralise the dd in urine, #0 it no rT irritates, thus ending bladder +. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- es ‘and makes a delightful ‘effervescent water drink. ult working’? Doesnt the childless wife of @ man of moderate salary often Insist on medelling hor existence, as nearly a0 possible, according te the rules of a cortain set of wealthy, Inde- lent, pleasure: leving eeclety | wemen?” i Tf you can answer Prof. Mussey in the negative, the spectacles through which you regard New York women are more roee-colored than mine. I asked him it he could eee any relief for the situation. “Z believe tt will not be entirely ended while the distribution of wealth fo ap uneven as it fe at present,” he SSS been used for Fr * alee satiate + aioe MR asi o TURKISH BLEND CIGARETTES The original Turkish blend with the dis- tinctive character that men like |: forge, or some boy or girl whom chance sup) It all prov opportunity to develop the latent faculty. never be any question of quality have acciimed it as Bh mistake may be made, and li pute, and then you may safely pay a low 1 The HARRINGTON at $275 Made in one of our own factories under our supervision and guaranteed by us, Sold ou Easy HARRIN( The Home That Possesses a Piano at Least Cannot Be Charged With Neglect Where there are means to decide that the piano shall he a HARDMAN there can for Caruso and scores of other great musical artists no is desired ut a more moderate price a great ‘long dissatisfaction and regret may follow. but whe But there is one safe thing to do. 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