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{ ~ 4 N X THEVERYLATEST TOSTOPADIVORGE The Chitin Now Is Wiether Kiss Mr. Anderson Gave His Wife Was It. IF SO HE LQSES CASE. Jury Is to Decide if He Showed Forgiveness When She Was Going Away. Ever hear of the Kiss?” Twelve jurors who hi been sit- ting in Justice Cohalan's part of the Supreme Court for three days heard of it probably for the first time to- day when the trial of the divorce suit brought by Percy E. Anderson, wealthy wholesale druggist, who lives in Upper Montclair, N. J. was re- sumed. There is not much difference be- tween a “condonation kiss” and any other kind of a kiss, according to Ars. Anderson's version as she related it to the jury when she took the witness stand in her own defense. It fe perhaps a little colder than most other kisses, but then it means more than most other kisses to her. ‘The fine question the jury will be called upon to decide concerning this Kies is whether when Anderson gave it to his wife, after having discovered her alleged indiscretions with Capt. J. W. Banner, U. 8. A. Medical Corpa, Bert Grant, the song writer and oth- ers, he at the same time forgave her. If the jury finds the proper degree of forgiveness in the kiss, then under the laws of this state the husband camnot maintain the divorce action. After indignantly denying the ac- eusations against her Mrs. Anderson told how after eighteen years of un- interrupted marital bliss she was su: prised to receive a letter from hi husband informing her that all was over between them. When she left the Grand Central Terminal for the Adirondacks on August 15 last year her husband accompanied her to the train and wae apparently just as lov- able then as he had been during the whole eighteen years. Miss Mgy Chandler Anderson, the husband's cousin who chummed around with Mrs. Anderson during the time the wife was supposed to be meting the captfin or th talented Grant clandestinely, testified pre- viously that Anderson caught her in an untruth concerning his wife's do- ings in New York and as a result she, Mies Anderson, was forced to tel] what ahe knew of Mra, Anderson. This ahe did before Mrs, Anderson went to the Adirondacks when Mrs. Anderson saya her hosband kissed her dbye with his el affection, sell then when f a mountains what happ wed?” Anéerso lawyer asked her to-day when she was on the witness stand. “I was enjoying myself do in the mountaina, when I re- ee a letter from his lawyers tell- shat my husband had laid be- fore them all of his troubles and that we could not live together as man and wife any longer a. “ that [ had better arrange an amicable tlement of our differences." “My husband offered to send me to Reno to get a divorce,” Mra, Ander- son testified. ‘He sald he would pay all my expenses out there, but I re- fused to do that and IT filed a sep- aration suit against him and then hi “Condonation brought this divorce action against me with all its fi ccusa tions Concerning the charge that she had taken moonlight strolin with Grant through the ake infested woods surrounding the Summit Lake House in Central Valley, Orange County, N. Y., Mrs. Anderson admitted that Grant “was everywhere about the place," but she had never taken walks with him. “Did you ever lie in a hammock or on the grass with him?" she was asked. “Why, the positively not WAITRESSES KEEP UP SILENT-PROTEST PARADE Carrying Placards From Their Shoulders, They Attract Atten- tion on Broadway. The “silent protest” against Conrad Bros,’ restaurant, at No, 864 Broad- way, was continued to-day by the alx striking waitresses, The girls—Dean Stone, Emma Schirber, Anna Calle han, Dorothy Laockayitz, Marjorie Sweeney and Amanda ‘Lind—kept up their march in front of the restaurant with their signe over their shoulders. ‘They attracted much attention from the pedestrians. “ We are atriking for $5 a week and meals,” read the placards, Aa a result of the walkout the at- tentioa of the Wo Trades Union League has been drawn to the girls, President Melinda Scott of the League said to-day that an effort will be made to form the girls into a union, ihe sald that 22,000 girls are em- ployed in the city as waitresses, i Paterson Man on Court of Errors, TRENTON, N. J., May 14.—Gov. Fielder to-day sppointed Robert Williams of raon, to membership of the New ise ti si % 18 urt idea—no, she replied. never, a. heh fut tg Se es ib TWO CAN WASH THE w Si¥ Minutes DISHES iN ORIVE MINUTES the Household Duties Can Save Time and Reduce the High Cost of Living. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall, Here’ to the new hugband! We have heard a great deal about the new woman, and, as a natural corollary, the new wife. But the new husband made his public debut only the committee on age the furniture and Pesammonnenls assist his wife in Now, to most of us this seems a truly revolutionary situation. But it is} — the other evening, although a goodly number of him may already be found in Manhattan, according to his sponsor. That person is Dr. Alcan Hirsch, chairman of the mechanic basis of feminism for the Feminist Alliance of New York. Dr. Hirsch placily asserts that the new husband differs from the old only in possessing a slightly larger modicum of common The fact remains that the new husdand will not only know how to wash the dishes, make the beds, dust cook the medjs, but that he will daily performing these taske! matter of course to many young married folk, according to Dr. Hirsch, and it should be matter of course to many more. For the domestication of the husband is only one factor in putting the individual home on an efficiency basis. “Our committee has set itself two Problems to work out,” the youthful chairman explained to me, “We want to show what can be done with co- operative housekeeping, and therefore we are planning a feminist apartment house for 260 families, But we also feel that much can be done in the way of systematizing the individual household, “People rather shy at the word ‘efficiency’ when it's used in connec- tion with the home, They think you're planning to make the home @ miniature factory or business office, where everything must be according to schedule and the individual has no chance to expand. But eMciency in the home simply means the doing away with the waste. Is there any- thing really beautiful or appealing about the idea of waste? Mustn’t the work of the ideal home be performed with the least expenditure of time, labor atid money compatible with comfort and happiness? “What's the smallest amount of money for which two persons can obtain a decent apartment?” Dr. Hirsch broke off, abruptly. “Ask the average person that question and you'll have only a guess for an an- awer. By investigation our commit- tee has found that a husband and wife ean obtain an elevator apart- ment of four rooms, 800 square feet, | in a good location, for $40 a month. You may have to hunt a few days before you discover such an apart. ment in New, York, but it exi And now he comen—this 1914 self- starting model of conjugal virtue! “A four-room square feet can be properly cared for, and two meals can be cooked, with ninety minutes’ labor every day,” continued Dr. Hirsch. “No servant is necessary, but the hu hie wife In the per- in their home, and she fifty min- utes, everything necessary can be do This time-table heats Mra. Inez Milholland Boissevain'’s two-bours-a- day housekeeping, which till now has held the domestic velocity champion- ship. I gasped, and asked Dr. Hirech for details of the ninety-minute-dash, “The schedule is based on actual experience, Not mine," he added hastily. “Please don't make me the personal discoverer of any of there arrangements. But the ninety-min- utes-a-day plan is backed up by prac- tiee and not by theory, “The no-ser t clause must be qualified. A woman would be necea- sary for seven hours once in two weeks, She would do the washing, clean the windows, scrub the floors) land do any other heavy cleaning that | might be necessary. be prepared, served and cleared away dally, assuming that both husband and wife were away from home for lunch, Also the floors would be lightly mopped, the furniture dusied, the beds made and the bathroom cleaned. Now disn-Washing for five arenas ‘o-aenado ie ming Ream | mitted. “There would remain two meals to| ‘ A bed, if it is properly located ao that it doesn’t have to be moved out, can be made in five minutes. “Cooking is vastly simplified by the use of gas, electricity, the fireless cooker and other modern improve- ments. Much time can be saved by keeping all tools in good condition and in definite places, “It is perfectly possible for a man and wife working together te prepare breakfast of cereal, eg ast or biscuite and coffee, and to give their irtment ite jaily cleaning in what the ef- ficlenoy expert calle ‘forty man minutes.’ This means simply that each works twenty minutes, be- ginning and ending together. while the hueband washes shee the wife makes the beds, and the two start off to their offices at the same time.” “But how can dishes be washed and wiped so quickly?” I asked, pick- ing out the process which the aver- age housexeeper finds moat tedious and time-destroying. “For one thing, they are not wiped,” responded Dr, Hirsch, “They are scraped out, flooded with hot run- ning water, while a dish-mop re- movea any obdura' particles, and then placed in a rack to dry. After jhe Is used to it, a man needs hardly more than one long motion for each dish, “The secret of caring for a house in this fashion ig to keep everything |spotiessly clean. The daily dusting and «dry mop-ing must never be omitted.” “The housekeeping husband will be cured of the trick of leaving things around, and he wil! stop dropping cigar ashes on the Moor,” [ observed. Dr. Hirsh assented with a smile, and added: “He will \6 ready to in- stall labor-saving machinery in the home when he finds out from prac- tical experience that home labor needs simplification.’ “Bu. ‘Il men really consent to help their wives about the house "y day?” . asked, I know of a number of young men who share the burden of housekeeping with their wives,” be replied. “1 can't see why @ man should ashamed to wash make bede. Why should euch duties be any more disgraceful f aman than for a weman? A what is drud for ene may be jay for tw “Into the Iimbo with the husband too proud to do housework you must put the wife who ‘hates to have a man fussing around the hous reminded Dr, Hirsch. “There are personal feelings on both sides to ye considered,” he ad- “But think of the economy jof the joint-labor home! 4 ily eliminated, and the wife this speedy fashion. sons capable of being trained are all that are required.” Dr. Hirach admits that children tip Industrious por- his nice little schedule bead over HE BVENING WORLD, aaa os Style of Husband Helps the Wife - the $10,000 THIEVES > ARE TRPPED UP 0NS1 00008 Robbers Who Ignored Mayor’s Bodyguard Arrested in Short Order. The two detectives who, ever since Mayor Mitchel was shot at, have been on guard at his home, the Peter Stuyvesant apartment house, No. 258 | Riveraide Drive, are more than ever vigilant to-day, for yesterday a pair of suave thieves walked right be- tweon the sentinel sleuths and stole $1,000 worth of jewelry from Mrs. H. and emall pieces of jewelry worth THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1916. Wash Dishes, oe aid Make the Beds| CONFESSION OF huey SHOULD OFAI® IF ALL @GHT TH BO MOULE WORK upwards of $100, The police aay the two have realized more than $10,000 in similar robberies. Mrs, Zeliner is the wife of a nov- elty manufacturer and advertised to sublet her apartment for the sum- mer. Two men called for the ostensible purpose of looking at the apartment. “Are those detectives we passed down in the main hall?” asked the man who called himself “White.” “Yos,” Mrs. Zeliner explained, “they have been on duty here ever since that man tried to murder Mayor Mitchel, who lives in thie building.” “Ab,” said Mr. “White, “that should operate also as a protection to the other tenants.” “Indeed, it dues,” said Mra. Zeliner, ‘one need have no fear of being robbed here.” The visitors looked over the apart- ment and left, saying they would let her know later whether they would rent It or not. They had been gone but a few minutes when Mrs, Zellner discovered that her jewelry had been stolen. She hurried downstairs and told the sleuths on duty in the hall. They, in turn, notified the West One Hundred street police station, and Detectives Dalton, Boyle, Quinn and Donnelly were assigned to the case, They learned that part of a diamond necklace had been pawned, an hour after the robbery, at . pawnshop on Columbus avenue, near Ninety-ninth street. ——— (TEACHERS SO GLAD THEY RUIN MILLINERY, H, Zellner, a tenant of the building, One man was arrested later and was identified by Mrs. Zellner, He gave the name of Wesley Exsex and 208 West One Hundred teenth street. and Thir- Mrs, Zellner says the White. Early to-day detectives ar- rested a second man answering the description given by Mra He was caught at One Hundred and Seventh street and Seventh avenue and taken to the * ost One Hun- dredth street police station, He gav the name of Albert Kehler, an iron- worker living at No. 1920 Simpson street, the Bronx. In the West Side Court to-day the prisoners were tdentified by three women and a man as the pair who had robbed their apartmonts in the same way. A fourth woman sald sho felt sure the men were the same who had robbed her, but wouldn't identify them positively. Hoth prisoners plead- ed guilty, and Magistrate Campbell held them in $5,000 bail each to await the action of the Grand Jury Besides Mrs, Zeliner the complain ants were Mrs. Charles O'Hellly of No, 430 West One Hundred and Tenth j street, who had advertised her apart- jment to aublet and said the men got | 9250 of jewelry from her last Mon- day; Joseph Ronia, superintendent of avenue; Miss Mary A. Marsden of No, 607 West One Hundred and Twenty-second street, and Miss Oli- vette Falla of No. 504 West One IT dred and Forty-third street. Mra, BE. ‘A, Keith of No, 230 West One Hun- dred and Seventh street thought the men had robbed hey, too, though in her case the rolyery occurred last June 28, and she wasn't sure. All the complainants had advertised thelr apartinents to sublet and said to see them. the apart- men had called Ronia admitted the pat that be is an embalmer of No. , name he gave her was that of EB.) Zeliner. | the apartments at No. 126 Clermont] ¥ ) Cleveland Women Form Labor | Union and in Joy Pull Off Their Hats and Send Them Flying. CLEVELAND, May 14.—Women teachers of the public achovls of this ‘city are to form @ union and affiliate | with the Federation of Labor. This wan decided yesterday at a meeting of the Grade Teachers’ Club, which 800 Jattended. The vote was two to one in favor of the labor union, is a resuit of the fight with the Board of Education for higher wages, When the result of the vote was announced women cheered and many pulled off thelr new apring hats and threw them acrous the room. Much of the head- gear Was ruined. The union ts to be formed at once and a committee of three was appointed to arrange the detail The Bourd of Education hei ao meeting at the same time. The mem- bern agised that the teachers should have move pay, but they persisted in their claim that there was no money in the treasury to meet increased salaries. a PRIEST DIES ON A TRIP. Priests in the Archdiocese of New York heard yesterday with sorrow of the death in Rome of the Rev. Patrick ansinti dred and y Gilmartin had been at for five years. He yeare ol ears. ‘Two monthe ago he underw: ‘ation and aa Aoon recovere change o 2 for Rome, 1 physicians e. He left he day Mer. with i ‘al ‘inal "rariey” if Rom of the death. ‘STANTON, England, May 14.— Miss Gladya Ravenscroft, wome champion of the United States, and Mise Cectile Leitch won their matcher to-da: mi-final round of the Hrit h golf champlonship played her oj ment of the Rev, 1. Dono- hue where, the minister rays, ‘re la got $100 worth of jewelry, The Mine Ravenscroft’ Rat twas Mise the ah a Others all eald they waissed trinkets poueat by The action | Ph, Fed PICKLES—Crosse & Blackwell's... 2| LIMA BEANS—A.M.&C.—Green—Medium in size GIANIN| FACES _[SUFFRAGETES CAMP. WASSERMAN ONDOORSTERSOFTHO QF HOW HE GOT MURDER AT TRAL|, SME RWENTTEE cL N COURT . “Gen.” prenwncnd Goes to| Official Declared He Admitted] Carson for “Protection” and Lalla to Inspector Inspector Wiliam Killing His Teacher with Mrs. Fox to Lansdowne, Tale of Selling Lots a Wrench. in Japan. . Y LONDON, May 14—“Generai” Mra. Flora Drurimond, leader of the mili- ‘£04 tant suffragettes, early to-day pitch-| Joseph A. Wasserman, the (Gl HERRIE EY Ne To Oy ye A led her camp on the doorstep of Sit! policeman who is suing the ph vig written confession alleged to haveliaward Carson's residence im Home News Publishing Company Ser been made by Jean Glanint, telling |iaton Place and Informed the Ulster | $100,000 for libel, heard his name It In detail how he murdered his young | unionist leader that she as a mill-| with that of Inspector Williams of school teacher, TAda Tou Beecher, liane pad come to him as another! Lexow investigation fare whee was introduced at Gianini'a trial to-|miitant to neck hie protection from| Ernest P. Seelman summed up foe day by the prosecution through Jono | srreet, the publishing company before ®e=_ Nellis, @ deputy sheriff. The witness | srg, preme Court .Juatice Rrady in the firat told how the boy had described | noned to appear at the police court} Bronx to-day. Seelman had called ate the murder to him orally. His @tory | thig afternoon in connection with tha| tention to Wasserman's purchase OP? was then reduced to writing and, 88/ campaign of militancy, and as she|real estate in 1% to 198 whieh CRNRNG tevGep, wan he: Eetewel bad made up her mind not to appear | amounted to $19,000 and $15,000, None “ET went to achool to Lida Reecher|hefore the mai ate, ahe expected Fae hi " and had trouble with her and wanted |to be arrested and declared that ehe|f Waeserman's lank seounts, oe eve would remain on Sir Edward Car- beak aos ie neve the hotel ana |#0n's doorstep and appeal to him for|the former policeman nad explained) Iked Tag aeeeats With aw bas [En nek taa rate pase aa arrived | that he earned tho extrs money well Sort oe 2lbighedod ing diamonds, hag rel her late cust ay, inant yond the stone quarry. She had irs. Dacre-Fox, anot! or prominen: “tt t ia militant Suffragette who had you belleve that story,” shout been coming to see my folka about it Suffrage far. Sectesan to the jury, “heat also been summoned to appear at the po- achool, and was would have believed Inspector WI) them last night, Hams when he told the Lexow Come? a-coming up to 86) ticg court on @ charge of inciting and T told her they| women to commit crime appealed to lived up the hill, mittee he made bis money sell cor, there, on the left side of the road ner lota in J y lng When we got up| the Marquis of Landsdowne, Unionist hit her with a monkey wrench that 1| leader in the House of Lord I got out of my father’s barn, I had residence in Herkeley Squar hammered at the door for a long the wrench in my pocket when I went up. time and caused the assemblage of @ big crowd bofore she was arrested “after I had hit her about three times with the wrench 1 hit her with by the police. Jucre-Fox wan subsequently a knife several times to be sure to finish her. and then I took her over in released and immediately returned to Lord Landsdowne’s house and re- the lot. I dragged her by the foot. Then I went home and got there nowed her demand for sanctuary, about 7.90, Neither Mrs. Dacre-Fox nor “Gen- | eral” Drummond appeared at the} police court to answer the aum- “The knife I stabbed her with was one that belonged to my father, and T took it home and put it in the monees sent to them d the m: gistrate therefore issued warranta pantry drawer, I left the wrench somewhere near where T hit her. | for their arrest. ‘The police later arrested both Mre. Dacre-Fox and “General” Drum- mond, When I hit her firet she did not scream but moaned. Sh a thought {t was quite a ways and she did not see any house. “T was not afraid when I got home. I wae just as happy as I evor wan and didn’t think anything about It as I thought I had revenge. “I make this statement voluntarily aig Drummond had been sum- a other officers should come here and testify that he was an man with a good reputation, he has no reputation for us to ged,” ir, Heelman spoke scornfully of Me trict-Attorney Jerome, he had supported Wa z fight against Police Commie? Hingham, he wan compelled “e support the former policeman new. “Bingham stands on a pedestal fer above ree SS " added the » lawyer. MAN WHO JILTED HER Somers Was Guest of Bedoultis He Met at the World's | Fair in 1893, . and under no fear or threat and os nl ee ed the Belvedere, im knowing the same may be used s, . rom este to-day, was Fredertek. against me. Perogini Enticed the Victim to Somers, an American artist. on his” ¥ way to visit his home in Chicago for” tho first time in fifteen years, Fer the past six years he has lived ‘a company of Bedouins in the of Sahara. Mr. Somers is tanned almost binok and wears a terrific beard. hia sojourn In the desert ne waa | quest of a chief he met In Paris sevon_ years ago and had previously met in ‘The foregoing wan subscribed and sworn to before a notary. Nellls testified that the boy had said he had used both knife and wrench because “he wi sure and do a good job. In the trial of Mrs. Madeline Ferola fing the victim, he sald, according |yetore Supreme Court J-stice Vernon to the witness, he took hold of her ry Davie, in the Bronx, for the murder Uylald heed Penis Pagan wae nOlof Carmello Vansatrale on Dec. 29 of leave Gugsrcprinisi*)) Glanial eeta| ate Tent: tue oneinal witnewsto-2sy| % wan Salvatore Perogini, who t= under thee os oe heliniedSiend tid Indictment for complicity with the, 1 woman in the munier. ane ray added that he haa |enuiced Vanestrale to the Park avenue Kaaethecdes bridge, where she stabbed him to death alept soundly after returning to the big knife, breaking off the blade house. When the deputy asked him tnd ita WU te ee bode. why he had left town the next morn- aitneah’ Wen, woeee: by Men fay he Dee te nem eae een remane Force's’ attorney whether he shad ene been promised immunity by the Dis- John F. McIntyre, counsel fog the |trict-Attorney for going on the defense, endeavored to & stand. Through an interpreter he fession excluded on thi round thet conta that he hed. Perogint wwore that on the night of the murder he was on the bridge and saw Vanestrale, who was en- waged to be married to Mra. Ferol: Ambush Where Mrs. Ferola Stabbed Him. the boy constitutional rights. The ruled the objection and received the document. ARE MUSICIANS CRANKS? Juctice Page Saye Their Tempera- ment Makes Them Erratic. Mrs. Gertrude Parke Stephens, who gave up choir singing to marry her brother-in-law, Percy Rector stephens, also a choir ainger, made Db. peal before Justice Page ot Court to-day in an effort to compel her husband to more than $b & week alimony out o ie. a'month shi carne she proceeded’ far Cow MMurical people are granke that my experience siti 1 fully underatand the | storereimeata of you Fier ee bon of sensitive 0" dinpoaltiona® ponitions.< aaid, at sight ot Madeline, fates Mjon't kill me Vanestrale eald, according to the witness. Then she plunged the knife into him. What do you See? A mechanism whose 5 detail proclaims practical sim- plicity. All unnecessary parts. are eliminated and the player ag. tion is as responsive as a fines Polk Replaces MeCocey Man. Corporation Counsel Polk announced two changes in his department yester- day. Edward Riegelman, who, at 0,000 @ year, has been tm charge of the Bu- Brooklyn 2 mo sees. 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