Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HUL HINGE SRI ‘Becky Edelsan’s Demands for “)> “Eats” Ave Louder Than, . the Others’. ‘ i £ HOSE, FOR INVADERS. It's “All Ready for Turning on{ y Water if They Appear in Tarrytown. ra t , t "} out to show the authorities that they had the nerve to stand a huger strike all joined in a pitiful yell for “ea “to-day. Skipping one meal.was hi senough, but when breakfast Tarrytown caved in. ehrilied Plained eaten las “rotten.” angry and he gave the woman acolding. Becky {5 Mahle to Plains shortly , New York will he “ther latest violence. loudest for food and ex- her peace bond in In the meanwhile the fire hose has i theen stretcha:l through the streets of soon as Berkman’s Abbott's Socialpst begin to make their Sight for “free Speech” the water will begtn to shoot “and there will be a grand washing down of the I won't Wash members. ‘Tarrytown and a Reds and Leon: “Therv, are already reports of deser- tre/.tment. i WwW. W. MEMBER HIT BY AN AUTOMOBILE, Six I. W. W. members looking for @ chance to further wake up the Sleepy Hollaw section were tramping ‘to-day between Hastings-on-the-Hud- eon and Tarrytown when one of their number was struck by an automobile and seriously injured. He gave his name as Alfred Werner and sald that he was from Chicago. He was taken to the Dobbs Ferry Hospital. The } automobile was driven by Miss I. T. Moare of Scarborough, who reported “the accident to the police at Hastings- “m-the-Hudson. “Big Dave” Sullivan, a husky Cor- nell graduate, and Francesco De Rosa, who were arrested Sunday, were arraigned yesterday before Jus- tice Morehouse in “John D.'s town.” the peuitentiary, whereupon yelled, “This is worse than Rusi ‘The Gourt didn't care, and a! heartag the charge against Sullivan wav hin thirty days in the peniten- ie Harry Wilkes, sometimes Town as Joe Vellocello, the third nan arrested Sunday, quickly waived ‘examination and was held for the @jrand Jury. ‘After the way you soaked those euther fellows,” he expl: 4, “IE don't Want to be tried here.” Leonard Abbott was refused a per- mit to hold a meeting in Tarrytown Saturday, and eaid there would be @ large gathering of Free Speech men om that day notwithstanding. Alex- wander Berkman said they were going ‘to “carry the war into Tarrytown.” ‘They have been offered the use of a ‘ch in North Tarrytown. But ssioner Hopkins said: vk me, there'll be no » gutherings in Tarry- PAINFUL RASH ON FACE AND HEAD ‘Started In Small Pimples, Very si Could Not Sleep. Hair Fell Out. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured in Six Weeks, 180 Elm St., Newark, N. J.—"My baby | ed» rash on his head and face, It started to ymoall pimples, was very itching and all over his head when be NY scratched it, Then 1 was very painful. He could not sleep at night. His hair started to fall out gradually, The trouble AZ anneyed him very much Cuticura Soap and Ointment joticed an improvement right away. ‘he itching and burning soon stopped and EE 3 (Gigued) Mrs. Emma Scholl, and a skin soap why [ roughness, soothe sensitive conditions, and promote skin and Buch ® soap, com- z ‘The sixteen I, W. W. prisoners in the fail at White Plains who started time ie the disturbera of the peace of Becky Edelson rward that ahe had not Hight because the fare was This made Sheriff Doyle leave White alled in because of tlory; because of fear of this humane De Rosa was given three months in ‘ext e | ras his quick retort. |BUT WE ARE SAVED BY CLEAN iv ts ’ PM mericots Are Sla ae ves ENDSTHELW.W. | Jt Eacroaches on Liberty, Says Dr. Brandes | | '§ THOUGHT OF Modern “Instrument of Torture” Puts Us at Beck and Call of Any One, Declares Danish’ Critic— None Is Free, None Can Escape—He Lauds Clean Mind and Chivalry of Men and Beauty of Women. { By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. - Of telephones, - sleeping cars, American chivalry, the Chicago stock yards, woman suffrage—‘of shoes and ships and sealing wax and cabbages and kings"— Dr. Georg Brandes, probably the greatest living literary oritic, discoursed with right good will when I called on him yesterday at the Hotel Astor. From his home in the little country of Denmark Dr. Brandes has sent out studies of Shakespeare, of Ibsen, of Nietzsche, which have been accepted as final autbority by scho! all over the worlk For years American universities and men of letters have besought him to visit us, but {t was only two weeks ago that he landed in New York for the first time in his life, He started directly on a tour of the Middle West, from which he has just returned to give his single lecture in this city and to keep engagements at several Eastern colleges. A friend and contemporary of Ibsen, Dr. Brandes is well along in years. But there is a tremendous vitality in his short, stocky frame and ruggedly hewn face. Brushed back from his forehead is a mane of thick, {ron-gray hair, and his eyes, the color of blue-gray northern seas, gleam from under heavy brows. He smiles broadly and easily, and his fluent, if somewhat guttural, English rises and falls in emphatic cadences. Finally, ripe scholar that h he talks with unaffected, unashamed fnterest of the habits and ideas of everyday American mon and women as he has observed them in his panoramic fortnight. As he sailed into New York Harbor fome one asked him what he thought of the statue of the Goddess of Lib- y. out danger or insult. No more than other women have they the physical strength to protect themeeives, and yet they are tected by the respect from your men have the true chivalry.” CHIVALRY OF THE AMERICAN MEN AIDS WOMEN. “And it is different abroad?" questioned. “Ie that all the liberty you have?” FINDS AMERICANS SLAVES OF THE TELEPHONE. “Do you find that we have other Nberty and enough of it?” I put the strug and the big head was’ thrust juddenly forward. “Your liberty? What is i that you call your liberty?” he half growled. “1 think you have less liberty in America than we have in Eu- rope—less personal, individual ; Killed herself in Paris because she could not walk through the streets alone, as circumstances forced hor to do, without being insulted by men. She was used to your American re- spect for wo "I believe remarkable achteve- ments of you are due to th’ supporting women 7 underlying attitude ,of respect from the men, Suppose, in Paris, an attractive, well-dressed girl {s suddenly flung on the world alone and forced to earn her own iliving, Naturally she tries first to curse a room where she imay live. house after house the landlady | \* t 8 instrument of torture that ever existed, The mediaeval rack and thumbscrews were playthings compared to it. And from it one can never get away! | “I sit here talking to you in this cool corner of the restaurant. Some- | where out there the telephone bell rings, and a peraon demands to speak with me, I must get up and answer) him, and if he called at any hour of; the nigh! it would be the same, Am} I free? No!” “But surely you have telephones abroad,” I ventured. “Never in my home,” |Brandes's jaws set firmly. | never! | “Another way in which you axe not | tree is that you are never permitted | |to be alone. How can you think? But | |does any American think before he |speaks? I go into a big business ex- \tablishment, and there I seo twenty, thirty, fifty men working in their} shirtsleeves and not even 4 glass par- tition between them. They write, they ‘AS PROOF. ;compute, they occupy their braing,| «your woman suffrage movement is and yet any one may interrupt any), proof of the esteem in which women one of them at ‘any time. At will say to herself, if not to the girl, ‘No, { won't take her. She can't be respectable, since eho is so pretty and without a home.” “There is the poor girl handicapped at tho very start. Now, in New York she would have no such trouble?” | queried Dr. Brandes. 1 promptly assured him that she "| wouldn't, and he continued, earnestly: ii “Here in America you put the most favorable construction on the actions of a girl or woman. You see a man with his arm around her in the park and you smile and say, ‘They court—they are fiances.’ Abroad the woman is so often placed under sus- picion. are held, The women do not have to or destroy, In sovera! States MINDS. ave the vote, and, little by tt tle, will have it in al'. There ts nett | Even on the railroad trains, in the icerDVEr hiDn thee mand wakes \! jaleeping cars, one cannot be alone eae. ereun ee SAI Abroad I buy my first class passage |and I have my compartment to my- |self—my little travelling home. But = here you have thirty or forty men) WELL 6 | and women sleeping in the same car. ad {One ris n the morning and goes half-dressed to wash one's face and perhaps must pass close by a beau- | tiful lady whose tollet is also unfin- ished, | “But you have clean minda here | America,” Dr, Brandes acknowledged |" “That is what saves | most beautiful in tie world,” ROOMED WOMEN br. i HAIR GROWTHS RADO gem rraee| “One of the features of Ameri- can life which has aroused my satonishment and admiration is the public safety accorded your wemen. They can ge anywhere In your etreete at any time with: ran F100 size bottle today. Tey it ‘do every fe u AND NOTHING WhO Brandes faithfully ever a foreigner say anything el “Your men—they have all passed | through the barber shop. what makes them look so young. But they du not dye Frenchmen.” yards?” ; has been called our mania for rush?" slow than other countries. Your por tal service is slower, and it takes me longer to get my trunks.” ropeans who say Bothing but mone; 2 which is rich In "Venice and Flor art cities of the I first of all great centres for the mer- have seen here ts t seum, with its plow painters, rope 8: cluded, warningly. weakness. You must live, but, above | QUOTES SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT ||! Hy Long “KAYSER” Silk Gloves 75c to $2.00 : of-the Telephone; . on — | yyunything else? || EXTRA! NEW DISEASE! NOW WHAT COULD IT BE BUT THE ‘TANGO FOOT?’ BERLIN, Juno 2.—Dr, Boehme of this city announces that ho has discovered a new discase, which he describes in a medical peri- odical under the name of the “tango foot.” Dr. Boehme says the disease is due to the extraordinary move- ments of the foot and ankle in ex- ecuting the tango, maxixe and other new dances. Paina which resemble rleumutism develop in the calf of the leg, the shin and the ankle snd increase until they often become agonizing. That is their hair, like “You visited the Chicago stock- “The Chica: to me the ho Revolution,” elnetly, “Have you been annoyed by what | | \ tockyards recall the French marked euc- | | "On the contrary, I find you more “And do you agree with those Ku- at wo care for 1 queried final- | | } ~ TRIED TO WRECK FLYER. Ties Fastened té Rails aud Youth le hed Up. “hart 9 the flower 0! civilization ho replied, the greatost Issance, were chants. I believe that Amorica ts ale question eae deca deine ioe} nue? exclaimed Dr, Brandes. | ready pos « sonse of Peaute BINGHAMT Noes 9 . The broad. eboniter ; |“Not so long ago an American girl| One of the HAE 50) SAK EHS ing things 1) Charged with a Mu- | Erie’ i flyer at William hicago cca Viaduct last “You Americans mustn't care if you're money-mad," ho “To \be forever hinking of the opinion of others is develop, be yourselves!" Ni {police claim Sutton hase: ‘ ‘A disastrous wreck Was averted wh the crew of-a track "pusher" foul pile of ties fastened with fish plat {he vaite." ‘They were removed barely | time. to fo More pairs ot Silk Gloves are sold than all cthers —because “KAYSER” Silk Gloves wear better, fit better and hold their shape better than any other silk glove in the world, yet they cost no more than the ordinary kind. The assurance of absolute satisfac. tion is worth the pains of insisting on “KAYSER” Silk Gloves, A guarantee ticket with every pair that the tips outwear the gloves. Short “KAYSER” Silk Gloves 50c to 1.25 AT ALL STORES FIND LEPER EARLY {THREAD TRES IN CAPITAL HOME | DISSOLVED BY OF MEPESDENT) FEDERAL Famous Patient Turns Up in| Gigantic Combination Is De- Hotel in Washington and clared to Be Monopoly in Telephones Reporters, Restraint of Trade. | WASHINGTON, June %2—John R.| WASHINGTON, June % — The Earty, who for the last five years haa | “Thread Trust” has been adjudged a! made many enforced journeys about , combiration in restraint of trade ana! the country in box cara and has been | ordered dissolved by the United tates) held under quarantine in many cities | District Court of New Jersey, at Tren- | while medical experts have disagreed | ton. according to announcement made on whether he is « leper, turned up in |5¥ the Department of Justice here to- Washington again to-day, and, be- | day. |fore his identity was discovered, took} The decree was agreed upon by the NOSTRILS f » | “ quarters at a fashionable uptown Government and the defendants and) hotel, the home of Vice-Preatdent | ##nctioned by the oourt. ] You rils catch is Marshall and others prominent in| 7h® decree ts directed to the Amor-| and aa tee are in phe Capital life. lcan Throad Company, the thread are clo Barly was not discovered until af- | agency, the Spool Cotton Company, J. a in ree tor he had telephoned to a newspaper! ® p, Coats, Ltd, the Clark Thread Pus erkation pic ‘The discharge is Tash of tbe. detentgnt te donee #0 tie ing owt any enderetandingn corperstions, | | ' | anne ARE YOUR: catarrh. charge. jasking for @ reporter to 11 jew | “Mr. Westwood.” ‘The paper | COMPANY, the Clark Mile-Ena Spool man at once recognized the noted Cotton Company, George A. Clark & patient and Informed the authorities, ! Bro, J. & P. Coate (Rhode Island) who took Early back to his old place | ing, James Chadwick & Co., BEn.-| choked-up nostrils causes of isolation on the city limits. gliish Sewing Cotton Company, Jonas| them in any way you can. The fashtonabie hotel and its| Brook & Bros. Ltd., and their oMcers| that you can draw the a suasts were thrown into a state of /ang directors, bad Be grid ye commotion, Judge John Relistab, handing down | tag “uncate practices and ‘The alleged leper escaped May 18|the decision, declared that “the de- ‘odor. from the Diamond Head quarantine | fendants, as a group, have entered station near Port Townsend, Wash: | into a combination to restrain tht in- ington, and was traced to Victoria, |‘ terstate and foreign trade and com. | per 1, C, where cMeors lost track of merce of the United States in do- him, mestic and manufacturers’ sowing | the natural way. The | fond ‘noless."“in, another ai ‘dineaves. ot LAMBERT DIAMONDSI-< Bought and Sold : By Methods That Keep Prices Down “Youcan’t goto anentertainment here (in Washington) without being blinded by the glitter of Diamonds,” says Con- ssman Prouty of Iowa. The fondness or Diamonds is increasing all over the land. It is gratified at moderate expense at Lamberts, as witness the low prices here quoted for Solitaire Diamond En- gagement Rings, Others from $10.00 to $1,500.00. Spot cash purchases aud all direct importa- tions. No middlemen to pay. Hand made mountings of solid 14-karat gold, & 18-karat gold or platinum. Store and factory expenses at the lowest level consistent with good service. A type of thousayds of Lambert Solid Gold Seamless Wedding Rings, on which - the profit is indirect. We do not make harvest pooch money on any purchase, but we §.25up make two friends with every sale. All shapes, styles, widths and thicknesses. Engraving Free. Diamonds remounted and cleaned. ‘Séttings strengthened, LAMBERT BROTHERS Third Ave., Cor. 58th Street Store Open Daily Until 6. Saturday Nights Until 10 IOC Beverages of Established Purity Just a few selections, which, in point of quality and price, are typical of the immense Macy stock. Macy's 01 ©, eS... weiter, $1.14 per pottle, ark bdo bee Wattles sun, Jeres do In LI ireva, ‘pneumonias Nostrits ©) Y foo © 4 4 pean lant age a thy jaderculoete, ee Fane neon ln ied a ‘E'gese ry rm rien See ot Oe “er 8 Treatments PR ie nage ioe Few je. prioe, $2°1 Bale price, 1,08 pe The Celebrated Cow|r: Macy's T Burn and Nothing te mare fortum Old Meilan per gallon; 4 rposee rt ah | Sipp’s Foot YE