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AMONG PRISONER UNIT, MUTA Ev0S Moves to Blackwell’s Island { and Will Listen to Griev- J*, pnces of the Men. THE WARDEN IS BLAMED. He, in Turn, Predicts a Whole- f¥ | sale Jail Delivery at (&#!. Any, Time. ' @emmiastoner of Correction Kath- frine B, Davia made good to-day her promise to make her headquarters on Chaciowell’s Intand until order ts per- guanentty restored in the penitentiary. ‘Uattl midnight last night she re- tristned tn the office of Werden Hayes Hi 3 i 5 i ea 43 | i ss ‘i | i gk i i though they had been put in that section by their own fault. GAID MEN WERE KNOCKED DOWN FOR ASKING WATER, A West Indian negro read to Miss Davis a diary he had kept. Among other things he told of seeing two men knocked down by keepers for asking for a drink of water. could not tell the names of the pris- oners or the keepers. Miss Davis ordered that 125 more prisoners be put on regular rations. There are only 560 under bread-and- r discipline now. Some amuse- ment was caused when the last group of eighteen delegates was mustered to go before the Commissioner by a delegate who eluded the guards and made for the mess hall and a square meal. He had been on bread and water. For fear of starting a new outbreak he was not recalled and another delegate was eelected to take his place. The Commissioner com- mented on criticiam of her actions in getting into close touch with the pris- oners, saying that neither yesterday nor to-day had she heard a profane ‘word or an insult from the convicts. , Bhe expressed her grief and disap- pointment over Dr, Baxter, the former prison physician, who was brought in —!'e she was examining delegates to penitentiary sentence of one Your before serving his Sing Sing term, She had trusted the doctor im- plicttly and it was a shock to her to find him at the head of the cocaine peddting conspiracy. ‘The prisoners were comparatively quiet to-day. Cheers mingled with the hissing and jeering when Com- miasioner Davis arrived. The keepers reported complete quiet last night. {The prisoners were notified that Mins | Davis would hear any one, outside of the delegates, who asked for a hear- ing. “One trouble here,” Warden Hi to an Evening World reporter to- day, “is that a weak prison makes for weak discipline and encourages dis- order. I could have put en hun- dred men to work yesterday, in spite of thelr unruly temper and ugly readt- mess to start trouble, if I could have spared the keepers to guard them in the shops. But the cells are so weak that it is necessary to keep guards in the aisle constantly.” ‘The Warden was referring to the fact, known to all observers of the prison, that the cell locks are filmsy and that two men quartered in the game cell could batter down the door in a few moments with the fifteen- pound cell buckets. “If I had thirty-five more keepers,” he continued, “I could get along with things as they are. But when the men are in close confinement I have to keep guards in the corridors every minute to prevent a general jail de- Hvery. Sing Sing, bad as it is in many respects, at least has this ad- vantage of us. When the cells are locked up for the night the guards could go home und go to bed without any fear that a single man might eecape. Warden showed the report celia trom which the locks hai ‘The two eee ee Vi oe pennant with tools MISS DAVIS TOLVE| What Right Has a Woman to Be Jealous? Is She Justified in Spying on Husband? «The Wife Oft: Int a re ad @ se WAS A SENSE OF HUMOR Wise WiP@ STANDS IN THE ROUND AND SMILES Stn TMGNT Kate Jorda «Jealousy Is a Cheap and Vulgar Defect of Char- acter, Like a Bad Temper or Avarice or Any Fault With Which a Person May Be Born.” “(In Most Natures All the Manifestations of Jealousy Are Dishonest and Petty, Even the Crimes of Jealousy Are Usually Cheap Dramatics.” By Marguerite Mooere Marshall. ‘What right hes @ woman to be jealous? “Love is strong as death; jealousy as cruel as the grave,” we read in the Song of Solomon. The super-wise King might have noted that jealousy IS @ grave—the grave of love. One would have more patience with the jealous woman if she were ever a success. But she hasn't even that pragmatic justification. The measure of her effort fe the measure of her futility. The harder she works to keep her husband, with prying and spying and crying, the further he recedes from her. With every tug of the chain he pulls away. A woman is extraordinarily keen on martyrdom, de to say the least, if she marries a man with any other 4 idea than that of trusting him completely. One cannot be happy when one is busy being suspicious. And though {t is perfectly true that the woman who trusts her husband may be forced to realize that he is unworthy, I doubt if even in that crisis she has as many hours of agony as the woman whose life {s one long-drawn-out, unconfirmed jealous fear. ‘The wife with whom suspicion Is a settled policy {s unhappy in exactly| & jeded Mrs. Vermilye, dryly. “It ien’t that sh one bundred cases out of one bun-| Aitving ‘eo intensely, o that an dred. The wife who trusts bas better draw sustenance from than a fighting chance of bappiness. @ holds Sah in order that Elementary arithmetic would seem to| she may no’ Cy [giles he ine: show which of the two courses ls the] Fevtiqigue’ physically: then many more expedient. men.” CAN OVERCOME TENDENCY) |"! hea one yesterday.” vot u' no use TOWARD JEALOUBY. for her husband, ‘Their ‘children That even the woman with a natural tendency toward jealousy can over- come it is the conviction of Mrs. Kate Jordan Vermilye, who as “Kate Jordan” is known as the author of “The Creeping Tides,” a novel of Greenwich Village, and who has writ- ten interesting studies of married life were grown up and fi hi ovat ‘she’ olung tothe man, Intensely disliked, idn’t want to give up ir and her servants.’ OF WOMAN THAT GROWING SCARCE, Mrs. Vermilye nodded and her red for many magazines. lige curled in contarnbt: “One at) “Jealousy is a defect of char- Aine women © that,” she sald, acter,” she observed, “and @ par- Pitti heaven, they're growing ticularly cheap and vulgar fect. arice or any fault with which a person may be born but which he can learn to control. Jealousy is often to be seen in email chil- dren, and their parents should begin ly to teach them to fight against it, to be large minded.” We spoke of the Freeport case, which aroused all this discussion of the rights and wrongs of jealousy. Mrs. Edwin Carman is now in jail on the charge of murdering Mrs. Louise Bailey in Dr. Carman's office last week, It is an admitted fact that Mrs. Carman was violently jealous of her husband, and that she had a dic- tograph installed so that she thight Msten to his private conversations with women in bis office. This being aff age of mechanical invention, only an old fashioned spy needs to apply ear to keyhole. “In most natures all the mani- festations of jealousy are dishonest “The exacting wife is one of the great causes of unhappy marriages. know of a woman whose husband nourishes a perfectly innocent desire to dine at his club once a week. Therefore his wife has exacted a Promise that he will never do this thing. He hates tears and scenes and #0 he yields, But how much love and respect can a man have for a woman who makes such unfair demands? the Jealous, suspicious instances urns “Al wife in man: into reality the fear, | know of hard workin, that his wife “How can @ woman conquer jeal- ousy?” T asked. SENSE OF HUMOR A FACTOR IN CONQUERING JEALOUSY. and petty," commented Mrs. Ver-| , milye. ‘There's nothing large and shinee ‘Sng sews, loaportant flerce and spirited about it. Even the| humor,” * Warovty A SIG © ‘ an CHEAP DRAMATIC fh ' F, crimes of jealousy are usually cheap dramatics. Yet there are many such crimes. In search for material for a short story I once visited the State rison in Connecticut. There were forty-two murderers there, thirty men and twelve women, All the men had killed their wives and all the women had killed their husbands, In @ considerable number of instances jealousy was the motive, “There is only one sort of jealousy for which anything may be said. Ifa woman of strong nature, who lover her husband and believes he loves her, learns that his bestowed elsewher he may mentarily overwhelmed in a wave tremendous envy of this other won- derful woman who is ao much haj pier than rself. is really strong, however, she pulis herseit out of her suffering, and she doesn't try to engulf elther her husband or the other woman,’ “Unfortunately, few woren are as generous and strong as that,” I re- marked. “The ordinary type of jealous | plasza of a summer hotel. the man exchanged casual g nings. She was scarcely out of hear- ing when the wife turned on the man, “Why did you say good evening to her that way” was the savage de- d, ‘What way? asked the man. * the wife fairly scene with a sense of humor,” the novelist added, as we laughed to- wether, “Add to a sense of humor a sense of the futility of Jealousy and the cure should he complete,” finished Mrs. Vermilye, —_——-. TRANSFER DESIGNS FRER, A set of ten embroidery designs ready to transfer, Free for the coupon to be found In Second News Section of to- Morrow's Sunday W. Order trom newedealer in advance, _ 8 Fifth Article of a Series NINE BALLOONS IN RACE |“L” TRAINS COLLIDE TOGET APLACE IN THE| WHEN BRAKES FAIL: INTRNATONAL FUT] THRE ARE INURE Start From St. Louis and Win- ner Will Be Third American Entrant for Cup Trophy. ST. LOUIB, July 11.—Nine balloons will sail from bere late this after- noon in the national elimination race to determine the third American en- trant for the international race that will start from Kansas City next October, The international race for the James Gordon Bennett Cup and each competing country is entitled to three entrants, The first two American entrants are the men who got first and second Place in the last international race— R. H, Upson of Akron, O. and H, E. Honeywell of St. Louis. The third entrant will be the aeronaut who makes the longest fight in en air ne In the race to-day. Specially prepared gas is to be pumped into the balloons. Each bal- loon has a capacity of 80,000 cuble feet and the aeronauts will sail equipped for a long flight. The record for American flights was made in 1910 by Allen R. Hawley, who flew from St. Louis to Lake Tchoto- gama, Que., a distance of 1,172.9 miles. ‘The world’s record was made by Mau- rice Renaims of France in the inter- national race of 1912. He flew 1,854 miles. ‘The order in which the balloons will sail was determined by lot yesterday afternoon, the coveted last place going to the balloon Goodyear, to be piloted by R. A. D. Preston of Akron, O, Following is the order in which the bags will be released at intervala of five minutes, the first one starting at 5 o'clock: Hoosier, pilot, Warren Rasor, Brookville, O.; aide, Herbert Rasor, son of pilot. America TIL, pilot, Dr. Jerome Kingsbury, New York; aide, Clarence Wynne, Philadelphia San Francisco 1915, pilot, F. 8. Cole, St. Louis; aide, R. F Emerson, Springfield, Mo. Uncle Sam, pilot, Paul loch, St. Louis; aide, Trefts, St. Louts, Miss Sofia, pilot, William Assmann, St, Louls; no alde Aero Club of St. J. MeCul- Willam H. Louis, pilot, John Rerry, St. Louis; alde, Albert Von Hoffman Jr., St. Louis. Kansas City TIL, pilot, John Watts, Kansas City; alde, W. F. Comstock, Kansas City. Pennsylvanta, pilot, Arthur T. Ath. erholt, Philadelphia; alde, Philip Sharples, Philadelphia Goodyear, pilot, R. A. D, Preston, Akron. O.; aide, M. D. Tremelin, Akron, 0. Child Burned hy Bonfire, Tannin Bressler, three years old, of No, 2000 Lenn street, Brooklyn, i# In St Mary's Hospital as the result of burns recelved this morning from a bonfire started by children tn front of her home Leo Andonenea threw his coat about pod byt she was badly burned about the City Line Train Crashes Into Rear of Brighton Beach Cars From Coney. When the motorman of a City Line “L" train, inbound from East New York shortly after 1 o'clock this morning, threw on the brakes as his train approached the City Hall sta- tion in Brooklyn, the brakes failed to work and the train tore ite way Into the rear platform of a Brighton Beach train of the B, R. T., standing in the station. A policeman who dashed up from Myrtle avenue was told a score had been hurt. He telephoned for ambu- lances and began to round up the in- jured. He succeeded in finding but three, however, who needed medical attention, These were Mise Lizzie Jones of No, 282 Lexington avenue, Brooklyn, who fainted in the crash; Charles Koppel of No. 234 DuiMeld street, who was cut om the head, and Thomas McInerney of No. 685 Sixty-sixth street, Brooklyn, who was similarly Injured, They were treated by am- bulance surgeons and sent home. All of the injured were passengers on the Brighton Beach train. The rear platform of the Brighton train, which was returning from Coney Island, was demolished, and the front platform of the City Line train was crushed inward. Traffic was blocked an hour. GIVES BAIL FOR GIRL WITH INVALID MOTHER Then Steamship Man Puts Miss Van Houten in Automobile and Sends Her to Anxious Parent. Eben E, Olcott, Prosident of the Hudson River Day Line, called on Judge Swann of General Sessions in chambers to-day and told him that he had read the pitiful story of Cath- erine Van Houten, bookkesper for Samuel! Bloomenfield, cloak manufac- turer, at No. 201 Wooster street, who confessed she had stolen about $1,500 in two years to provide medical at- tendance and proper food for her mother, who is elghty years old and bedridden Mr. Olcott wanted to know if he might provide the 500 bail in which the girl was held last Wednesday in the Jefferson Market Police Court to await the action of the Grand Jury ‘Told that he might furnish bail, Olcott gave his residence in West si enty-fifth street as surety, and then went to the Tombs, where he notified iss Van Houten that she was free ‘The young woman almost broke down Mr. Olcott, who had provided an au- tomobile to carry the girl to her hom in North Hackensack, No J., hurried her off to her mother Mr. Oleott said he had been deeply moved by the story of the girl's plight, nud, although he had never hefore heard of her or her mot waa anx- fous to bring them together again aly for the short time before the Jury considese Mies Von Hou- aa | MOTHER AN “THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 11, 1914. BAD TOOTH LEADS |STARVE QUT LOW DIVES | WITH STEEL TO THE DEATH OF MELVILLE INGALLS Financier Had Been Sick Some Time, but Shock of Treatment for Molar Proves Fatal. HOT SPRINGS, Va., July 11—Moel- ville #. Ingalls, financier and ratl- road man, died here early to-day of heart failure. Mr. Ingalls had been at his summer home here for some time, Members of the family and friends say he had been gradually de- clining for months, but bie illness had been more marked during the last fow weeks. Three days ago he suffered from an ulcerated tooth and the shock of treatment was fatal. He became un- conscious soon afterward and was only roused once or twice before be died. Ono of his sons, Melville E. Ingalls jr, summoned hurriedly from New York, arrived at the death- bed and was recognized by his father once during the last hours. Mrs. | Ingalls, the widow, and a daughter, Miss Gladys Ingalls, also were at the | bedside when death came | ‘Phe body will be taken to Cincin- nati to-morrow night on a special train and the funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock P. M, Monday at the Unitarian Church there. Burial will be in the family plot in Cin- cinnati. Melville E. Ingalls was one of the big railroad men of the country who believed that Wall atreet has had too much to do with railroad manage- ment. He never hesitated te tell Wail street that. He was never backward about telling other railroad mon that he believed in putting employees ‘on a profit sharing basis with employers tn all industries, He retired from active business in 1912, after tour of the world, Be- ides being Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Big Four tn 1912 he was President of the Merchants’ Na- tional Bank in Cincinnatl. He got into the ratiroad business as a lawyer in 1870 when he was made receiver of @ road, —— CLARENCE MACKAY FLEES BEFORE SNAP-SHOOTERS Battery of Photographers Drives Him to Cabin With His Children as Olympic Sails, A merry and fashionable crowd went away this morning on the White Star liner Olympic, and an even big- wer crowd was at the pier to witness the departure of the big steamer. A striking feature of the ling wae the number of children among the passengers. Of the 600 in the first cabin at least 160 were children. Among those who satled waa Clar- ence H. Mackay. His daughters, Misses Catherine and Ellin, and son, John W., accompanied him. Mr. Mackay said he was going to Nor- mandy for two mont then to Edinburgh for 4 few weeks, returning here in time for the children to gu back to 001, Mr. M ay, for the first time in many seasons, consented to have himself and the children photo- graphed. Barely had the newspaper men got them in range of their cam- eras on the upper deck when around the quartet swarmed a small army of free-lance photographers, climbing on top of and falling over one an- other in their wild efforts to get snap at the cable magnate, M Mackay gathered hia children to him and fled to his cat Sir Courtenay Bennett, British |Consul-General at this port, and Lady | Bennett were also among those wha sailed. The Olympic carried im all 1,550 passengers. ‘SEX TEACHING BARRED THE WAY TO RID CONEY OF THEM, SAYS WOODS Police Head Reported Against All-Night Licenses to Mayor Early in Season. Police Commissioner Arthur Woods explained to-day the part he had in the decision of Mayor Mitohel that the Excise Inw must be atrictly en- forced at Coney Island and that no all-night licenses would be issued to restaurants there, “At the beginning of the season,” said the Commissioner, “I asked Deputy Comminaioner Godley and In- Spector Murphy to look into con- ditions there, interview the keepers of reputable restnarante and amuse- ment resorts and make @ report. That report was submitted to the Mayor, and the recommendations in it are embodied in his announcement.” The Commissioner said there are a number of disreputnble places on Coney Island tucked away in the side streets. It has been the custom of disorderly persons, men and women, to go to Coney Island after the saloons of Manhattan and Brook- lyn proper have closed, The patron- age of these dives by these people ts what makes them profitable, he sald, as they cannot exist on the patronage of decent citizens such as those who crowd the tsland in hot weather in ordinary waking hours. ‘To wipe out the dives and make the island cleaner and more enjoyable for the sort of persons for whose amuse- ment and rest it is meant, the simp- lest method, Mr. Woods said, was to cut off their revenue, A raid of the disorderly saloons would give only temporary results. By starving them. out they will be made to quit busl- neas for good and all. The advisabil- ity of issuing a few all-night licenses to reputable restaurant keepers was discussed, but the investigators learned that the type of men to whom the Mayor was willing to issuo Heenses did not want the sort of patrons which would be forced on them if the “dumps” were cloned. BERNARD SHAW'S IDEAS, TORULE LIFE OF BABY, KIN OF LONGFELLOW omaha Mrs. Edmund T. Dana to Bring Up Her Boy Just Bom After Author’s Plans, (Apecial to The Evening World.) BOSTON, July 11,—The stork has presented Mr. and Mra, Edmund T. Dana withea~ son, and, although the newcomer is a great-grandson of tho poet Longfellow, he has been named Shaw Dana, after the English satirist and Socialist, George Bernard Shaw. In addition to naming her first-born after Mr. Shaw, Mrs. Dana intonds to do the author further honor by bring- ing up her son according to the satir- jat’s ideas. Mr. Shaw's notions were the other day made public through an essay on “Parents and Children” as @ preface to his play “Moesalliance.” Here are some of the novel ideas irs. Dana has adopted by naming her boy Shaw Dana: “Children are nulsances.” ‘The family is a humbug.” “The evidence shows it is easier to love the company of a dog than of a common-place child between the age of six and the beginnings of controlled maturity.” “If you compel an adult and a child to live in one another's company IN NEWARK SCHOOLS State Board of Education Members, Meeting in Trenton, Vote It Down. TRENTON, N. J., July 11 =A lution to permit the principal of the Newark Normal School to establish }a course of lectur sex hygiene at the next session developed « lively | discussion and much opposition at | the meeting of the State Board of | Kducation here to-day ‘fea by @ vote of five | Melvin A. Rice of Red Hank Intro- \duced the resolution in reporting for the advisory committee of the | Mr reso- and was de- Murray ared tion was “perilously | education, and in mental to the m | girls, |” Commissioner of Fdur stated that both from a teacher and on 5 (doubtful of the struction dec sex near > D GIRL IN BAY, sip on F and Rescued Mrs. Mars ald, and her deaghter Bt #lipn house an bins this afternoon, Several into the Water afier then Otto Frank of No. 4) Wilnon avenur torla, who succeeded in getting the woman and girl to shore They were treated by an ambulance surgeon from either the adult or the child will be miserable.” “Go and see what the baby ts doing and tell him he must'nt is the last word of the nursery.” Both father and mother of the Dana baby are known as followers of Ber- nard Shaw. <> HEARING ON BAD B. R. T. SERVICE COMES JULY 24 Puhiic Order on Complaint of Bed- ford Section. ervice Commission Makes Tha Public Service Commission, vot- ing on a protest signed by a large number of people living along the line of the Brighton Beach elevated railroad and transmitted by William G. Halpin, Secretary of the Bedford Heights Hoard of Trade, has called a hearing for July 24 plainants assert that and t some trains d mak the iInadequat reg The Public Service Commission ha ered the New ¥ Consolidated ud Company, npany of all elevated railroad tr Hrookiyn, to have ail the trains on dway-Canans no RtOp New Lots avenue static order is to take effect July 20, By July 18 the company must notify the Commission in writing whether Ir the atin St, Jobn's Hospital for shock and sub- and then taken home, ve eeeeestemereret the terms of the order are accepted and will be obeyed, | Call or Write +e HE'S RECOVERING AFTER REMARBLEOPRATIN Vertebrae Fractured by Fall, Surgeons Give Man an Artificial Spine. BINGHAMTON, N. Y., July tas & result of a remarkable surgical operation, Frank Harrington, fifty. nine, of Vestal, near here, will hepe- after be known as the man with the steel backbone. ’ A atcel tube, jointed to make it ae nearly as possible ike the vertebrae of the spinal column, repiaces twellty of the vertebrae which were crushed by a fall from a scaffolding. Harrington, when he fell, landed ow his back. It waa found that the lower and middie parts of the spinal col@iam had been crushed, and the resuitthg Pressure on the spinal cord had pare lysed his legs. It was net believed that he would be able to survive, Bat jo he was taken to 1. Drs. C. 8, Wilson, We Wilson and R. O. Crosier finally ée elded upon the remar! ie operation, As a preliminary, the surgeons Fe- moved the pieces of the tweaty crushed vertebrae, then took a ite ful measurement of the part spine removed. They then a steel tube about three feet shaped like the spine, and with ble joints to correspond with the ver- tebrae. ‘This was inserted, care being taken that ev branching from the spinal be In its proper place. “ Harrington was placed then im plaster cast. Ho has improved much that he ts now able to move - joxe in the bed, and the surgesae. eve that he will recover and be to walk as well as ever. —_—. = BARNEY MARTIN VERY ILL. y Leader, Hew Ty Attacked by Paeamonta. Bernard F. Martin, Barney Martin fa his younger days, for twenty-five yeare ‘Tarhmany leader in the Fifth Assembly District, former Pollog,Justice and for , danger~ Veteran Tam eleven yours State Senator, ts ously ill with pneumonia at his home tm Brevent Park, Atlantic Highlanda, Mr. Martin was taken ill on « His condition has become that his tw Beautiful . Vacation Guide © FREE The World’s . . 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