Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
9g “SWEET MARIE’ RIPS CITY OFFICIALS IN «SIDEWALK TALK Mounts Soap Box to Tell of Troubles During 60 Days on the Island. ‘PRAISE FOR MISS DAVIS. ‘Says Board of Estimate With- holds Money to Clean Up Blackwell’s. Sixty days of confinement in the “pen” appears to have taken much ‘ef the “pep” and ginger out of “Sweet Marie’ Genz. It was a sub- dued and perfectly lady-like Marie who mounted a soap box at the north end of the Municipal Building shortly after noon and told less than a Bundred onlookers—all she was able to muster during a harangue of More than an hour-—of the conditions on the Island as she saw them. ‘The police did not expect trouble and the two patrolmen sent from the ®ixth precinct to chaperon the affair had rothing to do. Marie is positive the Board of Esti- mate has a grudge against the De- partment of Correction and to the board she attributes most of the blame for the recent prison riots. She scored Warden Hayes “ “The Administration takes less in- terest in the Department of Correc- tion than any other in the city,” de- clared Marie. “Their appropriations are turned down right and left and when Mise Davis, whom the prison- ers rogard an blameless, wants money whe bas to go out and beg it from her friend Marie urged the need for the class!- fleation of prisoners on the Island, pointing out that the present system of herding drug fiends, drunkards and victims of tuberculosis and other dis- @ases together makes it impossible for @ person in normal health to main- tain it during a term in prison. After an hour of oratory, “Sweet Marie” explained she was too weak a8 a result of two months’ incarcera- tion to tell all her troubles. She prom- ised to be back on the job later in the week with data enourh to convince @ny reasonable person of the “unbear- able” conditions on the Island. ‘To got this she explained she would conduct her own investigation on the Island, but she failed to state just ow was going about getting the iesion of the Correction Depart- ment for this particular research. Mies Ganz, in a tirade on the news- papers that have referred to her as an “anarchist orator” says sho is going to sue any publication that re- fere to her as a “red” after to-day. @he had several copies of newspapers fa which that reference was made. “I have been to see Deputy Com- Beseee Rubin this morning, ‘and he informs me I the prison records as an anarch- fet. I am not an anarchist and never will be. I am for the workingmen.” —— OROKER DUE IN SEPTEMBER, Usual Report That He Will Fight it Not Credited. Richard ker, former leader of Tammany Hall, will come to New York fm September. His visit, it is under- gtood, will be in the int of a land goheme in which he ts interested in Florida. While Here Mr. Croker will most of his time in the Demo- exgilc Club. re was the usual report accom- ing the announcement of Mr. Broker's visit that he was on hie way fen Charles F. Murphy, oust him ym the leadership of Tammany Hall ro place "Big Ton” Foley in his stead, was told of this. all rot, this talk of my trying to t the leadership of Tammany Fatt an Mr. Murphy,” sald Foley. Murphy good enough for me at any and al mes. Every windjammér who hap- ng to cross the ocean shouldn't Pate ed @ special envoy from Mr, ck at Harry Walker, ° porter, who returned to- from a trip abroad and declared intention of Croker to start a fight. “« Jeal wise characterized by bi which casteth out jealousy: the author of “The Golden Rule Dol- livers," “The Pretender Person” and|him to be happy, @ number of other successful novels, She is also a happy wife and mother, | thing and desire another.” whose calling cards read, “Mrs. Har- rison C, Lewis. which she likes eo much: “Cling with Ii But when the surpriee, First vague shadow of surmise Flits across her bosom young, Of a joy apart from thee, From her summer diadem. Though thou loved her as thyself, As a self of purer clay, Though her parting dims the day, Stealing grace from all alive; Heartily know When half-gods go The gods arrive.” “One Ten Cent Box of . EX-LAX The Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries of Constipation Tt your stomach isn’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the mouth, \ coated tongue, feel distressed after eating and have frequent headaches, just | take Ex-Lax. This will tone up your stomach, aid digestion, promote bodily vigor and strengthen the nervous system. You will be surprised to see how quickly your energy, ambition and appetite will come back to you, ’ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 18, 191 THE WOMAN’S LA irl’s Fierce Battle Against “ The Romance of a ¥ lew York BY_WARAVENE THOMPSON an-Made Rules What Right Has a Woman to Be Jealous? {POLICE LIEUTENANT WILSON LAUDS LURTON IN MESSAGE TO WIDOW Is She Justified in Spying on Husband? HELD FORKILLING |coms wor rior von nen Now Mgnt STay AT HOME WITH ME SATURDAY AFTERNOON Is ism. It Is Nonsense that it Ina Signal Love.” hearguret Came of SHE 6 GVEN JEALOUS OF HIS ATHLETICS powr {ou want ME TO T ANY Seease dal we Owly DAY t + are wee WT “1 ) / Hi ud “The Meaning of Love Is Giving, Not Getting,” Asserts Margaret Cameron, Novelist, Who Adds: ' “The Jealous Woman Lets Her Thoughts Dwell on Grasping, Holding, Keeping Something or Somebody That She Conceives to Belong to Her.” Be Happy.” “If a Woman Loves a Man She Wants Him to Be Happy; Even If She Finds that He Prefers Some One Else She Still Must Want Him to By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What right has a woman to be jealous? “The right of her love,” some will cry. love which seems to be unalterably clear and definite, it is that the true lover must shun jealousy as the unforgivabl Most of us are such daubers in the art of lovin, And when, in our stupidity, we have splashed our lovecanvases with the paint of greed and treachery [ and malice, spoiling the pure outline and obscuring the radiant color, we insist that the insult is @ true ry expression of the most golden and beneficent dream al tine when mo istt wonk man and woman can know, Because a poet rhymes “been” and “again,” be- cause an artist makes the tree in his picture's back- | £ ground too small, we don't say that poetry must be, jad rhymes and painting by wrong perspective. Then| why assume that jealousy is inseparable from love, on the ground that some selfish, maladroit lovers have been jealous? PERFECT LOVE THAT CASTETH 4. OUT JEALOUSY. to the maids lined ie egotism,” jowly. “It Is non- sense to eay that jealousy Is a eign of love. The meaning of love is giving, not getting. The j ous woman dwell on grasping, holding, keep- ing something or somebody that she conceives belongs to her. “I suppose I'm a eentimentalist,” Mre. wa: Inj un ‘ully. added loves him, and no other.’ I suggested, “Alleged devotion but doming fellowship in which mployed by Mra, now held Freeport, L. I, makes one look for encouragement women will some day acquire a real sense of honor, “Nothing can justify such behav- for,” Mrs, Lewis said firmly, stooped to it I could never again re- spect myself, | one should lower one’s own Ideals of conduct hecause one suspects another person of having lowered his, “And what does the wife who spies on her husband really accomplish? For a variety of reasons he may con- tinue to Ive wit! tial thing, the spirit, ls more distant from her every day. “Nothin But if there ts one 1: in. the novelist, Mrs, Lewis speaks in a low, con- ." ‘These are the lines | trolled voice and with small, thought- ful pauses between her sentences, She is a woman in early middle life, with @ broad, smooth forehead out- by bands of black hair and Pleasant, meditative gray eyes. “The woman who loves a man de- Free be she, fancy free; sires bis best happiness, that in Nor thou detain her vesture’s hem; | which he will find his highest devel- Nor the palest rose she flung opment,” she went on. “And there's the chance for the egotist to an: herself, "I-can give him the, best, But I'm tnelined ‘to belleve that the man is the person to decide that question, how any one can do It for him. ALLEGED DEVOTION ONLY DOMINANCE, OFTEN ‘t it im such a situation that one may discern the actual selfish- ness of so-called unselfish women?” "A wife of this type | will do anything for her husband— except let him be happy in his own often noth. 1 mi docs his or her best to de Indlvidusiisy of the of y “Then you don't think the common Jealous tricks are ever justifiable? You do not believe that a woman has a right to open her husband's let- | ters or entechise him or spy on him |with a dictograph?" I asked, hope- The revelation of the tactics Edwin Carman, on ® murder charge in in one's faith that bit | a T see no reason why her, bit the essen- #0 paralyzing te & little smile moving the corners of her well-cut, Tt 1s in a poem by Ralph Waldo|©xpressive mouth. Emerson, entitled “Give All to Love,"| me that if a woman loves a man she that Margaret Cameron finds admir- | Wants him to be happy. She is glad able expression of the perfect love| and thankful if he can be happy with She t#|her, but if she finds that he prefers Some one else she must atill want This {s when she Of course love is one ‘But it seems to I hardly, eee Suspicion His love @ wife Is jealous,” the novelist added, reflectively. “The average American man ie tremendously absorbed in usiness and his wife may be jealous of that, because it receives more of his time and attention than she does. pend the me when he jan’t working on the | tennis court or the golf links, and his wife may feel jealous of his devotion to athletics.” “Incidentally, do you believe that @ man can combine devotion to busi- ness and devotion to his stenog- rapher?" 1 questioned. “That wifely Innuendo has always seemed so par- ticularly foolish to m “But you must remember that a man's stenographer knows more about the chief interest in his life than his wife does, If he only sves | the young woman in his ottice, the chances are that both will be too busy to think of other things, When I hear that a man has taken his stenogarpher out to lunch [ ulways begin to wonder a little. It's in the hours of ease that temptation comen, “That is why | would prescribe k for the woman_ who gre y things, but she has no creative effort which absorbs all her ac- tivity. Men have taken her old work out of the home, a set up for her the ideal of | veral gene er comparatively idle. Now the wise women are look- Ing about the world to find work for themselves, and the wise hus- bands are encouraging them.” “Then you don't axree with Miss Maria Thompson Daviess that the husband of to-day is jealoue of his ‘k?" some husbands who aren't,” Mrs, Lewis responded promptly, “Here and there a man may be found who {s jealous of his wife's profession, and who Is like- wise Jealous of her children, They're hi children too, but that makes no difference, He js simply a survival of the harem keeper temperament. “If we are ever to do away with jealousy we shall need to have genu- ine creative work, for women as well as men, and we shall need to cultt- vate a higher Ideal of loving, In short, we require civilization, For doesn't the existence of jealousy tm- ply that we're not yet civilized” she ended, a little seornfully, And after all, doesn't it? PEALE Seis JUMPS FROM BRIDGE. Deapondent Peddler Will Now Join Paterson Anti-Sulcide Clab. Judge Abe Cohen, organizer of the Anti-Sulcide Club In Paterson, N. J. was walking across the State street bridge to-day when he saw a man take & header over the rail into the Passale River, The man dropped twenty-five feet into water only #ix feet deepmdudge Cohen and others pulled him out and found he had struck on the rocks in the bed of the river and was severely brutsed. An ambulance wan called and Judge Cohen climbed in after the Injured man, A atop was made at the police court and the man, who said he was Harry Friedman, @ peddler, of No. 39 Law- rson, Was arraigned i, He anid duals pa he wa and his wife und child would be ted from their home. Judge Cohen procured a suspended sentence for him aTiaid | © MONK, FRIEND OF GZAR, STABBED BY A WOMAN Assailant of Rasputin, Who Calls Him a False Prophet, Lay in Wait for Him Two Weeks, ST. PETERSBURG, Russia, July 13.—Details reached here to-day in & despatch to the Courler of @ proba- bly fatal attack on the mystic lay monk, Gregory Rasputin, whose In- fluence over the Emperor is said to be great. Rasputin, who has been one of the most prominent figures in Russia in recent years, was visiting his native village, Pokrovsky, in the Province of Tobolsk, Siberia, when a woman, him, pretending to be a beirgar, After | accosting him, she stabbed him in the | abdomen with a long military dirk. The assailant was arrested and confessed she had waited two weeks for the opportunity she said she had decided to Kill the monk because he was a false prophet, and was leading everybody in Russia astray. Doctors who examined the monk's wound declared it was likely to prove fatal. —_ POLICEMAN SAVES VICTIM. Seven Men Were Benting Delayo When @ r Arrived, Patrick Wy! giving his address as No. street, and Edward Maher, of No, 275 Prospect avenu were arraigned to-day befor . twenty-one years old, 119 Charles ty-two, Brooklyn, a stranger to the locality, approached | Sixth Article of a Series DESPITE JURORS Coroner Sets Aside Verdict Ac- quitting Ashley of the Murder of Nash. |GANG LEADER IS VICTIM. The Jury Was Convinced That Policeman Shot to Save Himself and Comrade. Although the jury aitting before Coroner Riordan to-day exonerated Police Lieutenant Benjamin F. Ash- jley of the Thirty-eighth precinct of wantonly slaying William J. Nash of No, 49 West One Hundred and For- tleth #treet in the early morning of July 5, the Coroner set aside the ver- dict and held Ashley for the Grand Jury In $5,000 bail. The jury was convinced that the police Heutenant shot Nash in the dis- |charge of his duty although James McKnight of No. 1506 Southern Boule- vard, Philip Cohen of No. 28 Pine- huret avenue and Jeremiah Kava- |naugh of No, 2768 Tenth avenue, who had been associating with the Can- ary Island gang had testified that Nash had done nothing to provoke the killing. A good deal of information about the Canary I#land gang was brought out by Patrolman Edward Thompson, whose arrest of “Bunsey” Farrell a few minutes before the killing of Nash brought a mob of yelling men around Lieutenant Ashley, who had come to the assistance of Thomp- son tn civilian clothes at Lenox ave- nue and One Hundred and Forty- fourth street, ‘There had been a dance at the quar- ters of the North End Field Club on July 4, Thompson said, and as the dancers were leaving there were a number of fights In which knives were drawn and missties hurted. Thompson went to investigate and was accosted by “Bunsey” Farrell, who insisted upon knowing what right the patrolman had to “butt in.” Farrell grew obstreperous and Thompson had to knock him down and take him to a hospital RECOGNIZES GANG MEM THE MOB. “The mob began to grow larger,” | said Thompson, “and I called for as- | sistance, Lieut. Ashley, in civilian clothes, came up and the mob imme- | diately surrounded him, Most of the men wet members of the Canary sang. Among those whose faces I recognized wax ‘Paddy the Lug,’ the McKnight brothers and Nash. As |they closed In upon him Tieut, Ash- ley ordered me to lock them up. I | took nil away. A hoon @ Kreat many com- against the Canary gang,” oficer went on, “They had been holding up and blackmailing the storekeepers in Harlem, and [knew the men | had to deal with would think nothing of resisting officers.” | Cohen, a sallow complexioned youth Jacarcely twenty, who said he was @ lork and a pal of the dead man, saw Ashley and Nash out in the Lieut middle of the street, House in the Weat Farms police court, charged with attempted robbery, ‘They were granted an , while off duty last y was prostrate on th n had neither gun * Delayo. to rob him ener ae NEW SWIMMING RECORD Jjournment until Wed- | Jcould get near them, he sald, he | heard a shot and saw Nash fall, FRIENDS OF DEAD MAN TESTI- FY FOR HIM. “Did Nash strike Ashley?" asked | Assistant Pistriet-Attorney Duell “No,” replied the witness, “and If he ‘had struck him T would have seen tt” Pames McKnight, who admitted that he had been urrested three times al- ugh he was only twenty years old, reiterated Cohen's story, The question as to whether Lieut. Ashley was under the influenc of laq- nor on the night of the shooting was settled by Dr, Daniel J. Donovan, who said that he examined the Lieutenant immediately after the shooting and found him sober and in condition for police duty Attorney Samuel Koenig, counsel for BY HIGH SCHOOL GIRL, | Asuiry: Would not let the Licutenant PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 18.—Miss testify. Coroner Riordan called the LAeuten- ant to the stand, but he declined to Louise Debus, a local high school girl,| tall his story on constitutional swimming under the ausplees of the | grounds, Se Philadelphia Turngemende, yesterday broke the best authentic record for SUICIDE’S STORY DENIED. men over the five mile marathon cours ba in the Sebuylkill River. Miss Debus os Youth's Employer Declares Boy Was jeod With His Salary, quarter mile ¥ Mel alf miles in the I sterday in three hoy vinutes and twenty Ten-year: nine and a River n | Jawan > used the under-arm wide and over arm stroke, A emesis PRIZES FOR POLICE. Mayor Mit 1, the heads of clty de- partments and donors to the pension fund have been invi tend the presentation In the trial room! at Headquarters next Wednesday of | prizes won in the police Brighton Beach on last June missioner W nd there will the pleidice be ar | So far the fund amounts to $91,987 with expenses of only $2,000 and there are several collections yet to be ac- 4 took him to Barnett Hospital, counted 1ii3@"win teach’ ue"ii00,000 mark “"* In a letter to the editor of The Even- ing World, John 1. D. Bristol, manager for the New York City agencies for twenty-|the Northwestern Mutual Life Insur-| that Allen G@ r-old boy who in Washington Park, ‘awuse requests for in- sulary were ixnored by the ance € any. Hristol declares the lad, who waa Seeasion to salary Was ! Hy increased at th the donly a short th his he youth expressed ‘tion h the salary her — Celebrates 1,200th Anniversary. TIS, Switzerland, July 13.— ‘anton of Grlsons celebrated toe day the thirteen hundredth anniversary of the foundation of the edictine Abbey here by Saint Sigtsbert, an Irish- man, who in 614 began his work of con- verting the wee Bhat re of the Alpine est. The al 8 repul ‘ tm the world engaps ‘ene in Rome, but before he) ory of Justice, Says President— Talk of Successor. ‘WASHINGTON, July 18.—Presi- dent Wilson to-day sent the follow. ing telegram of condolence to the Widow of Associate Justice Lurton of the Supreme Court: “Our deepest sympathies go out to you in your bereavement. The coun- try hag lost @ gifted and honorable servant whose memory it will always honor, and I am sure that my feeling ia the feeling of the whole country.” No funeral ceremonies for the late Justice Lurton of the Supreme Court ‘will be held here, because of a change in the route of the funeral party from Atlantic City to Clarksville, Tenn., wh the burial will be. It will not pang through the capital. Chief Justice White, at White Bul- phur Springs, W. Va., has arranged to go to Clarkeville with Justice Lamar, now here, but other members of the court, widely scattered for their summer vacations, may not be able to attend. Membvere of Congress from Tennea- 806 were preparing steps to urge the selection of Attorney-General Mc- Reynolds to succeed Justice Lurton. Bolicitor-General John K. Davia of ‘West Virginia also is being brought forward for the place. The Fourth Circuit, to which West Virginia ts assigned, has not been represented on the Supreme Court bench since Chiof Justice Taney’s day, more than half @ century ago. SYSTEM OF INSPECTION IS CHANGED BY MALONE CARDINAL GIBBONS BACK WITH BLESSING OF POPE FOR THE U.S. A, Found the Pontiff in Good Health—treland is Quite Prosperous, His Eminence James Cardinal Gib- bons, returned this morning on the North German Lioyd liner Berlin from Rome, bringing with him the Diessing of His Holiness the Pope to the people of America. Cardinal Gib-. bons sailed from here on May 2 to attend a consistory of Cardinals in Rome for the ele tion of twenty-seven: new wearers of the red hat. He wan in Rome for two weeks and then went to Switzerland, Belgium and Ireland. He spent a number of “very, very happy” days on Lake Geneva, Swit- werland, with Frank Jenkins, an old friend of Baltimore, who has a cha- teau there. During his stay the Queen of Belgium called upon him. Later he returned the call in Brussels and there met the King. Then he went to Treiand and put in several days in Wexford. “I found conditions very good in that part of Ireland,” said His Emt- nence. “Nearly nine-tenths of the former teranta are now land owners. This is due to the law created through the efforts of Gladstone, ald- Ing the Irish people to purchase their land on easy terms, “The Pope [ found in excellent health. He was very cheerful. He was solicitous for the welfare of t people of this country. Per Cardinal Gibbons would nol rs the Ulster issue, nor did he desire to Collector Believes New Method Will Save His Department $250,000 Annually, A new system of inepecting bag- @age which Collector Dudley Field Malone thinks will save his depart- ment $260,000 a year, besides greatly expediting the work, was tried to-day when the Minnetonka landed seventy- two passengers. Heretofore inspec- tors have met ships down the bay, inspected the passengers’ declarations and turned them over on the pier to |{napectors, who then have inspected | baggage only when all pieces belong- ing to one person nad been gathered |together. Men of the Surveyor’s of- fice have made the same ingpection of declarations, To-day the Collector withdrew his men from the Minnetonka, depending on the Surveyor's report and, in- stalling more inspectora on the pier, had baggage examined as rapidly as it was removed from the ship with- jout waiting until all the baggage of one party had been collected to- gether. ONLY GIANTS ELIGIBLE | FOR TRAFFIC SQUADS |Commissioner Wooas Will Assign Only 6-Footers to This Duty in Future, Police Commissioner Woods wants to restore the Broadway traffic squad to its condition when each member was oix feet or more tn height and members of it, as well as the rest of the force, were known as The Fincat, To do it he announced to-day that he had established a traffic squad achool at Police Headyguarters to which only men six feet or taller will be eligible, They will be instructed for three week Cahalane and in the afternoons by doing duty at croasings with old time traffic men. There will be a school of Heuten- ants also, so that the posting of the station house blotters may be unt- form, and the School for Recruits | will be continued, recruits who have been asigned to duty being returned to it two or three times a month to be kept famillar with new ordi- nances, —— POLICE ARE SHADOWING ANARCHIST BERKMAN Won't Let Him Laave the City Un- til His Recent Union Square Speech ts Considered, Detectives are watching Alexander Berkman, the Anarchist, and they have orders not to let him leave the city, His speech at the memorial, meeting on Saturday to honor Arthur Caron, Charles Berg and Carl Han- }son, who died in the bomb explosion! the week before, was taken by avveral stenographers, and It 1s understood | that Chief Magistrate McAdoo has) | not made up his mind yet whether or |not to insue 4 warrant for Berkman {and, perhaps, for other speakers. | ‘The office of Mother Earth, No. 74 \wost Ono Hundred and Nineteouth street, where the ashes of the dead in the mornings by Inspector | say anything of the financial and tn- dustrial situation. He was desirow of knowing the condition of affal in Mexico and said he hoped matt would be settled there without bring- ing any trouble to this country: Up to yesterday noon he had not seen the aun for twenty days, Every- thing had been gray and gloomy. He celebrated mass on the Berlin yester- day. to facilitate the landing of his Emi. nence and the handling of his bag- gage Collector of the Port Malone went down the bay on the revenue cutter to meet the Berlin. With «th ers on the ship he received the Cardl- nal’s blessing. Cardinal Gibbons left for Baltimore this afternoon. ———>—_—— BASQUE BATHING SUIT LATEST AT SEASHORE ATLANTIC CITY, July 13.—The basque bathing sult, the very latest note in the 1914 beach costumes for women, bad ite first real summer showing to-day. Many other styles ared, but the basque suit caused the m comment and really @eemed the most becoming. Another bathing dress which cre- ated a small sensation was a ie fitting affair built tik jersey, with a pleated eget it scarcely seemed to be a» skirt at all. Considerable alarm was felt by the more nedate to where extreme fashion will stop when several young ‘women appeared in half hose. Down in. Chelsea, where the beack ts Jess congested, the women bathers from the cottage colony have adopted the fashion of going in the water without stockings. And some of the more athletic young women have been wearing simply @ jersey ead bloomers. poe SOTH REUNION THEIR LAST. * Con: fiewt War Veterans Amewer Rolicall ané Disband, sturdy old men, survivors of Company E, Twenty-second Regiment of Connectl- cut Volunteers of 1861, held their ftueth and last reunion yesterday and then disbanded. The regiment, which saw |eome of the hardest fishting of the final campaign of the war, was Fee cruited for the most part from Hart- ford and vicinity For the last few years not more than | CEYLON TEA Ce SEE aroma rammed White Rose Coffee, None Better SS RTD Reds were on display all day, was crowded with the curious, who walked into the rear yard to view the um resting om a plot of grass. HARTFORD, Conn., July 13.—Seven