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vay l > DEAT ENDS TRIAL OF CLERK ACCUSED OF $o0,00u sre Johr J. Diites, Wh Who Lived in Style on $20 a Week, Hit by Train on Way to Court. RELATIVES WITH HIM. Doubt as to Whether Prisoner Killed on Elevated in Phila- delphia Is Suicide. 2 PHILADHLPHIA, Sept. 22—The vial of John J, Dallas, bookkeeper, shared wit embezzling $50,000 from & wholesale fé. “-v firm, came to a sudden end to-day ‘en Dallas was killed by an elevated train while on hia way to court. Dallas had been on trial for sev- eral days, and hie w'fs and sister were with him when he was killed, Whether it was an accident or a case of suicide ie not known. Dallas, on a #alary of $20 a week, owned a handsome home in Ardmore, a euburb; entertained extensively and drove an automobile, and, in addition, had money in several banks. To ac- count for his prosperity, he claimed he did expert work for outside firms, receiving liberal fees, but witnesses dented this. AMERICAN GIRL TELLS OF WAR PREPARATIONS IN CONSTANTINOPLE Americans Beaten in Mistake for Englishmen — Goeben and Breslau Badly Injured, In a lotter sent from Roumell His- ear, Turkey, and written on Aug. 23, Miss Kate Hamerschlag, an American tourist, su “Our steamship is known as the mystery ship, unloading, goodness knows what, at night and visiting the, two German battleships that came into port (Constantinople) flying tie Turkish flag. They are very badly crippled ships, the Goeben and the Breslau, The rumor spread that these men-of-war had been bought by the Government to take the places of the two ships England refused to deliver to Turkey. “The Germans have a very strong hold on the Turks, so no one trusts in the news we hear about the war. Nothing 1s reported but German. vic- tories. Tho chief adviser of the Turk- ish Minister of War is a German, and many German officers in Turkish un forms ar@ here drilling the troops. ‘Turkey is not yet at war, but she Is inaking every preparation and re- spects nothing in the doing of the , confiscating autonfob! horses, sam ship loads of oil and, in fact, every~ thing she can lay her hands on with- out paying anything » had a laugh the other day when we were told the ed thousands of soap. Our butcher r day that he had no ernment had seized 0 sheep from the Government had mutton as the dyring the nigh’ hills in our vicinity, “The uncertainty of what Turkey will do makes an awful strain on tourists here, We hear the sound of the drums all through the night, call- ing men to enlist, We hear of the beating and shooting of desorters. Tho feeling against the English is intense. ‘Two Americans were beaten in mi: take for Englishmen, When the Turk- ish commander of the gendarmes found out the mistake he begged that ‘no complaint be made.” EX LAX Miss Hamerschlag had to pay 26 cent. to change American gold. Bie writes of the Kindness of all American embassy and consular offi- clals she has met in Turkey, —_——>—_—— NEARLY DROWNS RESCUER. trying to wo aboard the barge Jaton be ions, moored at the foot of Eighth street, jars! Nore ey ars, Mary, Gorry, wits iter Gorry, captain of the ge, lost aer footing and fell into ‘water, Capt. Gorry Jumped from bunk in response to her cry and | Charles Hochwait, on night Firemeduty at the boat house of the fireboat Abram hewitt, jumped rescue Mri Ty "Bie WW her arms around him and both were about to sink when Capt. Gorry ena other firemon, awakened by the shouting, pulled Hochwalt and fhe woman aboard the barge with hoathooks, ‘Mrs. Gorry, suffering from shock, Was taken to the Pastern Piniriet Hospital by Dr. Schept For’ Constipation The Delicious Laxative Chocolate Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regue lates the stomach and bowels, stimu- ‘and promotes digestion, | & ly glade 0 oung sid old,” 10ey #864 Mi lac att ae avantne wont ~y, Woman’ 3 Passion for Pay Envelope ° Overshadows Her Desire for Bailot Wants Fair Return for Her Services and Leaves Home When Tired of Work Without Pay, Saye Josephine Daskam Bacon. , By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Money {s the root of all the woman problem. It's the passion for a pay envelope that's really agi- tating the femi- nine breast, and not unrequited yearnings for suffrage or eu- genics or even a feminist flat. I'ts not “votes for omen” that’s wea wanted, but “dol- lars for women,” according to Mra. Josephine Daskam Bacon, in whose newest novel, “To-day's Daughter,” almost every facet of the woman Problem {s pointed with the logic of circumstance and polished with lucid, dexterous English. 1 foresee @ Donnybrook clash over the destiny assigned “To-day's Daughter.” Alto- gether there are five of her, each of the five most modernly up to the ears in business, art, society or settlement work. In the end each one ylelds meek obedience to that theory of life regularly expounded by the malé heckler at a suffrage meeting—"Go home and mind the baby!” “And In most cases the reason for the woman who doesn't want to stay at home with the baby {s the reason for the restless daughter,” *'rs, Bas con told me. ‘8 @ question of f- nance: THE WOMAN QUESTION 18 ONE OF MONEY. We sat on her wide piazza, where, far as one may look, one sees only Westchester fields and hills and sky. There isn't a neighbor to blur the horizon line. Mra, Bacon mai ages a farm, in addition to her three chil- dren, her literary work, her soe! philanthropic enterprises. She ap- parently lives to disprove her own theory that a woman will find her time fully occupied if she takes care of her house and children properly! “The woman question is at bot- tom a question of money,” she re- peated with quiet inviction. “And it will never, never be set- tled until we fix a standard for domestic work and a standard for cause she is tired of working in it without pay. She wants a just return for her services; doesn't want to be put longer with a ‘God bl the ladies.’ | “It's not suffrage to-day's daughter | desires; it's nancial independenc: I have talked with so many girls who are the children of well to do/ parents, who have large dress allow- ances, and they tell me that they would give anything in the world for five dollars a week which they might call their own, That is the motive which sends so many girls out of comfortable homes to ‘do something,’ they call it. ‘ewer, pretty generous with the woman he marries?" I suggested. “When I've discussed@the subject with men { have often had the an- ‘Oh, practically everything I make goes to my wife,’" replied Mrs. Bacon, “But does the wife feel about @ny part of this money as the busl- ness woman feels about her salary? Like any other successful worker, the wife should have a certain amount of y with which she may do as she , about which nobody has the right to question her. “And the men would benefit if we should standardize household service and its financial retums. pe in each husband would have SHOULD GIVE UP WORK WITH HER MARRIAGE. “Now, I can't say that I like that state of affairs," admitted Mrs. Bacon, with @ rueful smile. Her mouth is delicately cut and expres- sive, and she has thgt most effective of brunette combinations, @ creamy white skin and blue-black hair, “They name me a reactionary,” she added, her smile broadening, “and I suppose I am one. I personally pre- fer the old condition of things, when the daughter, until her marriage, was @ companion for her mother. But I believe in looking at facts, and it ie undoubtedly @ fact that after finish- ing her education the modern girl b desires to enter a working appren- ticeship outside ber home for several years at least.” “But when she marries you think she ha¥ no right to keep on with her work?” I asked, “{ don't think a woman hae any right to marry unless she intends to have a home and ‘children. These are the reasons why sooi- ety invented marriage. And | have never known any woman who has managed to combine succe fully busin social life and motherhood. It seems to me she must slight one of the three If ehe attempts them all.” “But you write and go out and take care of three children,” I objected. ER OWN WORK DONE AT HOME, AFTER ALL. “Do you know any one else who does?” Mrs, Bacon inquired naively, “IE happen to be very strong phyal- cally. And then I ca@do my writing here in my home, I don't have to very day for a business office, ‘As a matter of fact, an office rou- tine ia play compared with the proper right the pri netple at pa: if h WOULD TEACH HOME-MAKING IN ALL SCHOOLS, ‘tack don't see how men can keep their ces atraight,” added Mrs. Bacon in an phatic aside, “when they hear the suffragists talking about ‘muni- cipal housekeeping.’ For men kn how often the American’ woman Is a complete. failure in keeping her own home—and yet she boasts of the wo. ders she will accomplish when 6! ‘keeps house for the city!’ “We must introduce into every school a course in hom aking, Un- ed it successfully she That is the Arst step toward financial in- dependence for wives, When ‘woman can honestly assure her hus- band, ‘In our home I am worth so much to you; unless I get it there I ehall earn it elsewhere’—then she won't have to go elsewhere, and we Oeil Ss hail the return of the home wo! cise. “{s needed just as long as Iife begins in the home.” The biographer of one baby and the mother of three led with apologeticall: arched rows over her conclusion. “A mother gives something to her children which Mo one else can give. Yes, I know it sounds banel, But it really happens to be true, ——EE KING ALBERT SHOT HIS CHAUFFEUR, TRYING TO GIVE HIM UP TO ENEMY. PARIS, Sept. %%-The newspaper Le Progres Du Nord prints a remarkable story to-day to the effect that the King of the Belgians shot and killed his chauffeur who had tried to drive him into the German lines, While the King was with bie troope south of Antwerp he or chauf- four to drive shead. aa ted, but aft while King Albert noticed management of a household, Men can't understand that, but it's true, The woman with intelligence enough to earn @ large salary outside the home ja just tho woman who with oper training develops into the best Home 3 maker, That's why I think she ‘Stair’ money vane it services,’ ba ar a" the ph 3 American “But in that the chauffeur had changed the di- rection, The King told the driver he was not going in cnt right divection, and when ee $1,000,000 SUT AGAINST HEIRS OF MAN DEAD 75 YEARS Mrs. Edith I. Magee Claims’: Proceeds of Land Sale Were Not Properly Divided. SYRACUSE, N 22.—Suit for more than has been brought here by Mrs, Edith 1. Magee of Viewpoint against seven heirs of the estate of John M. Beach of Au. burn, who died nearly seventy-five years ago. In the action the sum of $640,000 with interest for twenty-four years is demanded by Mrs. Mageo who claims that her uncle, the late B. Kellogg Beach, disposed of land hold- ings in Chicago years ago and failed to divide the $640,000 received from the sale of the two parcels of property among the other heirs, Sometime ago Mrs. Mago secured her appointment as administratrix of the estate of her grandfather, who died on Aug. 8, 1893, for the sole pur- pose of bringing the action against the big estate. The action is brought against Cal- vin Burr Beach of Chicago, Mra. Em- ily Beach Condon and Miss Elizabeth Ten Eyck Keach of New York; the Northern Trust Company of Chicago and Calvin A. Beach as trustee of the estate of his father, . Kellogg Beach. Mrs, Condon and Miss Beach are sisters of the trustees yt GERMAN SHELL LANDS IN HOSPITAL ROOM AS DOCTOR IS OPERATING. BORDEAL head of the Fr jance Corps, his Government fr of Meune,.tn w bomba: nt of # place by the Germans on Aug. The first shot from the German artillery, Mme, Paul declares, brought down the Red Cross (lag on’ the roof of, the building, and a fragi of shattered « basin at TES AaB ote. tanh upon which Dr. Prouat of Paris was operating or a Serious cane. ‘The doctor then moved | Into a room in an bullding, in which there wounded Gerinan soldiers The shelis began to fall faster, and finally this section of the buildin, d to be abandoned. The wound nee moved to Verdun, twelve mi hospital at were five her wing of the! TUESDAY, SEPTEMBEN—29, 1914, Oddities in the War News HUNDRED POISONE IARMULOWSKY 1 BESIEGED WN HOME Gathered Before Banker's, on Washington Heights. HERALDS SPREAD NEWS. Men Who Lost Savings When Bank Closed Seek to Force Statement. All through the east side to-day tors of M. and L. Jarmulowsky, pri- vate bankers, at No. 165 East Broad- way, were to mest at 1 o'clock to-day in front of the Bellecourt apartments, No. 39 Fort Washington avenue, where M. Jarmulowsky lives, and “make some real trouble.” gunrd was at once sent to the Belle- court from the West One Hundred and Fifty-second street station, spot before the vanguard of the de- than ® hyndred on the block at 12.30. |The police kept them moving and plotting concerted action. watching. heralds, young men who went through visits, distributing etreulars, openly threatened violence. Among the earliest of those to ap- peur at tho Bellecourt was William Peskoft of No. 183 Madison street, Chairman of one of the many de- positors’ committees who have been holding more or less disagderly meet- ings in east side halla and In front of the bank since it was cloned by Banking Supt, Richards Aug. 3 and They tied up. to the Jarmulowsky apaytment at 1 ily In, positors, Then the crowd, which creased to several ‘hundred, ® vacant lot on the opposite corner, and Morris Cantor of No, 124 Henry street, Samuel Rafkin of No. Monro® street and others speeches in which they called Jarmu- lowsky hard fists at the windows of his apart- ments, had thousands to appear by saying that the religious holidays kept them In the synagogues and that many lacked MERCURY CLIMBS HIGH, BUT OLD RECORD STAND Hottest Sept. 22 Ever Recorded, After climbing to 92 degrees at Sept. 22 taken by the 96 was made, were: 8 o'clock, 76; 11 o'clock, 87; o'clock, $8; 1 o'clock, 91, in the | per cent, day, The high temperatures were eral all through the eastern 8 and the Mississippi! Valley. Pred tions for this neighborhood “continuing warm and fair weather, with moderate southw the next thirty-six hours. Lawns, baked so that them from m being burned out, TO ARREST JACK JOHNSON, | Pusilist Ignores Summons of | don Pollee Courts Sept 0 neKr? pawilln tt fatled ta accualn, ip ing rate grant BY EAST SIDERS: spread @ rumor that the angry credi-, A police The policemen were hardly on the positors appeared, There were more |broke up groups which seemed to be Every where persons wio stopped to watch the gathering crowd were assured in whispers that there were to be “some doings” which would be worth while | The call for the gathering wae cir- | culated on the east side by volunteer the streets making house to house *| forty-three, the colonel said: the $1,750,000 or its 16,000 depositors .A committee of two was admitted! o'clock, and came back to report that the banker had promised to conmult his lawyer and members of his fam- an effort to relieve the hard- ships of the more hard pressed de- | in- | went to! 230) made names, shaking their The omtors excused the failure of o'clock this afternoon, the thermome- ter began dropping rapidly and was down to 89 degrees by 3 o'clock. The hottest and only higher record for'a| Weather Bu- reau was in 1895, when a record of | The readings earlier in tho day on| the roof of the Whitehall Bylding 12 \ ‘The steamy miat which hung in a hage over the city all morning kept the humidity from décreasing as It did yesterday from 48 per cent. to 20 afternoon, To- day a» the heat increased the hu- midity stayed up, and was nearly 40 cent, at 8 o'clock, thereby making alr more oppresaive than yester: wind tor | SAM—Imported. . Robertson’ 8 Wengen or Dior hoa especially in the suburbs, have been niy a liberal use of the hose will save large sections of 99—Jack Johnson ar at the Bow Street Police Court late ymersay in answer to @ summons elipen fis non appee language shells, drilled them, and final an orderly manner, thanks to Her inatructions were #o accurate the destroyed and she was killed. A wounded officer in Paria sald: killed by heaps and hecatombe.” A French soldier wrote home tha‘ the British Government the services as @ private in an infantry regiment. lation tries to wreck the train, eighteen-months-old girl baby, which According to La Liberte, a Frenc! wanted to let his family know things knew the German censor was strict. well treated, lacking nothing,” and patols for “It's all Just the opposite. | thelr armies, and sel. them at auction | bought by French peasants -prived res.) ‘ton, acrtona. torches and horn lanterns, The following ts found in the pri 1918: | King. two, age." one. He was accepted. LILLIAN RUSSELL UNDER THE KNIFE FOR APPENDICITIS Actress Doing as Well as Could Be Expected After Operation, Doctors Report. (Special to The Evening World,) PITTSBURGH, Sept. 22.—Stricken the carfare to get uptown, ‘The po-| with appendicitis, Lillian Russell, the lice looked on patiently, saying they ; had no objection to mere oral vio-| Actress and wife of Alexander P. lencon Moore, publisher of the Pittsburgh Wealthy householders sent out sim > water and sandwiches for the wam- | Leader, waa operated on at the Waat en, many of whom seemed tif] Penn Hospital this forenoon, Imme- starved and often broke out Into loud) qiatery following the operation it wax When the audience hegan to crowd | stated by the hospital authorities that range st i the Suse Miss Russell was doing as well as ienes Church on the corns’ Pt] could be expected. 6 ‘dered i yer) Hulse ordered It dtapersed. ‘The patient was taken from the —_—_——— Behenley Hotel to the West Penn Hos- pital last night. She had lately re- turned to this city from her summer home tn .tlantic City, where she was atricken with a serious illness a few months ago while in bathing, nee Reaches 92, Only 4 Degrees Under AMERICANS MUST FILE CLAIMS ABROAD FOR WAR-SEIZED AUTOS. WASHINGTON, Sept. 12.—Americana whone automobiles were ce or requisitioned in Ei \ the out- break of the war have been advised by |Cone Johnen, Solicitor of the State De~ partment, that they should with the’ belligerent Kove: mentar Gul in the event that such representations fait will the claims State Department here. OLIVES—Large Queen .. VINEGAR — Pure Cider APPLES Fancy Maine ( When a French infantry regiment began to get panicky under heavy shell fire near Longuyon, the colonel called « halt, made the troops face the ordered a retreat, which was conducted in drill, A Belgian telephone girl at Dahlen telephoned officers at the forts § | they were not properly placing their shells, and directed them how to do it. \Threats Made by Depositors: Many German prisoners in England like “It's a Long Way to Tipperary” #0 well they sing it as well as they can. Thousands of women in Paris are knitting woollen | dlers in the flelds, which indicates fighting ie expected to last war of machines, There ts an appaling soulleseneas about it that is savagel: inhuman, Men turn handles and death files out in large bundies, Men are “Before two years are passed William IL. will enter And he will bitterly regret this fulfilment of his desires.” be taken up by the ture CHEESE- American Finest 'SALMON-—A. M. & C. Large flat tins, .25.. lena building where she was at work was for the sole ito the winter, “i ie not a war of men, it eo t he fought eo long without stopping or eating he fell asleep in an automobile with shells dropping around him. ‘Aga Khan, titular head of the Mohammedans in India, not only offers | '"S- of his subjects, but wants to serve Every military train in Bosnia carries hostages to be shot if the popu- A wounded Russian soldier found in @ deserted house tn Galicia an he carried all through the long mareh to Kioff, finally arriving at his home with her. h soldier frei hie prison in Germany were not as pleasant as might be, but So he wrote: “Don't worry; we are signed It “Eetoutarebours,” which ta “iecause German horses have been trained to obey only German words of command, the allies have found captured hor. 1 of no use to them in at the average price of $20, They are of the'r own horses by Governmont A new corpa that has volunteered for the French army te one of At night, in a silent proceasion, they go out with spades, Most of them are very old men, and they are followed by their women folk bearing little bundles of peeled willow wands and strands of wire. buried, a willow wand cross ts planted over his grove by the women, When the body of aw officer ts ‘ophecies of Mme, de, Thebes made in Although the age itmit of the White City Colonial Cavatry is forty- when a recruit measuring 6 feet 2 appeared and gave his age as “ll give you a half hour to think over your Upon returning the recrutt said he had discovered he was only forty- WAR MINE SINKS BRITISH STEAMER? 22 LIVES ARE LOST Cause of Wreck of Belgian King Not Told, but Belief Is Vessel Hit Marine Trap. TRERIZOND, Asia Minor, Sept. 22 (via London, 11.0% A. M.).—Twenty- two persone lost their lives by drowning as 4 result of the sinking of the British steamer Belgium King near Cape Kurell yesterday. The vessel carried passongers and crew to the number of 120, Ninety- elght of them were saved by a Rus- sian steamer. It 1s surmised that the Belgian King was shattered by a war mine, but the real cause has not been revealed, —————_———_ HERE’S ANOTHER GOOD STORY ABOUT BRUSSELS’S FAMOUS BURGOMASTER. ! ANTWERP, Sept. 12 (by matt igians are telling with pride man; ‘of Burgomaster Max of Brussel is now regarded as one of tho national | ge the heroes as a r Geiicate altuation presented when the mandeered py regan, een inant officer with a foustehs laid his revolver on the table across which they were to confer. Tromediately t the Hurt es yy by fain amphatic ‘banged it" dow out hi foun on ‘the ele alongvide the revoly r. Acker, Merrall & Condit /EST. Company /40 Profit by these quality- economy opportunities . 15 02, jars . 10 oz, bottles -small large bottles 5-qt. basket ireenings Qarie—but not as} ult of his handling of the | BY SEA FOOD ON: CITY EXGURSI Two Death Among Civil Service Guests j Ferryboat Crew Reported. ind Crab meat and lobster | Sunday by 244 members of the Civil Service Association and the of the municipal ferryboat which was used for an excursion the North River, caused one or more cases of ptomaine po © facts came out to-day whee” several members of the crew to work after spending Sunday and yesterday in the hands of doc- tors, It was rumored about the i Ferry terminal to-day thatstwo of 7 the excursionists had died. i | World reporters were unawe to’ ‘con= firm thie rumor, but located forty: cages of ptomaine poisoning. Some | the victims are seriously ill. The State Civil Service 1 had a convention here iast week. excursion wus arranged aa a treat fi the delegates by the city and ff Bronx was donated for ¢! cr by the Department of Docks and | Forrion. i an A crgwa of 500 was anticipated and — the caterer provided food for ti fa number. The bulk of the Ses ments consisted of sea food, includ! 4 delectable crab meat salad, Tt ls reported that everybody who ate of the crab meat and some who partook only of the lobster ze il after leaving the boat Sunday — evening. i s3 The crew after the excursionit® ye had departed made a concerted ass |i sault on the viands left o In this, \ | they were assisted by other ferry= boat and dock employees. Lawrence Hanlon; Superintendent of Ferries, who w@s on the exc ate neither b meat nor lobster escaped iliness. He sald to-day he! had heard from dock em| ‘ that two deaths had Tesulted from the poisoned food, 2 Charles J. McCoy of the office of the? | President oe the, Borough and Law: prengs Cay the office of the P dent of lyn Borough, who head= ed the Entertainment Committee, * this afternoon that they had heard many cases of severe illness Coie pto- | maine poisoning among thi sionists. Neither had Heard of any), deaths, Capt. Clarence E. Underhill, ors ant superintendent of ferries, who freely of the crab meat. is in @ {eal condition at his home in MSinors, ye Harbor, Staten Island. He became Sunday night. John Robinaon, termaster of the @ronx, is also sert: Dusly ill at his home. ee eae AMERICAN CORRESPONDENT THREATENED WITH DEATH. BY FRENCH AS A SPY, LONDON, Sept. 22 (Central News ble).—Alfred,J. Rorke, the Central Ne special correspondent. has heen in Amiens by the French on a charge of a espionage and has a executl X A. J. Rorke was special o of the Central News in Vera Crus, was arrested by Huerta’s Immediately on his ret York he was despatched to [as in Belxinm for several been in northern France past ten days. MEDICAL AUTHORITY es ENDORSES | Baer ee eat pi Bay a Soeur 81. a mak rer, and reports ba tae? arne ee be ores i Tobe OG Prosperity Talks. to Advertisers: @ Have you heard of couldn't get what they have tried, and not found PORTED ARTICLE have promptly taken 1 ve Imported Articles, fan ge meg, tll eout the ‘“ ing. ‘ thers Se ae oe" that's juste a matter of Opinion. q You won't find perfume users, or wingil = oF ville wearers, or usste Of mS ported cosmetics, brushes, 25, tooth pastes, hats, millinery, suitings, chinaware, dress Linn oils, or condiments, going without one of these because they cannot their favorite brand. G Not much, @ If they can't get what they they'll take what they can gst nearest to it, q burning Have th a that tae pone ee , = aS ae warren Se