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i \ ‘THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1914. « BOT HER $40,000 BY “MYSTICCUBE,” WOMANOF 70 SAYS Mrs. Jackson Hypnotized Into Marrying Husband.of Ann O'Delia Diss Debarr. LANDED WITH 15 CENTS. | Benefactress Didn’t Know He! Had a Scotland Yard \ Record. On the sivength of records sent) here from Scotland Yard and her own | testimony that he was an “immortal” and had persuaded her that if she vid fo: marry him she would be de- stroyed, Mra, Harriet Cadman Jack- son, widow.’ séventy years old, once) wealthy, sueceeded to-day in having | Supreme Court Justice Giegerich | anul her marriage to Frank Dutton | Wright, allas Francis Wright, “hus- vand of Ann Odelia Diss Debar, who | succeeded many years ago in getting! away with the fortune of Ludiow R. Morsh, a wealthy lawyer of this city. In low feeble voice the aged woman related how Jackson met hor in November, 1913, imbued her with the propaganda of the Theocratic Unity and Purity League, pypnotize1 her and after getting more than $40,- 00 from her by means of a “mystic | cube" which he said the !mmortals had given him, married her, ‘Then he disappeared, “L was sixty-nine when [ married THe wr PaYicacer S8LE TO SYAND THE WARD If Wifie Wants a “‘Career’”’ Let Her Have It—Making Beds and Minding Baby—But Give Her Her Salary, for She Earns It, Advises Mrs. Meyer, New Playwright. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. h “You rob your husband of the very warp and woof of his manhood. eae eetee na te Desun | You take from him the meaning of Lite {teelt, rob him of fatherhood, of all to hypnotize me. He rubbed my | he har a right to expect. You would have him less than the lowest of animals—less than the tiny male bird guarding the forehesd and ave me treatment/ thai he said was immortal. 1 became mother bird and her oggs. You Steal from him a man’s subject to his will absolutely and| most precious right—the right of the male to provide | ———__—_—_4— for his female.” ‘That is the charge levelled against the self-support- ing wife by Mre, Annie Nathan Meyer in her newest play “The Spur,” which has just been given a special performance for the benefit of the Belgian Relief Fund. Mrs. Meyer is the founder of Barnard College and the author of a number of brilliant dramatée dissections auve him large sums of money. 1} knew him only a month before I mar- | ried him, and he talked constantly of the New Light religion in which he wan deeply interested. ‘I am one of the immortals,’ he told me, ‘and u- | less you marry me you will be des- | troyed. I was susceptible to his in- of any hated feeling of dependence. “Wemen are physically adapted te th re of a home. They are not adapted to office work, whioh le ir reaeon why they eh: jodern woman. ¢ drop it soon as possible, and fluence. ot ee certainly after their marriage. “Did you know anything of his| “1 asked myself what feminism wae Till they've had years of it they prison record when you married |going to do to men,” she declared,| @n4 it's @ mistake to think that the don't know what business does to man doesn't want them, as well as ett the woman, The beautiful instinct of fatherhood ts too often overlooked. 1 don't think a wife has the right to refuse to satisfy this instinot, merely because she wants to go to a business office every day. Nor is state motherhood the answer. A baby needs a mother’s personal care. The charity eocieties have found this out, and, instead ef putting orphan babies in institutions, are boardng them in private homes, because they thrive so much better under mothering. WHY NOT MAKE A BUSINESS OF him?" asked Justice Giegerich. vigorously, when I sought thé reason “Nothing at all,” the witness re-|for her oppusition to the wage-earn- piled, Her attorney then handed her|in: wife, “Really, it seems to me copies of Scotland Yard records, to|that the men have the right to some which were attached Jackson's thumb | consideration. ’e hear a great deal prints and h.. Rogues’ Gallery photo- |mbout what their economic independ- eraphs. © wili do for wives, What's it “That is the same man 1 married, | folng to do for the husbands: but I didn’t know he had served fif-| MAN NEEOS MORE THAN teen years in Dartmoor Prison when VAULTING AMBITION. 1 married him,” said Mrs. Jackson. Then it became clear that Mra “This record shows,” said Attorney | xteyer doesn't believe the modern John MacGregor, counse! for Mrs./man to be another Macbeth, needing Jackson, “that this lady's husband |no spur to prick the sides of his served fifteen years for a heinouw|intent but only vaulting ambition.” THE HOME? crime, He had organized, with @/ghe maintains, on the contrary, that| “When women show the same ef- woman known to the detectives of| some of the finest men in the world |ficlency in filling their domestic po- fcotland Yard as ‘The Swan,’ the |do their best only if spurred on by |®tlons that they must show in » bust- ‘Theocratic Unity and Purity League. | their women.” ness office, they will be justified in ‘To the rooms of this organiaation | “The most sacred thing in the | demanding a fair economic division young girle were enticed and wronged,; world to a man is the protectlo und both he and ‘The Swan’ were! he can give his women,” she told ‘k, hanging to way, shivering in winter, burning in eummer, saving on yeur etemach to feed your van- ity, lenging dare tal every man's face. A woman ie not manufactured te stand the atrain. against ef the married woman. who 1 it on one: “Women! nent to jail.” sea tues| Me ine tae nim sales How Brooklyn Candidates usbend. strived’ this. country in| downtown le. the remembrance Stand on Probe of B. R. T. uptown there’e the little ment with his wife in a feanlog chair and their children | around her. “They call the home @voman, the 1913 he had only fifteen cents in bis; pockets and she took pity on him, He | began to spruce up on inoney she fur- nished him until he replaced hia! shabby clothes with costly garments, ‘The he succeeded tn getting her to These candidates favor vigorous legislative action to end intolerable B. R. T. traffic conditions in Brooklyn: y all her property rights to| gependent woman, ‘useless.’ Why, wild and when he converia’|the only useless. thing on God's 4. earth is what lives for itself. Use- | Where Ann O'Delia Diss Debar ts| tess! Have you never scen some now living even, Jackson does not great, tall tree in summer, with its apparently OW. orney lac: trance produced in coure & postal | leaven eaten by caterpillars, its bare, vard from Jackson in which shorn branches standing stiff and for information concerning | stark against the sky, a tragic skel Anoute of Dies Detar, The es ard ton? ‘Those little green leaves quiv- of her was when she got a tleket of oring in the breeze that you thought | Jeave trom England and set sail for Orne in lhe Bite vere necersary— destroy them and you destroy the this @ountry. Jackson married Diss Debar in New tree, root and branch, Women are to men like the leaves of a tree, They Orleane in 1897, Previous to that she met Marsh, the millionaire lawyer, feed them with sunlight, and though they seem mere ornament they nour- and by means of fake spiritualistic photographs and fake messages from ish the great strong roots deep down in the earth, is dead wife Induced him to deed over to her a handsome home in Madison avenue and other, property worth $50,000, She werved six MOnthS | WOMAN'S PLEA FOR FATHER: || 2-B, M. Patten. .Dem.| 2—C, Welland ...... patch HOOD'S RIGHTS. | Queens County Assembly Candidates. jotel orhes there's another thing forgot- | es. ! by 1 0. Aelhamus, ten by thone who say tat ® woman’ These candidates take non- cee position regar can combine marriage and a business || ao Mee aon: career, Every now and then some |{ ‘'4Mlc conditio one tells me of : ach @ ‘very succe: Himeelt. A man who registered as Robert Arm- ful’ instance of this sort. ‘Any chil- | dren? I ask, The almost invariable | strong at a hotel run by Robert Lind- berg at No. 402 Atlantic avenue, Brook- lyn, Inst night, was found undressed on reply 1s ‘No,’ Now, the normal pro- cedure for the normal, average hus-| band and wife is to have children, | Gharieg wi Ww 6—Charies |. Eng 6—W. C, Carew De: Torborg. King ‘Gounty Aesambiy a \didates. lame. “Er. eae Me Takes 1 Kings Gaunky Assembly Candidate. Dist, Naine, 11—George R. Brennan....... Queens Ssunty Assembly Candidate. swilliam m H. O'Hara These jegisiative candidates have got answered The Evening World's questions concerning B. R. T. outrages: WHERE DO THEY STAND? ASK THEM, VOTERS OF THE VARIOUS DISTRICTS! Kings County Senatorial Candidates. INFANTS fot Fila wre aroo eel fom aad ite vartowe “F7. He Gulten.. Dord. | Pthomas’ Ritchie ...........feps tee continued, these opiates ms cane changes in the fun the bed with a tube in his mouth con- nected with an open gas jot. The man was about thirty-! hive years old and had brought the tube with him in order to commit suicide. identify him. There was nothing to The Effects of Opiates. 7—Daniel J. Carroll Dem. | 8—A. W. Burlingame... Rep. growth of ‘he cells which are likel; ome perinanent, causii Kings County Assembly Candidates. (aE @ oraving for shat or narcotics in later life. gach as intractable nervous d dyspepsia and lack of stayin; ii ott Pacing wie e'phe i Bacon a keep chiidras gute infancy. ‘The rule mong pli b childre! ver the sinallest doses for more than a day at s time, and administration nodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing 8; pa eerste tut a ehsaciee tenet ie otal forged ond should not be be, 8, party to it, Coitdren who arei! is ‘nothing less than a crime to | Vasty, Carson. aw. a Gillen. 2-7 u Sebnere —C. Seyffart! Fourier of Barnard Stands Up for Men; Woman’s Job Is in the Home, She Says: of the family funds. That arrange- ment should dispose once and for all “Bo you see there are other argu- ments than blind masculine prejudice the economic independence And the Prejudice itself is still deeply rooted.” Then Mre. Meyer read me her own hero's outburst against the women “going out into the world,” of whom the hero's wife was te it women you call TWO MORE SHPS WITH AMERICAN CARGOES SEIZED Regina tale and $i and San Giovan- hi, Italian Steamers, Held by British. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—The seix- ‘ure at Gibraltar by British authorities ‘of two Itallan vessels, the San Gio- | vannt and the Regina Italia, carrying cargoes of American copper, was re ported to the State Department to- day. The report of the eeisures was re- colved from four copper companies in New York, shippers of the car- goes held. They requested the State) Calvert Motel, sh Department to make protests to Great | 2, The complaint o! Britain againet confiscation. & ree The State Department cabled th American Consul at Gibraltar for an explanation of the detention of the ) In this connection @ report was also awaited from the Consul re- garding the seisure of the Red Star lieve in overeomi: Liner Kroonland there yesterday. it is only Rouble Advt. ‘The San Giovanni and the Regina Italia sailed from New York and . aa ‘aomunee were on their way to Italian ports. Tt is also understood here thi Bri warships held up the Nor- wegien steamer Prosper III. from New York for Copenhagen and took her to @ port in North Scotland, —nmeeraniipinemnamee WAR WAKING US UP T0 CHANCES, SAYS EDISON Americans Too Rich and Have Been Slow in Improving Trade Opportunities. CLEVELAND, Oct. 29.—Thomas A. Edison is setting an example for Americans to boost the “Made in U. 8. A.” movement. “Tam making carbolic acid, now, in my laboratory,” Edison sald to on his way home from Detroit, where he and Mrs. Edison had been visit- ing. “We ought to make all of the t be daughters, you won't be : dyestuffs, for lack of which the wives, you won't be mothers, |dye industry in this community ts and you can’t be men! "¢ | threatened with ruin. See he rept women forthe lee “The trouble with us is that we are war if any man feels that way—-|too rich: too many of us have #0, T suppose that is the way ho feels, | much money we wouldn't know what aie essere to do with more if we had it. That's $100,000 TO COLUMBIA,|= $50,000 TO HARVARD Metropoliian Museum Gets $50,000 by Will of Bush’s Son- in-Law, why we haven't more readily grasped | the opportunities offered us through the war. America is waking wp, though. We are beginning to realise we have been too wasteful. We been throwing away tons upon tone of raw material that we might ha: been working into commodities hith- J erto bought In Germany “A big, broad demoeri Inatead of Kurope bet future by a Kaiser King, {t will be bossed by the peopl Universal peace and final suppression of militarism will result from the Ti+ tanie strug@lie. I never have put my brain to the task of inventing things that would contrioute toward, because war is wrong.” The inventor admitted, however, that he is now working to perfect a better storage battery for submarines for the United States Government. “Our Government officials are be- ested in eub- nd are planning to have'a flect of the beat on earth.” Eat less meat if feel. be eet oes bothers. ITY Aue Rignr To WOR Ron wm! Salta fr ny good store ‘The Grand Jury to-day presented be- “ of fore Judge Rosalsky in General Sexaione | Sade a thes a days: an Indictment charging grand larceny | Jou jeys will act fine. against Herbert J. Katon, known an the | ct Ds from the a “tango burglar.” The indictment was; if 4 en ee, ee imulate them to based on the theft of $10,000 worth of idneys activity. It also neutralizes the Maria Kohn of the in the so it no longer irritates thus ending bladder disorders, Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive: makes a delightful hadh aA eg = lithiae water drink which ever, hould take sav usd thea tolkoos Urn ae yeclean thus avoiding serious complications, ¥ A well-known local boy irugeiet oes i he sella lots of Jad Sal fed, trouble te tie Sowe OTweR MAN ead Bay, on A Mrs. Gertrude Pik: Dri who Cay ow in a Connecticut eK. Jerome. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29. — President Wilson to-day received Jerome K. Je- rome, the English author, and they hieus. for several minutes on iterary Exclusive Ladies’ Apparel 308 FIFTH AVENUE, Between 31st & 32d vtreecs REMOVAL SALE Entire Stock of Exclusive Gowns, Wraps, Costumes, Furs, Coats At Most Remarkable Reductions Very Special for Friday and Saturday 45 TOP COATS, *20 ur Regular Prices from $45 : For Street, Travel and Auto 175 TRIMMED HATS, *3.50 Including a Number of Late Fur [Trimmed Models None Sold Heretofore Less Than $15 3 Dress Hats at Same Unheard of Reductions he storms. You've not women! There's a let of talk in you, and saying what you won't do, and what you're going te do, but when up againet ing or you're not there— ing to you. told you sexle: You mean Ite time someone women the truth. Columbia and Harvard Universities and the Metropolitan Mureum of Art are large beneficiaries under the will of Hugo Reisinger, son-in-law of the late Adolphus Rusch, fled for probate to-day in the Surrogate's Court. The will specifically bequeathed more than $600,000 to charitable and public inati- tutions here and in Germany. Mrs, Reisinger, who was Fdmee Rusch, is to get nothing from the ea- tate. She is wealthy. Some of the bequests are: $100,000 to Columbia University, to establish a chair in the history of art, $50,000 to the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the purchase tof German paintings and aculpture; $50,000 to the | Germanic Museum at Harvard and $5,000 to Harvard for the purchase of German books, Five thousand dollars euch ia willed james's Lutheran Church, Now he German Hospital, the Ger- lub, the German House at Col- why more and more coffee drinkers quit coffee and use— POSTUM| Once convinced that coffee-drinking is actually harm- ful to health, few parents would give coffee to their children, or drink it themselves. What proof more convincing than the unnatural aches and pains that many coffee-drinkers suffer? istic Society of New York. A fund, the amount of which is n specified, goes to found a children’ hospital at Wiesbaden. the household furniture ‘ ighth street in willed to rf. Reisinger, as 1s a portrait of Mr. Reisinger by Arthur Kampf; one of Adolphus Busch by Anders Zorn, and rtrait of Mr. Reisinger’s sons, What proof more conclusive than the scores of exe pert medical and scientific opinions against coffee? | t No, 246 Brain, Stomach, Heart, Liver and Kidneys are the 3 first organs to be affected. Sometimes it shows in head- | Dae OE ache; often in nervousness, indigestion or heart disturb- BERLIN TO ARREST BRITISH | ance; frequently in biliousness or disturbed vision. a IN REPRISAL FOR ACTION | AGAINST LONDON GERMANS If you are in doubt, try this test— LONDON, Oct. 29 [United Press}. Having loarned that severe restrictions S FF. d d POSTUM | are imposed upon Ge.mans in England, top coffee ten days and use : the Berlin euthorities have instituted ? 6, and w clean sweep of the city tishinen, with hundreds of ar- Is Imminent, according to an News despatch from The This pure food-drink made of prime wheat and a small per cent. of wholesome molasses, has a rich, Java-like flavor and is absolutely pure and free from the ; coffee-drug, caffeine, or any other harmful ingredient. rieted visting of English | until he is able Id in Englaad with them. ‘The Huhlben a in the spatch declares by way of Hol ‘rutiniged by the HUGE GERMAN S SIEGE GUN EXPLODED, KILLING 250 | AND CREW, MADRID HEARS. | PARIS, Oct. 29.—The Journal pub- lishes a Madrid despatch credited to the Imparcial, which alleges that one of the German entimetre cannon | on their right wing in Frans ploded as the resuit of an exe powder charge and that the gunne: and 260 men were blown to pieces, Postum comes in two forms: Regular Postum—must be boiled. 15c¢ and 25c¢ packages. Instant Postum—needs no boiling. A teaspoonful of the soluble powder | stirred in a cup of hot water makes a delightful beverage instantly. 30c and 50c tins. . j Grocers everywhere sell both kinds, and the cost per cup is about the same, “There’s a Reason” for POSTUM