The evening world. Newspaper, November 30, 1914, Page 3

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ADDED HUSBAND IN Fairs. Price Alleges His Divorce ” Evidence Is Result of Beep- Laid Conspiracy. e OF NIGHT RAID. , Armed With Flash- light, Found Her With Man, * then Took Baby, She Says. f'Bwo nights before Christmas last gear in the pretty little apartment at No, 418 West One Hundred and _Twenty-ninth Street, occupied by young and beautiful Mrs. Ruth Mad- @en Price and her bosom chum, Mra. ~ Mea I. Wood, things were right for @ merry Christmas. But that's getting a bit ahead pf ‘the story, as Mrs. Price told it from the witness chair in Justice Green- baum's part of the Supreme Court to- day an her defense to the divorce suit of her husband, Charles Matlach p art critic, who says ho's a Mneal descéndant of a British Earl. *"*] was not quite seventeen year: old when I eloped and married Mr. Price,” she said. “He told me he was @ direct descendant of Lord Uvedale England. We lived together hap- " until my husband began to take me to task because an old friend of mine, a Mr. Gregg. came occasionally to call on me. “M80 man,’ he sald, ‘ever calls to @married woman unless he thinks it ‘worth his while.’ \ “Finally, things got so bad we agreed to live apart. My husband rented an apartment for me at No. 418 West One Hundred and Twenty- ginth Street and agreed to pay $18 a ‘week for the support of myself and eur baby. Mrs. Wood, who was em- ployed downtown, agreed to bring her ‘Own little child to the apartment and hare the expenses of it with me. We got along famously for awhile. “THIS POINT THE PLOT BE- GINS TO THICKEN. © ‘on Dec. 23, at Mrs. Wood’ . 8 hers. to meet her in our it at 8 o'clook in the evening. BE ROTH Mprice. & Bhe saw him only long enough to borrow $2 from him and left, saying he was going over to Jersey to see Some friends and would be back Promptly at 11 o'clock. Mr. Graham @at down in the living room to await gr return and I played the piano. “Finally, at about 10.45, I told Mr. Geaham I'd simply have to go to bed—thet I couldn't keep my eyes open a moment longer. He agreed to sit in the living room until Mrs, ‘Wood came back, and I went to my bedroom, disrobed and put on a ~ POT TOTRAP ER Solves Problem of.Economic Independence} GONIALES, LATEST | SHoucD SEK EM eNT “The question is not ‘Ought the home? The question ia, ‘Can a man no pay envelope?'"* © Propounder is Miss Mary Snow, for search work for pations. Miss Sni ingly overlooked {1 creasing number riage is put off or on a single salary. afford to marry n “Figures given by the last United States census show that 55 per cent. of the adult men of | the country earn less than $500 a year. Working girls who have any thought of marriage must accept the inevitable wrought by present-day economic conditions. That is, they must be willing to continue to support themselves after marriage, or at least to continue tho work which gives them a pay envelope every urday night. Unk they con- sent to do this there small chance that many of them ever will marry. “The wife with a pay envelope ts an economic fixture, whether or not it to Miss Snow, “Precisely that,” she agreed. “A in the home with a small income be- | gan to fee! that she must do all she could to help out, that she must be- come an economic asset to her par- ents instead of @ Nability. To-day all self-respecting girls whose par- ents are in moderate circumstances plan to take care of themselves as soon as they possibly can, “The movement is now reaching Graham went to the kitchen, heated a cup of milk and carried it into the bedroom to me. While he was jn the kitchen, I threw a kimono over my shoulders. “The clock had just begun to strike 11," she continued, “and Mr, Graham was handing me the hot milk when we heard a key turned in the door. “‘Here's Mrs. Wood now,’ I said, and we both turned to the dour, ex- pecting to see her, Instead, there stood my husband in evening clothes and carrying a pocket electric flash tgown and a boudoir cap. UAL was hungry and wanted a glass & hot milk, At my request Mr, lamp. Two other men were at his heels. “Mr. Price flashed the light around Miseries of Evils the Chocol Tortures of Indigestion Constipation of Impure Blood: Quickly and Safely Removed by T have laid Here Mrs. Pri |wopt, and Mrs. wa |veiled, sat in the rear of the court room, stirred uneasily in her chair, \ Mra, Price swore Mrs. Wood had t confessed to her she had been too jate Laxative q Ex-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people thy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. ., ExeLax is guaranteed to be efficient, gentle, harmless. % BT eh cone Davowters ir STAY WOME AND SPONGE aD MOTHERS ARE COMING TO THev fF WooK How | MUCH BETTER LiVE Now, [THAT | WORK Vere riage Because Salaries Are Small, Women Must Plan to Aid in Supporting the Home, and Often in Keeping It Together. pendence for wives, condition and not a theory confronts us.” generation or so back the daughter! working women I know have ha By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. married woman to work outside her afford to marry the woman who has There you have the problem of the wage-earning wife propounded from an economic rather than a sentimental angle. And the ruthlessly sensible many months in charge of the re- the Intercollegiate Bureau of Occu- jow has made the discovery, surpris- In many discussions of economic inde- that in this whole matter “a In an In- of instances it is necessary for the maintenance of the home that both husband and wife should earn money. In still other instances mar- given up because it is too expensive “Scores of young men who feel that they cannot jow fill the clubs and bachelor apart- ments of the city,” Miss Snow said in a recent talk at the Suffrage Shop on Fifth Anenue. “Many girls too are loath te marry unless their young men are financially able to support them. the modern wife. Like her unmar- ried sister, she is beginning to under- stand the economto strain which the Wage-earning head of the family en- dures. She wants to help him, and in many Instances she must help him if the home is to be kept together. “I Know they say that the modern woman often works when It isn’t nec- essary, simply to procure pin-money,” interjected Miss Snow. “I have come in contact with thousands of women, married and unmarried, in all sorts of occupations. And with the excep- tion of a few rich individuals who had a special passion for sculpture or some other art, I have never known any woman to accept money for her work unless economic necegsity com- she wins our mora! appreval?” I put! Pelled her.” “My experience has been the same as yours,” I said, “and most of the support others besides themselve: “Let those who assert that a hus- band ought to assumo the whole bur- den of household support examine the marriage statistics,” she contin- ued. “Already young men are put- ting off their marriage far be- yond the normal age. That abuse would be remedied if they — the room dramatically and Pointed to me, “There, gentlemen,’ he sald, ‘is my wife! SAYS HER HUSBAND TOOK HER BABY AWAY. “Mr. Price seized the baby, One of the men with him handed me a sum- Ree in a sult for divoree, Then they then “Did Mrs. Wood return th fan she promised. to do?” ‘naked attorney, Willlam Aaron Levy. “She certainly id not," positive reply. pe wearthe “When did you next see her? “The night of March 12 of this year, when my little baby died in a hos- pital where my husband hud placed him. I went to my husband's studio at No, 45 Washington Square to talk to him about the baby. He wasn't there, and I walked from the studio building up” Fifth avenue until I came to the Brevoort. “Something told me to go in, and there in the dining room at my’ hus- band and Mrs, Wood, baby, had died, Yes, it it?’ “Mrs, Wood sneered and I grabbed for her. Everything was black Lefore me and I would have Kille¢ her could on her!" broke down and who, heavily jhe replied, ‘I knew it. What Pri Wor friendly with Price. Mrs, Wood, from the witness stand, denied every al- legation of undue friendliness with Price, and sald she had never con- fessed to his wife, Mrs, Price op- poses her husband's suit for divorce with one for separation. She charges Mra, Wood's trip to New Jersey on the night of the raid was part of a > her husband laid. “I asked my husband if he knew | 4 ente ‘pHE SVENING WORLD. MONDAY; FALSEFRIEND |The Wife With the Regular Pay Envelope Never having been able to find @ logical answer to this question I didn't attempt it. But I did ask Miss Snow whether she thought the mother of young children should continue to work at her business or profession. INTERFERENCE BY MOTHER- HOOD ONLY TEMPORARY. “That is something which each mother should settle for herself, The arrangements would natu- | rally differ according to what the woman's work was and accord- ing to the number of the children. If there are several close together the mother, in order to care for them, may have to put aside other duties temporarily. Dut there's no reason why she shouldn't look forward to resum- ing her career at the end of the few years during which her chil- dren need her constant ence. Trainin is what the women of y, need pi ly. The old notion that many occu- ations must be clos t female sex because male sex is nonsense. trail brain. a trained brain whether you find it in a man's head or a woman's, and the modern em- ployer has already learned as much. “Girls need physical training too. The woman who Is always well, who never has to stay away from the of- fice with a headache or a bad cold, has a tremendous advantage. Girls must realize that health is a business asset and must learn to guard it. They already know more than thay did once, and prefer a lunch of baked beans or beefateak to a diet of choco- late eclairs and ice cream, “I believe that a girl ought to fol- jow her natural bent in choosing her work, but it seems to me that the pres- lose the habit of sneering at so-called ‘commercial’ work.” MANY FIELDS OPEN TO WILL- ING WOMEN. “What are the occupations in which you believe women have a particular- ly good chance to-day?” I asked. “Women are wanted for inves- tigating all sorts of social con- ditions. They are demanded in pure milk and pure food cam- gaigns, on tenement-house com- i ina, in labor inquiries and welfare work. | wish the college courses in economics and sociol- egy gave women more drill along these lines, An increasing num- ber of excellent civil service posi- tions are open to women. The: are employed in board of healt! laborato! and in libraries. Thero are never enough really well-equipped private secretarics to supply the demand, “Tho profession of teaching 1s over- crowded. The women who take up law incur the intense dislike of the men In the field, and, of ali profes- sional women, physicians have prob- jably had the hardest fight for recog. |nition, Even now the majority of | persons will not employ elther a wom- an physician or a woman lawyer in serious emergency. But I cannot too strongly reite » that the woman who succeeds ie \the trained woman, Ono great New York merebant who has forty-seven college women In his employ sa the colloge-trained woman bears same relation to others as a delicate Swiss watch to a plough,” Miss Snow concluded. ——— Corn Growers to Sto WASHINGTON, Noy. 80.—Ohlo corn growers numbering about 1,500 men, women, boys and girls will spend two to-morrow on their third annual tour. Th highly educated girl might well culti- | vate a more democratic attitude and) m Washington | arty ill be under the auspices of the Ohio Agricultural Commission d will arrive Here on seven special SPeciacive IN ADVERTISING Your Sacary 3 RAKED. AB YOU Ae TO TANG CHARGE OF , THE DEPARTMENT: DEFIED CONGRESS Answer Contempt Charge in Washington. the Supreme Court, — GARY'S SEGREGATED DISTRICT IS REOPENED Mayor Says Policy of Suppression Failed—Ministers to Demand Close of Resorts. GARY, Ind., Nov, 30.—The segre- gated district which has been closed tince July 29 reopened hero last night with the sanction of the Mayor and the Chief of Police, The Administration announced that the policy of suppression has been prac- Ucally a failure, ‘They found it impoa- sible to prevent disorderly places apring- ing up in residence sections, they said, and decided that the protection of community demanded a segregated di trict under police regulation, A necret meeting of the Gary Asso- elation of Ministers jed to call on the Mayor to-day and demand that he close the houses under threat of im- peachment. (QUEEN ALEXANDRA \S 70 TO-MORROW LONDON, Nov. 30,—Dowager Queen Alexandra, who will be seventy yours old on Tuesday, intends to have a quiet birthday anniversary, She ts |not likely to be visited by the German Emperor, though ne was invited to come here for this occasion before the war broke out, Her Mayesty has spent most of the Jyear in town, In spite of the extra duties devolving on the King, ne visits his mother frequentyy and tells her |the war news. Queen Alexandra takes a walk nearly every day with her dogs in the grounds of Marlborough House, She keeps herself very busy with her letters and with the close attention she gives to bouschold af- fairs. “ihe is showing a great Interest in the war, especially in the fortunes of the officers at the front whom she has known personally. If they return wounded she visits them in tho hos- pitals, Thureday and Friday Only. busy days in Washington beginning 622 Fulton St, Srooklyn, N. ¥ NOVEMBER’ 8 mand in Sinaloa, Northwestern Mex- jlco, The convention plans to put vi |Carranzistas at Tamos, nine miles from Tampico, WASHINGTON, Nov. 80.—With —_—>— Highest Court Decides He Must | batts sevat conten it anaes oe WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—The &D-|mer First Chief, must return to Washington to answer to indictment for contempt of Con- grems for refusing to give information | to the Money Trust Investigating |gorcog Committee, was dismissed to-day by ONE-PRICE CLEARANCE SALE: 50 Exclusive Models TRIMMED HATS Usual $8.75, $10, $15, $20, $25 Grades Lion feather (rere. : WLATO ATAGK EXCHANGE PLANS” or SOON 10 RESUME DENS W STOEKS MERIAN RULER” 4 Delays Entry to Mexico City, Probably to Halt New Presidential Claimant. Result of Success of Bond Opening. EL PASO, Tex., Nov. %0.—Gen.| Roassured by the gentle behavior Felipe Angeles, chief leutenant of! of the bond market, which opened Villa, 1s en route to Mexico City to-| saturday, governors of the Stock Ex. day with an infantry division with! change began planning to-day for Instructions to protect the forelgn le! restricted dealings in stocks. The gations. Villa ordered Angeles to the | ruling committes of five sat in execu- |e when the latter returned to|tive session moat of the day on the Tula after capturing Guadalajara, | subject, and from time to time there but despatches carly to-day say that/oame vague intimations of hope and Villa himself has not yet decided to} goog cheer for the long idle brokers. enter Mexico City at once. Statement was made by one of the The Zapata forces in Mexico City | governors that there were encourag- sent @ special train and a delegation | ing prospects for another move in the to Tula Sunday to escort Villa to|near future toward broadening the the capital. Their plans called for) market and that an effort would be his triumphal entry into the city to-| made to open the door for dealing in day, but for some reason the northern | stocks. leader delayed his departure. While this ruling committees of five It was reported among Villista of-| governors in playing the part of a gen- ficlals at Juares to-day that Villa, in- | eral staff, another committee of three stead of entering the capital, may de-| members Is sitting on the floor of the |cide to move at once inst Gen./ Exchange directing the actual opera- {Pablo Gonzales, who: is reported to|tions and passing upon every pur- have repudiated both Carranaa and ne the Aguas Calientes convention, and to have decided himself Provisional President of Mexico, The Aguas Calientes Convention is taking no chances with Zapata, it was learned to-day. Gertrudia Sanchez, @ Villa leader, has been ap- Pointed to command the State of Guerrero, Zapata's stronghold, and Gen, Juan Banderas, Zapata's second In comand, has been placed in com. Notice was giv daily list of im prices would be posted. The committee will pase upon sales as they occur, and If prices are too low for safety in its judg- ment a minimum for the particular securities will be made on the spot. There are more than & thousand listed bonds. Minimum prices were fixed for one hundred of them on Saturday. The others will bo dealt with as trades are Only about fifty bond issues have been traded in #o far. ‘Three hundred brokers were on the floor of the Exchange at the opening this morning, but most of them were there out of curiosity. Bond trading rally left to a few specialists, mall group of these fes- ade lota of noise but did not do much busin However, every- body felt cheer up and there was much optimistic talk about the floor. Opening prices were little Urrece eal from those prevailing Saturday. festinghouse HE iia officers over territory now held |by Zapata and send Zapatista officials :Into remote states. Gen, Alberto Carrera Torres to-day reported a victory in a battle with hit three distinct governments proclaimed The fess site was of |1n Mexico and others believed ready| Py vertibies at 90, which was 6 points down from the at 20 close. Most of the trades were in United States Steel rn Pacific, Union Pacific, and Distillers, The mar- a as narrow and quiet, with vari- ations of one-eighth and one-quarter some up and some down, Only x tiv pape: were sold in the rat Afteen minutes, The Coffee Exohange opened this morning after a wartime recess since distinct faction supreme was in aight to-day, ‘The latest claimant reported, |! Gen, Pablo Gonzales, has heretofore been looked upon as one of Carranza's chief supporters and his reported de- | fection may prove serious to the for- peal of George G, Henry, @ New) Gonzales in reported at Pachuca, |last July. A liquidating committee York banker, from the decision of forty miles northeast of Mexieo City,| NA ‘at work adjusting affairs in the New York courts, holding he| %}advance so that no troubles about with the outposts of Villa's army in close proximity. News of fighting be- tween them was expected. At the same time Carran: and Villista re racing for Tampico, where Gen, Luis Caballero has repudiated Carranza and declared for Villa and the Gutierrez Government. Mexico City, now held by Zapata troops, with several of Villa's veteran regiments in reserve, is reported quiet, The reorganized police force is in complete control and all threatened rioting is being effectively stamped out. Vera Cruz with Carranza in charge is also tranquil, although fighting in reported between there and Mexico City. uncompleted trades might disturb the new start. A large number of brok: ers and spectators were on hand. first sale wan 1,600 bags of December option at 5.45, which was consider- ably above the quotations fixed by the committee. There was little dis- poaltion to sell and the tendency of prices Was upward. ——— delphia Exchange Opens. ADELPHIA, Nov. 30.—The Phil- had a quiet and after having PH adelphia Stock Exchany orderly opening to-day, been closod since July 30. Trading was confined to local stocks, In some in- stances transactions were at prices above those of Ji 30, and in oth they were below, but conditions wi about normal because of the way the murket acted, [ne 2, SERS PURE WATER FOR ARMY MEN. vas Hage a Chieride Lime Used in Destroying Germs, WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Army sur- weons have developed a new method of purifying drinking water for troops in the fiel@ which has experimentally given excellent results and is likely to be adopted rally. Canvas bags 80 closely woven as to be waterproof are used to garry the water, and in each bag 1s dropped a glass tube containing fifteen grains of chloride of lime: the water potable and pane ee renaes VETERAN FIRE FIGHTER, 12 TIMES A HERO, OEAD Former Battalion Chief Eugene Ter- peny Succumbs After Career of 34 Years in Department. Former Battalion Chief Eugene Ter- peny of the New York Fire Depart- ment, died this morning at his home ing figures of the department when in the heyday of his glory as a fire fighter. He was six feet four inches in height and built in proportion, ang his career was one of honor and credit, He was appointed as a fireman March 7, 1880, when he was twenty-two years old, He rose steadily to the positions of Meutenant and captain, When he had werved twenty years in the de- partment he was made battalion chief. On April 6, 1497, he met his firat serious mishap, In @ dangerous smoke | fire in Harlem his men had to span an areaway with planks to reach the seat of the fire, He tried the planks first to see if they were safe. Ho plunged twenty feet, an injury 6 his irs, Wombat certs nly h ine faye? highly ‘devel ds, . Fifth Avenue | spine and al injuries’ resulting. | In his he had many rena ape, reine nis omar When he ae Will Hold Their Annual Sale of mado Battalion Chief Hook and Lad- der Company No. 10 and Harlem ad- mirers presented him with a diamond badge. FOR PRICES 867 Broad 8t., Newark, N, J. 6.0. MLYOU, Fouterdt heii Committee Considers Move as} Veteran Amusement i Succumbs After Opera itors have @ good time and fortune in doing it, died early at his home, No. 87 Prospect a ‘West, Brooklyn. He underwedt operation last evening for in Jamestown, L. I. He had been it 10 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. more than @ year from a complica. |T hep weighs only 0s 3 pasate ow tion of maladics, He was retired June Going ¥e0 PAR. Th Edi Sh 1 of this year, (From the Louistille.Coarer Journal.) le ison . Chief Terpeny was one of the strilr- 473 Fifth Avenue, Between 40th and 4iet Streste | Franklin Simon & Co. On Wednesday, December Second Women’s Fur Coats and Furs } Best Values Ever Offered PARTICULARS: SEE, TUESDAY'S EVENING PAPERS |’ FIFTH AVE. 37th. and. 38th 8 ~ a

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