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OF SUFFS AND ANTIS ip SEEWARFORVOTE Kept Apart in Gallery of Con- }. gress With Men Sitting Between Them. HOT DEBATE -ON BILL. ‘Suffragists Face Defeat, but See Victory in Even Having ‘Their Cause Put to Test. ‘WASHINGTON, Jan. 12—After an hour and a half of debate the House to-day adopted, 209 to 31, a special rule for considering the proposed eonstitutional amendment for woman wuffrage, and then settled down to eix hours’ actual debate before vot- fng on whether to submit the reso lution to the States for ratification. ‘This opened the way for a decisive ‘vote on the Mondell resolution, em- bodying the constitutional amend- ment, Inserting a new article reading as follows: = “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by & Btate on account cf sex. “Congress shall have power, by ap- Propriate legislation, to enforce tho Provisions of this article.” ‘The hope of every woman uffragist fm the United States that the question @f their right to vote be considered in Congress was realized to-day. At 11 o'clock the House opened debate on the Mondel! resolution. The galleries ‘were jammed, mostly with suffragists, and nearly every member of the House was in his seat when Chair- man Henry of the House Rules Com- mittee presented the rule providing for six hours’ debate. Unless there Is unexpected parliamentary dickering @ vote Is expected at 8 P. M. The gallery to the leit of Speaker Clark's desk was occupied by the guffragettes. On the right the anti- suffragettes. Separating the hostile camps was the men’s gallery. In the euffrage gallery Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, Mrs, O. H. P. Belmont, Mrs. Pethick Lawrence of London and the “Congressional Committee of the Na- tional Association were in charge. Asroas the way were Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge, President of the National As- @ociation Opposed to Woman Suf- frage—Mra. A. J. George, Mrs. Dan- fel A. Markham and the legislative| committee of that association, | Nearly one hundred members of! the House declared their intention early in the day to speak on the amendment and the leaders believed because of this demand that they would have little opportunity to pre- eent their views, The time of the de- bate was controlled by Representa- tive Mondell of Wyoming, Taylor of Colorado and Volstead of Minnesota and Chairman Henry of the Rules Committee. The first three support- ed the suffrage cause, Henry, assist- ed by Representative Webb of North Carolina, opposed it, ‘Mr. Henry, voting for the rule, sald: “I believe a vote should be given on any proposal which has become a natiopal issue. But I believe this ts purely a matter of State jurisdiction. T shall never vote for any amendment that proposes to take from the States powers now reserved to them and to ‘vest those powers in the Federal Gov- ernment.” Representative Campbell, Republi- can, spoke for the rule and the Mon- , dell resolution. success. being married? know. time of the original choosing. Young Men's Christian Association. to marry the studio should never mate with a in,” patience will give way. When I called on Dr. Smith in hia’ and Twenty-second Street, he had ready a stock of admirable advice on the proper way to choose a husband or a wife, “Man and woman alike demand continually, ‘Where is my mate?" he said. “The family is really older than voiced by Representative Kelly of Pennsylvania. “There is no reason,” he sald, “why the woman suffrage problem should be met piecemeal and fractionally. There is no reason why it should be decided in forty-eight different places. It should be decided once and for all here and in Washington. The blackguard, the thief, the un- convicted scoundrel of every kind walks up and casts his ballot, but the American woman must stand aside." Representative Hobson argued that the resolution did not take any power from the States. id the D 4 5; No one in the House expecte “The President and many of bis} surfragists to Bek victorious. Even followers,” said he, “insist that} the “pros'" expectations were that @ranting the right of suffrage to women is one that must be dealt with by the States. He invokes the doctrine of State's sovereignty with the eame enthusiasm and confidence * that others of his party invoked that doctrine in favor of bumunp slavery ) in other days. “The President, the leader of his) | eau party, when he charges the opposi-| Gne t, half of the House membership would suport the amendment. Two-thirds is necessary, “The bare fact that women will get the House to vote on the a of suffrage is in itself a victor; clared Representative Taylor to-day. ‘or forty’ years women have ap- pealed for a vote In Congress and the fact that it Is coming up to-day is in itself an adv: of the svffrage I think we will get about a o three vote.” {tion with not having a new idea in| “Tho suffragists won't get, any ” thing like a majority,” sal epre= thirty years, should at least find) Ee yisqin of Alabama, aD op- ‘aome buffer for everything new that| ponent of the amendmen }1# proposad besides the doctrine of) A heavy rain to-day spoiled pa- | State's sovereignty that surrendered reas 408 Grenghed panne aad pan: i : [nants of the # D at Apppmattox half a century ago.” | leaders of both factions were among Progressive party support was tho spectators. | “Happiness—prosperity—health— lie wit inthering Ms moderation.” And so it is a matter of pride with us that the moderate man is our best customer, It is especially for him that we make a wonderfully mild and mnettiow .Whiskey — Wilson — Real Wilson—That’s All! The Whiskey for which we invented the Non-Refillable Bottle, | COE ee ee rinse Se PA Aner NL fo ate Alt ‘Address Wilson, 315 omen fait diy pica ty e sald. water hottle won't get on well together. not to take a fretful woman as his wife, for s earth and by the citizens of earth. difficult for two persons to make a marriage than It is.” home at No, 21 West One Hundred] the human race, | | hand, there are those | Isn't caprice, oe *t Choose Fox- If You Are Steady, Serious or Studious| (NBRITISHREPLY CourrsHP SHOULD Cousur OF A Senex OF CROSE- EXAMINATIONS Extremes By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. If you decide to go into business with a partner you don't choose him because his hair curls, or because his ties and socks match, or because he is the best fox-trotter of your acquaintance. 7 On the contrary, you give weight to his executive ability, his financial standing, his reputation for honor and good faith—the essentials, In short, which will help make the business a Why Mate,” at the iceberg, for an iceberg a The patient and animals, one man for one woman, Boal should be equal rights privileges for the two. not in heaven, mate. be at the seashore, And of all the girls who one you love. ance before marria: and consequent the ur and person during absenc connotes a willingn: for the one who ha tain individuals. Who told me that she re three of her husbands, ar deubt her in the least 0 hearts in the graves o! | loves.”” |THE ESSENTIALS OF MATRIMONY. Why go it blind? Be as Careful as You Would Be in Selection of a Business Partner, Is Advice of Dr. J. Gardner Smith—Cautious Against Temperament or Even in Complexion —From 23 to 30 the Right Age to Marry—Divorce the Last Resort. in Then why not pursue the same plan in regard to the matrimonial partnership? marry for the most trivial motives? yourself and your environment and reason out, seneibly ‘and seriously, just what sort of girl or man is moat likely to help you succeed in the business of loving and Why not study e what Dr. J. Gardner Smith would like to For more than a quarter of a century Dr. Smith has been an ex- ceedingly busy man, and yet he has found time to observe the great amount of marital unhappiness in New York and to deduce the reason. The main cause, he believes, les in just this absence of logic and good sense at the He mentioned certain glaring instances the other afternoon, during his talk on “The Marriag West Side “The woman who loves to tango and fox-trot is very foolish “The affectionate person a hot ought ner or later his Marriages are not made in heaven, but on And It ought to be much more for it- exists as a result of the mating of many birds! POINTS IN CON. With buman beings we| posseAvaes have come down through the stages of| polyandry and polygamy, plural wives| cially congenial. The woman fond of and plural husbands, to monogamy, Now the and equal “As 1 said the other day, | believe that marriages are made on earth and The young man in- stinctively feels that when he asks, ‘Where is she? instead of waiting passively for a miracle to disclose his The answer to his question is this, ‘She is where you are.’ It may t the mountains, on board ship, it may be in your city boarding house that you will find her, are where you are ‘She’ is the ons you fancy, the one with whom yov are fascinated, the “What is love? It isn't passion. It It isn't admiration of beauty, or desire for money, or am- bition for social distinction. rue love implies devotion. It is ready to make sacrifices for the beloved object. it is character- d by harmony. The poets have much to say of lovers’ quarrels, but if @ girl anJ man have many diesensions during their acquaint- they may count on many more afterward, unhappiness. Tru. love means a fondness for ince of the person loved, constant desire for that It also to work inapired it. “It 1s possible to love more than once; at least, it is possible for cer- I know of a woman ly loved ail nd I don’t 24 the other bury their thelr first HAPPY “But you believe, do you not, that there are other ersentials besides love to consider in selecting a asked Dr, Smith : “Certainly there are,” he mate?" replied, I should name love the chief essential, but in addith health in one's prospectiv and for healthy parents. partner, By health I Include a certain amount of muscular always a good | future husband or dings before able decision. ould al A oung rength and muscular ability to. obse! wife in coun coming Personal be considered to hy- in an should be ity for whieh jo asks. ‘ “The safest age to perey. for beth men and women, is , 1! i\VENING WORLD, otter for Lif | ) one ought to look for | A twenty-three and thirty. The man should be from two to ten years der than his wife, because she wi Ad marry neither « ir physical type nor a decided brunette. The choice should fall upon a medium brunette, and a decided brunette mates best with a medium blonde, Two medium blondes may marry each other, and likewise two me- jum brunettes. ‘George Middleton has said that persons on different mental planes should not mate, and I agree with f Gd cave Man and he modern and the cook, thi tudent ‘and. the tango enthusiast, are almost sure to turn out unhappily. It is desirable that husband and wife should have their reading, study, taste for the theatre, games and’ aspirations tn common, “Morally, husband and wife ought to comprehend each other's attl- tude in the matter of sex, The wife should have a clearer appreciation of the physical side of love and the hus- hand of the spiritual. SHOULD BE OBSERVED. “A husband and wife should be so- the theatre and of large parties ought not to marry the man whi chief en- joyment ts in the family group. The man always on the go will not fi happiness with the woman who ‘ no life to her.’ And in disposition there should be this element of con- geniality. A sympathetic, affection- te Individual married to a chilly, re- served perace will be made utterly miserable, “It is foolish to ma who has been b society entire! @ person up ina roug ie different from one’s own. There will be too many violently contrasting tastes, ideas and methods living. Lon, sngesements are unwise, articularly if the principals are ‘opt separate by space as well as by time. Their love is likely to and if they ma debt. e really happy | vmgk @ mod- ern husband and wife should meet on oF gettin a basis of complete equality, includes political equality and an equal division of property. ‘Spirtes ually they should shure their religion, their altruism and thelr conception of honor, “Ina mate, then, we ought to acok love, affection, agreement, cleanliness, equal mentality, congeniality ond high motives—a physical, mental, moral and spiritual harmony.” “and if we find we haven't these things in our marriage?” I asked. “Divorce should always be @ last resort,” sald Dr, Smith gravely. “But a loveless partnership is legalized In- famy.” . BIG. SING SING GUARD CELEBRATES WITH GUN This Two separate reports came to the police that a big, six-foot man was Nourishing a revolver and frightening the life out of people with his gu play, the first coming from Park Ave~- hue and One Hundred and Twenty- fifth eet and the second from No. Broadway, whieh is at Two Wundred and Twenty- seventh i it was not until He proved to be Jolin Quinn, 4 sins Ping Who Wass i He went back to Os- sining t to get the pemmnit to carry the revolver which he told Mag- istrate Harris he had locked away in his room, Magistrate Harris gave Quinn until Thursday to return with the revolver @ ininute. But Then be will have to answer permit. to the charge of disorderly conduct, Ae de ds . Mate Tee Trem oor Ins COUNTRY §=SURROUNDINGS FIND AN ANTOTE FOR THE PSN O MERCURY TABLET Ohio Physician Says Calcium Sulphide Will Offset Effects of Bichloride of Mercury. (Brerial to The Brening World.) CINCINNATI, O., Jan. 11.—Dr. J. H. Wims of the West End Medical So- clety of this city, when seen to-day by The Evening World correspondent in regard to his reported discovery of and the successful antidotal use of calclum sulphide in cases of bichlo- ride of mercury poisoning, said: “Chemista have long known that sulphur forms an insoluble com- pound with mercury, but it had never been used universallly as an antidote to mercurial poisoning. I have used calcium sulphide in one-tenth to one one-hundredth grain dose, repeated every hour in mercurial poisoning such as we frequently meet with. In Qeiving mercury for diseased condi. tions requiring large doses internally, when salivation would follow in these cases relief followed almost imme- diately. “In bichloride poisoning we have almost the same condition as from mercury distributed to the various tissues and organs. ‘This condition requires some drug that will form an insoluble compound. This is what the calclum sulphide does, Bichloride of mercury is one of the most valu- able drugs and antiseptics in use and its universal use makes it all the more important that its antidote should be known. —_— TWO WOMEN INHURED IN AUTO COLLISION One Driver Arrested on Charge of Operating Car While Intoxicateu. biles at One Hundred and Sixty-fret Street and Union Avenue, the Bronx, early to-day, two women we: jehtly injured and © th machines wrecked, Benedict Reeves, thirty-ons, of No, 760 Elton Avenue, the Bronx, who la in the automobile Lusiness at One Hundred and Fifty-second Street and Bergen Avenue, the Bronx, and who was operating one of the machine: ps <oked up in the Morrivania Station, charged with operating an automobile while intoxicated, | Reeves was operating @ factory car west in One Hundred and Sixty-frat Street when at Union Avenue he ccl- Nded with a seven passenger touring car owned by Albert Kelpian of No. 1006 Boston Road, and operated by | John Dooley of No, 967 Cauldwell Avenue. In the machine were Mra, Keilpian and Miss Ida Pfeifer of No, 1048 Boston Road. The force of the collision threw both women to the In @ collision between two automo- WORLD'S PRINTING FORCE WHO EXPIRED TO-DAY ON SHIP SEIZURES President Has Not Yet Studied the Note or Discusséd It * With Bryan. WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—President ‘Wilson eaid to-day he had no com- meat to make on the British reply to the American note, inasmuch as it was only a preliminary. He indicat- 4 he had not given the British com- (Prom ‘Trensertpt.) ye & purty loud sult yer ges @& Weary. ji gti it belonged ter a mam dat 8 Treatment for $5 During the past siz y my office was located in the Building, @ great many persons come to me and told me that would like very much to have treat them for clogged ness and other manifestations af, 4 tarrh, but, that they could not af to pay my fees, Such persons requested that I treat them lower rate than my usual fee. je fact that Plage in “Dat's Bryan. In other quarters, where the com- munication has been gone over in de- tail by officers of the Government, the view still prevails that while many concessions have been made, the British note leaves much still to be explained before American mer- chants can be apprised of what they can or cannot do with their cargoes. Officials hope the second British J0S.D. JACKSON 26 YEARS IN WORLD'S EMPLOY, PASSES AWAY TO NOSE AND WIGGLING | ing FINGERS MERT AINE? ric eom nerf posing Room and Member of Quarter-Century Club. Assistant District Attorney Cites History to Court to Show It Does. note, expected in a few days, will lay down specific rules by which Ameri- oe exporters can be guided in the ture. DOES PUTTING THUMB fecs as they were. * When a. expired in the Flatiron Bu! 1 moved into my new offices, No, Weat 42d strect, my office fi were so°much increased and the rangements of the office are so better that 1 decided to reduce. tees for a Hmited time to a nomi price, so that all may aYord te eer"take this opportunity of not I e im! notify all those who require treatment catarrhal troubles that at present fees for treatment will be a of $5.00 for eight treatments. It requires frequent treatment master catarrh and the clogged trils, deafness and head noises sore throats and coughs that caused by catarrh. ee The of the nominal fee pone for Kin phe visits is given thes requent treatment may the reach of every one. The will include all necemary and medicine needed for home a The only condition that I make ts that as soon as I have all the Joseph D. Jackson, Superintendent jen of The World composing room, died at 3.10 o'clock this morning at home, No, 446 Kast One Hundred and Fortieth Street, after a brief illness following a fall on the slippery steps in front of his home two weeks ago. A alight concussion of the brain re- sulted in blood poisoning, which neces- sitated an operation, but he was re- covering when a kidney affection caused his death, Mr. Jackson was born in County Antrim, Ireland, on the 7th of Ap and with his parents emigrated to Canada while he was a mere boy. They settled in Kingaton, Ontario, and came to New York in 1869. He was firat foreman, then city editor of the ce Daily Graphic. He came to The ‘orld twenty-six years ago, about the time The Evening World was estab- shed, and at first was foreman of The Evening World composing room. Later be was made foreman of Th World, and atill later superintendent of the combined composing rooms, He was a member of The World’ Quarter Century Club and there was not @ more popular man among the coe OE eet nity tect] $02 Candler Building—220W, 42d department. All who knew him feel ey ‘* reehiy Pyar np randy. WA. te a distinot personal loss in bis doath. | Hours He was a genial, kindly man, whol ¥: {7 40° County Judge Roy tn Brooklyn to- day heard an appeal from the judg- ment of Magistrate Naumer in the case of John J. Shannon, a New York broker, agains(Morris Gerstenfeld of No, 128 Windsor Place, Brooklyn. Tho former accused Geratenfeld of stand- ing in the doorway of the butcher shop of his son-in-law at that ad- dress, Nov. 16 last, and, as Shannon passed, putting his thumb to his nose and wriggling his four fingers at him. Shannon had Geratenfeld convicted of disorderly conduct and a fine of %® wan imposed. * Charles Berlin, Geratenfeld’s law- yer, sald in his appeal to-day that the case wan of importance because of numerous litigations between the two men resting on it, There have been five summonses and arrests, and two other brokers, John Gilbine and John Atkins, are involved. Assistant District Attorney Ander- son fought the appeal and dug into history In an effort to show that the act of putting the thumb to the nose and wriggling one’s fingers at a per- son tended to produce a breach of the He pointed out that such ac- described by Shakespeare us i the trouble between the fam- flies of Romeo and Juiet. And he said New York history tells of a trum- peter going down the river to demand the surrender of the English and .mak- ing similar finger motion! the amazed commander then learned that such was the custom of New Amsterdam tenants In expressing their derision of rent collectors. He said this showed Ger act was intended to provoke an with Shannon, and declared Magi trate Naumer had said that if any o1 should do auch @ Shing. to him he would be tempted to castigate the of- der, sence Roy li ly to the ry evidence, and ‘deciared. the Thumb and Nose case was of such moment that he felt it necessary to reserve his decision. RESTAURANT PATRONS HURL DISHES AND ROUT DARING YOUNG HOLD-P Antonio Batlotta, elghteen years old, who came to New York only two | months ago from Italy and speaks no English, walked into Peter Koen restaurant at No, 203 Boerum Street, Williamsburg, to-day, drew a loaded revolver from his pocket, pointed it in the direction of a dozen men din- ing in the place and reached across the counter in an effort to get to the | 4 If you desire to avail this offer you will do your name at an early date. 1 will be pleased to have you visit It will cost you nothing for an siviee, Dr. J. C. McCOY } foe ae aid not territy | BACK IF IT FAILS | Keene's customers. One of them A Blessing to a New York Official Photograp! hurled a plate at Ratlotta and struck is aw w signal | New York Cit; ‘I ‘¢ found Vino! to be a godsend as a reconstructive tonic for a run-down constitution. I am an j him on the head, 7 | tor 9 bombardment of plates, cups} official photographer, and for a long time I suffered from and saucers, knives, bottles and weakness and general debility, and’ soon realized that my food, Koene ran from the kiteher strength was fast eeving me, I tried different tonics with a big carving knife and Batlotta without benefit, but one day I.saw Vinol advertised and backed out of the place and | decided to try it, Before I had taken two bottles I had gained in health and stren, work than before, Vinol 80 that I could do 100% more F t man and his cus-| ayy reeegrens Se af hos the best tonic I ever took and | tomers puratied the youth, who head-| “ment while the two men fell ti ° I cannot say enough in its praise to do it justice."’— the ‘wreckage, ‘| freight satis Sieiectiven Farris aaa "WILLIAM KOHLHOFY, 4 Teving Place; New York. w : ea Ag Carroll, who were looking for car It is the combined action of the curctivel elements of the Cheating Him: Raiayes, BRN tum approaching and cods’ livers akied by the. Blagg Layee 4 and (rom the eaen P ‘ strength creating properties of tonic iron con- FJ that milionair te| Again Hatlotta displayed his re- . ’ wocth'e daley s miaute?’ naulted the| volver, but the getectives | grabbed wine in Vinal tei males # the vent Roy, man with large diamonds. him before he cou! . and took him uilding and strength creating tonic known, Yer. You wouldn't think it from bie|to the Manhattan Avenue Police «At Riker & Hegeman stores, and at all > manner and appeai \Court, where Magistrate Geismar drug stores that display this —— a |e “No. His time m worth « doll bald him for Fd Saad. tery al pele op sign when it com arges of attemp' bery ALSO LEADING DRUG STORES a himself, he foo't' getting © rus| gesnult and carrying « loaded revol- money. ver. “ ae" ° \ * %