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1% sb at of You tink I Killed Him?” She Asked Over Phone |, After Victim’s Death. ww emer WITNESS HEARD NOISE. Crash Before Finding of Bal- lou’s Body Described by Patrick Rabbitt. Ape: taf Co indent ad the alanine World) BRIDGEPORT, Conn., March 10.— ‘The trial of Mrs. Helen M. Angle on @ charge of manslaughter in connec- tion with the death in Stamford of Waldo R. Ballon, her aged admirer, was resumed in the Superior Court here to-day. Before the calling of Edwin R. (Guernsey, Mr. Ballou's business part- ner, friend and landlord, at No. 24 Re- Tay Place, a big packing box, contain- fing all the small articles found in Mrs, Angle's apartments by the police, was brought into court. The exhibit »» included a black sheet used as a cover, ‘ked with dark stains and white hairs. Mra. Angle regarded the ar- ticles with calm, detached curiosity, apparently the least interested of any Woman in the court room. “Do you know whether Mr. Ballou and Mrs. Angle were engaged to be married?” Guernsey was asked. “I know that one time they were not,” he replied. Q. How? A. 1 asked her why she @id not marry Ballou and she said thought he was too old, and be- she did not think people who ‘She own children ought to marry. fad felt the results of it in her ‘ows family, “. Did she say anything else? A. he said she bud all that was coming to her as it was. TELLS OF TALK WITH MRS. ANGLE AFTER TRAGEDY. Q. Did you Lave any conversation with Mrs. Angle after the death of Mr. Ballou? A. ¥ The day she was re- leased on bail she called me on the telephone. She asked if I knew who it was I said, “Yes, it's Mrs. Angie. * Bhe sald Do you think I killed Wal- do?” 1 said: “I don't know waether you did or not, but Idon’t like the idea of your Olga him out on tba street to die like a dog.” She said: “I wish I had called you up or tele- I sald: “I wish ‘Mr. Klein tried fo get Guernsey to I, | Mrs. Angle had sald: “I have the friends” (or good times) “I need coming to me now.” His ef- forts, however, were unsuc’ssful, James Vincent Morris, a record clerk in the Yale and Towne lock factory, where Ballou was a depart- ment superintendent, said he saw Ballou buy a bottle of something at ler’s saloon near the Rippowam Building at 9.25 o'clock on the night of June 23. Mr. Ballou took a drink out ‘of the bottle before it was wrapped ‘Up and he took it away. John Moran, Kessler’s bartender, said a broken ottle found in the back of Mrs. Angle's apartmont and shown to him by Mr. Cummings had _ contained qwild cherry wine, bought at Kessler’s. Mr. Cummings also showed the bar- tender two pint bottles with whiskey labels. TELL 8 EARING NOISE NIGHT oF pALLoU's. DEATH. Patrick Rabbitt, who lived on the floor beneath Mrs. Angle, wae called. *Q. When in your rooms, about 11 o'clock the night of June 23, did you any unusual sounds? AL heard @ crash about a quarter to 11. 1 was reading. It was a noise as if a bed had broken down, I said, “Hey there!” But I did not hear anything more. Q. Were you present at the test made by the Coroner when the dum- my was thrown downstairs outside your rooms? Yes. . Was the sound of the dummy as loud as the sound you heard June 28? 4. The dummy was not a circum- @tance to it. The sound of the crash, Rabbitt told Mr, Klein, was the same as that of a slat of a bed breaking, followe: by hd continuous collapse of the James M. Burke, Policeman, . said he passed the Rippowam Buliding at seven minutes before 11 on the night when Ballou's body was found. ie passed within fifteen feet of the Rip- powam door, but did Hot eee Ballou on_the sidewalk. cial Policeman Edward Morris he passed the building ut five or hrs mieniee after 11 with Policeman ley. saw nothiag unui al om the Duilding. Ley corroborated lorri Joseph O'Neill testified he was etanding in front of the Rippowam Building with Thomas Lane and two girls talking for fifteen minutes after 21 o'clock. He saw nothing of Ballou Expert Rulings on Do- mestic Relations: Housework Ie the Lowest Form of Life. The Relationship Be- tween Husband and Wife Is Not That of Cook and Hired Man. A Man Is Too Likely to Marry Because He Wants a Cook, and a Woman Because She Needs a Pay Envelope. It Is Ridiculous That a Man Should Expect a Woman to Spend All Her Time, Thought and Energy Over the Meals He Eats. Cookery Will Be a Lost ArtinaFew Years, When Prepared Foods Will Be Available for All. ~ en INGLE CQ (OL |No Man Ought Be Ashamed to ‘Wipe Dishes THe Wee's Place iS NOT tM THE HITCH = PREMRIG FooD POR AN OVA PED HUSBAND poll owe ee DR. CHARLES WESLEY BRANDENGURG By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. A woman’s place is NOT in the Ther kitchen! a nice revolutionary text for you. Strange to relate, it is put forward not by a woman but by a man—Dr. Charles Wesley Brandenburg, “Why should West Side Y. M. When I called on Dr. Brandenburg at the Hotel Albert I found that, unlike many propounders of start- ling theories, he practises what he preaches. ‘He wili have been mar- = in front of the building. O'Neill sald he met John Wendell (who foynd Ballou on the sidewalk) when he Was about two blocks from the Rippo- wam Building, after saying goodby to the girls. This was 4 little after 11.15. Mr. Klein wanted the names of the girls. He asked the witness to write them on a slip of paper. “I don't know,” said the witness, “whether they gave us their right names or not. I don't know where they are now." He said he ana Lane had been with the girls three hours, but he didn’t notice whether thp girls were blonde or brunette, tall or short. John A. Wendell, a real estate agent, related how he saw Ballo’ body ‘on the Rippowam steps. He fixed tho time as about 11.32, ——_— G. A. SCHIEREN DEAD AND HIS WIFE DYING Charles A. Schieren, former Mayor of Brooklyn, died at 8.50 A. M,. to- day. of pneumonia in his home, No. 405 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, His wife, who is\ill of the same disease, is not eZpected to live through the day. Mr. and ‘Mrs, Schieren became ill at about the same time, a week ago, and Drs, Glentworth Butler, J. A. McCorkle and Sidney Smith, with a corps of nurses, have been in un- interrupted attendance from the be- ginning, as it was feared that neither would survive, Mr. Schieren became unconsctous yesterday morning and so remained to bis death. Sends Antitoxin to Mexicans. WASHINGTON, March 10.—Th Red Cross to-day sent 2,000,000 diphtheria antitoxin units to El Paso for use in Chihuahua, Mexico, whet is reported raging. In Ni three hundred cas: Don’t Let Your o—— Trouble You Da Fe Pa eherabins an oun, bare 5 hed eae in tee th, coated po eh nai it is a sure sign Pagel pacesigaed A AT ll cll fa Blagoccgar laa your stomach, liver _EXLAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate vo poten a eM Get it at your drug store Faris Ba! vrs | a natural, heal » without seen rH in bese), henliiy wares, vi pain or grip- will be clear and your eyes will sparkle. Cae ite bes of Fates i crateh bp conten to-day. 0c, 25c and waste matter, and ood Soy i id saying: “It would be better to employ a woman with = cooking instincts to preside over the kitchen. weman who possesses business ability is wasting her time if she stays at home and cooks for her husband.” for forty years a physician in New York. He is also emeritus professor of physiology and hygiene eclect at the City Medical College, and a recognized authority on these subjects. &@ married woman who has business ability stay in the kitchen, where her earning capacity ie “probably $4 a week, if she can earn $15 or $20 8 lake as a stenographer?” Dr. Brandenburg asked this queltion in the course of a recent lecture on “Marriage and Health” at the C. A. Then he answered himself by A ried thirty years next July, and dur- ing almost the whole of that time his wife has worked as a physician. She was among the pioneer women doctors, for she entered the profes- sion of medicine in 1887, just after her marriage. “When I was a girl I worked in my father’s store,” she told me, “and after I was married I just couldn't stand having nothing to do. So I studied chemistry first, then medt- cine. My husband has had his work And I've had mine. We've never in- terfered with each other, and yet we've had all the benefit of each/,, other's encouragement and advice. It's been just fine.” MATRIMONIAL RELATION NOT THAT OF COOK AND HIRED MAN, And the feminine Dr. Branden- burg’s gray eyes, still clear and bright in the plump face that ts be- ginning to pucker a bit around the edges, turned affectionately in the direction of the masculine Dr. Bran- denburg, who had just entered the room and who returned the glance with interest. He is obviously proud of his professional and domestic |, partner. He has even admitted that in certain respects is more capa- ble than he! “You evidently don't believe that a woman's place is in the kitchen,” F saluted him. “Indeed, I do not,” he replied, his thin, straight mouth parting in a slight smile, He has a square, smooth- shaven, distinctly shrewd face, and the broad, well-developed forehead of the person who does his thinking at first hand. “A man is too likely to marry because he wants a cook and to regard his wife chiefly as a cook,” the pot jinued. ‘On the other hand the wife frequently looks on her husband as a hired man, who brings her his earn- ings, Therefore, the husband gets ina ge if the beefsteak is overdone, and the wife ecolde if the pay envelope is opened be- fore she receives it. “Now such a state of affairs is en- tirely wrong. The relationship be- tween these two persons !s not that of cook and hired man, It is that of husband and wife, I believe two married persons are happiest when each is allowed to develop as an in- dividual, which means that each | must do the work of hia or her choice | without interference from the other. | Then they can meet as real equals.” | “Yesterday Dr. Scott Nearing, the political economist, told me that in industry the wage*is determined by the needs of the aingle worker, rather than of the married one,” I sald, “This being the case, I should think economic necessity would compel two single workers who happen to marry to keep on with their jobs.” TWO WAGES, NOT ONE, NEEDED TO SUPPORT A HOME. ~ “Ptoa. suo om arrangement is a wits we Ae wor!’ Q necessary,” he agreed. hard for a young man to support a wife and family on $16 a week. But it his wife is also drawing $15 a week the situation is vastly ness, much actual want and suf- fering, are trying to support the home on one wage, when ited "What by the conservatives th: entrance into industry the ‘In the first plac countered Dr. mere collection of “hairs, cook true love exists b wife there is a home. allows his wife to follow the work of her choice may have a better home with her in one furnished room than another man finds in a large house in which his wife is compelled to work long | hours at eee lishment for two. 0 be ashamed to w for his wife.” And then Dr, an to @ moral sense Is more strongly developed in women, than in men,” he said. that not believe that a married woman clerk or atenographer forgets home ties as quickly as docs her spouse, of tunching with | of taking automobile rides with him. | Yet how often do we see a married shows a distinct interest in t girls who work for him makes the excuse of ‘pu many a drinking bout. WHY NOT TAKE THE BABY TO “You tove: interesting point. fey that the home is f Lk 1 husband than by the busines: wv _ 4 Prt not in the kitchen. Do you think it ie in the nursery?’ I asi “O1 can she combine motherhood with cal incap: it When a wouta: hires @ nursemaid to care child, and contents herself with gen- eral supervision. There is no reason why @ business woman should not “ ASMANY TELLOF ‘For Wife, Says Dr: Brandenburg, Who Doesn d BALLOU LOU TRAGEDY Mrs. Brandenburg Is a Physician. Like Hi imself, and They Agree That a Woman's Place Is NOT in the Kitcheo. ed. may r Fes! for a fow few months after her baby's bieth, but her physi- ould last no longer. th ah for her is rich enot follow the same procedure, “It's pretty . Brand js due to the fact that we baby Ser ban on two wa: aes about the existence of the hom other than a tables and that wherever ween husband and The man who Ib v the offi band's fal tasks, see no reason why ‘his wife who are in wed congentall every enga ie shoul all hi jo man ou the di Res weren't in Brandenburg made He argued more ance on f be shipwrecked by th few will anerhy “There are exceptions, but the rule, Therefore, I do “The her | pos She doesn't make a habit} ous of her. her employer or debts. young id who | of life, BUSINESS. say that a woman's place ts| Patented Gold that} stops garter runs. Twice the usual amount of silk. aa than 480 shades. HAM Gor % HOSIERY SHOP oo” 27 West 34th St. way. joa rangement.” Personally, that $5 a week would pay me for leaving my baby to the care of a two-dollar nursemaid, However, Dr. nburg tion—take the baby to Spreng “I know of a woma: deserted her kitchen, with he ice and saver He was ready to file tition in bankruptey Afton) his wite took charge. Waist designer wefore her marriage. She immediately made some new and attractive designs, parcelled out the work in the factory, instructed the salesmen and gave them their prices. Meanwhile, the baby reposed in his carriage, which occupied a corner of She didn’t negiect him for @ moment, and yet she put her hus- business on its feet. “Two of @ trade are almost sure to bis gree if the two are husband and wife. it's @ good thing for a lawyer to marry a woman in the same profes- sion, for a physician to marry u phyaictun, for a man in the mil or grocery or restaurant business to @ woman connected wit! game trade as his.own. f ith diet an seeks ya pan means worse dish-counter.” In short, don't give up the job! NEW SILK», o nFocKiNes a a week in she “will” etill” have LJ making such an I shouldn't offers another w She hed Intends to marry. ridiculous that af xpect a woman to sper time, thought and energy over the meals he i the habit of tin much he wouldn't feel that way if he on food hs too much imp: weyidn' red fi her time in the | kitchen, real reason why man op- Dor woman's entrance into business und the profeasions is that he is jea: She is not one whit be- hind him in matters of finance, \she is better than he at paying her No business position will put as much physical strain on her as housework, which is the lowest form Many a girl restgns her po- sition In the shop at the time of her marriage, only to find that the dish- drudgery than the "%, 100% PURE SILK ATER %GAl 1oo% SERVICE (eoT GL mn UaLESS SOMNPEO OBE consider bis bu nee been a Ll ry angr; ik was burn leet rticle of ar ina and ROOSEVELT ADDRESSES! + WORKERS I SHOPS FOR CITY'S QUT-OF-WORKS Makes seepiton Tour With Judge Gary, Bruere, Mrs. Speyer and Others. A party which included Theodore Roosevelt, Judge Gary, City Cham- berlain Bruere, Mra, James Speyer and Miss Charlotte Boyd, a deaconess workshops established by the Mayor's | unemployed. hospitals here and for shipment to ‘the ‘pay range hour, besides luncheon for the work- ors, More than 6,000 persons have already been benefited by the workshop em- | pl h pent $170,000 In wages and food. ‘The expense amounts to about $22,000] *t |a week, and it is reported that funds | out his brains. jare getting low. of its objects are arousing of public Interest In the work, started from the home of Judge Gary at Sixty-seventh | Street and Fifth Avenue. ‘The first place visited was No, 649 East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, the Bronx, where 222 men were busy. There Col. Roosevelt, who was the centre of interest, found an old friend, Police Captain Eddie Bourke, years ago. As the Colonel shook the Captain's hand he remarked: ‘This ts the first man who shut up Mike Callahan's gambling house.” Some told Col, Roosevelt that the workers, so “Comrad his band shaken. Then the ‘Colonel made @ little speech and the party went on, At No, 313 West One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Street the found 817 n men doi hi dage work. The Colonel shook with about half of them, and met Cornell graduate who was in charge. The next place, the largest yet, Wai was in a loft of the Dock Department Building, Fifty-nixt! Twelfth "Avenue. The lean fas swinging from Col. Rooseveit another & little speech. pieced DAPPER FUGITIVE CAUGHT. Alleged fate-B lower Captarea Chase. A dapper young man, with kid gloves and spats, was walking along Atlantic Avenue to-day when five detectives sud- denly surrounded him. ello, Harry Smolensky!" said John Grah one of the detectiv: Lager - a Pinkerton man, ne’ ‘aham and I'm on my was the indignant re questioning however * sae 2 Smolensky. Detectives een trailing th man Stee, Dy 1814, when he enceped/f hoy “county TaN at Rochester white af, ing trial on @ charge of robbing gate, oléensky was trailed out West and finally to Loulaville. r prints founda on beats in. ales fon re in Lou! ‘Atisd. those of ontucky city he <1 ander Meyer's ville are anid molenaky, armored to rookiyn ranch—Open Kven'xs ‘nua Fulton St. A Complexion Exquisite in Coloring, Soft in Texture worde—use VELOGEN, Apply it, treely night and morning, wipiny cloth, gate thin ch arnt y sure your complex rin that nothing baby! SUPERFLUOUS HAIR Formanontly and Palalessly Remove, ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED. Ne Preparations or Depilater'es !'sed. | of St. Bartholomew's Chirch, started] side doors of the hobbieskirt cars and | out to-day In eleven automobiles on 8] the frightened men and women fought tour of inspection of the twenty-six] vainiy to get out. Committee to provide work for the| W4 The greater part of the work is the on Street Hospital. cutting and rolling of bandages for) sald It was doubtful if Te would re- region of Europe, and the! girected the work of from 10 to 12 cents an|cucrs until Ambulance Surgeon. Bi ment, and the Mayor's committee | trewe wi Ti. trip to-day, which had for one| acquainted, The weman will recover. whom he had appointed to the force| ® TRAPPED BY CARS, PASSENGERS IN PANIC Victim Jammed by Broadway “Hob- ble Skirts” Given Morphine While Rescuers Work. Hugh 8. Patten, an automobile salesman, living at No. 189 Haw- thorne Street, Brooklyn, was jammed between two crowded Broadway cars at Fulton Street at 11.45 o'clock to- day and imprisoned for fifteen min- utes. An ambulance surgeon admin- istered morphine to ease his pain, po- licemen chopped around him with wrecking tools and scores of men tried to“tip the cara off their tracks, The passengers were panic atricke: Tho conductors refused to open th ITHACA, N, Y., Mareh Hunter, treeh en a renenaenyyS When Patten finally was rescued it} 101. found that his left arm was bye and he was injured yooh Nn ambulance took him to the Hi Physicians there cover. Patten, although yegeertog Rye ce ‘The biggest delegation from ton eased his suffering, ot Woman and Killed Himaciz, |i" at Albany, Is planned, for HARRISBURG, March Keys, a young chauffew sie, twenty-four yer the cheek when he met her on ithe t near her home here to-day, and committed muteide by | blowing No cause is known for Mra, Hoxle cannot talk and friends did not know they dollar causeway over the to be known as the Great Gateway, More than fifty have been secured for the Capital and the caravan his action, ieee ae sooe eros. f All Quality Compare the exquisite Turkish fragrance, flavor and mildness of Lord Salisbury with higher-priced * Turkish brands —then consider that you, purchase twenty of these high-class Turkish cigarettes for fifteen cents! Turkish Cigarettes You get this remarkable vaiue hecyme there are no Coupons— o Premiums — no Boxes with Lord Salisbury cigarettes. They are packed in the conven- ient, yet inexpensive Foil Packa: —which keeps them delicio Fresh and full of flavor. 20 tor 15 THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY ieseseaesese oF 4 aH iti row on the proposition to build a nis daughter-istaw, | den when Hunter's automobile | Hunter's wife, who was also. 6 SCHENECTADY, N. ¥,, March tady ever to attend « legisiative he headed by a motor truck bearing tions and favoruble letters from the State. - ac sc 23} rs 2: RBS, 72 |: TO FREE YOUR SKIN FROM ITCHIN __ ERUPTIONAL TROUBLES _ Just Use ; A Few Apelieatiall “ Will Work Wonders Nothing like it and skin diseas Posiam, 50c. Posiam Soap, (M02's4.) 15¢. & AT ALL DRUGGISTS. Ever Taken v9 t of the “NEW YORK” REDE A Double-Page Feature in ‘The Picte Weekly Review’’ Section of NEXT SUNDAY’S WO of a Battleship. = AWonderful Picture (17220 Inches) | U. S. Superdreadnought a Coming Full Speed, Bow On.