The evening world. Newspaper, April 8, 1915, Page 3

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> ISTANZERGRAND To Rear Mo -—.- Thiee Expected to Complete Pre- Newspapers’ | esuimen sentinel of (ase INDICTMENTS EXPECTED Three ills Against lindividuals and Hlanket One Will Name Four ten . ‘ growing out of Ul rer Ont . f prow Ud ‘ in Tiree ho. Man . ' wa mined tell hy setae eur e (he engaging of Alfred Moet lough, one ot operatives, by David Slade, Mins Hae Tanger's attormn o the f prominy so MeCutiougs las t by Vedero| agents ever since Miss Tan tar's hevring before oner Hotiehton on a charge of umng the ails to defraud, whe he told how ord, the Plair Indiets authority to Judge hoon. tt ed a@gatnet prin 1 plot and another 4 weVen persona be the four, it was wil name { United States Attorney resentingr the ease to refused to-day to conden he textimony «iven yes- day by Saffo Apparently, how he didn't reward tt 14 of great © the Government, for he sald ly most positively that ball Will not be reduced, was hinted (t might.” pSafford is in the ‘Tombs in default “ PRISONER OF WAR, HERE AS STOWAWAY ON LINER Walter Blanck Escaped From Kings: ton by Teaching Black Sentry to Shoot Craps. Walter Blanck arrived to-day asa stowaway on the United Fruit liner Santa Marta from Kingston, Jamaica. On Aug. 10 he was taken from ‘ne Santa Marta at Kingston while ne was one of the crew, and placed in the English concentration camp as a prisoner of war. He made friends with a black sentry when he wna! given an outside job on a plantation. He taught him the turkey trot and how to shoot « One day Blanck shot the dice u 4 fence and took W le his guard vas looking fc He m to Kingston and smuggled aboard the Santa Marta, The Jilix Island authorities took him in chi 1 he enteved pounds wan Mn ounce of rice, an ounce , one potato and a spoonful r, We says if the potato should happen ty be bad {t's the pria- oner's misfor of a of Se sTOV ’ April Stivers, Widow of Rep- D. Stivers and mother ot State Senator John D. Stivers, died to-day at her home here of apoplexy She had been iil since Friday, EAT LESS AND TAKE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers. we Dead. MIDDLE Mra. Mary B sentative M. ‘The American me 1 women must qed constantly against Kidney trouble, is ri use we eat too much and all our foo h. Our blood is filled with uric which the kidneys strive to filt out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish, the climinative tissues clog an the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. ‘When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead, your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are obliged to seck relief two or three ti during the night; if you suffer with si headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid jtomach, or you have rheumatim ‘when the weather is bad, get from your phar- maciat about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass « water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine, ‘his famous sults is made from the a P ‘and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. a a In 3 is inexpensive; cannot ins jure, makes delightful effervescent fit water beverage, and belongs in every home, because nebody can mi mirtalse b; a good kidney flush- jag any wAdvt. neveral | aw from here last) Augnuat, | Weighs nin Ile says ihe vations in the concentration THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY. APRIL 8. Girl Weds, but She Yes, College Declares “re re Ch ‘President of College Women's Club Answers Con- tentions of Boston's Prof, Sprague That College Girls Are Not Sought as Mates by Men Who Want Cooks, and When Married Are the Mothers of Few Children’ Why Waste $50 Brain on $5 Job? By Marguerite Mooere Marshall Hraee the college gurl marty! mol why matt ihe newest follower of BI Maul tera bewe que oud lo enewe td Sprague of chupetts Agrieul the other them in the woman tid Lard tone of the Depar nt of Keonomles and Mo tural College day: te Prot Mo ology tu the Mew Quoth Prof progue wagely College wre are pot greatly © in the work of ut oe ing # living and mates to nding « family, becawee they are not prepared paycwologteally and technleaily for the jobs of cooking, sanitation " # and child salsing “Kvery child-bearing married woman, ju order to sistain the prevent population of native-born eltizens, Wiest Lear at least three children College graduates ay Uelow thir average GIRL HAS NO CHANCE A MAN TARES WER IN TO DINNER DuT TURNS To THE CLEVER Gike CN THE OTHER SIDE | “How do you know?” some akepti- ca! alumna doubtless asked the pro- fessor. Back he came with the response that “from statistien from four weli-| known women's colleges” the average | number of alumnae who marry 4s lesa than 60 per cent,, and that for every graduate there is an average of less than half @ child. WHERE THE PROFESSOR GOT HIS FIGURES. fing to appreciate the clever woman, Really, the stupid girl has no chance nowadays, Even if a man takes her in to dinner he forgets all the manners his moth- er taught him and tur to the clever girl on the And when it's rimony he marries is the brightest cultivated girl of 4 matter of fact, the colleges And what is the logic with which) are ba Aled more attention than they ever have the: the professor accounted for the minus/pver have b oy 8 marriages and the fractional child? | He found it in a catalogue of Welles- hiey College, He pointed out solemnly i that out of 114 profeseors and instruc- tors 100 were women, Out of the 100 women %# were unmarried. “This,” he declared with finality, \ "does not enable the girls to get the [right attitude of mind toward home |iife and motherhood. How much bet- ter it would be if these 93 women In- structors were married and had fam-_ ilies.” e, and I think at Mount Holyoke every girl do two hours of housework a “All that ts true," assented Mrs. Bates, “and yet I believe the neces- laity for such preparation is but tem- jporary, W coming nearer and hearer to the time when all, or nearly all, housework will be done co-oper- atively. We're going to have more Apartment hotels and ¢ er ones, and we're going to develop the art of making them as comfortable as pri- vate homes now e. WASTING A $50 BRAIN ON A §5 Wherein Prof. Sprague and the) COOK'S JoB. New York Board of Education do not) “Even at present 1 think the wife agree, proving that there ly more than Who is a college graduate can find aeenind of pedagogical Bourbon, — |#0Nething to do more important |than cooking, If her husband can't But ia it really true that the gitl In) agora to hire a servant she can earn the cap and gown also wears a sund-) much more than enough money to e rf | the wages of one, And why wich board inscribed "No Intentions, | Pay Kes oO! nd why Matrimony?” — Perwonaily, 1 never! {00y!4 #80 brain be wasted on a $9 knew one so encumbered, But 1 de- | waste when a mentally trained person cided to consult a person of wider must perform manual Labor, wivcted = Mrs,|. “Even her children have no respect experience, and 1 seivcted a ‘ i . jto-day for the mother who Charles Austin Bates, for several! Mry Gridee. “thy way, ears Freadent of the Collese) old-fashioned; she doosn't under- Vomen'a Club and a graduate of the stand.” A woman needs every bit of women ID) education she c n get, every bit of | book-knowledge and of world-know!- edge, If she would retain her chil- | dren's admiration and her influeuce firat. college founded for it m aright to them. man who can qualify. Mra, Bates is a tall woman, with such aparkling oyes and such a #len- der, beautifully modelled figure that one would never suspect her of tho several grown-up children she actu~ ally possesses, She lives in a brown~ #tone house overlooking the \tudson at No, 107 Riverside Drive, and she well known bs puffrage, club and philanthropic circles. WHY THE COLLEGE MAID IS HARD TO PLEASE. “On just what standards do you, find the college woman lays empha-| gis?" L asked. “She insists on the single standard| morality,” replied Mrs. Bates. | Skne will not recognize any necessity | for the existence of a double stand- | ard. she will remain unmarried rather than accept as her busband a roue, a man with a past. Why? Because sho has been educated to Know that that sort of man is not the one she wants for the father of her children. “Mentally, the college woman de- mands an equal, if not a superior Tyt is nonsense to say at the e cated, progressive woman is Inte ested only in the man whom she can dominate, She doesn't want to dom- jnate any man. No one is as quick as she to admire the man with the, creative, constructive mind, the man who sends a tower into the air, a tunnel under the eurth, a ship across the sea, a new article of commerce into the markets. It's only @ clever ‘y dosen | over them." ° | ut the college women who marr knows, The re: are supposed to have only halt 4 ane knows child apiece,” E reminded her, O “The college woman is intelli- gent enough to have no more ¢ ren than she and her Ih can take care of proper! retorted, “That's where the o nomic standard comi I an will no} ough fy : dy without urging that their number be augmented by college ‘women, “the strongest natural inatinet in any xirl's heart {s the desire to be a wife und mother, Four years at aot. lege, even under the guidance of un- married instructors, cannot change that Instinct. Most of the college girls 1 know have married shortly after thelr graduation, much more quickly than college men who must first make a start tn life. All the married college women of my ac- quaintanca have charming homes and are ideal wives and mothers. More- over, they are big enough to take an Interont In municipal housekeeping and in every ehild everywhere who needs a other's care.” Mody of Floating 7 Of College ‘The body of a ini in the water a ce found floating off ¢ The body is that of a thirty-five years old. 5 feet % inches in hetght. dark skin and hair, wore a white ‘woman who can appreciate a really clever man. “And the clover man io bogias shirt with black stripes. a pepper and alt sult, black overcoal and tan tits toned shoce On @ signet ting are dottere F, x a | Sidey, seventeen years old, of Flush- o Too Wise Charles Austin Hates, ildren Than She Can Afford aati a wae Sut HAS HIGH STANDARDS - Mota, , MENTAL AYO ECONOMIC WHY WASTE A Soe train, ON 4&5 Jos ? -, WILL LIE IN NAVY YARD AT NORFOLK Raider Will Be Closely Guard- ed to Prevent Harm—En- gines to Be Dismantled. PROMOTION OF LOVE BY KISSES HURT BY DRINKING AND SMOKING CHICAGO, April 8.—A girl should veto drinking and smoking bec the two habits in ‘© with pro- motion of love by kisses, according to Dr. Alfred B. Westrup, six, who returned to-day third honeymoon. pr, Westrup is the author of “Plenty of Money,” da book on sex. Here are Dr. trup's rules for wooing “He perfectly frank and have no snerets. “Caress one another during court- [| ship to learn whether suited in magnetism and nature “He liberal, if a girl of mon “Test the congeniality of hands--often NEWPORT NEWS, Va., April 8. With the internment to-day of the German auxiliary cruiser Pring Friedrich merce-destroyer ended her spectacu- lar war career, Detatis of the actual internment of the Pring Eitel before she is taken to the Norfolk Navy Yard where shi will remain unttl the end of the were worked out at a onference early to-day between Kear Admiral Fletcher, Commander-in-Chief of the ettel with plenty and her crew, the com- hy the before mar- a SHOULD GUT OUT LUNCHES TO PAY WHAT HE STOLE i One Hit by ba bvangelst Turns Down Minls pi ‘ tas Veniow iny 6” lnvita to Preach in Through biglieh Channe dev land, Ohio. PASSENGERS HELD UP. iu \ BETTER HUMOR how waned by British Patrol Teli, John D's Pastor to Go Alter Steamship Had Been Back and “CGiet the Presby Searched at Downs | —E Vor the firet time # Noord * leat Ootober he eteamebty HERWAY THROUGH IMPATERSON NOM, FLONTING MINES DECLARE SUNDAY (Special, From o Meh Correapen tient terians in Line.” The Evening Werld) F N,N DF, Ape OW ee wday turned n the we oruing fi « delee f miniete rip enlivened 4 to appear and prenoh ry Viritiay cruise and pasty wee that etty made this deviston ‘v bons On her last casters (rip the Noord when he he precy Haile ot 7 Spay f Cleveland Joined in at V ts struck a mine net far from her por al The Cleveland delegation w 181 or of destination and suffered the loan of sted by the ftew Dr Bastard of The exceedingly low fee rate of & her rudder and stern poet. This is Buctid Ave Haptiat Ob in reatments for $0 le given at thie time her first trip #inoe repaire were com-| which John 1) Roekefoller ts inter by Dr MeCoy to allow persons sute Jeted. Mhe left Motterdam March 2 cated De Mustard used fo be pas fering from eatarrbal troubles to b@ “i f her yannengers were! t f « Paterson church | treated often euough to be cured. Pe ee Se Lensgercmny aes ; Under thin offer all cases of akou off the Noorda bya Herttinn| " Sunday eabt » Mustard and | @ tarrhal nature, including el patrol boat, which held her up for| hie collaawues “Got hontrile, catarrhal throst. troubles. Germany to ner hours off the Downs while! land Ign. Onoostowites, an Austrian Jour nalist, was separated from hin wife month in the] all rigne* | in Cleveland.” Women and ektierly men to the snd when you # aud catarrhal deafness, will be ae+ rding of onely queationed | torians Homt up Uh ex | papeat Patients a er hy @ oe Het, Hane Milly Sunday was in better mood | Ofer will receive complete treate has been today when newapaper men bee - — all necosaary medicine for ¥ o i with the Zeitung! at ite bome. Hie wan enthusiast If you desire to take advantage hore, was one of t over last niahts wens) nd mailto thin offer you must enroll your the British Benedix had returned to! “I've wot the devil o the run fow.| name not later than April Seth lo protect nome pFop:| MMly wald he wus going to hin h would otherwise Oremon apple ranch when he fninhed | heres bed thre b forfeited, and, after having | Paterson cat yond bathing tof : been wounded and ant to the hoapital! “1 have dates,” he sat, “in Omaha COY " for two months, was on his way back|and Huffalo and Cincinatt! before T mice JS McCO ase to New York to Join hin wife, can Take an engagement to preach e . " Neat door the New Amstardom Thesire, ‘ Tyhati kre Howry Mada: * r donpite hin protests that hin writing | number of about 4.600 gathered in Jwould all be favorable to the Alles. | gunday'a tabernnole for thin after. if [and wax detained, toxethor with | noon's wervine, The rear bonohen, Apparel For Henodla, on other afternoons, were vacant. ther Austrian, Hix wife continued to!” up odoy” and his trombone took the New platform at the outset and the audl+ [EITEL, INTERNED, i F i Atlantic Fleet; Rear Admiral Helm Judge's Advice to Youth Whose]oe the battleship Alabama, and Grandmother Made Up | Beatty, Commandant of the Norfolk ‘ Navy Yard, und Collector of the| oss | Port Hamiiton. Ordera from Seoretary of the Navy In suspending sentence on Filtott the Eltel Friedrich’s officers be paroled and that the crutser and erew be terned at the Norfolk Navy Y adding that the men we as much Mberty ing, L. 1, after he had pleaded guilty to # charge of forgery to-day, United | States Judge Chatfleld, in the Brook- lyn Federal Court, advised the youth in d, to be given as po to Ko Without Iunel and walk instead | Mer een | mt of using a car so that he will 4090) rendered to Communder McCracken Day up $80 which he stole by forging! 5¢ the naval tug Patuxent, which eee oe Of the Metropolitan | nas been guarding the German ship ave. SHSUTEDS STAPABY wl a man and two boys, all Germans, employed a8 an office boy in the com- pany's office The judge said that although he Was empowered to send the youth to prison for Ave years and fine $5,000, he had decided to give him a} chance. He hoped, he added, that Sidey would undertake to suffer a ttle In paying his grandmother the money she had advanced for restitu- tion, and advised the cutting out of who joined the Eitel after its arrival in American waters MeCracken turned them over to Col- lector Hamiiton On board the Pring Eitel to-day, which up until the last minute before her time limit expired, had appeared to be ready for a dash to sea, Capt, Thierlchens and his men seemed: to be gloomy | With the taking of the Pring Eitel him DEER Ane perterse ae nae K004) 46 the Norfolk Navy Yard to-day, the Inspector, 4 ©") pamoved and the connecting rod of DEO es her engines detached, The Pring Bitel Second Reprieve for Sinyer, — | Rad been ald up here since Murch 10, ine Aerts when sho imped into port following ORMENING, Ne¥si Apel Bo Word wa: her remarkable commerce raiding Jat Sing Sing Prison this voyage from the Oriont during which she destroyed the American ship Wtll- t Karol Dranewiea, thi death sentence had be Me for to-morrow, haa + jam PB. Frye of thirty days from ve OW A close guard will be kept by this This ts the ‘ond reprieve Dranewice Government to see that no barm iy ved since he was convieted and don» the ol while she is interned. Despatches from the national cap- de e M tan in De-| i Pana oe erp eeredp ape | ital say that official Washington gen- plices, two of whom were tried, but the! erally expressed the conviction that D He 4 * A&A third .| Commander Thierichens of the Bitel pice iaade als estape, * "''? *S5°"'| asl aloaply blusting to the very last, 4 for participation in an east Daniels, received to-day, directed that | “We are particularly anxious to get hold of these journaliats,” eatd | 19, the boarding officer to Gun Roeder of The World staff, who was returning from an assignment in Germany. “Their writings In New York can do | a great deal of harm.” we y rived upon the platéorm with a mile thie revellod in “Hrighten the Cor- and other hymns until Billy ary Ho got no more applause wpon entrance thin was given to him srday afternoon, but he came time, While the ushers went through Throughout the circultous route the audience with their pannikins for ia now neconsitated in sailing from tO} iy atiurnoon offering —“Rodey” c ae te ee ene seat (Homer A. Rodeheaver), the mu- Bathing Suita 3.96 t0 16.78, dam had a double quota of too! 7 or, played “ihe Palin” on Pap vghaetiypelter on duty und all ofticors were on deck | Sal diredon, Oy rein balty eter: | Dee Kho aid slender. fines, ‘The English Channel | UPON bis slide hop i fuality and poiac that pro- all the tin i : Ld aver bad 1 in with his sermon on “The Re- ee Oe eee ca oromions peerage ich te not more | Vivil of the Penteooat.” we not only offer, you low prices Kile CLeR®: pOeSS eek HiNy scored the churoh-goere for] B but indvantages such sa duplicnt- than two thousand feet wide, can only be naviga by the ald of pl- lots supplied by the British Admiral- the! God ty, Few merchant stip are agen | annie ete,” he maid, “and and th a ee oe one of hie generals came to him be- yes me I trating mine No, si] moaning the fact that the enemy they dam panned so close that a passenger might have tomved his hat over it In common with all other steamers d, ‘How do you count me In the war gone, the wireless of the | @*** A Jshinkd co wah Noordam was down unl abe eg hl eabie do you people count was well into the Atlantic and for God in this battle againat fed twelve days the passengers had no nows, ‘They had not heard the remult of the Johnson-Willard fight nor any event of international importance. —_—>—_— RUSH U. S. SHIPS TO AID EIGHT WRECKED VESSELS Every Cutter South of Boston Or- dered to North Carolina Coast, Where Disabled Craft Lay. ni rd my tow: ront “Alexander the Groat sat tn his tent were to ineot outnum And Alexander Istened suddenly he turned to the me believe Lam called to preach God tn Luther in his and ‘Then a wave of approval swept through the Tabernacle another clatter with «reat vehom gesture, he sald, swinging his body “Tf you Pplscopallans terians don’t represent God, [ell me wha does and Pil turn my to measure, with ftti (hanging details and trimmings "yous Lane Bryant, inn'x Ureoley r lack of simplicity and fatth in "s power, red them 20 to him, but ral and liy's sermon ran on with much enthusiasm til} much a# Martin Paul in his." day just as He also got clapping when, of volee and) of ‘ard the ministers’ section of the] rum, famous At close out prices! For Friday and Saturday Only and Presby-| back on| ‘om and follow the real representa 10m | _WABHINOTON, Apri Fhe Coast | (17) nt bad be Traneoas a Siectedg jartared Oak, Guard Service to-day ordered every) qiqn't balieve in revivals, I'd Kot down | Seiden se Barty ‘Sealey Javailable cutter south of Boston to] from the pulpit and button my collar | 3 3 Diamond Shoals, N. C., at full speed,| in front instead of in the back." | 18° Throughout his sermon, It seamed No. 612—Daven-0 in j to aid eight vessels wrecked off that) te piaying for laughs and he often Jed the audience with laughter of his own at the end of an ancedote point on the const Of the distressed craft one wae the schooner Alice Murphy, formerly the] Even hiv most serious appeals to the Moliana Willey of Thomaston, Me,,| crowd were torminated with an ap- |ushore and capsized. peal to the humor of his audience, | A second was the schooner Liasie|and he got the laughs, although sometimes he had to wait for them Thess are some of the utterances that amused the crowd: “Lye beon in churches where th had a clock screwed up by the pul- pit. EM bet the devil used the acrew, driver.” “rm going to preach the trath In Paterson, if I have to put my trunk on a whoel-barrow and roll it all the way out to Chicago when I'm done,” B, Wiley, also of Thomaston, aground aod water-logged. Two unidentified veasele stranded, bottom upward A fifth, also unidentified, was at the | bottom, with only ite maat showing above the breakers ‘The sixth Was the schooner Creasy ind the seventh and eighth were the barges Cline and Northwestern What had befallen these the Service did not know beyond that they were in diatrean | Whether or not there was loss of fe was uncertain, but it was deemed extremely likely. The disaster was declared the worst Diamond Shoals has Known in years ‘The cutter Seminole was on the reone and the Yamacraw, Savannah, | Mohawk and Onondaga were Included in the call for aid. Spring Sunlight in your home, The Original owpbani nat > on See Neuro KAM Mother, , April 8.—"The police are | for an unidentified negro who) murdered Mrs. Willlam H. Sebriever esterday after attempting to assault er, He cut her throat tn the presence | of her four smell children and thea Mahogany; value 945, $22-50 Saves the rent of one room Ay ae Vou Wisk D.T. OWEN CO., Inc. 84 East 28d Street Open Saturday Until 10 P, at 2006 Third Ave. (Bronx) At 1Gist Street. Bronx Store Open he Se A Open Mon, and Sa, ey Here’s a Secret! But the peculiar thing about the “se. cret” is that nearly everybody knows tt, It is: it your “LOST AND FOUND’ Ad. is printed in The Morning Sunday World, it gets a circula in New York City GREATER than it published in the Herald, Times amet Tribune ADDED TOGETHER! 2 For the convenience of those who have lost articles of value, The Wortd |accepts “LOST & FOUND”, Ads, over | the phone. Call 4000 Beekman! —“

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