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Stewart, Racing An- other Car on Pifth Avenue, Hits Milk Truck. . a racing cor going § thirty-five Milles a0 bow through Fitth Avenue fen inte & Central Dairy Com- Peers thres- bores truck ot One Hus (Gred and Klevooth Strest ac 1 AM to-day. ‘The racing sutols, who eaid he wee Hdward Stewart, thirty-two 22 sutomobile saiseman, living Me. Hi West Forty-seventh Street, Was taken to Hariem Hospital, dying With & broken beck aod internal in- Hu companion, who ssid she was Mre. Nan Golden, twenty-four y Old, of No, 467 Bast One Hundred and Thirty-tourth Street, is in Mount Hina! Hospital euffering from cute end bruises The low bung, bigh powered auto Was going south, and, according to Policoman Lacey, closely following was a big black touring car filled with merrymakers who appeared to be racing the other car. The big milk truck was in charge of Fred Althoff, going west through One Hundred and Eleventh Street. Stewart tried to slow up and awerve past the truck, but was going too fast. The hood of bis machine crumpled up against the rear axle of the truck, Jarred the driver almoat off his seat. The big black touring car that was measuring speed with the racer was barely able to avold crashing into the wreck, The driver sent it to the sidewalk. Stewart and the young woman were unconscious when Policeman Lacey reached them. William J, Burns, 4 finger print expert of the Hariem Court, came along in bis auto and took the woman to Mount Sinai Hos- pital, and another passing auto took Stewart to Harlem Hospital, Althoff, driver of the milk truck, who lives at No. 1848 Mayflower Ave- nue, Westchester, Was not burt. The racing car was practically demolished. Mrs. Golden is the wife of George Golden, and for two years they have lived at the address she gave with Mrs, Margaret Finn, Golden formerly Was an automobile mechanician, but lately has been employed as an fron- worker. He and Stewart are friends, and Golden has been doing automo- bile work for Stewart, The racer wrecked this morning wag a balky car on which Golden had been working, He and his wife and Stewart had been looking it over, and Mrs. Golden decided to accompany Stewart on a tryout. Golden went on home and was waiting for his wife when notified of the acciden’ Give Those Worn Nerves a Rest Don't give up, When you feel all un- , when family cares seem too hard to bear, and backache, dizzy head- aches, queer pains and irregular action of the kidneys and bladder may mystify you, remember that such troubles often come from weak kidneys and it may be that you only need Doan’s Kidney Pills to make you well. When the kidneys fare weak there's danger of dropsy, vel and Bright's disease. Don't de- lay. Profit by others’ experience., A Brooklyn Woman Says: Mrs. I. L. Drake, 1822 Gravesend Ave., says: “I was having severe pains through my back and very often I had bed dissy spells end headaches, I was also very nervous, When I caught hese troubles caused me more I used plasters on my back, ‘ood, Finally I took Doan’s Kidney Pills and they surely we fine results. I soon enjoyed better th and have been practically free from these ailments since.” © KIDNEY DOAN'S "ris Foster-Milburn Co. Preps. Buffalo, NY. “Indigestion. Onc package [proves it. 25c at all dru, \ Jan test or found articles ate hy ¢ The World will te sted at The World's Informa tion Bureau, Pultzer Building Arcade, Park Row; orid's Uptown Office, northwest cor= ner 38th St, and Broadway; BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes ggists, am = mem et ae A NE | wer ee ormee ne me ns 8 ST OE Ee ee aa _ TEE BVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, VorvBER », THE GIRL OF TO-DAY: 1: she We are told that men today only “imagine” they beeing for the up-to<date creature wi Mier a dinner Marshal! “The girl ot today may & M1 cook want the ' can « correspondents is worth repeating ner Men Blamed for the Objectionable, Meretricious Displays of the Present-Day Girls, for if It Wasn't for Man, Says One Correspondent (Himself a Man), They Wouldn’t Paint, Powder or Dress as They Do. | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. | “The men to-day imagine they want the type of unsuphisticated | maiden, Time has evolved the present-day girl, so why blame her? It ts! only to be seen when both the old-fashioned and the new-fashioned girls are in man’s compapy which one he makes a beeline for! It fe an age of specialization, “Years ago they did not have attractively gotten up windows filled with tempting pastries and dainty ap- parel—things that cry aloud to you from stores on every other block—and mother and daughter sat in the! back kitchen dully plodding away the hours cooking and | also losing their eyesight over tidies and fancy work | that can now be bought for a song. | “I have seldom been called upon to do much house-| work, but when the occasion arose I have washed,| TT WAAR SHALL business girl can do the same when she can master her own line of work six days in the week. If men really want only good cooks, which sounds 80 unromantic, why are they not ttracted to the !mmigrant maid? I belleve the girl of to-day 1s a success, and an {mprovement on the girl of yestorday.” That is how “Stenographer” gayly defends the girl of the present. She 1s a product of evolution, of the age of the department store, the delicatessen shop and the gas stove. She belongs to a time when much of the work of the home has been taken into the market place, and naturally enough she goes the.« herself. I can’t see that she should be blamed for that. And {s the kitchen really the best university for a young woman GO TO BUSINESS AND LEARN| ~~ HOUSEKEEPING TOO. clearly true that the girl of understands less of cooking. Tt ia to-day make a wife and mother of the right sort? Is dissatisfaction with sewing and other household arts than) the girl of to-day the reaeen why did the girl of yesterday. enog-| $0 many young men refuse to {| rapher" maintains that she is “mod- maneey Are they looking for the | ‘ dutien| ,,AMi#t, demure, old-fashioned girl | jerately” fitted to perform the d of domestic ¢: ? What do men | ‘usually known as “domestic,” but) and women ne \therein she is almost certainly su-| ning World think? i mana istl from you. | perior to many of her companions. A girl who @oes from school directly WHERE IS THAT OLD- FASH- | into the business or professional) |ONED GIRL? WAILS ONE MAN. At least two young men “have tt tn’ for the girl of to-day for the reasons that | have suggested, Their letters follow, and also some others which I have received in defense of the girl to-day, “Dear Madam: If the girl of to-day knew something about household duties and about helping a fellow to save, I should yote her more of a suc- | cess than she is, | “| have heard | old-fashio: almost think t! world has little or no time to prac- tise general housework and cooking. If she does attempt this work, in {conjunction with the other that she has chosen, her health ts likely to give way. And yet the average young |iman, when he marries, wants a home land cannot afford to hire servants, | What's the answer? As regards her own personal de- velopment, it seems to mo that the | modern girl does well in seeking much about the } @ | work in a world that is not bounded! wy, |by four kitchen walls. But this work |g does nothing to prepire her for some only know. —not all--of the duties of wife and{ mother she| Sit that do n't expect to go | . and wife and jmother, ec comes, in the great ma-| cus every time yeu call on he Jority of cases, The girl of to-day] {O*ial © say Dt often would fail in an examination ae Hi th Mel \Based on the homely but still im-| We 99° am sailing on three giris at present and they expect to go portant detalls of making a man art | out every time | call, They are ref we Rave’ any native Soalety: CHICAGO, Oct. %.—With Gov. Dunne pmfortable, i ~~» --—— thie Panning ought to be given her,| Not out of the ordinary, and other | fv’ ty Livia mini minora ditearies of Miinols as the official guest, twenty~ i se and € 01 of Hy e be dey | + id bc ne actual condi 6 Dixie h' pe’ Cara a . ene se readers cas k, Why call! May struggle along between the ideals (tion of Clearing House banks and | 1600 mile tour wer Li pe ae hehe 5 natend Gf 0 Well, if you that are passing and the ones that are | irust companies for the a through route from Chicago to Miami, slones. he girl ahe expeste ‘vin te COMIN, still wo Will emerge all right. } that they hh OWS Fay. The Governor rode with M, M. Al- al pr out to the theatro and sup. and forthe present we need not scorn, He xcoxs Of legal Feauirements, ‘This ta /lison of Chatanooxa, Tonn., lenving the fo-day writing her down per and save money to get married on FOF Praie, but understanding. | nu decrease Of 1 $6,997,410 from Inet {tourists at il, ‘The other mo gether a failure in the besides, Calling on several girls and | __ oe . }tor care will contain directora of the | Young men? Do they consider her letting them know you are doing so - Highway Association from Southern — = ee makes each one want to go out, but States | it does away with the marriage quea- | The southward wae made af- Let tion doern't want to go out and, tf we don't, faint, we will show her all the re- spect she could ask for~-fatnt or no us have a girl say she} Why Not Get Rid of Eczema? faint—and marry her much sooner than we can possibly do under pres- ent circumstances, when a girl is morely a source of extra expense to 1. #." It your skin itches and burns with ns, “SHE'S A FAILURE AS A SWEET- HEART” “Dear Madam: The girl of to- day may be a success in the busi- ness world, but she's a failure as a sweetheart. | have known and know girls whose chief delight is pleasure, - lati eczema or any such tormenting, un- tightly skin disease, simply wash the sore places with Resinol Soap and hot water, dry, and apply a little Resinol Ointment. _The_ itching stops INSTANTLY, you nu longer have to dig and scratch, sleep becomes pos- sible, and healing begins at once, That is because the sooth- ing, antiseptic Res- inol medication strikes right into the surface, arrests the action of the dis- ease, and almost always restores the | | ve gone out with and who they met to-day and who was going to take them out to-night. After a | thought of any kind. athioned girl, qutt whe iw a succes in the Pustne wee one Never! Trey Aiwarf TAtw ABOUT how MANY YOUNG MEN ‘THET VE Lasr ‘TuEsDay AND WWUNCHEDN ToDAY WITH “TOM, Bia wanne me 70 G0 To THE MATINGE SATURDAY, the mother of his children, 1 think she’s a failure, . Year Madam: Mr, Sherrill is all wrong, God bless the girl of to-day, She is all to the good, If she 1s over- dressing, blame the man, herself ‘too conspicuous, blame man, If she is too flighty, blame the man, Man is all wrong. be content with the | SEES BIG PROSPERITY If she makes! makes the Were he to! girl he goes out|rapidiy from the financial and eco- ironed and cooked moderately, and surely any average with, instead of casting admiring! nomic crisis caused by the outbreak FOR UNITED STATES Leading Banking Institution of Swit- zerland, While Optimistic, | Sounds a Warning. | BERNE (Via Paris), Oct, %—The Swiss Bankverein, the most important banking institution in Switzerland, this comment_on American conditions in a pamphiet just issued: ho United States has recovered | glances at the other woman, why his girl would not try to make herself |0f the war. more attra ve just to hold hin “Yes, it's man's own fault, Be satis- fled with what you've got and don't long for what you haven't got “SAM BP, W." “WE'LL MAKE GOOD,” CRIES AN OPTIMISTIC “EVE.” We girls of to-day are “Dear Madam: are—well, girls of to-day. We not of yesterday, when women w confined to the home and the on way of getting a home was marryin oné; nor are we of to-morrow, when every girl will be trained to earn a living and will marr n she meets ard she has set for’ her mate “Our mother: day, raised ui ry. We want to marry, but as we muat go to business we have no thinking only of nm, 80 We the quickest le them n looking ‘able. man's ical comedy or any play with no plot, any play that amused without requiring It was his way of relaxing, of letting up from the strain of the day, Now when the business girl tries to relax by dancing or talking about anything that re- qilres little thought she is called Drainless, Brajuless! Ye gods! Why we're just learning how to use our brains. “As for the sort of wife mother we make, our busin perience m us an ing m us practical thoughtful, ol hi id. Denver and she to lim how ¢ $80 and ra tortured, inflamed skin to perfect health nickly, easily and at little cost, tore, The next her girl friends about youre tnd'pold by every deupeit For| nea she hae added to her Hiet of a jotim: sample free, write to Dept. 1-R, Resinol, “that ien’t the kind of gtr! whom « | Baltimore, Md.— Adve, man would choose to be his wife and brown eyes. ot the New BRICK hurled through glass door of E second Street Police Station got plano mover the Obviously the country ts approaching a period of great prosper- {ty, owing to her rich harvests and uncommonly large exports—a degree of prosperity which has not perhaps been equalled in the economic annals of America, “However, this situation, caused by ‘extraordinary and transitory factor: jis not without some dangers, Opti- mism in business und the spirit of enterprise are growing to such an ex- tent that after the return to the nor- mal standard a heavy reaction seems inevitable, all the more because wages have reached an exaggerated height. However, the United States can regard the future with confidence, as neither external nor internal policies cause sty or apprehension. It was real- fortunate for Europe that the ec nomic and financial resources of the United States have so well resisted all shattering event ea pea POPE HAS TALK ON MEXICO. n for Fatar | of Charch There Presented to Him, OME, Oct, 9.—Pope Renedict re: | eived In private audience yesterday the most Rey, Francisco Crozco ¥ Jimines, | Archbishop of Guadalajara, Mexico, to- | gether with Mer. Francis C. Kelley of Chicago, President of the Catholic Ex- ‘ on clety in the United States ne visitors presented an important plar connection with the present cond! of the church in Mexico Pope showed a thorough knowl- of the situation as regards. the | can clergy, and praised the gener- osity of American Catholics in the help ere wiving thelr co-religioniata in | Mar. Kelley also preesnted the | jal report of the Catholle Exten a pretty girl in rv, After she had told rmon Was she disappearéd with his uehed the prea st Twenty- hight’s lodging he wanted but couldn't pay for, PEACH AND PLUM TR Wallingford and Clifton, CKLING A BEAR to win wrestling match is legtt- ir Supreme rules in sult of man against owner, who refused to pay $50 offered any one who would throw hear in New Rochelle theatre, Owner contended bear ost because man Uckled it SEVENTERNTH BABY born to Mrs, William Bivhop, thirty-seven, at Winated, Conn.. and all have | these - York Suffragists What A New Doing to Win Cam- paign This Fall The women suffrage amend mont will be submitted te New on lene than a month the gulfragiote done te preeure the passage of thet amendment? The ning World put this quer Wading suffrage organt+| Vive of these the the New York State jation, the Raqual ere Mawel! to-day © Party Suffrage League Men's league for Woman h the . mmmittes, with vartere at No.| 408 Fifth Avenue. Miss Rose Young, representing thie Joint vim ittee, which han epent $176,000 In ite aut frage ganda, eave some of the facts ond figuree “Mince © 1 between 40,000 and! | 60,000 wuftr meetings have beqn held in the State outside of New York City, Mere at at neven meetings a week have been beld tp each off the sixty-three Assembly Aletricts, or 497 meetings aince) June 1, In the last fortnight we [have held 1,400 street meetings, @ | bundred meetings a night “Thia month we shall have 160 mass meetings all over the State, Five of will be in the elty, one at! Cooper Union, Oct, 14; two at Carne- gle Hall, Oct. 22 and Oot, 2%, and two at the Brooklyn Academy of Musto, | Oct, 23 Oct, 90, On Oct, 4 we Ii have the largest Suffrage parade ever held in the world, in which | 9e¢ women wi}! march. Wo shall have 3,000 paid organizers and speak- ors working in the State and 100,000 volunteers, women on whom we can definitely depend to perform any task we ask of them. “We have distributed among the 2,000,000 odd voters of New York be- tween 75,000,000 and 100,000,000 leat- lets and pamphiets. “On our committee of publications we have some of the ablest wo writers and artists in the country, and they have worked most loy: » In March we bad more than 200 special Suffrage editions of newspapers ip this State, The Evaning World and other metropolitan papers gave us special editions. Many ofthe weekly and monthly publications followed sult, and nearly all the magasines have used our spectal articles, “We have bad given to us, in New York City, billboard space worth $60,- 000, and the artists on our committeo have desig: the posters. We have 90 prepared posters for space in street cars and buses valued 1,000, and for $20,000 worth of billboard and street-car space up the State. “We have been allowed display ad- vertising in the programmes and pos ers in the lobbies of fifty city the- atres, Sixty-five moving — picture houses have consented to fash ‘Votes for Women’ on the screen at brief intervals between pictures, and one big moving picture company Is about to put out a film drama which con- tains excellent suffrage propaganda, Every county in the State is organ- {xed for suffrage, with local workers arranging local meetings. In addi- tion, We have flying squadrons of suf- frage workers who are sent to any locality where the cause seems to need strengthening. These workers hold three and four meetings a day. Woe have had suffrage booths and made | at least 1,560 suffrage speeches at 130) State fairs this summer. “We have distributed 1,000,000 suf- frage buttons, 1,000,000 suffrage match cards, 2,000,000 suffrage fans, 25,000 Aiftrage balloons, 100,000 suffrage whirli«ime. “The most important, if the least sensational, part of our work has been the. house-to-house canvass — by women In every Assembly District of the city and State, Last year we talked to the woman of the house, but this year we've appealed directly to the man. I believe this will count tremendously on Election Day,” — OFF ON DIXIE HIGHWAY TOUR, Hlinots Heads Auto- Gov, Danne « Inte Who Start 1,600 Mile Ride, | News Oddities ; PREACHERS SERMON touched | | | | exercises were held In n Chicago's luke front rt A her joweke cure at the Tg i Me — Mitton Hitchcock, Brother4in ferteee Gone, Tebow Her tate, Law of Gov . Whitman, . + invalid bushen® Admits $2,000 Robbery Mysiery surrounds « erent, esi made by Milton Hitehoook eu dh brother of the wife of Gov, Whitman that be etoile 08,008 wort velonging (© his mother in order to eet money to pay for a eure for the drug baw | Young Hitchooek made the “con fession” in the presence of his father last ev the Hotel Bucking ham = Neither futher nor son could | be found there to-day. The gist of| young man's statement was that uttering from the Arug habit that he wanted to be cured that he stole bis mother's jewels from the Mitehoock summer home at Quogue i. 1, pawned them and entered the Polyclinic Hospital an a drug patient “L was discharged as cured on July he added nk God with all — », 1 my heart that Iam able to say I am cured.” Records of the Polyelinte Mowpital, not discharged but that the word “im- when he left the institution July 29. Young Hitchcock failed to aay in his “confeasion” that he returned to the hospital last Tuesday, This time he was booked as an appendicitis patient, o of the hdwpital said to- ‘The fact of the matter was his e could net be diagnosed at first, & suspicion that he had appendicitts, Therefore he was booked as an appendicitia pa- tlent. As to why he to the hospital we cannot say. Hitchcock entered the hospital July eof “Milton Ha ton H t yeh T 3. WLS RPET, a Eve. 1875 EANING %3w54nst Aa A NAN WE We Invite the Woman Who Pays $15 to $20 For Her Hat to Come and See at $8.50 The New Idea in Millinery. Herald Square New York. NN ill i en WI CAN i tt il HNN B. Altman & Ce. ‘The Dollar Dinner with Wine.” Also a ta Carte. 10 ORY is the City's favorite meal. Tout Commencing MONDAY, October tl, will hold the great Autumn Sale of Selected Oriental RUGS AND CARPETS The prices will beextraordinarily low Fifth Aurwe-Madtaon Avenue, Sth and 35th Streets New York