The evening world. Newspaper, December 8, 1916, Page 3

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what appears to be differences of Interpretation {n Washington and Berlin to what Germany's pledges in the Sussex case covered, especially as to armed ships, Secretary Lansing sald to-day no U.S. TOASK BERLIN FOR CLEAR NOTE ON pen up President Wilkos A848 Hime ing each case separately on its merits, it was sald to-day that the number of cases had reached such propor- tions that some general action would be Justified, although tt was made clear that nohing had been deer- mined upon The day's developments tn the sit- uation were: The United States aasked Great Britain for information to determine the status of the P. and O, nor Arabia, which a German submarine commander took for an armed trans- Hopes to End Differences in Views of Pledges Given Af- ter Sussex Incident. BRITAIN. Status of Arabia Is Asked—Ma- rina Officially Declared Not a Transport. MESSAGE TO port, Official information coming to the WASHINGTON, Dec. 8A new] State Department established that the British ship Marina, torpedoed with a loss of six Americans, was In t v 1 note to Germany on the general sub- marine situation appe ra to be among the posibilitios which of the latest sease bonte may come idle BY the Immunities of a peaceful mer- setivities ot WE or. | Chantman, Wwittes of the undetet both canes many has ex. pressed a willingness to offer amends If her pledges were broken. It was reiterated again to- f clearing uo) the United States stands square ~|the position it took in the Sussex | case. This, combined with Germany's statement that she, too, holds to the pledges she case, leads officials ¢ ns to be some dl . rpretation, A new nofe, If It should be « to wend one, would be to clear thie up and make plain, ond question, that the United St # expecta all If decided upon, such a note would be for the EE HOT WATER THE BEST LIVER AND BOWEL MEDICINE purpose troyed without crews and pas- law, shall not be di warning or havin sengers removed to places of safety Affidavite on the sinking without Says glass of hot water be=) warning, of the Italian liner Palermo, lon which State Department records ‘ vas Siow there were twenty-three Amerl- fore breakfast washes |s!ow « ty-three Ameri cn poisons from sy are being collected as rapidly a8 possible As yet th tions that any Ameri lost, but from inform the case seems to Physicians the world over recom-/ Arabia and the M ier the eee bath, claiming this} ————— of vastly more importance than} outside cleantiness, because. the skin ANOTHER POINT DROP res do not absorb impurities into ¢ bloody causing ill health, while the} Pores in the ten yards of bowels do. “Men and women are urged to drink| 4 Conk moraine before breakfast a glass} Geneva Reports a Further Falling of hot water with a teaspoonful of tae Value he Lmestone phosphate in it, as a harin- Off in Value on the Jess means of helping to wash from the Bourse. @tomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible mate- ystem. NBVA, T 8 (via Paris) —The {German hundred mark bill has wial, poisons, sour bile and toxins, thus) grooped another point and a quarter 1 éleansing, sweetening and purifying! on the Geneva Bourse and a point a the entire alimentary canal before | three-quarters on the Zurich Bours putting more food into the stomach. [It is now quoted at 79 francs and 78 Just as soap and hot water cleanse francs 25 centimes respectively nd freshen the skin, so hot water| The fall ts attributed to the and limestone phosphate act on the lishment of the mass levy in aliminative organs. many, which, it 1s feared, will resul Those who wake up with bad breath, |!" 18 LSdey oe ee ated tongue, nasty taste or have a ROME He oO! lull, aching head, sallow complexion, | acid stomach; others who are subject| T° to bilious attacks or constipation! rp, es; Rem A: toriads should obtain a quarter pound of wnt th ewept over this town early today limestone phosphate at the drug store.!*/' emoliahed This will cost very little but is suffi-\{ ae Biot cient to demonstrate the value of in-| buildings dest side bathing. ‘Those who continue it} C dist each morning are assured of pro-| Chur eat Charches owe, the business sec. $40,000. the Baptist ay al Ni ompi nounced results, both regard to S88, Railway or ently mare aoa health and appearance Advt. child was reported killed, No Connection With Any Other Establishment tn the World WORTH 43 & 45 West 34th Street New Winter Coats Fitted, Flare and Belted Models Greatly Reduced Women’s & Misses’ Coats Broadcloth, Velour, Duvetyn, Montagnacs, With or Without Fur Trimmings, Reduced to Opposite MeAlpin Hotel 16.50 Women’s & Misses’ Coats Bolivia, ) Suede Velour, | Velour de Laine, Velveteen, Broadelot? With or Without Fur Trimniings, ieduced to Women's & Misses’ Coata Peau de Peche, C. shmere Velour, Suede Velour, Pa. 35.00 Handsom ly Fur Trimmed, Leduced to Will Close Out 120 Fur Trimmed & Tailored Suits Freadeloth, Veiour, Duvetyn, Gabardine, 16.50 Fur Trimmed Velour Coat, $23.50 ena Serge. k lined, heavily interlined, Many handsomely fur trimmed, Reduced to IN HUNDRED MARX BiLl.’ THE ihe pei COUNT TOLSTOY SAYS: © “Competition tances antagonism’ Other Great City.’’ Let Her.’’ Seems Necessary.’’ Success, She Preacher of Doctrine of Non-Resistance, Like His Father, Is Against Feminism; but Women | in America Are Free to Try All Experiments They Want; He Won't Resist. Shares the Views of Great Tolstoy on Woman’s Dress and Her Place in National Life, and in Lectures Here May Re- veal Untold Chapters in Reformer’s History. sand he obected to Reereae By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | “1 have been in New York but a day and a half,” said Count Ilya Tolstoy, “but I have felt the pulse of your city already, It is a quick and jfeverish pulse, Life is swifter here than in any great city I have seen, otherwise New York is not very different from Paris or London, except that its buildings are higher, I have been in my hotel and in a bank, and I have just come from a photograph gallery. That is all I have seen. But in the walk of people in the streets, in the look of eyes, there is extraordinary energy and vitality and speed.” The son of Russia's famous novelist is tall, bearded hi Jeonine, as a son of the great Leo should be. ders are broad and heavy, his gray e moteness of eyes that look toward mountain peaks and stars rather than into other eyes, They seem to hold lis father's dregs in them, But the Tolstoy Count Ilya resembles is the Tolstoy who wrt nna Karenina” and “War and Peace,” the great books which belong to Tolstoy the artist rather than to Tolstoy the reformer, “My memory of my father goes b | His shou b. 4 Bt emamsy oot o the wilderness to die. to the time he was forty years old early nalf his reasons and apologies have tences of 3 conduct from the slavish idolatry of his blographers to the mary of Bernard Shaw. Count Iya told me, bree years old life, for he was eighty when he died, I shall give two lev- tures here in January on my fathesn work, on his philosophy, on his do- parture from Yasnaya Poliana and his death away from us.” c COUNT WILL THROW LIGHT ON| caustic eu Shaw wrot “He {insisted on celibacy as the first ndition of a worthy life and his became sixteen times a mother. ‘ In the ordinary course of Ife he END OF HIS FATHER'S LIFE. | oe cny anconiental respon ‘The Count said that he did not} giniity while availing himaelf of wish to speak of these events before hia public And ht distaste was natural and filial, M every lusury he really eared for, And at his wife and family for to do it, appearance here, railed enabling hin | persons have written of the motives] wife as ethically | which impelled the great Russian to] she insisted on | leave home and wife and children a4] from ruin, un go to visit his 8 .anun ina re-}up as treating inferior, be saving the family 1 at last impossible Ra mote convent, wh ed, But uo] him without sa s harsher ne has told the whole story as Couat | than her Hussian formula, “Nothing {riya Tolstoy can tell it, We know] matters so long as the baby ts not |that Tolstoy, who did not belleve in]erying!” private property, left tho manage-| “In addition to the story of my ment of his estate and the great in-| father's of his ; |come from his writings to bis wite | strugule," aioy te ‘ Jand continued to live in his home, | shall spe great religious while the Countess exacte] from the | erizis of hi . of the belief that peasants on his estate tuxes which| came to hin that Christ preached the Count had always told them were | non-resistance and that men sb t wrong and unjust. We know that] live accord that doetrir t the man who wrote that terrible ty. | We should follow It In the affairs ¢ dictment of marri The Kreutwer |Our daily us well as in the man who advocated unt-| M@tonal relations, My fat 1 versal macy, was the father of six. | OPPOKed to all w He belley teen children, bu Hy left bis tam. | Mat Wars result from false culcation « triotism is egotl noand that pa ily in an effort to sq | with his beliefs, We know that Tolstoy aro his f | The great tenet of my father jwilled all his manuscripts to D3) Ceca after 5 « ‘throug |youngest daug and that th's) sotigious crisis wh ne to him be daughter and the widow had @ tween 1880° and 1885, was non-re their possession squabble over sistance,” the Count ¢ t the great man’s death, But we doo.) was, he thousht, the oo know the story of the spiritual strug the doctrine of Jesus gle which compelled tl id and} It-as he accepted it brok n to leave the nt i POET AND PHILOSOPHER AGREE the sustaining affection which are the right of old age and go a tottertug | ON NATIONALISM India, Rabindranath Tagor Earn Money Knitting at Home, nounced nationaian to an It jo a fact at the present time that| in Carnegie Ha many women operating Auto-Knitters| ctuatiy. the at home are making over $2.00 per day os Anitting hosiery. The work is pleas- ant and easily learned and gives one dy employment at home the year! T round, Write to-day to Auto-Knitter|Amerioa principn Co, In Deak 82-1, gument agalnst Tagore and Jone was Hoslery are! Smith and the @ Jones Smiths were born here, But our no- particulars, ® workers Heeded at once more Adve, Se ee | “If Woman Can Do the Work of Man ‘\..:’:: | ‘“‘My Father Accepted Marriage, as the|“: | Bible Does, for Those to Whom Tt ie ee, “If She Relies a Her Work Alone for irre cco: te couen ena! ‘as to Do Better Work | Than Her Male Competitor.’’ he objected to Court thip blest feelings have humble beginnings, the great passion of love perhaps the most ignoble origin of all and funda- mentally the Ltebestod in und Isolde” and the yow! of the alley eat are the same, “Are you going to discuss r father’s opposition to marriage I asked Count Tolstoy. “In his latter rs he belleved in universal cell- did he not? (Strange, isn't tt, that it 9 always In one's latter years that one belleves in celibacy, and quite generally after one haa been married several times.) “My father did not belleve tn celt- haey for every one,” the Count re- plied, “He accepted marriage as the Hible does, for those to whom it seems | Dt necessary, But I shall not attempt to define his views of marriage, He gay them fully in the K Sonata, Have you read that I had read that terrible rosary of rows and rapture when 1 was young enough to be disturbed by it, and 1 know that Count Leo Tolstoy had de- d marriage to4e “not a prog but a fall for man;" that he de- nounced love 4s @ anare for the best 8 of the human that courtship led men into fraud and ly- ing, and that he thought modewn art, fashionable vening dress, tennis, plays, “everything from the pletures in boxes of #weetmeats up to the ulzer enere race; novel,” fans the unholy flame and lead us into “vulgar and brutish things.” “What did your father think of the feminist movement?” [ asked, He was opposed to tt, | think. And n opposed to jt," Count liya Tol- answered rather deprecatingly, ave the greatest esteem and liking r women, but I do not believe they uld do the same work as men, for the same work brings titton, wid Competition Induc nlm,’ comm ant HE WON'T STAND IN THE WAY OF WOMAN'S WORK Hy this time J was eall ne myself for wsked the Count tuple a For, of course, Woman, I feit vier liberallty ot and i ubtedtt rae, Si reeemmcen Carstains “Tristan | this army, America has known— master blend since 1788. VENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECKMBER 8, 1916 | ( “Life Swifter in New York Than in: Any’: t than many men, since he be ft hon-resista “Ie women can dot let th node it Ne them," Cour |tinued. “If a woman wants to take my pen away from me, why, let hor take tt." unt Te © work of ny ody | trying to vatoy oy seized an itnaging table cover in the little rec Hotel Lafayette, eption room of the where to take his Instead, I lenge and try from him, away eked “Rut don't you know that every woman who tries to succeed In man's |fleld encounters the organized in | credulity of society, even when other opposition stops; that if she | upon her work alone for success, and some women do, sho has to do better work than her male competitors in jorder to get equal recognition and equal reward? So that a | never gets equal pay for equal work, but equal pay for better work, and | that t# not equality at all.” Count Tolstoy received this expo. sition with the impasstvity of one of the Public | “The subje nounced, “is a diMeult one haps in days I shall write something about tt in| | Russian, Ido not want the Amert-| can ladies to think that Loppose thelr | reltes woman he a few ideals, You are free here to try all experiments, und you are trying | them.” ALLIED BLOCKADE. OF GRECIAN PORTS. IFUL EFFET Stern Measures Taken to Force | King Into Complete Sub- | | mission. | TONDON® Deo, §.—The disciplining Iles begins to-day, | ‘eok ports was to nd by the French |e formally announ Government, which, combined with previous British and ench orders against movement of Greek vessels | from thelr harbors, was expected ab- solutely to cut the kingdom off from supplies. Despatches from Athens to-day said the Italian colony was the only ly citizens remaining tn the | apital, e has suMeient supplies to Inst | for possibly twenty days against the sort of a blockade whtch Admiral du Fournet probably will Inatitute against the kingdom. | Delayed despatches from Athena to uid that on Monday adherents of ov taken privoner by the Gov- ernment forces were transferred from the Parllament House to the Averoft prison, Crowds in tho atreets Jeered the procession and the captives: as they were marched by tled in groups of four, HERLIN (via Sayville powers were wireless), hired by n= responsible Athens, ac public ta- tente nearly all the rlots in cording to reports made day by the "AIL rep ‘voluntes Presa Hureau ts about the so-ca Venizelos ar * the statement asserted. no soldiers enlisted for though it was considered 8 by some of the p or the ny food busine of Athens to enlist, accept mon and| then disappear, Hracticaily all thel volunteers the Ver army are otflcers—at \ t nants i who are either bank special reason pre- Salonica to the All are people rupt or for some fer a residence tn climate of Athens. “As to Athen Prices are hi fe is almost normal, ), but Wage corre spond, The Entente has hired hood lums from the port and appointed A Kort of self-styled police, 1 by British and Freneh hus, the British Mintet v pune on tb nelehborh: Mica, where day and nig a hundred sueh — ‘poliv Hodged, These all rows reported in. the 1en create practically Kantente ception of tiene Jwho are pald by the r ace and new pro Entente { | Ten Yours Ba: Jand oh G ‘ tormen, | Jeon ! i Homie ar | ‘ enced t ars tmpriqnment each today in| rf rt dt was the maxi | mum penalty | | | liked—this CARSTAIRS| Whisney Library lone, \« |p v FORCED 10 DEPORT |=: sae GERMAN NOTE permitted to regular visite to Social Necessity, as minke reir ho 1,500,000 red Persons Are Dependent | fit and titling on Public Charity. h erica's traditional. positon. al len freedom and the champlom RERLIN, 1 8 (via London) et Mi 1 German Government issued a Oni ai justifteation of the transfer of Belgian laborers t tie any 1 measure ia by for the laty ity Owing et sen te| MAKES TEUTONS ANXIOUS & hardship Side but is @ social ne "*1Oll Wound in Monareh’s Trouble and He Is Very Weak. to the Tritisn em.| bargo | na’ ¢ trade, which t the war supported ea PARIS, Dec. ~The health of Ki A large pa f istrial popula-| Constantine is ag causing anxiety, tion, large numbers of Belgian work rding to news from German ora are idle, the ment says, a vurces, says a Zurteh despatch te vditiona are growing worse, Many |‘, Mat | The oid wound 4 King’ ing, have become objets of public | mn ind has kept constantly open, ity dition is eaid to be state of things t# not due, as 4 in Belgium, to German ons of raw material, It is ex. | for these | aswert requis plaine curr tons o¢ HEAD STUFFED FROM ! CATARRH OR A COLD nployees engaged in| Applied to Nostrils 4 Passages Right Up requt 1, a9 a rule, only where fi were unable to continue ope OF 1,200,000 Belgian Indust 505,000, including now wholly without work, and 15 are| 000, | Instant relief no waiting. Your including 46,000 wor are partiy| Clogged nostrils open right up; the alr without work, making a total of 666,-| Passages of your head clear and you 000 persony. denandene on not \can breathe freely. No more hawke In addition to thene, there are 203,- | (Ne: suffling, blowing, headache, dep. 000 wiven and 618/000 ohlidren of men 4 No struggling for breath at n m : night; your cold or catarrh Sicereeame Without work, so that 1,560,000 por-| Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream sons, or one-fifth of the total Belgian) Balm from your druggist now. Ay ths popul . require assistance, a little of this fragrant, ai More than 900,000,000 franes al-| healing cream in your nostrils. It pen ly has been spent tn supporting | ¢trates through every alr passage of 40 persons, and 20,000,000 fi the head, soothes the inflamed or . and 20, 00 francs monthly will bo required henceforth, | wollen mucous membrane and Galle? ey comes instant! Thene masses of idle people, the It's Just fine. Don't stay etui statement says, are degenerating, | with a cold or nasty catarrh—i and drunkenness and gocial depravity = = Win era A MOTHER'S TROUBLES The Gern n Kissing, early re sity of tak asures to help the| , 4 mother’s unending work end Aig fn eployinent. Heevuscg| devotion drains and strains her tou take public pore Some and leaves its mark in ldlo to obtain emy munictpalitie rhe to create employment, where thia Was ponsible, without dmposing tuo great financial burdens, Upon the suggestion of Belgians of practical ft insight, the Governor General Issued an ordinance in August — of Hroryegas Con aves Cu canoer against persons unwilling to work,| 88 food and bracing tonic to riche Which Was made more stringent last | 869% to ber blood and build up ber » ordinances provide for com- | Bm Ceanulee Of WorRlcen It is free from alcool. when idle persons refum Gcott & Bowne, Bloomseld, M. J. work at reasonable pay, without adequate reasons, the provisions of international law protecting them against working on war material] being recognized ax adequate ground. 10 ordinances Were directed chlefly iuinst organized Influence | to prevent. laborers. fr work voluntarily, only t offered by Germana, Nevertheloss, | tens of thousands voluntarily ac cepted work in Germany at profitable wages r th vernor G eral, von ognized the neces- only 1 to accept we Diamonds at Wholesale he statement goes on to say that the labor situation in Belgium has | Krown worse and that conditions are how such as to necessitate improve- ment, henee the ordinances must be enforced vigorously In order to! BH. Altman & Cao, have in their Toilet Goods Depart- ment an extraordinarily fine assortment of CHOICE IMPORTED PERFUMES the products of the foremost parfumeurs of France Among the exquisite extracts prominently featured are La Rose Jacqueminot and |'Origan, from Coty; Quelques Fleurs and i Ideal, from Houbigant; Kadine and Champs- Llysees, from Guerlain; Aeolian, from Lentheric; Mary Garden, from Rigaud; Nuit de Chine, from Rosine; and Djer-Kiss, from Kerkoff All of these perfumes are enclosed in artistic flacons, the ensemble suggesting a Yuletide gift of more than ordinary desirability TOILET WATERS in all the wanted varieties Fifth Avenue - Madison Avenue 34th and 25th Streets New York

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