The evening world. Newspaper, December 18, 1916, Page 3

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) taken frpm the Noordam to Ellls Is- No. 1. Don't raise barriers between yourself and your husband. jand this morning and was tmmedi- No, 2, Don’t nag ately summoned before a special No, 3. Don't choose an all-absorbing pastime, Your board of inquiry, which ordered his iusband will do likewise and he will never choose the | {deportation after a secret session, sixe one. He refused to discuss the Brittsh No, 4, Cultivate In married life an entente cordiale, | charges. a surface, and allow nothing to serateh it. | he Baron spent the night in his No, 5, Find at least one interest which you and stateroom on the Noordam with two 7 | ELLIS ISLAND AT BRITISH CALL penheim, Who Is Said to ave $500,000 With Him, Makes Appeal. | A_vwike it & prevent, Wve’ “t “Eke chorus girt habit AS PRISONER ON SHIP. jar Contracts Made Abroad Reported to Be Cause | for Detention. | i Our Girls are ruined At the request of the British Gov- | | ay: sense eatery ment the United States immigra- tion authorities have ordered the de- portation of Baron Robert Emanuel | Oppenheim, a merchant of Paris and | London, who arrived here yesterday | on the Holland-America liner Noore/ dam and was not allowed to land. | The Baron, through his counsel, Warren-C. Van Slyke, will appeal to Washington, and pending judgment on the dppeal will be lodged on Ellis Istand in the comfortable quarters which were ocoupied by Sylvia Pank- wurst, and later by Castro, the Venezuelan dictator, while this coun- try was deliberating about letting them In. It is stated that the British Gov- ernment has asked that the Baron be nent back to England to explain some extensive business deals having to do! with war conttacts which were made in London and Paris. The Baron was That Name, “Is Like a Business, and the Blame for the Failures That Wind Up in the Divorce Courts Should Rest Generally on the Shoulders of the Wives.” By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. These are the rules of the marriage game for Everywife your husband can enjoy in common, sallors wearing side arms on guard at the door, He took with him to | - Ellis Island a portfolio which, It is ;. in the world worth his attention said, contains $500,000 worth of 4 I It ig Mrs, Anne Crawford Flexner who in this in ‘American securities, i = stance is marriage’s Marchioness of Queensberry. The Baron had talked freely with) ““ Three years ago Mrs. Flexner's exceedingly clever play, reporters coming up from Quaran-| tine. He said he obit America partly on business and part- ly for his health, expected to stay two “The Marriage Game,” was a Broadway success, Now philosophy of life have been put out between book covers. in three years the author—who, by the way, is the ner, the well-known educator and #-/ 1 wondered 1 months and then go to his estate in od her| Wild desire, And there is the point) ‘ | cial investigat nad changed her) oe iw expressed by W. L, Georee, Italy, He was here for several weeks | joint of view as to American WIVeS| Who finds marriause Het Bitoni last spring, returning home in June.|oi4 matrimony. And although she jing to live without belns hap \ We saya he is an offloer on tho! oy vedingiy busy just now with her| What do you say? Pench Army Reserve, but Ie flfty-| new piay, “Wanted—An Alibi,” whieh A, Supcenetulrmarciage y years old and could not be easy to define,” Mrs. xner 8 to be produced after Christmas, T| swered, “although one always wanted for active military service.) oy joy for a delightful half-hour! recognizes it when one sevs it. even if the United States acted im) oii cng tea in her home at No.| | should describe it as a marriage ea: CNBOR, 160 East Seventy-second Street | which makes for qenui pon- He says ho is a member of a wealthy family of French bankers, and a son of the Baron Oppenheim j taneous personal happiness an WIVES ARE RESPONSIBLE. FOR est measure of social UNHAPPY MARRIAGES. “The Marriage Game,’’ Says Author of Play by No. 6. Convince him that you are the only woman its wit and suave f | 2 wee trouble with Mr, George's at- connected with the Rothschild bank-| And at the outset Mra. Flexner re- | titude toward marriage is that he ing interest. At the pler to meet him| iterated something she sald to te always looks at it trough the small was his brother, Baron Bugene Op. | threo years ago, something with | nd of the opera glasses, hen too, as 4 woman said to me t penal of Syracuse, who Is out on Which I agreed then and agree now. e other day, Ihe seems to have known such sor bail after conviction on a charge of “For most of the unhappy mar- | didly middle-class peoplr conspiracy in connection with the in American | riexner then, 4 my iene bet banking laws In November of last are responsible,” she said. enh ls He wi ntenced to five years “The blame for the matrimon {llustrated in her pub im the Federal prison in Atlanta, and pending appeal 1s out under $16,000; bond, At the trial Baron Hugene sald he was a brother of Baron Robert,! bankruptcy which ends in the divorce courts should rest gen shoulders of the | WoMEN KNOW HOW TO RE- CEIVE BUT NOT HOW TO GIVE. “L don't mean that this is true tn} that he 1s in possession of a papal! every case. are men with |g tt do Pec boon ag title, and that he fs a descendant of | whom mar could not possibly be! ainerican woman ag a wife?” L asked, | @ line of Frenoh kings. | made successful—the drunkards, is Canty noua nee to eorelees | | Sesene the criminals, at ver thinks of what she has to! the average American case I bellove | that the man marries a woinan whom | Toy jy rere pacntd targely tie fault of ‘ he truly loves and that id ters te ‘We are’ prostituting our young work for her, to shiel her, to a c dec em- A‘DAY OFF; CITY IS ARK ects cae ease guns Mie Monae, adel ae | s riage ia not & success 1 bellev that | adu! our iildetras | the fault is here, Rites bane! wets influence, are | larriage an pusines: a a « 0 " Pog and Smoke Combine to Make Ewen TERIOR Ot lifes ane. the SUES | Ch. thee owiete’ aut dau To-day the Murkiest in the for one aro t rules for the other, ant, Sending a girl| ‘i In any business, a step in advance of} |makes the su The women t that the job is the husband's?" | j) you think rather than t club all ition and lighted to the full extent of their being, in which he is ready to do his full and generous share. To woman, marriage is a state of aoc~ quiring: "Gin und women m to a standar quid pro. que 1 know tha my lite it would she mus mt you fing ndability “Bat d Favorite Pure and mellow—the finest product of the distiller’s art. t queer me," It didn't laughed queer you girl in 0 be 4 MIS Above Lhe o: villke baw os a y hag no definite goal at the PITTSBURGH, Pa, Dec, 18—!| Citcrprise, ‘The elilef end of her coll career, if ati does Pittsburgh to-day experienced what| {ty rests, with him, A age, @ not understand that she must return weather observers declared was the | home, Hp be ranged fn iH same /to the world an equivalent of self- darkest day in its history, At 9|plan, There must be a head, A pore) supporting, — self-respecting work, atari Wades oe aan “fe fib. {son whose Job It Is to soe that every= what good dors her college do her | o'clocl @ streets, in the # thing goes smoothly, that the most She is sull receptive, and only that. — | urbs, were black as the ordinary mid- | Imports feature of home life—the AL chub meeting which 1 ate | night, with electric lamps on in full relation be n husband and wife— day the tople w force and automobile and street cars| 1s all t it should be.” rs, | power, All traffle was seriously Im- futough peded, particularly on railroads where | A. ra maid a agains rescence mont : pais ul in the discussion, it ane be . tis she who has the time anc developed iey believed that trains were boing operated as though | i cig to attend to it, Her hus-|their daughters should be carefully during the hours of night, hand has too much else to de » | educated, should even be prepared fox Thousinds of persons were late in| iman T know keeps union hours. The a profession, But when the question | reac elr places of employme American man’s working day is much|of the girls actually working for a reaching thelr places of employment, | VAM Ot venty-four hours than eight. living way ralwed, every lust woman | and freight traiiic Was serloUsy Aa teen eee for the wife to do any |sakd no! , queers ped work outside the ho altho 1 girl, did 40 much to keep her fr " ocal office of the Weather | think she might do such work in many | getting married, Bur ald the darkness was caused | instances. But often she doesn’t even “And here, | thought, is just thi falling temperature; which per- {succeed at the Job Iying to her hand) difference between the ma by a falling tempera oF the winning of her marriage game point of view and the wom: mitted the formetion fog. The ~*tfow do you define a successful! The woman wants to GET m fox, mingling with smoke from milly | marriage?" ke Jam family ried. The man wants to BE m, sactuPlen, he with at least three definitions. There ried, It's in the blood of the spigalne’ rhe yur 1ose who belleve t consist American airl, it's drilled into her being wbaolntely no wind | in keeping up appearance There from babyhood, it’s her dominant 1 gentle b are porsons—1 ain one of them—who| impulse—even though she may be 4¢ butidings and think that to be really successful it unconscious of it—to think of mu eo and remain a wonder and a what she will get from marriage and not of what she will aive to it. To man, marriage is a state of is fl 4 Mrs. 4. she has the be: {Sho isn’t likes game “Yet every wo nd's sweetheart the chorus girl ———— TEIPER NOT SURE NOW SLAYER WAS A NEGRO. Would Not Sw Immediate happens,” man provided nit.” act the attention of busy other hand, does marry she gets the best man and chance of happiness. to lose in the marriage when she can be her she n’t curl up inside at the thought, concluded Mrs, i he wife who knows her wife of Abrabam ¥ ‘lex: {sob is the bust possible preventive of to Story weit After Tragedy, He Says Under Cross-Examination, BUPFALO, examination of John Edward brother, Court to District asked ‘Telper he told {mmedlately in which he knocked him senseless be w sald Dec. Attorney about 18,—The Guy B. the the a cross- elper, ged murderer of his mother and 8 finished in the Supreme Moore veral stories after the tragedy, | pre attack- ing the other members of the family would not swe was impression, , the @ negro, 2 He could not re 1 his ecused sald, but he the night of the murders, “Did you have that revolver in your hands on the night of the tragedy?" Mr: “IT did not, day. Moore asked, | will pre 1. king of noon and to- ont testimony its case, Th tion will present Its case on W a Moore,” Telper re- MAY MELT STOLEN $20,000 JEWELRY Police Believe the Gold Articles as Bul- lion Only. In the police bunt for in gold articles from his employ | Woods & Chatell of ni }by rend | Avenue, ef that his plans for pessitated |Zwack, alias White Friday, t articles ni tl ring who stole er of No, 315 here develog 1, the r now that the man though that his He beyond ientifleath Jane J so enabling the thie 1 A revolver like the one found near | the scene of the murders, Telper sald, had been placed In the tool box of his automobile and, so far as he knew 1s there on Jan, 0, ended thi orrow the defens prosecu- To E: Escape Matrimonial Bankruptcy _ Try These Six Rules By Mrs. Flexner, EXAMINE RECORDS: For her marriage ts a ie of heoutng ‘0. OSBORNE’ TAKEN FROM TOMBS, BUT HE'S ISAPPOTED Put to Work Ve Veritying Dis- trict-Attorney’s Records and Holds No “Reception.” She Should be the bors of the home “Oliver Osborne” wa recolve ¢ this mo! mons to the office of District Attorney H. shall. The gloom of thy instantly ble bril Evidently ception, at which eyes would contemp | regret, } doomed to disappointment, ag he arrived at the F under close guard, But nd his ami Hiance. he exp @ hin “oll he Snowden ted 3 overjoyed to ring a sum= United States Mar- e Tombs lifted lo resumed ite another re- of the fair with tender hopes were As soon pral Building, was imimured m in the private office of Assistant At- torney Roger B, Wood. He was led to a table piled high with papers and books th Wood. and em, “Hes verifying records,” I can't say ailant who! are, but there are many of them, and it will take ‘Oliver Osborne’ No, set to work examining said Mr. what they a num- ber of hours to complete his task. then he'll go back to the on turned ‘his fac tion, lighted with tt undistul there'll be no sort of a lay, 4 ner Ww and— iil just work stunt and nbs.” with lis back bent over mountain ins rhe A there he was ge of scene and had xe ) which looked Important, doubtedly was, was to of documents, remarks, but plodded little on the reporter, and med with suavity and satisfac- Though ption,” later he be no and un- In brief, he was col- ating with the District Attor- y's office in a most pronounced | manner, and appeared hugely de- Listinetion, —— »°* | BUTCHER GUILTY OF BRIBERY Judge Postpones Sentence in the a Bulntok, Harris Bulnick, one of the wealthy whols vale butchers of Greenpoint, who empted bribe health Inspectors | te ae diseased meat, to-day pleaded 00 | Fifth i the sing of employ- © work was found yesterday by detectives | under Capt, Quinn of the Second) Branch Detective. Bureau, She e+ tablished beyond doubt the fact that she knew nothi Zwack, sho sald, left « quarrel few days bef A former dent of N, young chap penniless in the Stato: GOIN off K, newest Te Cu LAX stip he G@ UP, boy is Presi- Fairbank, and a 1900 is Morgan purtner CARY, W. Va, De Coal & Coke Company, ary vf the United States announce ay that fe 000 ernployees wsent in the form of «10 } in wages, The inc tive at once, are pold tn One tas | of Hire | bery Frederick | Bary: te Rescue lyn. nite Hulnte April 5 ry | arrested. jeve Zwack Can al guilty of bribery in the ¢ Judge Faw until Jan, the third of #ix butchers indicted for bribery, in trying to foist diseased 1 retail trade, 8. or to he gave a oe FIRE GONG SAVES TENANTS. Squad dia Ditenaa Not mist twenty East Two Street, the 0 fire, ated at $2,000. unty Court tt postponed attempted brie come to tints health inape ey for this purpose and was Needed at The duimaxe Bronx, ken by @ bobsled Inst aight. | ing at Wh lundred @ n to For nt out ‘Ditwen and Was W mall ale pite Plains Ave- nd Thirty-third dham Hoepttal to look for the said she alking back up d when etruge. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1916. _ U.S. GRAND JURORS THREE BADLY HURT [CLOTHING STRIKE OF COAL Officials of f Mining Companies Tell of Amount Received Daily in New York, (EROOKS OF CONSPIRACY | Sigh of Relief Relief « When Ship Arrives After Battle With Gale and High Seas. MAXINE ELLIOTT BACK. ‘sw ann’s Assistant Declares tage Favorite Returns a Chev- State Has Evidence of Don- nelly Act Violations. ‘The United States Grand Jury to- lay resumed its inquiry into the il- ‘legal boosting of the price of coal, For some reason, retailers of coal in New York have not raised the! price as a result of the fall of a foot of snow, followed by xero weather, | which made it harder and more costly to deliver. Coal i still quoted at $7.75 a ton by Burns Brothers and other leading dealers. Wherever ex- tra work is needed to put the coal in bins, a charge of 25 cents extra per ton is made. Officials of two of the principal coal producing companies, one “rem- ular,” the other “independent,” con- tinued their testimony before the United States Grand Jury as to the amount of coal recetved dally in New York during October, November and thus far in Decembor. Harry Peters, from Williams & Pe- ters, No. 1 Broadway, told of the coal sent here by th ow York, Susque- hanna and Western, the Pennsyl- vania Coal Company, the Hillside Coal and Tron Company and the Blossburg Coal Company. Allen Dodson of Weston, Dodson & Co., No. 17 Battery Place, one of the oldest “independent” companies in Pennsylvania, brought records show- ing his firm's daily receipts for months, ‘The Grand Jurors examined these rec- ords and heard the testimony of the witnesses under the examination of Special Pi cutor Frank M. Swacker, It ts understood there was on slight shortage of coal during the au- tumn and early winter, and that the boosting of the price to $12 a ton by New York retaliers was the result of a criminal agreement between specu- jators and retailers. Tho retail coal dealers, driven out of business by being undersold by the “combination which then raised tha price so as to get their money back, were summoned to testify to-day ov- fore the State Grand Jury, but As- sistant District Attorney Markewich sent them away. He is devoting the whole day to arranging the testimony ho has already taken before present- ing it to the Federal prosecutor. “We have heard,” said Mr, Mark wich, “enough to prove that there was a criminal conspiracy between certain coal producers, speculators and New York City retailers to create a panic among coal consumers and to make it appear that there was a famine in coal when there was really only a alight shortage. This testimony I am putting in order to-day. I shall present it to t| the Federal Prosecutor as soon ag it is in shape. “We shall go right ahead presenting to the State Grand Jury more evidence of the working of the criminal com- bination which boosted the price of coal in this city in violation of the Donnelly law, We expect to get indictments in a number of these cases.” The Kings County Grand Jury for November, which was continued into this month for the purpose of Inves- tlgating the high cost of coal, handed & presentment on the situation to County Judge Hylan to-day, Both the court and District Attorney Lewis were somewhat surprised at the tone of the presentment, It states that it Is the common be- fin Brooklyn that the public ts belng Imposed upon by coal dealers, but that careful investigation has failed to produce any legal proof of a onsplracy to maintain exorbitant prices, During the investigation the Grand Jury seriously considered — recom mending the establishment of a mu- aiclpal coal ste yard on some of the vacant property owned by the city in Brooklyn. However, the plan was not incorporated in the present- ment, ————| | Hundred and! had hor! against F | was Several, times Grand Jury SVELAND, 1) tory of a ton o en today tn the modern being writ- and exidents of WIFE'S LOVE PUT AT $25,000. She Court With Two! ugbters. nD A jury was picked The Bronx to-day to hear the case of Thomas E N & Custom House inepector, of 19 Hust 2 sixth Street, | BS @ contracting sleveds Hilla, Staten Island, by Nolan with having wite's. affections. Mrs as in court with two Bhe was a widow with the two children when she mar. | ried Nolan in 1906, They separated and Inst year m legal secured by the hue- separation and HISTORY OF A TON OF COAL. | I It Is Being Written for the Vederat| alier, Wearing the Cross of the Order of the Crown, A sigh of retlef went up from the 431 passengers of the American liner ‘ew York when she dropped her mud- hooks at Quarantine this morning. The steamer went through a week of furious storms, tossed by wind and washed by high waves, Sho left Liv- erpool Dec. 10 and tho next day stuck her nose Into the “mussy” weather, A big comber arose in her path and fell with crushing force on the deck, making @ clean sweep abaft amid- ships. Mrs, Samuel Hall of Pittsburgh, standing in the saloon door, was caught by the wall of water and thrown down the cabin stairs. She was badly brulsed and her leg cut eo that ten stitches had to be taken in it, Another cabin passenger suffered a fractured hip and the kneecap of a sailor was broken, Other passengers were knocked down or thrown against the aside of the! house and rail, and for a while there was a panic on board. Nearly all the way over the bad weather followed the ship, and those who weren't burt were for the most part obliged to re- main below on account of sea sick- ness. Mre. Hall was taken from the pier to St. Vinceat'’s Hospital. Mrs, Armar Saunderson, daughter of the late John D, Archbold, Stand- ard Ol magnate, @ passenger and was met at the pier by members of her family, She was in England when her father died, and the New York was the first available steamer to bring her home, The reading of the dead millionaire’s will had been post- poned until her arrival, Maxine Elliott arrived after an ab. sence of seven years, She wore a $10,000 sealskin coat and the cross of the Order of the Crown, She is a chevalier of the Order, the distinction having been conferred upon her by King Albert of Belgium: Tho cross is maltese in shape, with a blue cirele, surmounted by a silver crown, en- compassing it. Miss Elitott wears the cross, attached to a red ribbon, sus- pended from her neck, She said the honor was for caring for wounded Belgian soldiers, under fire, Miss Elliott spent. two years in barges in the canal In the Furness district and was continually in dan- ger, She says she will remain here for about three months and then will go back to England, Tho cutest little thing that has come across the ocean in many moons was diminutive Toby Claude, the musical comedy star, Miss Toby has two brothers at the front, one in Dublin Fusiliers and one in the Canadian contingent, So she sports the garb of a soldier, She wore « chic aviation cap, suggestive of the Highlanders, and @ coat and skirt of olive drab, the skirt short, and both pelted In at the middle; leather boots, and carried a swagger stick, Miss Claude says that there are 1,000,000 women in England ready not only to keep up the Red Cross work front, but to go into the es and do ® soldier's work if Miss Olive ‘Tempest, tall and hand-| some and blonde, with @ stunning ure, who sald that she had just finished a season with Sir Herbert ‘Tree in His Majesty's Theatro in sorpheus in the Underground,” was another passenger on the New York. She ts on her way to South America and will be at the Hotel Seville until she sails, The New York brought tons of Christmas mail, boxes and packages from England and the Continent, Le oh State Must Rule on 2 of Work for Wome: N, Dec, 18.—-A suit to ystitutionality of the New limiting hours law ~ ASGIANTWAVEHIT| BECOMES A FIGHT UPPLY LINER NEW YORK} BETWEEN UNIONS Second Week Is a: Is a Tryout for the Amalgamated and the United. EMPLOYERS “SIT TIGHT’ Now 15,000 in Boys’ Waists Threaten to Strike for 48- Hour Week. The second week of the clothing Workers’ atrike began early to-day as a sort of “try-out” between the Amal- gamated Clothing Workers of Amer- lea, headed by Sidney Hillman, and t United Garment Workers of + mnerica, with Bernard Larger pre- siding, Hillman's organization ts in town; Larger's is mostly out of town. The Manufacturers’ Association has shown a@ decided preference for Lar- wer’s union and hopes he may be able to split Hillman's ranks wide enough to take in at least half of the mem~ bership. Some of the organizers of the United have been making frantic efforts to win over the striking Amal- gamated men and women, but #o far do not appear to have met with suc- cei Outside union men look on tt as @ first-class scrap for the spoils by the heads of both untons at the expense of the workers, The return of about 20,000 to the fold of the United would mean a treasury bulging at all sides, ‘The manufacturers say they are “sit- ting tight.” They put into effect to- day a $2 a week increase and a prom- ine of a forty-nine-hour week, begin~ ning next June and a forty-eight hour week ‘next winter, The Amal- gwamated, which has numbers to back it, wants a forty-elght-hour week ow, and In order to get it has app ently spurned that week Increase, The United, with Little more than its organic name as far as member~ ship in the local industry Js con cerned, grabbed at the $2 increase and the promise of a forty-eight-hour week later on as a very substantial concession on the part of the manu- facturers. Just what the atrkers will do, the next few days will tell The strikers were supposed to number 60,000 last Wodnesday. Since then there have been independent sectlemente, 000 are reported by the unior otticials ax “back “Numbers tt lothing strike ek with stu ae and pliancy mathema- lan can't tell where is two days after a strike is on, The union says 60,000; the manufacturers say “eut it in half; take either half and you've got the correct solution,” The loyal strikers were out om the picket line early to-day, anywhere from five to fifteen thousand strong. Clashes are expected any minute be- tween the loyalists and those who prefer to go back to work, The manu- facturers say they Will break even to~ Mayer Shoenfeld, head of the pelation’s labor department, ims the strike ts a flazle. ‘They'll all be back soon,” he said. "The walking dei¢gate can't keep them from taking a raise in wages. . If they don't come now, well, they'll come later, We can afford to wait until they are good and ready.” Another strike is threatened any day for the forty-clght-hour week, The Shirt and Boys’ Waists Makers and Ironers have sent an ultimatum to the bosses: If their demand for a forty-clght-hour week is not granted they will probably walk out to-mor- row. There are about 15,000 in the In- dustry, of whom 35 per cent. are or- ganized. Sole ownershi Ite founder, Low! yy, reemans FACE POWDER. For 30 years women who care for have found Femi ee ees ys Se ; not rub of. All tollet counters, for fre sample The Freeman Perfume Co. Deyt. 90 Cincinnati, Obie @ 42 BURNETT co We MPANY for dinner— dessert cotnes on—hoste' ess confident—madeit herself —guests enthusiastic—“such a flavor”—hostess generous tells the secret— Burnett's Vanilla. The rich, delicate delicious: thie Vanilla is paralleled by Burnette mon, Orange, Almond, Raspberry and others,

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