The evening world. Newspaper, January 23, 1917, Page 3

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- < T ~ BRAZILIAN GUNS ~ HALT SHIP GOING TO RADERS a *@ignalied to stop. gated a * Universities. | Expected to Be Next Heard _ Dutch Steamer Attempts to “Leave After Taking Cases *-From Interned GermanVessels SEA WOLF DISAPPEARS. From on Far Distant Part of Ocean, } RIO JANETRO, Brazil, Jan. 2 } @he Danish steamer Hammershus Was fired on last night by the guns of the fort at Santa Cruz and halted “while trying to put to sea secretly. ‘The Hammershus entered the port Bt 10 o'clock last night and dropped | anchor close to the German ships ich are interned. It took on board large number of cases—posstbly | nition for the ratder—and then tempted to leave the harbor. The movements of tho ship were ved from the fort and it was The signals were red until two cannon shots were when the Hammershus halted and was boarded by tho port police, Shall Husband or Wife Open the Pay Envelope? Women Thriftier Than Men, Says Expert; Miss Rose McQuade, Who| The police compelled the steamer to Anchor in the neighborhood of some Brazilian warships where it ts being ‘kept under surveillance pending an tovestigation. O08 AYRES, BUED German raider has apparently disap- peared just as mysteriously as she Jan. 23.—The rived in the South Atlantic. Her next appearance in some faredistant Part of the world, heralded by an- other raid on allied shipping was to- ‘day predicted as the next word to be heard from the rover. Rio de Janerio reported several ves which might he the raider and consorts, sighted on the north Brazil coast, but there ‘Was no tangible evidence that any he of these were actually raiders Efforts to trace the source of a Tumor that the cruiser Glasgow had unk the raider were fruitless, but 1t ‘was certain it had not been based on any definite information, The nowspaper Standard to-day published an unconfirmea rumor that @ submarine, presumably a German, had stopped the Spanish steamer Reina Victoria Fugenia yesterday mvening at the mouth of the River Plate. According to this report the ggg Papers were examined and he was finally permitted to proceed. | oft TA AUTOS MAY USE SPEEDWAY. Borough P. nt Marke Prep: BIL With That Atm, Claiming there is a monopoly of the Bpeedway by a few horse owners at the expense of the general public, Borough President Marks has prepared a legis- lative measure which would open the famous roadway to automob! » traffic The bill {s a home rule measure and provides that the Board of Estimate, pon two weeks’ not ehall have pow- er to prescribe the va Vehicles which may use Mr. Marks says the ago didn atory rathe Dass because than a home repared a y it was a min Tule measu — B, T, Fairchtld, Educator, Dies, DURHAM, N. H., Jan, 23.—Edward Thowson Fairchild, President of New Hampshire College, died to- He had is. Mr ing his adminta- tration the attendance at the college was been il! for several w Fatrenild came here in 1912, D to tho wife earning less than $20 a week and the! Has Reconciled More| Warring Families Than. Any One Else in New, York, Disagrees With) MagistratesWhoUphold | Husbands’ Superiority. | By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Who shall open the pay envelope—husband or wife? Miss Rose McQuade belleves the answer depends on how much is in {t; that where a family 1s large and the salary small, the wife should be the custodian and dispenser of the income, Miss McQuade, who has been Probation Officer in the Domestic Relations Court since {ts creation, the city prior to that time, has reconciled more war- 3 ring husbands and wives than any other human being £ 4» in New York City, She disagrees with Magistrates ce . Frescht, House and Appleton, who in these columns Gs # have concurred in deciding that a nusvand should not measur «be compelled to turn an intact pay envelope over to his wife, Magistrate Appleton went so far as to declare that the husband who submite to this humillating rite is a “low worm.” While few men could be found bold enough to express thetr opinions with the freedom of this City Magistrate, practically all men share his polnt of view | “Bat they are wrong,” Mss Mc- Qe nnn Quade assured me. “Where a man's income is large It 1s best, perhaps, for him to administer his own money and give his wife a liberal allowance | for her personal use, but where chil- | dren are numerous and wages small he will do well to turn his envelope over to his wife, who can get more particular dollars should have out of the money than he, | themselves up ever since leav- ing the mint for the day a cashier MONEY TROUBLES IN FAMILIES | trust them Into Smith's pay OF SMALL INCOMES. | envelope and John Smith placed them “The habit of giving the envelope hands. 1 women may be wrong. ts universal among hus- ii, the notien the ideas of love and money, but this There are women the first pa first kiss could never » are wives who resent 1 pay envelope has lost m. They think it should reach them with the freshness of @ snow- . the purity of a dewdrop; that bands and wives who seek redress spread . KX, Be exe from each other this court room. in the following letter H Practically all our cases concern men| THIS WOMAN HAS RECEIVED HUSBAND'S SALARY 10 YEARS. “Dear Miss Greeley-Smith: | have ractically doubled, new Dulldings and| sreater number wigh incomes of $12 Z 4 $ Miuipment were added and many new! and $15. All those men have been in|"D00? Married ten years. During that urses were instituted. He was born in ume my busband, who now makes Wiescown, O. in 1si4, and waa edu-| the habit of taking thetr money home| $40 a weok, but who earned $25 when Ohlo Wesleyan and Woo Get the Habit of | Drinking Hot Water | Before Breakfast | @aye wo can't look or feel right | with the system full | of polsons, || Millions of folks bathe fara now instead of loading their system | with drugs. “What's an inside bath?” u say. Well, itis guaranteed to per- form miracles if you could believe these hot water enthusiasts. There are vast numbers of men and | women who, immediately upon arising fn the morning, drink a glass real | hot water with a teaspoonful of ‘ime. | stone phosphate in it. This is a very excellent health measure, It is in | tended to flush the stomach, liver, kid- neys and the thirty feet of intestines of the previous day's waste, sour bile and indigestible material left over in from|I married him, has never failed to bring mo his weekly salary, If he should fail to do so now I would feel and week or @ day for; to thelr wives » much receiving them D that something in our partnership seldom that there ts trouble! tna’ clunged and that ha. had. no over iiving the envelope to the wife. | jonger the trust in me which he Workingmen believe in that, The dit- | ynker Heh He shown since the ¢ ried, When him back $5, out of wh pald his carfare, lunches and bought othas. I put $5 a week tn the bank and ran my home and dr self on what remained, ‘Two children have come to us since, and because of that and Increased living expenses were ma 1 floulty comes when the man wants to borrow hia money and the wife re- fuses to give it to him, ‘There may be special cases where wives drink or re shiftless or extravagant, where he husband should control ‘the in- come, but in the very large majority of homes the mothers are thrifty he m anded women wh have learned how to’ 7 have not been able to put away make @ dollar go much further than | more than $5 weekly, though my hus Aman, unskilled in buy can make) hand's salary {8 now $40. The money it go. Once & nan gets Into the habit we have saved ts in the savings bank of taking @ dollar or two from his iy our joint names. ‘That is the only envelope tho money goaa for drink | sai arrangement to make. e as a wife is certainly entitled to half of what sho saves and {t ts not just to the husband for her to take ft all husband's brother put all his aevings in his wife's name, and after fifteen yoars she dtvorced him and kept his savings. Onea a man gota into the ubit of taking first $1 and then $2 or ‘© from his wages the wife never she will have and the a exposed to temptations of drink ng that he would not meet and his childre uffer ff the n sities of life until the next payda 1 was glad to hear Miss McQuade | speak a vailant word for the wives who bave sought her for so many y liMeulty, Considered MW pay envelopo F 1 is of inter to men of #t mn ing power, But there no household fu which anda and wives have not differed now and then about the ¢ nditure of money. und gam WHEN LAW TAKES COGNIZANCE if he went directly homa instead of OF WOMAN'S VALUE. | ache Aan. here ta ae Tt has 3 that the « to say what @ wo ed to: sae: Cen ene cle ie law undertakes | put up a front nis worth to her | Pur BPM ran queer 4 that men may ing indey If they the body which, if not eliminated every | husband is whon | leap coer want day, become food for the millions of | bo w be Indenendent let thon _Femaln bacteria which infest the oowels. The | is, when she sucs Bil gee fein thal san Abataey enone einen: quick result is poisons and toxins, or divorce, Prior i Prey ME FX. BY which are then absorbed into the the law per malta this matter t » des ms ui blood, causing headache, bilious at | 0! ‘ie Renerosity « nusband ri ie tacks, foul breath, bad taste, colds, | 1" Wife's po yin ore) Wiles Wee niane ne one stomach trouble, kidney misery, sleep | ivy oy his eg es WAEHINGTON, Jan h leasness, impure blood and al! sorts | young Mauricr, roe coach dosit ie ‘ of ailmen' People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can- not get feeling right, are urced to obtain a quarter pound of ‘imestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little, but is to make any one a real crank on the subject of internal sanitation, Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, 80 limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, livery kidneys and bowels. It {s vastly more Important to bathe on the inside than onthe outside, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blerd, while the howe! pores do-—Advt i sufficient |“ fixed French his moni upon this as munufactira. « thought a. ch ‘ alr for uso in ex ee for the Government A —_———.————— ‘The law seems to be of this Vederal Aid for Guardamen Whore maeTiE Genul Haba Are F for wi WASHINGTON, Jan, Guardsmen specifying ho ret © border to find thetr rearfare, | jobs fille the assistance of House and A the Fede f immigration. in Aieageceinal obtaining inployment.. The plan inl re has been approved by the War Depart men soe su Piles Cured in a # to 14 Days, ‘ provision, | git eslinrs Tiching, Tiina, Bleeding or Protoding Lave never been eble w associato Pie Fis evvliaiion see walich 6is.—ddre 1910, and who served seven years in other courts in| My! | The man with a range family aa A smaN salary Should turn over Me fa envelope Un The most troudle comes with Salaries under twealy dotlarr a weer PIE APPETITE BLIGHTS BOYS’ QUEST FOR WEALTH Three Brooklyn Runaways, Bent on | Being Munitions Workers, Seized | After Restaurant Is Raided. ‘Three Brooklyn boys who ran away from homo yesterday to be munitions makers in Providence got off on the wrong foot. After a series of start-| ling adventures they will be a | raigned to-day in the Morrisania \ court charged with burglary, To the Kingsbridge police they described) themselves as Frank Smith, seven- | teen, of No. 614 Hicks Street; Michael Fanning, sixteen, of No, 418 Warren Street, and Frank Schimsky, seventeen, of No, 418 Wyckoff Street. The boys say they got on a freight train in the New York Central yards at West Fifty-ninth Street, thinking | it would take them to Providence. Somewhere north of Yonkers hard- hearted brakemen threw them into the ditch, They headed for New York on foot to make a fresh start. Karly this morning three boys en- |tered George Liakoks's restaurant a! | ‘two Hundred and Forty-third Street ‘and Broadway by the back door, Pies, cakes and coffee began to disappear. by eman Hughes passed, and the s ran out. After a chase of seven cks the policeman caught Smith. The other two wandered tn Van Cort- | landt Park till 4A. M., when they fell into the hands of Policeman Shiels, All the boys deny they robbed the res- taurant; but the pollc y they found | a lot of pies a packed in bundles; also $5. missing trom the cash register Daties ks BOY STARTS HIS GAREER WITH A POLICE RECORD Ten Pound Youngster Born to Mrs, Carman, Who Sought Refuge in Station. Unable to get to the hospital, Mrs. | Rose Carman of No, 622 Tenth Ave-| nue, was assisted Into the West Thirty-seventh Btrect Police Station at 6 o'clock this morning by her |friend, Mrs, Mary Mullen, HE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, MRS. BYRNE TAKEN FROM WORKHOUSE ON COURT WRIT Judge Hand Orders Birth Con- trol Teacher Produced Before Him, TERM ON ISLAND BEGUN. Habeas Corpus Proceedings Interrupt Threatened Hun- ger Strike in Prison. Judge Augustus N. Hand, tn the Fed- eral District Court, this afternoon granted a writ of habaes corpus calling for the production before him at 4 o'clock of Mrs. Ethel Hyrne, who was convicted in Special Sessions in Brook- lyn yesterday of distributing birth con- trol Hterature from a clinte established by her sister, Mrs. Margaret Sanger, 1 @ house in Amboy Street, Brooklyn, Counsel for Mrs. Byrne in his ap- plication for the writ attacked the constitutionality of the law governing her case. Ho charged that the New York Legislature exceeded its powers in passing the measure. He alleged it interfered with the exercise of con- scence and the pursutt of happiness Mra. Byrne was in the workhouse on Blackwell's Island when the writ was issued. She had been sentenced to serve a term of thirty days. Mrs, Byrne was transferred to Blackwell's Island from Raymond Street jail this morning. She declared she meant to go on a hunger strike and sacrifice her life, if necessary, a8 a protest against the en- | forcement of the laws forbidding the teaching of birth control. Because the trial of Mrs, Byrne, who is a trained nurse, brought many of her fellow bellevers, women of prom- inence and aggressive enthusiasm, to the court-room, where they made a demonstration in favor of the pris- oner, precautions were taken to pre- vent disorders at the jail. The prison van usually makes the trip to Blackwell's Island at 8 o'clock ‘To-day it was started half an hour earlier, Mrs, Byrne made the declaration yesterday in court that she had mado up her mind to die for the cause if sent to the Workhouse. The author- ities at the jail professed not to know to-day whether she had partaken of the meals set before her last night and this mornin, Seas Ree ASIATIC CREW SEIZES SHIP AFTER DESPERATE BAITLE | Marlin Spikes and Revolvers Used by Mutineers at Baltimore— Captured by Police. RALTIMORD, Md, Jan, 2%—The Asiatic crew of the Japanese steamer Harima Maru held possession of the ship for several hours before they were overcome by ja squad of elty poltes, The Japanese chief engineer, led the revolt, suffered ekull in the fight for possession o: the craft, Revolvers, marlin spikes and other weapons were used dozens of shots fred. Tho captain wag driven ashore and the other officers barricaded selves in staterooms, The Harima Maru was loaded with and a general cargo for Genoa, Reports confi as to the cause of the mu tiny, but a rumor persisted that the crew, composed of Chiness and Siam ese, foared encountering hostile war ships. When tha polies boarded the ship th mutineers were at dinner and thetr capture was easily effected. MUST PAY FATHER-IN-LAW. RB. Fr. Krever, acased for Now tn P Family's Sap hae Mrs, Mullen called Liout. Patrick Randall to one side and whispered to him, | “Ia {t #0?" asked Randall, | Sleeping reserves were hustled out! of the back room, and Mrs Mullen went with Mrs, Carman, w Randall kept the wires busy to New York Hospital, Dr, Lowry came in| @ hurry, but before he could get there | ‘ia len pound boy had been added to| the station house fore: | Mrs, Carman and her baby wero | sent te where doing well the fa t young ster t t_known | police records, Rumor is that Randall |!s going to be the godfathor | MACARONI MEN FINED, |; When Burton F. Kreyer of Parts, w formerly ved at No, 315 West Ninet fourth Stroet, gets back to New Ye inlest an Appellate Court intervenes. will find that vue Hunt, his fathe fn-law, has secured @ Judgment again him for #2, 44 for care of } vite, Alvida Hunt Kreyer, and Mthel Ralph an n, his children. ln a r says he 1 His chikire n Ma ty ba Dies In eat Same Hour is 0 In Burted Ht welal to The Eveutna M BALTIMORE, Md 23.--1 Rrother Chysoston known the world J A noted member of the ¢ thers and wid. na to-da nist n 1 yuried in W York Cily i} Product Colored to Nepre-| the sent It Was in Italy. | The Atlantic Macaront Company of| HAGHISTO Jan, 23 No. 295 Vernon Avenus, Long laland | crossl » Potoune Kiver to-day it City, pleaded guilty before Judge Chat- | a no to Bakerton GY. Va) |feld'tn the United States District Court t nal , Wa in Brooklyn to-day to indictments dy rere Grows i rging the use of labels whlch would le nt ud” purchasers Delleve domestic ne quarries, macatonl was ma sine SON fy . The company vy indie tand trial ‘wing the fal coloring to simu real Opt of macaroni moat 1 {Al nt © med by Iallan born citizens, ich 1 ” is dark yellow. The tes oat chem- sent ve Vick an of Allegheny feal experts for the (ov ont result- afternoon i od in conviction. ‘The penalty for each jopt bil, ao Anti-saluua Leagu de @ 4/40 One ~ | a ae) mutinied to-day and} who} a fractured | AR Roo CHIL D’S PLEAS FAILED | TO RECONCILE MOTHER | WITH HER HUSBAND 16 644668 OOOO ORG AADAOT DS a NG \¢ | $6 06.4.9 LITTLE DAUGHTER'S PLEAS FAILS TO REUNITE BROWNS Parents, Almost Reconciled by Child’s Efforts, Sign Separation | Agreement Giving Girl to Father. ‘The efforts of ittle Dudley Brown to reconcile her mother and father having failed, he couple to-day signed ‘ation agreement by which the Mrs. Diamond Brown, gots alimony and permtsston to see her ughter as often as she wishes, The custody of the child, however, is given | to the father, Dudley Brown, agent of ta large manufacturing concern with ofle in Newark So little Dudley may be amid por- fectly neutral surroundings her par- Jents agreed she should be placed in & boarding school. Mrs. Brown may call on her, but may not take her out for a walk. Tho parents bave also agreed not to visit the child together, for in the past that has provoked | quarrets, When the writ of habeas corpus brought by the mother was called for hearing before Supreme Court Justice Coli an adjournment of a week was tial Mrs, Brown and Dudley then went to the Hotel Marie to have a farewell mother, a efforts to rt her lq the promising that M and mot! week, | Brown is twenty-nine but | lost than her husband fa sald to have tween the couple. nd n the barrier be $352,000,000 FOR DEFENSE FUND IN NEW REVENUE BI Provision Giving President Power to Tax Incomes of $2,000 by Proclamation Is Inserted WASHINGTON, Jan, 23.—The new Revenue Hill was perfected to-day by Ja sub-cc for submission to | the of the Ways and Means Committe. Fy specific provision it ta entitled a bill to p fount of the army a special £0 Democrats ide revenue on acc and navy. It puts into “preparedness fund” Jonts revenua to be col Jlected from the excess profits, tax snd increased rates on estates, but tnelu a Jof the revenue to by mergency law of last year y a new provision Inserted to-day, the I tdent would bee to tr ’ This on {t $100,000,000 | CUTTING CORN COSTS LIFE. lw » nu. Ha er, Court | OM Ship Afive at $ | sho established a smuggling concern. et her father | WOMAN'S GIGANTIC | BERLIN FOOD FRAUD _ NETSHER MILO Starts With $92 She Borrowed | and Forms a $2,300,000 Concern. BHRLIN, Jan, 2%. — A eignntio scheme in food ewindiing waa an- | covered to-day through the arrest of Frau Kupfer and her daughter, Ber- Mn’s first citizens, tt 18 now revealed, have been swindled out of millions of marks tn a story of financing and | mantpulation that rivals fiction, Frau Kupfer came fro Leipzig at tho start of the war and borrowed 400 marks ($92), with which she opened @ small office, She purchased artificial honey and later resold it at & great profit. It was but @ short time until she had 10,000 marks ($2,300) and this she invested tn other food products, reselling them at ex: travagant prices. Her fascinating manners gained her hundreds of thousands of marks from investors, and she finally organized a 10,000,000 mark ($2,300,000) concern. Al- most unbelievable dividends were paid by this great company. Frau Kupfer forged contracts for army food, and as her business grew | Her headquarters in Berlin was al- ways filled with food. This the rich people of Berlin bought willingly at extortionate prices. Ho- tels bid for a chance to purchase her products, Frau Kupfer began quietly obtaining enormous sums on her| promises for future delivery, ‘Then | she was trapped by the police, | Careful search was being made to- day for a man co-worker of the fas- ing Frau Kupfer. rho Berlin Vossische Zeltung de- clared to-day: lin's first cttizens have been | swindled out of millions of marks. | Tho number of creditors grows hour- ly — ‘NATIONAL CAMBS FOR ~ MILITARY TRAINING DARINGTINS PLA He Advocates Universal Ser- vice, but Would Not Have | Drill in Schools, Dr. Thomas Darlington, former Health Commiasioner, advocated a system of national reservation train. ing camps in an address this morning at the decond day's seasion of the an- nual meeting of the National Civic leration at the Astot Hotel, | Dr. Darlington, who Investigated the condition of the soldtors on ghe Mext- can border, declared unqualtiedly his jbelief in universal serv nd stated that such @ system of camps which would train recruits In times of peace in military tactics, sanitation, hy- glene, aviation and automobile en- \gincerIng would not only provide an a ate force but would safeguard |the men from “the evil influences that too often accompany military Ife." He © h training for young boys In the public schools and in this connection said: ‘We do not want our children to be tmbued with milt- turism so that they want to fight, Th 6 of clghtecn or nineteen ts you enough and L would not have the training in connection with high hool work and possibly not even in ' college boys have enough to do De Dorling New York divi Gund at the t for,” there a great short and no bathing factlitt and that the camp, because of pred where the ure ady,”" charged that the ion of the Nationa rder was n inage, be a swampy pool eouree a plague of mon Hy predicted that the Guard + mintmum its experiences at on be luced to non session Harvey of thé Des Moines that lange em- resentatives locating pre 1 Iness and # large ny and navy | weause they f , but y quell domestic Ins M uid) The hestta- on © part of the Middle West danas - war, ” pistol t with @ constitutional might to. carry 1 ica than in any country \ Odel of Omaha dectared pS o heard trea Madison Square thr Wes | BZLDHOI Ve Against Rock] Istand Road eHicado, J Another step fr tho reorganization of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Ratlway Company, tn] Ap Discoverer, ident Wilson, ON, J 3 Meets Roald Weel,weel,ifitisna SANDY MACDONALD the real Scots Whisky—10 old, bottled in Leith, Scotland— as served to the House of Lords, and now at our own NERVOUS WOMEN Here is a Remedy You May Depend Upon. “1 wish all nervous, weak, run- down women could have Vinol. I was so run down, weak and nervous I could not sleep. Everything I ate hurt me, and the medicine T had take en did me no good. I decided to try Vinol, and before long I could eat anything 1 wanted and could sleep all night. Now I am well and strong, and in better health than T have been for yenrs."—-Mra. Anna Millison, Beallsville, Ohio. There is no secret about Vinol. Tt derives Its power to build up the over- worked, broken-down, nervous sys- tem from beef and cod liver peptones, fron and manganese peptonates and glycerophosphates which it contains We will return your money if Vi fails to benefit weak, nervous women At Liggett's-Riker-Hegeman Drug Stores ang at all drug stores that display the Vinol Agency Sign. Also a leading drug stores in all New York towns.—Advt. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package provesit. 25catall druggists 25¢_.< > 1% , 2 Acts Like Magic ~—TWE MERE FACT THAT Scott’s Emulsion is generously: used in tuberculosis camps is proot positive that it is most energizing pre, pees in the wert. Pit wer to create power. It Je and nourishes; it enriches the blood, stops loss of flesh and ilds you up, SCOTT’S IS PURE AND RICH AND FREE FROM ALCOHOL. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. -“ RUE economy is not a poonful of cheap vanil- la, but a 1/2 spoonful of this most exquisite of * all flavors. Burnett's: YANILLA=~ \m ie ’ was ores re: Nag rd Wants Work {Vonders, —

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