The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1919, Page 3

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8 ig | said. UAL VIVUNOL CVI YFANILY COURS, SPLEATOULS.BA With 400,000 Cases This Year, “Something Must Be Done to Save Home Life.” BOSTON, Sept. 4.—The establish- ment of “family courts” to meet the menace to the marriage relation pre- sented by the divorce evil was recom- mended by Chief Justice Charles W. Hoffman of the Court of Domestic Relations at Cincinnati in an ad- dress before the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, in session here to-day in connection with the annual meeting of the American Bar Association. “Marriage as an institution is en- @angered in America to-day through the divorce evil, the only way to save it is by the establishment of family courts in which social evi- dence, as distinguished from legal, will be considered,” Judge Hoffman “There will be more than 400,000 divorce cases filed before the courts | of the land this year, and something must be done to save our family life,” | he continued. “The family court | should be an extension of the princi- | ple upon which Juvenile Courts are founded. , “It will be possible under this sys- tem to correlate the work of the juve- nile and divorce divisions of the court and obtain reliable scientific data. No | scientific law has ever been made on the subject of divorce. \ Elihu Root, former Secretary of | State, speaking before the judicial | section of the Bar Association to-day, |t said he favored wiping out the ness of attempting to bring about jus- tice by statute,” and that he believed it best to “leave it to the Judges to do justice.” “A few meagre rules embodying the |! fundamental principles are all that is} nooessary,” he added. “One of the great troubles with legislation to-day is that it does not permit the Judges | to do justice." SEEK CLUE TO SLAYER | OF FRIEND OF “TANNER” Overalls Retarded Stenson’s ‘Draw’ and Assassin Fired Three Shots First. Over his holiday clothes Michael | Stenson, longshoreman, member of the | c o a ture, “The Miracle Man," at the late Tanner Smith's “Marginal Club,” |COnsiderable of a blank page. And! 1 ot.54 before a map of the world. : : leverybody feels it. Taxi drive: q Cohan, are among the big attractions wore overalls tightly buttoned last | s *) Sister, pointer in hand, is indicating 7 night when he left his home, No. 21 |*Seeing Chinatown" conductors, news. | S'S Dee enna tne of the night. The only spoken drama} West ‘16th Street, and told his wife stand proprietors, pay station tele-|% SPOt on the ot Astin; jbo, 2 Sight from Broadway i “John was going “out.” {phone operators, haberdashers— | Hockies. « a4 re arghess Ferguson” at the Fulton. ‘The overalls, the police believe, may jeverybody up and down the street BCOE i tone Around the corner, in 46th Stree Account for the fact that Stenson was|agrees that the old home “ain't Like |“ O's to Bill Borat.) Mr, Jeff Davis, introduced as King o! killed soon afterward in a revolver due at 10th Avenue and Mth Street, Nor ‘4 ed fro} eet to Both [20% A ‘on with a drunken €x- js anathematizing Socialists, Bols| mally, hey say, Stenwon waa the qulck- gees bets f Stay ie aide leet pression, advertising candies! ~ Viks, 1. W. W's “and anarchists, and est Man With @ gun on the wast side. Street and back last night withou saying that he was “born in a cellar But last night his revolver was in the |secing or hearing a single individual! C088 the street to a bulletin 4 in Cincinnati with a rust spoon in me | hip pocket of his best trousers and the | Any news? Simpleton won the third! mouth: Three * ist Cee fitting overalls, ‘must have, re |he could classify as union or non- AY n Three hundred in bist tarded his speed. ‘The assassin fired | union pl manager, musician or GREAT CHANCE FOR THE SAL- audience. three shots to Stengon's one. ea deent VATION ARMY NOW. SMOKES ON TICK FOR STRIKING No clue to the identity of the, man |Prese seent. In from the Big Street, at a6th| ACTORS, | , won has been found, by 4 hd ‘ detective: ay th y do not believe the NOTHING REMAINS BUT THE Street, a clean looking youngster, in ae Tossing Longacre Square at 47th | Shooting had anything to do with the LIGHTED SIGNS, the uniform of a doughboy, is taking | Street, to get back on Broadway, ono | death of Tanner Smith, . notes the card in a cigar store Stenson’s brother, John, was stud-| All that was left of Broadway was part in a Salvation Army meeting. | wi bornly silent whe polloe. “Leave it alone—T'll elt.” he said. acl Stenson was sentenced to [0 naety days on the island once for '° lareeny, but had no other police record, square it my- No Trouble Now to Buy WARD'S BREAD and CAKE PTOWN, downtown, at the .big store or the Broadway number of years ago by the Repub- lican with jon the hewing-gum. Bie EXCITEMENT With Theatres | Closed and Cafes Crippled Is | Like Main Street in Squee- dunk—Nothing of the Old Life and Activity Except a| Memory. | The order was “tell hing about Broadway at night with| to us some- Room ONLY AT ALL S106 WALIC RELIGIOUS MEETINGS ON “Main * STREET TAX | the Hotel he show-shops closed.” the most famous str in » hours of 9 and 2 P.M. of a boo or the Democratic National “ommittee, entitled: “WHAT CONGRESS HAS DONE several temples of the spoken drama |° cicsed as tight as a Kansas Sunday, is| it used to be.” the well roof at 42d Street. brothers The six little store, every variety of Ward's delicious and nutritious bread and for your demand. No need now to accept “other kinds.” cake is ready at hand y Every grocer and delicatessen dealer can now supply your kind “WARD'S. Ask for them by name. WARD'S | FAR-FAMED BREADS | | TIP-TOP MOTHER HUBBARD PEACE-TIME DAINTY-MAID ROMANY RYE YANKEE RYE LONG IDEAL FAMILY LOAF a Should you have any difficulty in us by ‘phone and we will see thé WARD BAKING Bronx Bakery Melrose 6100 Yrouv otek ie Hipideeni ap enenneenC Any Choice | Good Choice WARD'S | through let published a {Would do them good; the chewing- | Jum kids not have his mind on hig work. Broad- way was hushed, tame, drowsy, hea Main Street Raleigh—any town you want to nam ali i | cialism tun | the closi | famous bull, And one is reminded, after a stroll] tinued to advise rolling your own. through America, between t But, school supplies, but er hi w ° n ting speaker of ThE ONLY THING LEFT OF THe *GAY LIFE ON THE WHITE WA) their ¥ ~ 4~JoY RIDES Astor, the in Up outlined red, the motions mehow, kittens if ¢ as eked Mr. pep; in Fall River, Elk for Children.” Tw m around the 5-and-10 win- questioned by the | ity jights, The familiar kittens played Plainly unaccustomed to public speak known spools of sitk ing, 4th m, sincerity sticking th Street it's an Irish Republic A tall Young ng Gael n selling yo wom colors—orange, green and white, Pic- tures Thomas Joffe With Jefferson: burst her fetter among the fre Attendance At 38th § George Washington a que “Irelunc ation May she and take her p nations of the ¢ Undemonstrati 0. treet, a gentleman capable of making himself heard a block away in either direction First applause of the eve- is lambasting ve at the darkened entrance sof the show-snops must have | ( lane the | Bull did | figures, boy and | he is telling what the} performed | folks up-State think of the 8. A. One their calisthenics on the roof next to hundred men and women listen to)! him, son held aloft on stan- ascribed to con- went tnip | | ALL DRESS: UP and TO Go NO PLACE ED | | | | hart, Ri ow |50 the the and soon place rth." th pr So- Bu gai | smart expect? of pictures! down on Broadway?" | In the window of a photo shop on the 1,—Four voli; ndow: win. ne Cafe ery table om, th Street “Very, young ma west sic e first spe opagane FOR THE AC TO THE PUL DO YOU YNOW THAT ONLY ASKS GIVES weeks’ reh without Kleven day ma ut th “re pay holi- Hoboes, but not dressing de taken, ¢ young man in chai er: hat | regulars. They live around here." There was business enough in Con- | According to the party which was|~®? @ might when the stores are/sidine's to keep one bartender busy. | agin ab tate 1 that party, |°l08d ‘The Giants without @ bat-!Not enough for two. Six or seven “out" at the. time (and that party, |«tncie la? icant 3 el . Si P | i ah eae eh ope aes Nele Tom's Cabin" without @/men at the var. Somebody from, you can bet your lite, published the| bloodhound. Hamlet without the | Hetroit, of course: | little book) Congress hadn't done any- | ham. It was the same story in 424 Street. | hening; ana the book consisted of four fey let's go. : ae ndow {Ditto in Broadway north of 42d Street. Satie dla wen deena borate Taylor Holmes, in “Three Black Eyes,” blank pages. ; ide Aperhorer tial ed be 8, ee Black Eyes,” | Sang Broadway at night with (tne oereeh What's unt Welat Loew's Newoiifark; Wallace Reid! , Broadway at night, investigate. “Serges for School.” |in Sphe Valley of:the Giants" at the| Mary Pickford at the Strand in “The Hoodlum, and a fou! triking actors, get your cir- tes here and pay when you The bigest crowd of the night Is Paris, at 49 aret. looking newsstand ne Smart ul bad," Vell, what ow open? Ac Who wanty to of Broadway Imen of Actors’ Equity | 2QUITY to tin and down the lan AAC THE sogn 1sino and see for the first]. withayt pay. | \time the ¥ “Sunday per- feme the noslos formances with- | “This theatre closed because of out p | he action of the Actors’ Equity Sunday per -| Association in forcing its mem. [for mances are b to violate their individual |&iven if) nea . pers to violate their individual |fvory city in the contracts with the management.” | United States At 40th Street we meet for the first the west, in 4st ne Broadway's busiest business of | V! i re oe Americ ar ; meeting. The feature ac evenings the i Chinatown | 7p, wood looking man leads in tho jand the Bowery" motor bus, ainging of a hymn, EVEN THE SIGHT-SEEING BUSES| A sedate crowd in Church | ARE LOSING. other in Shanley's, wy we say to the barker, “the| All this time crowds are sur mm bot oth doing w's busin | —Arbitration rth pic- he part, Street. Balle at the ne | 38? n you couple come we so | ACTOR ition of nization, 8, Ane cing up How abies: Shops FAR-FAMED helped your busine |elosed; theatres closed, Nothing to CAKES Don't you believe it," says t ie jepend your money for except, tobi A SILVER QUEEN | young man. “We got the bulk 0 ty tot | FAIRY SPON feeearaneers |, The eapedition is within an inch anc DEVIL'S DREAM Briwa'e arsund shoe tora wlndowhe| Rertiinin Mucieuet tia nit KUKUNO Men's shoes, “marked down" to $9 News and Cunia 4, Adverti for | f $13.50; shoey for women, $9, $12{15 cents, and right on page ont 3 Houdini is at Moss's Broadway °: hiv mee ne Theatre. We approach a taxi driver |, Ooi2o-22 Mexico, Highly e at dist Stre t, How's business? one of the wealthiest and aristocr “OM 60 per cent.,” he says. | fas Hes of Mex 8 AR yeRre OF y 10x sase advise 4 ff'5 in; 109 Iba; is highly cultured, | buying our goods please advis Why accomplished in both instrumental | at prompt service is supplied, The theatres are cl and vocal music; speaks Spanish and Woe crosy the street kle an- English; hus abundance of mea Homie bial her own, including city property ‘farms and other possessions; wishes i low," he saya, tu make the acquaintance of a gen Yes? Why? oman not over 85; must be highly Brooklyn Bakery “Nobody comes downtown; the cultured and refined and move in bes rm vet ia society; equal socially and finan Prospect 6100 shows are shut” But the street !8 ciaiiy”’ proad-minded American pie crowded ferried, “Phese people?” he says. “They're Pleasant dreamal . rh te Pas he ‘ + ® 2 Ay Re eee * << I , wis ay he'd Mis.) eights: ities Ale: Waar PASS ic ai RRP OMe S™Gvetr SCENE ON 414° STREET im THE THEATRE Or TRICT Its Only Voltage in Advertising Signs REVIVE WAR POWER. TO FIX COAL PRICE, ~—TSPLANOF HINES ctor General of Railroads Sees Move to Boost Cost to Consumers, 2 ay 6.000 MORE WEN — e Fighting Chaplain Who Weat Over the Top Arrives on the Callao. . U More than 6,009 troopd of the First Division arrived to-day or will reach port before night. Of the number 5,390 were hete before n: coming in on the transports Callao, Edellyn, Santa Teresa and Finland. A fighting chaplain came the Calfao, His name is Rey, Clinton Bowman, now with the 18th Regi- ment, but with the 141st Infantry of the 86th Division when he went the top and won his French War Cross. He gave first aid to the fallen and acted as a stretcher-bearer and when asked if he carried a gun he wouldn't say that Ne didn’t, but gay the smiling assurance that there we plenty of guns to be had on the bat- tlefleld. _ The 34 Battalion Headquarters of back on the 18th and Medical Detaghment Companics T and K were on the Calla, as w the Headquarters of the 8d Battalion of the 1 Regiment i iv h Infantry engineer officers of the Callao who hadya five-day at I were left behind, but upon the arrival of the transport it was learned that they had come over on the Mobile, which left after the Callao and ar- rive Nearly ors of the leave ent yes more of the First Ist Division came home in command of Col. BE, J. Atkinson, who wears the D, 8. O, and D. 8, M, Colonel went to France as nh and was in command of the Ist Gas Regiment nmand of the Engine the hen he was in 1 Battalion of the ly became Colonel giment. 1 BOW, @ passenger, as was Willard jr, who wears the Order of Leo- es and fin: was also Hii D the decoration of pold ‘olonel Atkinson, nd orders to proceed at once to a yp at Atlanta, Ga, ‘This will de him of the pleasure of leadi crack First Engineers in the bug He will leave for Georgia to- on his arrivel, WASHINGTON, sept varning oe nb porpshsblen] | apt nk W. Willett of Company that from now until the end of the! , cr tne Engineers lives at No, 8004 year coal operators will lay stress on] tteath Avenue, the Bronx. Under his jtransportation difficulties to explain| directions five monuments to the increased ‘coal prices, was given the] “ead of the Firat Division w ‘ erected, one each In Soissons, Can- enate col Investigation Committe ees tay Argonne, St, Miblel and to-day by Walker D. Hines, Director] sedaw? ‘The names of the fallen will General of Rnilroads. be inscribed on the monuments. The These difficulties will opt be-| largest st wil contain 1,700 names, : " | Capt. Willett has two division ols fore the public, exploited and per-1 ations and one army citation, haps expanded." Mr. Hines # pt, Willett and his men on more an effort to justify raising prices (1 han one occasion dropped their picks as high a point as the pu Wil} and shovels to pick up rifles ani atand, and for which it should not) agnt, On one occasion they fought stand th such good effect as to be largely Appearing before the committee tol responsible for the capture of Pont reply to the operators’ charges that Maugus, in the St, Mibiel sector car shortage was the main fa 1]On another oceasion the engineers bringing about a diminished stormed Hill 269 in the Argonn of coal and, consequently, a te The Santa ‘Teresa, with a total to high prices, Mr, Hines declared his] Gf 878 of A hed Head ada wills nos belief that the A would be able!” ‘The transport Liberator, which is to move all the ¢ essary said to be bringing ¢ 1 Persh ing’s horse, in addition to 778 troops, The Director General suggested | Vi "gock at Pier 4, Hoboken, late this that the Government retain enough | Nill dock 4 of its “war power" to enable it to According to the Cru and co) ‘ol coal prices until normal con. | Transport Foree, the five tr sports f | Voyayes as troop carriers, is A war emergency after all The Ist Division men on the Fin- Mr. Hines insisted that, if the situ-|tand include the m became acute dd he expresse nd Staff Headquarters as o mise : a Compane Medical De a fear that it may, he r led Fed Ist Muttalion, nplete; ‘i eral control as ost desirable Artillery, Field and Staff, Medicai Replying to Chairman Frelinghuy-fand Ordnan Detachment sen, the Director General said the|teries D, E 2d Infantry Brigade Headquarters, ist Ammunition Train, al operator 1 demonstrated dur- LRGs a | | of « met alah es DRCOOMAN AL ) ATTEND SIGK DAUGHTER hi OFFRST DIVISION: REACH NEWYORK TALLOLAH Miss Talulah Bankhead in Serious Condition Following Operation For Appendicitis. Rankhead, BANKHEAD Miss Talulah easman W ma and grand J. H. Bankhe is stil) St, Blizabeth's operation for daughter B. Bankhead of aughter of Sen- d from the same 4 critical condition hospital after an appendicitis, Her father who rushed here from Wash- ington on hi ing of his daughter’ illness is at her bedside. Miss Bankhead is really a victim the strike, her condition brought about by worry in losing @ position to which she had aspired for yea she is only eighteen-—by reason of the strike. She was the understudy for Constance Binney in “39 East," and given first opportunity 6f appearing on Broadway. On the fol- lowing night the theatre was closed by the strike of the musicians and stage hands. Stat in at of having and chi — GIFT WINGING ITS WAY TOWARD ENRICO CARUSO Tenor Is Happy Because He Ex- pects It Will Reach His Home About Christmas Day. Enrico Caruso admitted to a host of teoming friends woo vioited him tn his apartments at the Hotel Kmicker- bocker to-day that he was looking for- ward to the Christm Us of 1919 as had never looked forward to a nrintriah (ni ail-Als ‘Why Wouldn't I look forward to it,” picturesque life. he said to William J. Gu chief feWa censo? at the Motropolitan Opera House, "knowing that the most wonder- ful gift In the world is winging Its way In my direction? “Winging?” queried Guard, arching awathetle eyebrows. neing Is right, replied the great- ¢ all tenors, “Airplane or R-247" asked the news announced Caruso, sighing “A broad-winged, —long~ ed, Napping stork, He's due on the f aby its a be aruao the ekerbocker 1 only hop an! Mrs. terday Verd tmas arrived Italian from on liner BARS DOCTORS AND LAWYERS sak 4 TOAYLANY NON. |Invites the Mayor to Take Re — sponsibility for Shutting Down Line. Service Commissioner Nixom to-day sent to Mayor Mylan and the Board of Estimate thé question of solving the traction problem of the Manhattan and Queens Traction Core poration, which has threatened to go out of business in two wegks. Commissioner Nixon, upon receipe ~ of a call for help from the Queens company, sent the facts to the Mayor and invited him to take the responale bility for shutting down'the line, A® the same time he ordered a re-heare ing for to-morrow evening at the Fiushing Town Hall on the North || Shore Traction case and expressed the hope that Mayor Hylan and mem- bers of the city government would appear. Deputy Commissioner Bate rett will preside. The. statement given out by Come @Missioner Nixon follows: The Manhfttan and Queens Trae on Corporation matter was referred to the Board of Estimate and Ap portionment festerday through the Mayor, This system serves a seer |tion housing laboring men, and an interruption of service, will work |great hardship to them as there Ie ho elevated or other line they cam use, “In the North Shore Line case @ great community faced invonvenienee and loss and immediate action was necessary that service might be mali tained. Efforts are making to break dowh this ald, in direct opposition to the demands of the people served, » one is more weary of the daily screeds than myseif, unless it ts the public, “Since the City Government bas seen fit to oppose the aid given the North Shore it will be an object les- son in efficient handling of a diffle cult situation to let the Mayor take up the Manhattan and Queens probe * lem, 1 had intended to refer this te! the city and the minute the papers arrived did so. “Doing nothing will add to the dise tress of a large section settled by men to whom a breaking down of this system will be a calamity. Full warning has been given in the papors sent by me to the Mayor that quick. action is necessary on account not only of financial dilficulties but of strike among the men, “My desire has been by temporary relief to hold intact the Various syse of transportation on a single with free transfers. Now those lines, not paying, are being lopped off in spite of my efforts. “It will only be a few months bee fore the logic of tacts will force clty government to re-draft the dui contracts that they have so long doe nouneed, Such re-drafting will de” with the approval of the city governs ment and will prevent CP iy eg \s 4 detarioration and demoralization our transit system, HURLS BOMB AT PREMIER = OF EGYPT AFTER RIOTS — Theological Student Throws Mise sile, Hidden in Basket of Grapes; Official Escapes, LONDON, Sept. 4.—A bomb was | thrown at Hussein Rushdi Pasha, Pree mier of Exypt, at Alexandria on Tueee according to an AleXandria de spatch received here. The bomb was concealed in & basket of grapes, bue did not injure the Premier, The age enilant of Hussein Rushd! Pasha was @ - theological student, Company LD. On the “ = a — ing the war that they w capable} the I8th litantry, 2d Ba . Demonstrations were held by Esyp f close co-operation with the rail-| quarters, Medical Detachment, Com CHICAGO, Sept. 4.—Doctors, lawyers [tian Nationalists in Cairo and Alexame | bdo is panies B, F,G, HM, Land M; ‘Supply}and editors barred from taking | dria on Saturday and Sunday, according ¢ road administration, He added that) Gonpany, On the Edellyn, the ist the coming revolution,” ac. |to reports received on Wednesday, the king under war conditions had] yoy Fi o, (part in "the coming rad 1 f the demonstrations being, It ie bball d Sapa Sida we) Bn, rs Headquarters Detachment | cording to a clause in the new constitu. the recelpt of telegram’ from. Brought the’ coal “operators into | Oempaniss Ds Bi; Ast Buxineer | ion of the Communiat ha Zagloul, head of the “closer yperation” than ever by rain, The Liberator has the 3d fonmionir ationalist deputation in Pa Battalion of the 28th Infantry. al parties stating that the Foreign Relations CG |fore, and intimated that this co-opera — nd County officers. [mittee of the United Stat tion would be used for increasing |declared Exypt should Jan investigation of profita ‘ whe isang racres "ue: ruiroed| OFFER, BUT WON'T STRIKE idings hold many idle cars re might be delivered to mines, Leave Question of Adjustment ot Hines said that this was due largely ly ; to the strike in August and | that Wages in Hands of Union since then there had been tunprove Leaders. ment. He admitted that many cars acct thes ds SRL has hac n used for storage of rail-| y eps Pia tse ——, — ee read coal, but said this condition} ** ; visu wis bel rected f 00 that the wage: ad : ae ance by President’ Wilson ls “DOC” WATERBURY GUILTY. | iment ar their demania, they have. 52 percent’ ail HY? ™ {ded to leave the question of a stri Pp Vaeen of Ten the hands of thelr international tnon flee e su known as It waa announced to-day that e ith criminal assault 1 jon of Lubor would not put Joseph WF. Mulqueen in General trike vote into effect until the out P§ . ions, ‘The minimum penaity mo of the Government's efforts th 4 an b H ‘ 4a] red ne cost of living had becom Cun nd te prison, Hel y Me , weALD piers n| Kepreaentatives of the United Broth n “ tort n- | erhood of Maintenance of Way and Ral . A t and attacked Miss| yond Shop workers asked the Railroad 3 : ~ | in accordance with the principle Noublecteader at Pre 4 down by President W p in ap eatery Gea | proving adjustments last w r the . A double-heade staged this] rot men Sunday at th Protectory | PRT SNOUT, Mich, Sept. 4.—The aud 3 ©.) of Weatchen the A Hrotherhood of Maintenance of Way Giuy of van N ccont game} employees and shop. laborers, com: Of thels three-game serie In the final | pleted Wednesday, shows t 000 & contest the crack Umeraida will eross| inembers ra walkout unless their Meat stales § bate with the Platufield Club, a team! demands for a wage in > of & composed of ex-leaguers. A ¢ t proximately $4 a day per man ar ® 22 Kame. time and betwee granted, Brotherhood officials an: | will be rendered by the Catholie Pro: unced to-day. Five thousand voted Westory and, | sealed @ ‘strike. | i a ¥ 4 ~ i , ‘ i : , ‘ ir Mv P LY 7" alias By roe x * mere PE eee eae, 4 ee - os can a Alen aa - - — : ,

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