By Nixola Greeley-Smith
FULL
TEXT: New York, May 29. – Testimony is now being taken in New York in the suit
brought by Baroness Ursula von Kalinowski against Michael J. Hurley, paint
manufacturer of St. Louis, for $2,500,000 damages for blighted affections.
Affection
to the value of two and a half million dollars is certainly SOME affection even
when you consider that it was lavished upon the fickle and unworthy Hurley by a
high-born German baroness.
In her deposition the noblewoman said that she had followed
Hurley from one city to another in Europe and finally across the ocean in
response to telegrams in which he promised to marry.
I
think nearly all women FEEL the same way about breach-of-promise suits, to-wit,
that they are sordid, disgraceful, and that no really self-respecting woman is
ever involved in one.
But
if we accept the logic of the present economic status of woman we simply cannot
THINK as we FEEL on the subject.
A
woman like the Baroness Kalinowski has NO ACTUAL VALUE.
Without
either trade or professional training, her economic worth is represented by
zero. She has nothing to give anyone save the problematical quantity called
“affections.” Now affections when they are offered for sale are worth precisely
what you can get for them.
The
baroness thought she had arranged a life transfer of that exceedingly
perishable commodity to a man worth millions. If the buyer backed out of his
contract assuming there was one then the baroness is damaged to the full value
of her blighted hopes.
Admitting
that the woman who puts a commercial value upon her love sets herself before
the world as livestock. she is entitled to damages nevertheless, just as any
other prize animal is damaged in reputation and saleability if the man who has
arranged for this purchase refuses to complete the bargain.
There
is no getting away from the fact that so long, as sex is generally regarded as
something which women have to sell and men to buy, we shall have
breach-of-promise suits, the known as alimony and all similar social weeds
which owe their noxious being to the economic dependence of women.
Until women regain the eugenic choice of which she alone
among all females is deprived, she has the right to set a value in money upon
her alighted affections.
Her
affections are the tools of her trade, her means of livelihood. Damage to them
is the most serious injury she can receive. So long as she profits by their
disposal she must be damaged
by their rejection.
The
Baroness Kalinowski, and other women like her, are just a little more logical,
a little more cold-blooded, if you like, a little more sordid than millions of
their sister women, the pitiful peons of sex.
[Nixola
Greeley-Smith, “Woman Asks $2,500,000 Heart Balm,” The Day Book (Chicago, Il.),
Jun. 2, 1914, p. 10]
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For more on the Heart Balm Racket, see:
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[558-2/4/22]
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