Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
GO AFTER FALL | NS PRose BUSINESS START YOUR ADVERTISING campaign in THE HERALD now and get in on “the ground floor.” The gratifying results obtained will war- rant any expenditures made. MR Herald Ads Make Merchants Glad They pay big dividends, not quarterly nor semi-annually, but EVERY DAY. STORAGE BATTERY The best thing we can say about our storage battery serviceis “Judge by our customers.” *The Fullr Sorags Batery G0 105 Arch St.,, Now Britain **msiens Heartford Free inspection of any battery at any time Yes-One Glass will convince you of the measure of good taste, purity and nourishment this beverage contains. Get acquainted with this, Con- necticut'sfinest, e fiperT Fraci: s Trouo.c HOT J. LOIN, KEEVERS & CO., HER- CARTHY, WHI & CO. ON TAP AT LOUI MANN SCE W fARR, FODT, W | | | young women | in the white slave investigation three | indictments were | with interfering with an agent of the | with him. | Hausenreiter, | means, | ment, where Helen Kelves, one of the THREE INDICTMENTS Girl Lured Away by Promise of | Marriage New strength York, of August stories to the 29.—On told by Grand the two | Jury | returned yesterday against John Hausenreiter of 328 Wes Ninety-sixth street. It is alleged that posing as a n of lived off the earnings of girls whom he forced to work for him after diverting them from the straight | road by promises of marriage. He had his wife and seven-year-old son in the Ninety-sixth street apart- has Grand Jury witnesses, also lived. Mrs. Hausenreiter is under arrest charged Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children who was sent to her home to take the boy away. Helen Kelves breaking away from a District Attor- ney’s detective at Ninety-sixth street and Riverside Drive on Sunday night, jumped down a flight of thirty steps and was running toward the river when the detective caught her. She sald she was afraid the authorities meant to put her in jail, but was re- assured by the information that she was wanted only as a material witne The other witness was Pauline Mink, who says Hausenreiter led her astray, but she refused to have anything to do with other men and Hausenreiter con- tented himself with taking the money she earned as a milliner. Helen Kelves told Assistant District Attorney James E. Smith that her parents brought her to America from Russia when she was 7 years old and that she came to New York from Chi- cago two and a half years ago and worked behnd the counter in a 116th street cafe where pinochle is played steadily. Her hours were from 8 A. M. to 8 P. M., her pay $6 a week. She had this job about a month, she said, when Hausenreiter, following her one night to the door of her home in 115th street, asked her why she should work so hard. “I know where there's some easy money,” the girl says Hausenreiter told her. ‘“Come, take a walk with me,” They walked until 3 A. M. The next day he reappeared and remarked that her clothes were shabby and bought her a new outfit. Hausenreiter professed great affection for her and, expecting the marriage would take place immediately, she went to live The next day, according to Hausenreiter told her to go and earn money. Took Her Wages as Servant. Helen Kelves said that from April | to August 20 of this year she averaged | $20 a day, and that when she tried to | hold out something for herself Hausen- reiter beat her. On August 18 , he found out she had managed to rete $20 and after heating her he | pocketed this little hoard. After his | arrest, which took place on August 20, | Hausenreiter sent her a tel- ling her to leave the city at once. She had no money, but one of her patrons said he would supply it. She was ex- pecting to meet this man on Riverside Drive when the detective appeared. Mr. Smith asked her why she didn't run away from Hausenreiter. “I did twice”, she replied, “but he found me and beat me. I have always wanted to be respectable. Why, for ten months I worked in a good place as a servant and got $25 a month. Hausenreiter took that money too.” Pauline Mink ays her parents are in Russia and she was brought here by relatives ten vears ago. She was in troduced to Hausenreiter in May, 1915, and for some time they ‘“kept com- pany” in the ordinary way. He spoke of a wealthy uncle in Lorain, Ohio, and of his own prosperity in business. On March 29 there was a party at her home, celebrating the feast of the Passover. Wine was passed around and Pauline Mink took some. She says Hausenrelter slamming the front door | to make her believe he had followed the other guests out when the party ended, concealed himself in another room and later attacked her. He then sald, according to her story, “Now you're a ruined girl and you | 8ot to go out and do what I tell yo But she refused. Hausenreiter, how ever, took the money she earned as a milliner. Whatever was in her purse when he appeared he confiscated. One day it was only twelve cents. She finally made a confidant of the man who owns the store where she Was employed. Together they went out to find Hausenreiter and located him in a West 126th street flat, where Helen Kelves also was visihle. ~ Hausen- reiter protested that he wanted ‘o marry Pauline Mink “and be decent. Publicity Saves Third Girl. Later Helen Kelves told her story to the millinery merchant and the arrest of Hausenreiter followed. Since then another girl giving her name and address and saying that she was a “model” has telephoned to Assistant her story out she mess! District Attorney Smith. he said | Hausenheiter told her he was about | to receive $10,000 from an uncle in | Lorain, Ohio. and suggested that they | go there together, get marrfed, col- lect the money and take a honeymoon The girl said her eves were | opened by the developments of the | white slaves inquiry. | A Brooklyn girl told the district at- | trip. torney yesterday she almost got into { the clutches of Gustav Kugelman, who | was arrested last week on the com- plaint of Catherine Kaufman, for- emrly a pupil in Washington Irving | High school. The Brooklyn girl says ! Kugelman vainly made love to her in 1913, when she was fifteen years old. This summer she has been singing in a Broadway chorus and on the street one day she met Kugelman. | back LAME EVERY MORNING ' A Bad Back is Generally Worse in the | New Britain People | Are Finding Relief. | A back that aches all day and causes | discomfort at night is. usually worse | in the morning. Makes you feel as | if you hadn’t slept at all. You can’t t rid of kidney back- | ache, until you reach the cause—the | kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills are es- pecially prepared for weakened or dis- ordered kidneys—have bheen ateful- 1y recommended by thousands. Testimony of New Britain proves the merit of Doan Oliver Foulds, 374 Arch St, New Britain, says: cold settled on my back and kidneys, causing a dull ache across the small of my back. It seemed to catch me when I bent over. | When I sat down, my back seemed to stiffen up and I had to take hold of some object to arise. Mornings my felt lame and sore. 1 took two | of Doan's Kidney Pills and they cured this trouble.” 50c, at all dealers. simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that | cured Mr. Foulds. Foster-Milburn Co., rops., Buffalo, Vi, Morning. people | boxes entirel Price Don’t her engagement. He pictured the dangers of the stage and later warned her mother that the girl was likely to be sorry unless she forsook the stage and married him, Having read of Kugelman’s arrest and treatment of women, the Brooklyn girl went to the district attorney with her narrative, In Mr. Smith's office she met Cather- ine Kaufman, who said to her “You ought to thank God that you were able to keep out of Kugelman’s way Kugelman pleaded not guilty to two “white s indictments befora ! Judge Rosalsky in general sessions vesterday and was held for trial in $10,000 bail Hausenreiter is (-h‘nrm‘(l‘ with attacking Pauline Mink and with | forcing Felen Kelves to lead an im- moral life A story banquet that is said to have heen staged in upper Manhattan not long ago is being vestigated by the district attorney he- cause of the assertion tha women who might possibly come within the defini- tion of ‘“‘white slaves” were procured for the entertainment of the gucsts A typewritten document sent in by a woman who it was a report of the proceedings is the basis of the story. It names a city officer as having been present. Mr. Smith said vesterda All T can told the night of a wild said is that became 'so wild before the close a woman posed as ‘September Morn.” We will hew to the line, let the chips fall where they may. We did not give the dinner or invite the guests.” Deputy Police Commissioner Lord. to whose belief that the ‘“pickpocket trust” and the white slavers are rather closely allied color is given by a re- say now we are that a Don’t turn off the right road to scfe motor- ing. Don’t buy your gasoline from dealers who try to sell you inferior mixtures. The Standard Oil Company of New STANDARD ‘““That’s bad,” she quotes Kugeiman lu saying when she told him about NOONDAY LUNCH 1A M to2P. M FOR MEN AND WOMEN 25¢ HUDSON LUNCH 284 MAIN STREET B. Stone ALEXANDER G tigate. R of the immigration bureau said that in the past women had been bought in China for brought to the United States regu Iy as wives of Chinese merchants and sold in American cities at prices rang- ing from $1,000 to $2,000. Whether the Mott street women now under ar- rest were thus marketed has not been establis spector Frank to Chicago to inve Tnspector Wile; port that the pickpockets have riised Ras gone BoNUS a fund for the protection of the deal- ers in women, called on Mr. Smith vesterday. Both men denied fthat there was lack of harmony between the police and prosecutor's depart- ments. Mr. Lord said: “At the start of the white slave in- vestigation the police were asked to keep their hands off and not inter- fere with the district attorney. We have done so.” A Chinese woman, Lee Lai, Kflr\'w].\i\- old, was held in Jefferson Market | court yester for examination on a NORWEGIAN SHIP SUNK. charge of violating the tenement house law by occupying 17 Mott street for immoral purposes. She was ar- rested on Sunday night by detectives . who found the door locked and climbed | Christiania, in through a window. Another wom- an arested on a similar charge last week, Lee Shee, is held in the Flor- ence Crittenden Mission. On infor- mation that Chinese women are heing smuggled here from Canada by way of an ‘“‘underground railroad,” whose main station is Chicago, Federal In- | Given $1,000 Five Games This Season. For Winning Twex 29.—Grover Alexi der, star pitcher for the Philadelp National League team, $1,000 & ter off today for having won his g against the Cubs here yesterday. It was the twenty-fifth victory Alexander this season, which gave the bonus of $1,000 offered by Philadelphians should he score 25 during 1916. Alexander had shoot at in the game with the C He has pitched thirteen shut | games this season and should | twirl another, it will make a new ord. Chicago, Aug, is — another mark Tyr, Destreyed But Is Saved. Aug. —The Norwegian Isdalen, Forme Crew Norway, London, 11:12 a. m. former'y the Tyr, was saved steamship Isdalen, NO CHOLERA EPIDEMIC. Manila, Aug. 29.—The health rector denies the report that an demic of cholera is prevalent in Philippines. has been sunk. Her crew Maritime records give two Norwe- | glan steamships Tyr, each of about 2,200 tons gross. KEEP TO THE RIGHT Appeoash to branch soad o jelt American Motor Loagne “Cantion Sign™ York produces and recommends only one gasoline for motor cars. It is called SOCONY Motor Gasoline, 22d nothing else. Ask' for it by name, and always look out for the RED, WHITE and BLUE SOCONY sign. OIL CO. »f NEW YORK