Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| { SAW FIRST WIFE BURIED, CAME BACK AS SECOND WE ——ee a Frederick W. Sherman Kept It} Secret, She Says, to | | “Prevent Talk.” NOW SUES FOR DIVORCE, | Still Another Wife Is Named in Action as the Co- respondent. / Christina Sherman of No. 0 Fast One Hundred and Sixty-third street, who | says she came from the funeral of the) first wife of Frederick W. Sherman and entered his home as his second wife, has filed in the Supreme Court an ac- tlon for divorce. She names Jane son Sherman, another sileged wife, as correspondent. Sherman ts credited by his wives with having more than $10,0% and many apartment houses in New York. He 1s) sald to be living now with Ja ason Sherman in ono of the apartments at No. 20 Nast Thirty-first st story that Christina Sherman told Jus- tiee Delany to-day prompted hi gtant her $13 a week alimony pending the trial of her action Christina gxplained to the Court that tn 1898, while she was housekeeper for Mr. Sherman's invalid wife, the latter died. After the funeral services the housekegiper put on her hac and wen: to her employer to bid him good-by. She swears that he said to her, “ ceremonial marriage so soon after the funeral would provoke talk, but you! can just as well live here as my wife and it will be the same as ff we had| 4 ceremonial maria The former housekeeper asserts that she took Sherman's word for the pro- prety of the proposal and thereafter remained as the housewife, He gave her, she claims, $12 to purchase a wed- ding ring and treated her in the house and abroad as his wife. A son, Robyrt Sherman. was born in July, 1901, Mrs. Christina Sherman declares that she lived with Sherman and her son in the house where Jane Gleason Sherman 1s now residing until April, 19, when she fell seriously {ll and was removed to a hospital. She was confined to bed, in fear of death, until the following June. Then there came to her a report that Jane Gleason, an employee of Sherman, had usurped her piace and was then the wife of Sher- man. Mra, Christina Sherman left the hospital and went home. She searched for her wedding ring, which she claims to have left in a jewel tray when she hecame ill, but the ring was gone. She charges Sherman with giving it to Jane Gleason Sherman, and was told, she de- clares, that she would get no more support from him. The following October Sherman ex- ecuted @ separation agreement in which he agreed to give his wife $1,600 in cash and $2,700 in instalments of $500 each in Meu of her claims upon him. The first instalment fell due in February last, but was not paid. Then Jane Gleason Sherman started an action to have the nebaration agreement annuelled the ground that it was obtained f Sherman by fraud and duress. complaint in this case was subsequently ismiased with leave to plead again. Sherman denies that he ever asked Christina to be his wife, but he admits that “Robby” 1s his boy, He speaks Christina nt” in his hou and swears that the separation agree- ment she obtained from him was se- cured by trickery at a time when he 4i4 not know what he was signing. He eciares June Gleacon Sherman is h eniy legal wife. ——_ $500,000 STEAL CHARGED. wo Berlin Bankers Accused of! Heavy Embeaslement | BERLIN, Aug. %.—Paul Kwtet and Martin Gans, the heads of the firm of | Kwiet and Gans, a private banking house here, were arrested to-day | charged, It Is alleged by the police Js, with embexzling $800,000 of the It would a4. | have cost Markets ~ | ever so Restaurants | much more Cafes to start a become deserted, uae venushen tatVeae eaten Hotels new business | WOMEN HIT BY WARFARE MORE that aims at making good citizens. Th 8 mothers of the world are ranging them- aunadries “The explanation of this coincidence | 0° ath on you es pund outlet for boyish spirits and a Delicatessens YOur OWN | js very simple. An emancipated wo real training in the arts of peace. Patent account than | is a reasoning woman, and a reasc | Out of that movement ts coming a atents it world to | Woman sees sthe follies and the crim iy italy Ande Ameriea have aimeety Good Wills hav of tnternatianal strife. ‘The world 18! clasped hands, and Germany is coming Brita tye es | the book of woman, Enlightened wom n, ‘That is but the beginning. Think chased one |eaw how they were hit by warfare, [of the prospect In ten years’ time! 4 en more than the men who served | day the women ta the Interests of the many |{i"the trenches, Not even’ the glory |™ af the w our sid BARGAINS) came their way. Thetr portion was | A'@ also rearing w generation o offered through the widowhood and penury. With the |Citvairous in ideale aml sworn en th growth of death-dealing weapons this |jald the principle that t con on grew, till to-day it ts aiM-| brother of every other scot cult find an enlightened woman who | distinction of nation or creed. will adinit that there is anything but Seer, BRP 9 insens aughter in wars conducted te Saved Him, with Jong range gump between vrmies| SHARON \ a—tohn Ma “Business Opportunity” Ads. wno rarely seo each ether honey wart ies bulldine when’ a “Phe recent ware in which Amertea, | Workinan ¢ 1a hea um \ published in The World Spain, England, two Hoers, Russia and Mospulto ailghted on Mahoney's no last week— Japan were engaged gave women all | (Huse lim to jerk his head beckwa o the world new lessons, The hor- “ ate 403 MORE than were printed jo; ani folly of war dawned upon ‘eiases bc Yorks Maiall the, six other New! women tong hefore it touched tho men, | only members of the family wt teorge ‘orks Morrie ane inday Newse| women realize also the waste of War| Kraus, partner of Senator Timothy D. papers of the Always read World Ad best way to get the your money, 4 to-day,’ has been the impetus given to the peace agitation by the conclusion of the Anglo- American Peace treaty that peace #0- | practically all the prominent women of f id Ads. before | investing, for that is by far the| other over a dispute any moro than I most max fight Mrs, Smith next door when | mae THE EVENING ‘WORLD, T Women Have Decided | War Must Be Abolished ! AARARARAARRR AAA AA: | Emancipation of Woman Was Coincident With the Dawn of the Peace Movement, Says Mrs. Elmer E. Black of the American Peace League. Womankind, She Asserts, Has Been Harder Hit by War- fare Than the Men Who Served in the Trenches, | by Widowhood and Penury. | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “War is a sham “War may be magnificent, but it is not gocd sense. F “Woman has dectded to abolish war, and women can do everything, because they rule those who command everything.” Such at least are the conclusions of Mrs. E worth Black, Chairman of the New York Branch of the American Peace and Arbitration League, of which Wille jam H, Taft is the honorary president and Henry Clews the actu cutive, Mrs, Black reached New York on| the steamship Caronia yesterday, but took the first train * to Quebdeb, where ghe is to deliver a lecture on universal GREELEY* SMITH ace to-night. In London she made many addresses] victims of tho armament maker, army | tin favor of what she considers “the| contractor and concession hunter, when | most important movement in the world | ‘he dispute could be settled by a court on principles of justice and equity?’ that so great and she says Looking at war as !t is to-day, she says, This may be megnificent, but is not g00d sense.’ CREDIT DUE TO WOMEN FOR WHAT HAS BEEN DONE cleties have sprung up all over the United Kingdom, In London, the newly 0 we come to the present time, with formed Anglo-American Peace and Art-|the nations lining up in an Arbitration bitration Woman's League numbers] League. Woman, pend upon it, Is be- | bind this solid a nplishment, for wo- men rule those who command every- thing, as the French proverb says. “For years women all over the United States have been active membere of hundreds of p soc . “The American woman, having a freer and broader education than her Buropean s' has taken the lead in the woman's movement for peace, In her own country she saw men of all nations living peacefully together, and that taught her that if men of different races could liv to, w without quarrelling, the nations surely should be able to get slong. fo cite one more the British capital in its membership. The Duchess of Marlborough and other peeresses of American origin are active- ly Interested. where is now on the war path for uni- versal peace, “The emancipation of woman, the most important development in modern history, was coincident with the dawn of the peace mov ment," said Mrs, Black yesterday, in telling what woman has done for peace. “Mot until woman be- came ® free and independent be- ing did the altars of the war god In short, woman every- dence of wom- and women are idealists In the wor most practical | Sullivan in the | theatrical | were allowed to business, oe Mr Kraus to-day her dog wanders into my flower bed?’ | put "Why should J and my children be the | jong a \e rea oe Sermemenens - | and They Rule the Men ern mmrnrene > “The modern woman has asked her-/4t the Manhattan Heach Hotel, where ares Krave will have to take a UESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1911. “ PRBERS FONG ~NPLANTS HERE Many New York City Con- cerns Never Before Visited by Public Officials, FORCING NEW LAW, |Enormous Quantity of Food Stored Accounts for High Cost, State Counsel Says. ~ STORAGE HORRORS | STATE'S COUNSEL IN COLD STORAGE INQUIRY HERE. 2, | Street he crumpled up and died before their! BOY IN STREET KILLED BOY TELLS HOW "WORM TURNED AND eyes the boys fled, and since then have BY BLOW FROM BICYCLE. that Mandelstand had died at thelr | —. ands, Pressed Coroner Winterbottom, who Sight-Y ear- icti thinks Mandelstand die¢ of fright, that | a au Mow Medfe Gictio in de Mary's Hospital, Brooklyn, beer, too frightened to tell thelr parents The lad's straightforward tate so im-| Rider Is Arrested After Death of he paroled him in the custody of his| | father, Henry, a stevedore, living at r t a | Because little Benjamin Baumgarten, B [ y WA No. 61 Monroe street eight yeare old, of No. 488 Christopher eekly Javenue Brooklyn, died at St. Mary's ARMY OF WOMEN MARCH | Hospital last night from injuries re: —-— ceived when he was knocked down ac- eldentlly by a bleycle ridden by Isidore Danilin, aged sixteen, of No. 44 Christo. pher avenue, Lieut. Neumayer of the Liberty avenue police station went at IN HIGH PRICE CRUSADE. Processions Move From Villag® tol Village Making Protest Against Youngster Killed in Candy Store Was Aggressor in Poa 6 3 o'clock this morning to Danilin's Food Extortion. home, caused his arrest and put him ip the Fatal Assault PARIS, Aug. 2.—Processions of wo-|& cell. ; men, some of them 2000 strong, were| Baumgarten, Dantlin and other poye held thie evening In tly: cities and| Were playing lust night on the street, | The story told by thirteen-year-old James Frawley when he was arraigned | to-day before Coroner Winterbottom ‘charged with being implicated fr the beating to h, last Saturday, of Samuel Mandfestand in Hyman Green's taking turns at riding Danilin's bioyel As Danilin rode up, ending his tugn. little Baumgarten ran out to meet hint, but got in front of the wheel and was kocked down. The boys carried him to @ nearby stoop, where he first appeared towns of Northern France protesting | against the high prices of provisions. At Lillie, Cambrai, Doual, Valenciennes, Bethune, Lene and at many smaller Places a species of anarchy prevatle be: cause the police are insufficient to pro- dea candy store at No. 6% Market atreet,|tect the dealers of food from the de-|t® be recovering, and then collapsed, |completely destroyed the theory of race| structive impulses of the people. jA policeman from the Liberty avenue feud which the police of ths Madison| The processions in some of the north- | Static aled Rr. Dulligan from @t. Mary's Hi station had built up as o mo-{ern department# are marching from] pital, but the boy dled in ——— a |tive for the fatal asnautt Village to village, and running over| the hospital a few hours later. Danl- With criminal prosecutions under | Young Frawley, a bright-eyed lad, ad- poo aad damaging dairies and vege-|lin'’« arrest followed immediately 5 ! | ated thd Dtle able gardens to Indicate their sense ——> Way in Rochester, Buffalo, Syracuse, Pate ne oe ne fought with Mandel: | or grievangs against the high cost of i Utfea and Corning as well as New stand, but he told Coroner Winterbottom | food, Ae ‘each village is deacended| POPE RECEIVES PRELATES, York City, ihe enteroement ah ene | | that it was a case of the worm turning| upon the ranks of the manifestants are ~<——— ° retnah Cold Mtotake int Hy Beil | at last. Instead of the dead boy being) steadily augmented and occasional {n-| ROME, 0 Plus recelved inspectors actitg under State Com: hounded, it was stalwart fifteen-year-old nts are reported of conflicts be-|{n audience yeste Cardinal Serafino ailestoner oF Seah be Mandelstand who had bullied the smalier|/tween the marauders and farmers| Vannutelll, Grand Penitentiary of the i : ea 7 or nt ak H fellows on the block. Frawley, # boy|®fMed with pitchforks, Holy Catholle Chureh, end Archbishop er, to-day promises startling rev- |named “Reddy” and another, whore| WASUANT 1D Oo Peiteenioe- of Suntan, elations, Not only does the law prom-| Q THOMAS A AN @ | name he thinks ss Musseiman, he toa) BAD WASHOUT UP-STATE, | Cardinat Merry del Vat, the Papat {se to protect public health by re-}__ pias |the Coroner, were Mandelstand’s especial . belt oh ie fon isa Lid ducing thé high th rate which the | victims. le br “di sc! y Rain Ph | Mop abba) Stl iL eel: Mt a wart American Association of pisaleiann Inaulated, and the building was of O14) int street ns nem Aenea! and} Four DAY ave Havoc With| (day to Montemurio for the summer, | fashioned construction and should be . S s . Erte Ratlroad Tramic, and Surgeons say was due in a large ndemned to other purposes than those| Saturday Frawley, “Reddy” and Mus- ‘i Y © measure to unsanitary conditions of |for which It is being used selman came into the candy store to| HORNELL, » Aug. 2.—Heary| storage plants, but aie law already| Although the Brennan Cold Storage| buy some soda, Mandelstand was in| Washouts are reported all along the| romises to afford rellef from exorbl- he was signed June 15 by Gov, Dix, the place and began picking at them. eo ag Division of the s the nt prices now charged fo rea, |Pecoming a law tmmediately, it is quite | Finally, young Frawley told the "| reault of the constant rain of the last i | sn riven now charged for the neves Jevident that the cold storage men tookrd | ner, Mandelstand ‘kicked ‘him vicious? four dave At Hast Salamanca For Infants and Children. a upon the measure as a joke. One : racks are $0 ¥ flooded that pas- |" te “irenman aw forbids tho cola | Ponte ensure as a Joke. Oe Of ite fell tack In agony, and. the other [tacks are go adv footed that voe-| Tha Kind You Have Always Bought storage of all food products, except|age interests at Albany was District-| {WO lads piled on Mandelstand and) city py way of the Buffalo Div | ty 7 o nt 4 ‘ » Division. | Bears the butter, for a longer period than ten | Attorney ancis Winslow of Weat-| were giving it to him with all thelr! ail west-bound trains are from four to| ignature | months. Butter may be held In ‘stor-|chester County. But when Gov. Dix{littie might, when Frawiey recovered | six hours late. It Was late in the day | &Bat by OM lage twelve months. Fallure to comply | signed the appropriation bill Aug. 1,/ from the eff of the kick and joined | before traffic be lo | with its terms Is punishable by a fine of $500 or one year's imprisonment or, both, The storage of e rmous quantities of food for unlimited is, we have found, to be the rei reason why the full dinner pail been succeeded by the empty market basket,” said | Assemblyman Thomas A. Brennan, author of the law, who has been r tained as special counsel by the State Health Commis: toner. Mr. Brennan's office, No. 346 Broadwa:, is the tem- porary headquarters from which the prosecutions are being conducted. “the investigations of our inspec- tors prove that c...ditions were worse than I believed when I advocated the Pp of the law, and ey absolute- ly justify its enactmen.. Their re- ports show that enormous amounts of meat, poultry, butter, exgs and fish are being held in storage. This ac- counts in a great measure for the high cost of food stuffs. Inspection of plants in up-State cities has shown violations to be so flagrant thac cases have been sent sent to District-At- torneys in six counties, SOME NEW YORK PLANTS NEVER VISITED BEFORE. “With respect to New York City there has been an inspection of about o: third of the cold storage plants. ‘The inspection 1s now going forward as rapidly as our men can cover the» | ground, “It may surprise the people of New York to know that men at some of the plants declare that they have never been visited be- fore by public officials of any character whatsoever, although there is a Division of Food In- spectors in the Health Department of the City of New York who agents are authorized by law to fe and destroy any food they | gna unfit for human consumption. “Figures already piling up show an astounding quantity of food stuffs in storage here at the present time. In thirteen of the cold storage plants of New York City we have found 7,230.27 pounds of meat and poultry, 6,000,000 pounds of butter, 2,000,000 pounds of cheese and 180,000,000 eggs. As yet our !men have not got to the plants where ‘meat only Is storea, which will carry which allowed $40.00 for the enfores- ment of the cold storage measure, and Assemblyman Bren’ importuned by Dr. Porter to take charge of a for of temporary inspectors, there was im- mediate ala ng the cold storage people. A enforcement of the law meant monetary loss to them for the season of 1911-19 Already Dr. I , under the power of supervison given him in the law, has begun to map out rules and regulations to protect the consumer from ‘impure foods. Here are a few of the rules/ which the State Healtn Commis: oner | has und onsideration | RULES CONSIDERED FOR THE! PEOPLE'S PRUTECTION. | 1. Persons employed by the cold stor- age plants shall not be allowed to live and sleep In the work roon Persons affiicted eases shall not be allowed to e' in cold storage plan 3. All floors shal! be of cement Operators fore beginning 1) wash hands and arms. i} 5. Eggs which have b in storage thirty days or more, when sold at retail must be placed in a receptacle having iu full view a card upon which shal! be printed the words “cold storage” in let- ters not less than two Inches high . When foods are brought fromy one State into another State there shall be counted In the filme the food has oeen in storage in the cther State | now provides that all cold) shall be “kept and matn- | anand sanitary manner.” The law storage plant tained in a ¢ Such plac where f¢ t for less th thirty days. mpt from designa- tion as cold storage warehouses, but feods here stored m the same as in the lar “untif New York ha cold storage said A law its plight was me | blyman Br n in conclusion. “Here one of the foremost tes in jon, and this great question of th preservation | » cold storage 1 hey have an org ily they will ment of the remains for the pe State to see that they the protection gu proper support of thi —————__— | ARRESTED FOR MURDER. | | Man Caught Charged With Sia | of | not rob! ad ounder a crt in nal Courts the totals to gigantic proportions. In| Prigihe' il ge ale sks one plant alone we found 4,500,000/9d, of No. 14 West Fortie Mee eeucas (ae an former nate ef th nira Reforma- m . tory, was ested bi tective Shi In regard to the sanitary conditions lof the plants already exami: , an ning World reporter was permitted to examine soine of the reports of [inspectors upon the © names of the warehouses to which they | related, would not be puolished for the present. State Commissioner of Heaiti | Porter is now engaged in {rules and regulations for the c |the plants and the cold storage barons jare to receive opportunity to put their places into sanitary shape. Here is a portion of a report made with respect to @ certain Manhattan | warehouse, | "In this of meat, stored, 1 dirty barr The top floor condition. 1 tion was the plant.” aver place, where 260,000 and 48,000 cases of exgs are ound the rooms filled with 8 and all sorts of rubbis's was in a particular bad was told that my inspec first ever made at the pounds MEAT COMES IN CONTACT WITH | CREOSOTE. The following was taken from a re- made another warehouse: po! upon The floors were entirely of wood, and were infected with th nds of sects, Creosote Is here used in large quantit wn attempt to exterminate the bugs. “E would respectfully suggest that inquiry be mad to the ef- fect of creosote upon meat pro- ducts, for the ment in dragged over the floor which is covered with creosote, The walls and ceilings were in bad condition, betng ue. sin te a third wa house said “I found the floors of the halls lead- directly to the rooms where t foods are stored, to be wet, muddy, and in many places there were pools of stagnant water. Through this mosa | food stuffs were being dragged to and |fro while T was on the premises.” | Only an alert and honest inspector y|could have written the following clause in a report made with respect to still self, ‘Why should one nation fight an-|@ has been seriously 111 since Sunday.|another cold storage plant in Manhat- | Dr, Joseph Engelgon, of No, 181 Kast | tan: Fifty-seventh streot, says he cannot} “I found the hallway and storage 4 complete diagnosis of th rooms neither properly swept nor cleaned, The walls were not scraped or whitewashed, The pipes were not the | ition that the| to-day’ while loitering in. the urts Building. He Moses I harged with le murder of a negro, on that Brennan quar- elled 1 w aps hat he n negro without wat " loccurred on West Fertyefirst str front livery stable. Brennan de arrested that Hill had hot himself —<_——_— KATHERINE DREIER TO LONDON, Aug. 2.—Miss Katherine Dreier, ho went through a marriage ceremony with Edward nbull-Smith, | the mural artist, in Brooklyn, Aug. 8, |arrived here on the steamship Cedric late on Sattirday. So far she has refused | to see reporters Her sister, Miss Mary Dreter, who ac- companied her sa3% Miss Katherine has |mot yet seen the first Mrs Trumbull- Smith, but expects to In a day or two, —————————— Ee HARMFUL MEDICINES cannot be sold by any druggist in America to-day except under penalty of the law. This is what the Pure Food and Drugs Law has accomplished for the people. Such standafal prepa- rations, however, as Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, which for thirty years has stood the test of time and complies with all conditions of this law, will continue to be sold by every reputable druggist in the land, work | ff w Newro, | Criminal | SEE TRUMBULL’S WIFE. | was resumed on the Al- When Tegany Divi Odol-ize! ET a bottle of Odol to- day. After you see for yourself what Odol can do, you will no more think of for- getting to Odol-ize the mouth and teeth than of forgetting to wash the face and hands. At all Druggists and Depariment Stores Geo, Borgfaldt & C New York “All You Want to Know About All the — Apartment Houses You Want to Know About” | for FREE distribution at the World’s Main Office and all Branch Offices The WORLD’S FALL RENTING GUIDE To New York City’s High-Class Apartment Houses | | In every way the most complete book of its kind ever printed. Presenting Illustrations and Detailed Descriptions of 200 High-Class - Multi-Family Structures. Get a Copy Without Delay! If you prefer, send 5 cents for postage and a copy will be mailed to you forthwith. Address: “RENTING GUIDE DEPT,,” "°°™ 'S./9Big APM }