The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1911, Page 5

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CHEAPER TO HRE NUT ABROAD THAN TOTAKE YOUR OW Stuyvesant Fish Gives This Information After Trying Both Ways. HERE ON LA _ SAVOIE. Baseball News Sadly Mixed When Translated by French Wireless Operator. Doubtiess the reader wil! be interested to learn that it 1s much cheaper to ire an automobile for touring purposes fm France than to take one's own auto- Mobile and one's own chauffeur abroad. Take tt from Stuyvesant Fish, who has tried both method: Mr, Fish and his wife returned to-day from an automobile tour of France. They were passengers on La Savole, which ample ship was packed to ca- pacity with returning Americans. Pre- vious to this season, Mr. Fish hi taken his own automobile to the Continent. This year he tried the ex- Periment of renting a r and found the expense materially lessened. Mr. Fish does not look for war hetwaen Germany and France over the Moruccan question, “A dominating influence for Deace,” remarked Mr, Fish, “is the fact that armor plate costs $400 @ ton.” aries Cabot of Boston asked the Yeporters who boarded La Savoie at Quarantine if the United States steel Corporation had made any report on the ® investigation of a magazine story, Jeging that workers in the plants cf the corporation were forced to tol! tWelve hours a day seven days a week. Wren told that no formal report had deen made, Mr. Cabot announced his intention of seeing about it. CABOT WANTS REASONABLE HOURS OF LABOR. At a meeting in Hoboken last April Mr. Cabot, a heavy stockholder tn Untted States Steel, offered a motion, ex'ch was adopted, direoting an inves- ation of the charges. He 1s of the opinion that the United States Stee! Ccrporation makes enough money to grant {ts laborers reasonable hours of en ployment. Another passenger on La Savole was Robert Adamson, retary to Mayor Gaynor. Mr, Adamson used to be a cap- able reporter for The World. He was eo.ry he wa out of the newspaper game whit. abroad. cl ran into one good ate-y after an- other,” said Mr. Adamson. I butted right into + great strike in England 1 saw the Carlton Hotel fire in econ, 1 ed in “arts just as the atone were only a fow and slapped as it were, and it ave a chance m." Lisa was stolen. T) News events that rose me in the face, me that I anothing with didn't th to do Mr. alam o ested Thursday to the wire.ss# 0 rv of La Savote ve- cause no baseball news tn the all 1 ao.ard, The next issue ss paper contained the fol all news In the game of the ball yesterday Pittsbourg prevailed over Sintantines a: FRENCH CPERATOR SIMPLY DIDN'T UNDERSTAND. Which was the French wirele operator's way of stating that Pit burgh won from Cineinnat! by the score of 4 to Florence Burns, J. Burns, the detective, was overcome with joy when, looking over the rail as La Savoie approached the pler, she saw her father in the crowd ashore, Sho thought he was in California The most gifted passenger, wally, on La Savole was Armenak Ment- emedian, a lawyer, of Cairo, Egypt, who is profictent in seven tongues. Hoe ex- plained that it was necessary to speak and write four languages to practice law in Cairo, Surprise was expressed by Mr. Mentemedian when he was Informed that many lawyers practice in New York who cannot speak or write evengone language correctly. Mrs, Potter Palmer of New York and Chicago was aboard. For further par- ticulars. see the Customs Inspectors, They dearly love to see Mrs, Palm and her array of trunks come ashore. lnguistt- Your Advertisement Is Priutedin | To-morrow’s | SUNDAY | | WORLD First—Tt will be one of about Foo Individual, handily: | fied” a ate hu | more be scatt | throughout the various’ sections of the Sunday Her: Becond—It will be given a cfreulne | 100,000 greater through the Sunda jay Ties COMBIN Thini—It will be most Mkely to bring you on Monday the poste flone vorker, home, Tost, arth} {nvestment opportunity, bargain, eo, you seek, ' IT WILL PROVE BY TEST THAT SUNDAY WORLD ADS. ARE BEST daughter of William | —w— VENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, COMING BACK FROM THE COUNTRY Car FORGET Yous Cnece -, @ ‘Suir Now. URE every FIGHT RENEWED THAT MAY UPSET TWO MARRIAGES Referee to Take More Testi- mony in Famous Tysen-Ben- rimo Marital Tangle. J. Campbell Thompson to-day pre- pared to take more testimony In the famous Tysen-Rowe-Pollock-Kernochane Benrimo-Lewis-Robertson divorce tans gle, having been appointed by Justice Goff as referee In the sult of Robert F. Tysen, wealthy New York broker, to have his marriage to Mrs. Tysen the third annulled. At the same time Jo- seph H. Benrimo, an actor, former hus. band of the latest Mrs. Tysen, planned to defend a suit for divorce brought by Mrs. Benrlmo the second. Benrimo had already intervened in Tysen’s sult be- cause victory for Tysen would mean that Benrimo's latest marriage was in- valid. Following {s @ schedule of the marital events that have culminated tn the dl- vorce tangle now before the court: 1s76—Tysen married Miss Ida Row, society debutante. A lapse of sixteen years. 1892—Mrs. Tyser got a divorce in outh Dakota. 1992—Mrs, William Pollock got a di- vorce from her husband and married Tysen. 1893—Pollock married Mrs. Kernochan, 1900—Benrimo married Miss Fay Lewis of Detrott. 1%1—Mrs, Pollock divorced Tysen. 1902—Mrs, Benrimo came to New York and thought she had divorced Benrimo. 1908-—-Mrs, Benrimo became Mrs. Tysen IIL. 1906—-Benrimo went abroad and mar- ried Miss Helen Robertson. 1909--Tysen sued to have his marriage to Mrs. Benrimo I. annulled on the ground that she had not been legally William divorced from Benrimo, Benrimo inter- vened, because if Tyson was illegally | married to Mrs, Benrimo 1, Benrimo must alse have been illegally married to Miss I tson. 1910—Supreme sult. 1911—Appellate Court reversed Supreme Court, saying the Tysen suit was im- properly dismissed, Referee appointed to-take testimony, Suit for divorce brought by Mrs. Benrimo II, How many more chapters there may be in the strange marital not even the lawyers can say _—_——— AUTO BLOWS UP; MAN DYING. The flywheel of an automobile burst yesterday in the private garage of ‘Theodore F. Reynolds, Prospect avenue, West Orange, N. J, Edward Sandford, the chauffeur, was taken to the Orange Memorial Hospital with his left leg 60 badly crushed that {t was necessary to amputate !t, He also sustained a pos- sible fracture of the skull, both arms were broken, and there is little chance of his recovery. Mr. Reynolds 1s a stock broker, with offices in New York, The violence of the explosion was at- tested by the fact that one plece of the heavy wheel was driven four Inches into the concrete floor of the gara, An- other chunk of metal was hurled through the roof. An extingulsher that rested on the front of the car was flat- tened out by the force of another blow, — KILLED BY TOOTH ABSCESS. An abscess at the base of a tooth, bursting when the patient was under the mfluence of an anaesthetic and about to be operated on, caused the death of Olin A. Stranahan, forty-five years old, a mechanical engincer of tn- ternational reputation, in the office of Dr. J. F. Hasbrouck, No. #@ East Forty-first street. He had been {ll for weeks and had been taken by hia at- tending phytsician, Dr, ed B. Suther- land of No. 1 West = Thirty-fourth street, to the oMee of Dr. Hasbrouck yesterday for @ consultation, and then it was elded to op te, He fatled to revive after the abscess broke. Strana- han had been for years connected with the Westinghouse-Churoh-Kerr Com- pany, the Allis-Chalmers Company of Milwaukee and house Company, TM GErring iF , aie Ry J: ( eer the British Westing- | WAIT A Pugre -T Now RUSSAN COUNTESS BUYS HF. PLANTS FLOATING PALACE Likes Half Million Dollar Yacht Iolanda So Well After Cruise She Keeps It. The enormously rich Russian Coun- tess Perestchenko has bought Morton F. Plant's palatial steam yacht Iolan- da, the most expensively built and lux- urious of American pleasure craft. Countess had the yacht under charter during the past season and be- came so fond of it that she determined on its purchose at the conclusion. She has announced that she will divide her time evenly between the floating pal- ace and her establishments at St. Pe- teraburg and Cann The Iolanda is now at Southampton The price paid {s not stated in the des- patches, but Mr. Plant is known to have spent more than half a million dollars in building the boat, and there is no reason to believe he was inclined to take a lods on her, Moreover, the Countess is well able to pay the full price for anything she wants. ‘The Iolanda was first put into com- mission in the summer of 1908, Bhe was built by Ramage and Ferguson at Leith from designs by Cox and King of London. She has the proportions of the smaller ocean liners, 306 feet over all, 28 fect on the water line, 37% feet beam. Her tonnage 1s 1647, her bunker capacity 1s 500 tons of coal. The appointments of the Iolanda are of @ magnificent scale. The saloons comprise smoking, dining, drawing and two private sitting-rooms, There are in addition an entrance hall, eix vestibules and several staterooms, Beautiful hard woods are a feature of the yacht, The emoking-room is part elled and framed in Genoa walnut, the framework and panels of the drawing- room are in Honduras mahogany, the entrance hall and dining-room, which aré en suite, are treated in different species of oak; the owner's private alt- ting-room {s panelled with pale green tapestry, and in the various other cab- ins are examples of Italian walnut, Mght oak, curly oak, pollard oak, dark oak, Linden patapso, East and West India @atinwood, boxwood and syca- more. ‘The electric ilght fittings are of unique and ornate designe. The yacht is fitted with @ submarine signalling apparatus, The heating system is by eteam. ———— a EPISCOPAL CLERGYMAN WHO GOT DIVORCE IS DEAD. Rev, John A, Crockett, Mind Un- balanced by Domestic Trou- ble, Dies in Asylum. HARTFORD, Conn., Sept. 9.—News of the death of the Rey. John who Was one of the first isters in this country wife and who died in the New York State Hospital for the Insane, has reached here and has called the tragic life story of the clergyman, He married a wealthy young woman opal min from whom he got a& dlvorce short! afterward, The divorce was grante with the ction of his bishop, but |eaused a great deal of comment. Al- though still a minister, Mr. Crockett was never willing after his divorce to accept \a regular charge, He devoted himse! to aupply work and was regarded as an able man, Several years later he went to New York and engaged in newspaper work, and did some clerical supply Later he was dismissed from the min- istry at his own request. The breaking up of his home eventually unbalanced his mind, and he was committed about @ yoar ago to the asylum where he died pecan Sates Beattle Verdict Kil ATLANTA, Ga,, Sept. 9. | Sarah Templebrook unfolded a newa- paper here to-day and saw by the head- |lines that Henry Clay Beattie jr. had been found guilty she dropped dead Physicians eaid she had heart trouble. Crockett, | to divorce his) work. | HoLd ON A MINUTE ‘HERES: MY Sroes ! Sites? ghee WOWEN PLEA FOR WOMAN WHO HAD ROBBED THEN Ask for Mercy, and Judge Suspends Sentence on Prom- ise to Reform. Her women accusers appeared to offer pleas for lenency when Mrs. Lena Bluo was arraigned in the Somerset County Court at Somerville, N. J., yesterday and pleaded gullty to two charges of larceny in connection with the robberios of homes in South Somerville last April. The spokesman was Mrs. Charles L. Kain, whose husband is in the advertis- ing business at No, 2% Fifth avenue, New York. At the time of Mrs. Blue's arrest, in April, Mrs. Kain, who ha employed her as housekeeper, charge: a-brac, and also with attempting poison her. ro] 4 POME AT LAST. had repented of her crimes and had al- 1911, SEEK MORE LAWS: TO SPREAD HOMES THROUGH SUBURBS Restrictions on Tenements and Lofts in Old Centres Force Rents ‘Higher, THE MASSES MUST LEAVE. Fight Against Congestion Is Shaping Trend in New City Charter and Building Code. Congestion of population tn olf city) districts ts to be fought by legislation. Recommendations of the Mayor's committee and of various organizations that have been trying to spread the people over outlying homesites wera placed in form for presentation to the Legislature this week. While no direct | laws to compel @ scattering of the masses are deemed possible, the crowds ed conditions in a large part of the old clty will be used by advocates of sev- eral new laws in support of thelr de- mands. Politicians who are mainly responsible base some of their strohgest arguments upon Increasing conge: They say that many sections of the charter as drawn are intended to promote a more logical readjustment of home dlstrtots. | | They dectare that the working of the| charter woud tend to hasten the eub- j urban movement, NEW LAWS TEND TO FORCE, FACTORIES OUTSIDE OF CITY. Several laws to restrict business struc- tures used by large numbers of persons were passed at the last session of the Legislature. More are to be introduced at this session. It 1s belleved that many manufac- THATCHER READY for the proposed new city charter will} | centres, ready been severely punished by two short terms In jall whii waiting trial and by her loss of ca: among her neighbors. Her oldest daughter, a girl of sixteen, was charged with being an now under the protection of the Chil- turers who carry on their busin crowded buildings tn old centres will be ed to move their plants to suburban ‘This would mean that the work- Accessory to her mother's wrongdoing, |@rs, alxo, would move thelr homes in and on April 21 was sent to the State|order to be near their work, They Home for Girls in Trenton, Six other|would get better quarters for less children, the youngest an infant, are | mone rators in suburban sections sold Judge to her. Relativ the woman with stealing valuable bric-; from school Tuesday, to| now that the child was taken to New | Haven by the woman who abducted her. Mrs. Kane sald she believed Mrs. Blue! Arrests may be made to-da placed Mrs. Case dren's Home Soclety in Trenton. suspended sentence and Blue in charge of the pro- bation officer for one year. will be made to restore the six children Mrs, Blue was led out of court by her aged mother. The woman's hus- band is a fireman in the oil works near An effort of elght-year-old Alta How- 4|ard, who was kidnapped while returning convinced sites for such removals this ‘They have negotiations pending al week, 4 for many more. They say that the re- adjustment will assume big proportions during the coming y Projects of this fall contemplate the bullding of towns around groups of new Somerville, +|factories In nearly all parts of the a ee suburban zon Sites chosen, in most ‘Teace Kidnapped Girl. instances, are on the Ines of the new SPRINGFIELD, Mass. Sept. %—| subways. Outside of the greater city, however, sites for such projects be- coming more available on account of better transit facilities on the trunk line ratiroads, The movement is forming new in- FOR BIG RUSH OF FLAT BUILDERS VQHN THATCHER As Superintendent of Buildings tn Brooklyn he will watch over the cam: paign to house the great overflow from old city centres along the lines of the ew subway hom for a distance of nearly @ miles) from Manhattan. SEEK TO LIMIT HEIGHT IN| CROWDED CEN’RES. | Directly bearing upon the scattering of population in the proposed new chars | ter are» parts relating to the Tene- | ment-House Department and ¢! Build. | ing Code. All parts of the city are Watching closely the Probable action upon the charter provision placing the Imitation of bullding helgh* in control of the Aldermen cad the Board of Beatle mate, Suburban realty developers are fight. Ing for explicit Jegisiation to restrict the hight of new buildings In the old CMeago and Boston have stopped the construction of skyscrapers and the advocates of a rapid spread. ing of New York population believe congestion canno. be eliminated wh more skys capers are being reared t once: ‘rate the workers. Although lim. | demand |Is expected to be nothing less {tation feet res are not expected to cover ths entire city, It is believed that restrictions can be placed upon height In many distinct parte and that the olty will assume clon pervision over the type of construction in various distelets. WANT MORE TENEMENT RE STRICTIONS TO RAISE RENT, Tenement laws Mmit the hetght of the various types of houses siready. Further laws are advocated to sur round all structures In crowded centres with such stringent provisions for health and safety that they could not be constructed for tenants who paid ordi- nary rentals, Manhattan regulations are steadily forcing out the cheaper homes, Builders cannot afford to pay the high land prices and then construct the type af house that the laws require unless they can get comparatively high rental fe turna. Under the new laws, the comly restrictions are made heavier and éd- ditfonal restrictions would make the ownership of such properties so un- desirable that few if any new houses would be bullt and Investors who he'd the old ones would want to iightén their burdens as soon as poasidie. Thee ditions would tend to make own higher rents and the result han a wholesale outflow of tenants in search of cheaper, more congental accommo dations. One of the propored clauses in the new Tenement House Department pro- visions would give the city the right to make any improvement which the department officers deemed necessary in any tenement and charge the costs as a lien against the property, It would stand ahead cf ordinary mortgage claims. Owners claim that this would Inter- fero gravely with thelr equities and that it would force an immense amount of Mquidation. It Is probable that a great mass of tenements In olf centres would be altered for business uses, thus unhousing thousands of tenants, who would have to seek homes outside of the crowded sections. It would add strongly to the suburban movement peated at SUBWAY SAMARITAN HURT. Miss Fannie Wagner of N Clintap street to-day was Informed that a rela- tice was In trouble and started for the Yorkville Court to give bat! for him, She took the subway, and at Fifty-ninth street was told that was the nearest station to the court. Miss Wagner reached the car door just as it was being josed. She endeavored to get out, but the train started and she was thrown violently against the side of the car. ‘A physician on the train ministered to her until the train reached the Seventy- econd street station, where she was re moved to the J. Hood Wright Hospital suffering from bruises and Internal ia- jurtea. dustrial colonies of both factories and “il Fh Avene, 34th and A BUY WORD FOR B’ Altman & Cn) ANNOUNCE A SPECIAL SALE FOR MONDAY, SEPT. With, OF | 1000 PAIRS OF IMPORTED LACECURTAINS AT UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES 35th Streets, New York. Sy IN

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