The evening world. Newspaper, September 16, 1911, Page 3

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Al pi i | EAMES DOESNQ] | CHARACTERISTIC FAR CHURCH WL D> ANMUL MARRAGE Singer Artives With Her Hus- band and Says Case Was Fully Investigated. BOTH SEEM CONFIDENT. Gogorza Declares That the Discussion Was Started by Malicious Mischief Makers, Mme Emma Fs. (professional name) anil Gogoraa, of Ff to Now to-day Va Lorraine encountar a report bled from Paris that the Archbi , hop of tha has inaugurated an res may matter 5 Gogorza wa to learn tha Shout (heir marriag «My first marriage © explain elty at the jam. It was a vue dollevel by uAe firs: mar Church, W in Parts 1 we Church authors) case then as stigatiy ever ting to my we was estabtished and 1 granted us the sanction y to hay marrtage mony performed by a priest 84VS CASE WAS REOPENED BY A MISCHIEF-MAKER. "T cannot account for the re- pening | Of the case now, save through the ac- y tivities of some malicious mischief maker, We have no fear of the out. ! come. The investigation—if there really {9 to be one—will show just the condi- tion of affairs upon which the church favorably passed at the time we were 1 fiven permission to wed." . had leanings toward Catholte religion,” said “long before I beca The Church is a wo! organization. It than an investiga thorities lasting m should now be re the Roman Mme. Eames, a muntcant. derful and serious $ ridiculous to think 1 by the Church aus n five months “It has been reported that we pald some r isly vast sum to obtain | consent to our marriage according to the Cath: All it cost us was ut ten francs in postage and a con- siderabl ¥, be every statement we had was into, Even my baptism at my e in China was looked This was necessar decause my baptismal certificate was lost in a fire ye ago. rules of the Catholic { marriage was no mar- om a religious stand- n the first marriage of gorza, that having been per- hy a Magistrate. TWO MARRIAGE CEREMONIES PERFORMED IN PARIS. “In Pa married once by t once by the civil auth h tnstances every thet the. ceremony twice, are Wes ta should 1 better In this country lonna serlously, I ‘ ‘ ' can walk 1 ret married, Dt | 1 y If marriag , isidered divorces only twice In Appear: wW y Collese Ban Cigarettes, SOUTH BEND, Sept. 16—Cigar- nts at Notre bes forbidden. ution announce the order will be Information Who is there who has not saved a little money and wants to invest it to the best ad- vantage? Ordinary opportunities are rampant, but it is the person who seeks and finds the EX- TRAORDINARY chances to invest profitably that builds the bank account of unusual size. WORLD. “Business Op- pane Advertisements 4,602 es 9,689 More Than The Herald Showed Where Stores, Markets, They Shela Be: Bought For Much Las'Than They Were Worth Many More Such Rare Chances to Multiply Dollars are Advertised in The SUNDAY WORLD To-Day ane EBVENXING WORLD, GOV. EUGENE N, FOSS, MASS. COV.FIAGKES E.ASGOVERN, GOV, WH H. MANN, Or WTRGINIA GOV.E.-F,NOEY, MISS. oy. HERBERT HADLEY, missovat One ster bl ALDRICH, NEBRASIA BROUT'S ARREST AY BE TAKEN TO GOVERNOR —aa Justice Putnam Signs Order, Then Issues Re-Settling Writ After Wrangle. | Deputy Attorney-General Chambers land Assistant District-Attorney Gold- stein of King County, went before Jus- tlee Putnam tn Brooklyn, to-day, and asked for a warrant compelling Edward M. Grout, former Comptroller and pres ident of the closed Union Bank, to ap- pear before Deputy Superintendent: of | Banks Dodge in the investigation of rregularities in the conduct of the bank. Mr, Grout was represented by counsel Justice Putnam signed the order for the arrest of Mr. Grout and a technical Jorder “re-settling” the first. Co ei for Mr. ¢ uit asked that the Jorder be vacated. After a heated ar- |xument, Justice Putnam dented motion Counsel then filed notice of two appeals; one against the re-settlement of the original order, and one against the denial of the motion to vacate. Then a stay of execution of the war- rant, pending the appeal, was granted, after another hot argument. The Ap- pellate Division will not be in session until the first Monday tn October, Mr. Chambers at once asked that the which could be heard in the corridors, Justice Putnam wae not inclined to ve- cate the stay Mr. Goldstein Inte 1s to go to Albany on Tuesday to * Vv. Dix, Wh he} undertook examination, Mr, Gold- stein was to! by Dix that ff he neountered any serious icles the Jtun power of the Gov office | would be used to overcome Mr. wil sk Gov, Di jue an ! su Grout, cof. |pelling him to the Governor Jin Albany and answer Mr. Goldstein's ouestions. —-— SAYS BROKER'S CLERK GOT HER SAVINGS BY FRAUD. Handsome Widow Gave Him $1,200 to Buy Bonds, Sie Says; He Says Speculation Was Plan. Mrs, Juli; Martinoll, a handsome young widow who ke ) shop at No, 39 Amsterdam told Magistrate Cornell in the Centre Street Pollee Court to-day a story of the ed theft of her savings that caused le ry Woodcock, a young brok erk, to be sent to the Tombs to awalt the action of the Grand Jury on a parge of grand larceny Woodcock was arrested by P. Shafer of the Court Squad. He was @ rk in the offices of Brown Bros, & Co, ‘bank at No, 6 Wall street when the alleged theft occurred, and at the time of his arrest was a b eeper Co. In Kingston, im Martinoll said that in February, for Armour & Mrs 144), Brown told her had tnside tn- formetion that Virginia bonds were a 1 investment and advised her to buy She drew $1,200 from the Emigrant Kank and gave !t to him with Savings vtions to purchase the bonds for » told she claims, that he s7% and placed them '1 Brown his in court Woodcock id the money had not been given n to buy bonds but that he and Mrs. Muartinoll had entered into a partner- ship to speculate on margains and that the money had been los stay be vacated, and there was a wrangle | BATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, POSES OF THE GOVERNORS OF MANY STATES. KfPTINASYLUM — SHEKERSCONFESS BY MILLIONAIRE, = MURDER TO RIDE = Gov, woopRow WILSON, Nude GOV. JUDSON HARMON, OIC 1911, Jou u BURKE, te HE N.DAKOTA | Seareln ASTUDY OF 29 GOVERNORS; HEADS OF BiG STATES, BUT WITHOUT A SWELLED HEAD Hadley of Missouri — Dark, Slender, with Clean Cut Almost Indian Profile of the Western American. Wilson of New Jersey—Has the Scholar’s Stoop and Candi- date’s Smile. Harmon of Ohio—Looks Like Bismarck; Folds His Arms Like Napoleon. Mann of Virginia—Might Have Stepped from the Pages of an Ante-Bellum Novel. Hoke Smith of Georgia—Big, Un- gainly, Uncompromising. STRIKING CHARACTERISTICS OBSERVED AMONG THE EXECUTIVES AT SPRING LAKE. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. You may have met one or two Governors of States in the course of a Ufetime, and perhaps you were not particularly impressed by them. And you may have fallen a victim to a prevailing scepticism concerning the ef: fectiveness of popular government. If you have heard politicians discuss Presidents and Governors, lawyers discourse upon the corruption of Judges and newspaper men describe the follies of the jury system, your belief in government for and by the people may have burned dim within you. i If so, and you wished to feel your faith quicken and grow warm, quite as ‘if you were attending a revival meeting and had heard the call of grace, | you should have taken a run down to Spring Lake, N. J., where twenty- | nine Governors of States have been holding their fourth annual conference, and attended one of the sessions. This 1s not a theory but a preserip-/tn the bac tion. I proved the prescription by | Pictures f¢ taking {t myself, and I came away | Hat thea ae from the Governor's co mn | for moat of th ; lett thelr wives der conviction of and wey | At home, and ft may help. However, t @ revival of patriotic fervor that I'd! be pertectly fatr, they don't look aa if Uke to mark the paragraphs of the | they needed help tn this direction, hay story of the Governors with a selection! ing the air of sober settled family men th The artist who drew the this story says that means good husbands. 1 put 8 a good turn, vention with sin of popular airs, Just imag |for the most part. brass band, won't you, and at e\ Herbert &. Hadley, period hum a bar or so of thé “Star souri, brought his wife pangled Banner” or “Columbia, the|tion, His face shows : Gem of the Ocean” or “John Brown's | tine brain that car with Body.” jhim, and his wife's face show t he } And it's not the flaunting flags norjused his brain when he was a the many yards of bun which | Mrs. Ha I have never seen a more draped the new Monmouth Hotel, where |attractive and efficient couple than the the Governors were ass that|two make—Hadley dark, wit! gave one this influx of p: fervor. that clean cut, almost Indian profile of It was the Governors tiemselves—|the Western American, hia wife young, simp! unpretentious, pan] brown haired, beautiful—but strongly Americans. ta fore ace among beautiful as the Western women them all, Perhaps not all th: pt to be. There is nothing of th are very wise, but all have a comn vapid, simpering meretricious Broad marked quality of Kindliness, of way beauty about Mra, Hadley, Her mocra Not the spouting, unreal, hair, complexion and figure are as na- democracy of the rostrum, but the| ture made them, and nature did a very quiet, unconscious democracy of the good day's work, heart ‘Twenty-nine Leads of great ov, Hadley and Gov, Kitchen of States and not a “swelled head” among North Carolina divide honors as the them was my first impression of the Dest looking among the Governors assembled Governors, Somehow the tall dark North Carolina Executive looks lonesome, Perhaps he GOVERNORS SEEM TO RUN TO BROWN HEADS. They are dark heads for the most part, and {f you are a fond father or mother and are still undecided whether misses his side partner—the Governor of South Carolina—who sent word to the convention that he couldn't come be cause he had to attend # lodge 1 Men, neeting Hivothers’ safe Johnny shall be Governor when he |’. ; By Sept. 13 of this year the price of| grows up and Willie Pre: t, or the WASHINGTON'S GOVERNOR AP- » bonds had advanced more than 50{ciher way about, the Knowle that PLAUDS THE SUFFRAGE PLEA, at. and Mrs, Martinoll decided| post American Governors are browa-| Or perhaps Gov, Kitenen merely ind reap the profit, She asked | ay help you to a decision. seemed serious by contract with Woodvoek for the bonds, she says, and{ "phe Governors to the last man part| Marion K. Hay of Washington, who » told her they were still in the safe.| tneir hair on the side, On many heads,|sat next to him, Gov, Hay, fresl But inquiry at Brown Bros. brough: the! o¢ course, the part 18 a broad, bald|from the latest State where women wormation that the bonds were not! iighway, but at any rate it shows that | vote, was very loud in his applause eee eee eee Wocacatt {B2Ct eather Time took @ sharp turn to the| when Dr. Anna Shaw addressed the purcha’ K MAY") eft when he passed that way, The | Governors in behalf of woman euffras ical Governor is blue-eyed. He has) Also Gov. Hay, at least when compared ‘ge, badly shod feet and his clothes | with the other Governors, js #artorially pressing. Broadway would not| vociferous, He wore the only pair of per-|tan shoes in the convention, and when he changed from the gray frock coat of head, well developed | the morning to the black frock in which ja need look at him a second time unlei haps to call him a yap. He has a le ! he ate his luncheon, the tan shoes were {still in evidence, Gov. Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey |has the scholar's stoop and the candi- date's smile. If he is elected to the Presidency that smile will be a perpetual Joy to the cartoonists, It 1s as dis- tinctive as Roosevelt's and, when it seeks to be, as eagerly ingratiating. | Personally I think I'd be glad to see| Gov. Wilson get the Presidential Job. He seéms to want it so much and he's certainly fit for it. I saw Gov, Wilson for a moment only, but it seemed to me as ff he had shaken hands with halt the people in 1¢ hotel lobby in that molecile of time. Because of his prominence as a Presi- dential candidate Gov. Judson Harmon was very much observed. He is worth observing, anyhow. Everything about Ohio's Governor suggests a fighter—a general. He looks like Bismarck. He folds his arms over the breast of his| sack coat of army blue like Napoleon. His tremendous head droops forward, his heavy brows contract, suggesting | alry. sippl, all the Governors I heard betoag to the sledge-hammer school of oratory, ‘The Governors like Dr. Shaw, ‘They ighed at her jokes. They were par- ularly tickled by her inquiry: ‘What man ever stopped to think whether the vote might ct his at- tractiveness to the opposite sex? Dr. Shaw would have been the ideal Person to address the Governors If one might hope to talk to men, even Gov- Jernors, as dise 4 intelligences. But’ one and T couldn't help wishing that efforts had been sup- plemented by a youn pretty woman, say th holland, suffragist Regiment.” For th deferred to Dr. of the Daughter vernors obviously aw as to an elderly lady—a very brilliant elderly lady, but one to hear and applaud with fatal chiv- It was the biggest kind of per- onal triumph for Dr. Shaw, for the other suffragists had not made a pro- found impression. Why don't we all remember to press our gowns as well as our arguments? You never can tell which ts going to win. the famillar picture of the captive Napoleon on the deck of the British; frigate Bellerophon. Gov. Harmon! twirls his short gray military mustache lke a German officer. If the regiment of forty-eight States should choose him for its Commander-in-Chief there'd be MUSTACHES. Incidentally, while talking of mous- taches, I found out yesterday why men grow things on their faces. to give them something to occupy their hands. Every man in the convention who has a moustache strokes it or twirls it, and that fine old Virginia gen- tleman, Gov, Willlam Mann, who might have slipped from the pages of an ante- bellum novel by George W. Cable or Hopkinson Smith, is perpetually milk- ing a milk-white goatee. ‘The clean shaven men, who hve nothing on their faces to stroke or twirl, whittle while fome brother Governor addresses them. At least, they sharpen lead pencils, which Is the civilized equivalent for whittling. Gov. Lee Cruce of Oklahoma has a ministerial aspect. Perhaps it is the combination of a gentle manner and a white full dress tle. He has a very pretty Mttle daughter of sixteen—a real young girl-who sits opposite him at luncheon and solemnly watches him onsume large draughts of buttermiik— ut drink for Governors, th of Georgia ts blg, un incompromixing. His action in staying away from the suffrage ar. suments was characteristic. Iam sure © could never be convinced of the rea sonableness of anything which he found ersonaliy disagreeable. Gov. Walter Stubbs of Kansas was one of the few blond men in the con+ vention. His hair, on a woman, would © called reddish gold. On a man tt's andy red. If Goy, Stubbs should walk some real fighting—there is no doubt, about that. ‘| THIS EXPLAIN? WHY MEN GROW. Lucius Hopkins Smith, a dainty P It must be | ® —_ oe GETS 88 PROPOSALS IN FOUR MONTHS. But Dainty Parisian Widow of New | York Broker Won't Wed Again, She Says. ANGELES, — Sept. | Los 16,—Mr: san widow, twenty-seven years old, registered at a hotel here, came to this country four months ago to pay last tribute to her late husband. Since then she has received elghty- eight offers to wed. The proposals come from clerks, business men, farm hands and playwrights, and wer letter, by telephone, by telegram and in person. Mrs, Smith's husband, a wealthy cotton broker of New Ye months ago. She receives on of the estate and was appointed ad. ministratrix, Her adopted da Ruth Hopkins Smith, t# claimant to the other two-thirds, Her first offer was received from New York when a contest arose over the estate. Sidney A, Smith, her lared the sal and filed a claim brother-in-law, de of Ruth Smith against the estate. Mrs. Smith kept a propowa’ “Americans are the best husbands, she sald to-day, “but Iam not looking for a husba 1 do not vlan to re- marry.” record of hi —$—- |SERVANT GAVE EARNINGS FOR SALVATION ARMORY, Work was comp! terday on the $10,000 for the Montelalr branch of the Salvation Army. ‘The buildin which will be dedicated on Oct, 5, wa erected largely through the efforts of former housematd and a ini The hi and — the P Broadway half a dozen persons on every block would hall him with “Hello, Nat!" Among them three ladies who night claim to have been his wives till ey resigned or were retired. a startling replica of Nat Goodwin, Gov. McGovern of Wisconsin might tment store. His face Is eesentially that of a business man or uerchant, I wonder if Gov Virginia passes t ng back home. He of West Virginia fc eornest, Glasscock of West plate for the offer- may be an F. Ir all I know, but his lean face suggests that some overburdened little mother pinned ail her hopes on him and made many strug- | gles and sacrifi fore she saw her boy at the head of his Stat Oh, the lush ateness of the | votce of Gov. Noel of Mississipp!, who presided yesterday Kk an batter es and soft as ‘he maple syrup | which drowns them eye 1s 48 keen and swift as his volce ts indolent. Smiling, good natured, toler- lant, there 1s nothing of reformer about him, I think he rather laughs to himself at the earnestness of some of the younger men. Life 1s @ novel with But Gov. Noel's the a happy ending to him and he wouldn't | know a muck-rake from a golf stick GOOD NATURE SHOWN IN RE. CEPTION OF DR. ANNA SHAW, The whole gathering of Governors ex- aided good nature, and at no time was | {t more evident than on thelr reception of Dr, Anna Shaw, who talked to them about suffrage. Dr. Shaw ta @ splendid orator. Her sweet, varied, resonant voice was a lesson in assemblage—a needed lesson, for, the exception of Gov. Noel of M ) eution to the with For he's |° millionatr yesterday to his previous gift | Milas Anna Ho worked for eleven years in th y of J epherd until two years ago, When she gave up most of } nes to ald int nd then became an actly iaiva tion Army. She Hoston ald ing in the colle undy for the |work there. Welcoming TOKIO, Sept. 15 re turned hy yay yar around the world, He was we 4 enthusiastically beth In Yokohama and Toklo. The warrior declared himself tn excellent health and spirits. by | adoption | IS WIFE'S CHARGE —— Mrs. Middleton Declares She ; Was Denied Access to Man- sion on Liberation. Cancellation of Former Agree- ment Part of Claim by W in New Action. reing that her millionaire husband, | John A, Middleton, fest vice-president of the Lehigh Valley and director in many other ratiroads, is Hving In luxury at] the Waldo’ toria, while she and her| reed to ive In al small flat a 1) Kast six street, Mrs. Lilly Middl A sult for separation: in Court Mr three n are enth on to-day fled the Supreme Middleton la to with 1 the vent entered June, by! her und last hich her husband agreed y » a year for her support alleged that this agreement was procured from her by fraud. Mrs. Middleton alleged further that Middleton had her confined in an asylum for the ingane at Litchfield, Conn,, tn December, 1910, without just cause, and that it was only after thetr married daughter had threatened to expose Mid- dleton that she was set free. SAYS SHE WAS BARRED FROM LARCHMONT MANSION. When she returned to this city, after Mra. her Iberation from the asylum, Middleton declares her fused to permit her to return to their home in Larchmont, sald to be one of the handsomest residences in the fai lonable suburban colony. She also charged that Middleton took from her the two automobiles she owned, ax well as ratiroad passes on lines through- out the country. ‘The couple were married in January, 1896, and their children are Helen W., fourteen years old; Jean L., twelve, and John Lee, ten, The married daugh- ter, who helped to free Mrs, Middleton from the asylum, is by # former hus- band of the plaintiff. Mrs. Middleton bases her suit for separation on crue! and inhuman treat- ment. She declares that for months prior to the separation Middleton would not #peak to her. The ratlroad passes she sald he took from her were given to her by offictals of roads other than those in which her husband was Inter- ested. Back of the whole affair, according to Mrs, Middleton, were the almost con- stant interferences of her husband's family, She said he broke up his home everal times while they were living together and sold all the contents, Mrs, Middleton declared her husband has an income of more than $75,000 a year, but that he had refused to con- tribute a cent toward her support sine last June. The flat where she now live with her young children, she added, consists of but two rooms, When she and her husband lived together at ho A eX~ |Larchmont, she said, were upw. penditures month, She set forth that Mid 1s tdenti- nan offetal cap, with at t twenty rallroads, trust compantes other concerns. Middleton has not filed an answer to his wife's charges. Mrs. Middleton wants the court to |srant her tempo alimony, p: ML of her sult, alleging the Ix at present without means | In ort of her sult to | separation agreement she er hugoand, Mrs. Middleton decla | she was Ml at the thme sh hecause of her hushand's mistreatment | ot said she was led to be 1 not sign tt she would of the custody of her chil- are _ Turned on Gast Mra, Jennie M SUMMER COMPLAINTS Dysentery, Diarrhoea, | Cholera Morbus Radway's Bea TADWAY Stern Brothers Have in Prepara a Very Imp French La | in new and ¢ | At Extraordinarily Low Prices | THIRD FLOOR West 23d and 22d Streets r Monday Sale of tion f rtant ce Curtains fesirable style | MAIN BUILDING SUICIDE STAIN. -_ Theory Now That Woman Killed Self and Others Made Sacrifice fo Save Her Name. Sept. 16—That rohant mot death at Je, and that Brother B. B. Sister zabeth Sears, fel- Shaker sect, to confess to chlor. than permit her religion of the in the planned Shakers to sain her memory was the report which galvol credence here to= day The Shaker ret ion condemns the ace. Heartbroken — ov 1 dearly beloved © fr that the two le Ives to take the blame for her é¢ ) that ber friends » sect ¥ ntinue to revere her nory Brother ind Sister, who say they 1 the pas the spirit" from net of thelr Sister in the falth administering chlorform to end her sufferings fr tuberculosia, stood steadfastly by thelr story to-day. With- In a few weeks the murder charge against them will be taken up by the Grand Jury. However it Kenerally believed to-day that no jury made up of citizens of this section would hold them on the murder charge. Respected by thelr nelhbors and strong tn thetr alm- ple faite, tho community ts with thera to a man. was here ——<—————— MILLIONAIRE A SUICIDE DRESSED FOR HIS DEATH, Martin Costello, Arizona Mine Mag- nate, Donned Evening Clothes and Shot Himself. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16—Martin Cos- tello, sixty-five years old, of Tombstone, Ariz., prominent for more than a quar- ter of a century in the development of mines in the Southwest and reputed to be a multi-millionaire, committed sul- cide here last night. Costello dressed himself in faultless evening attire, left his family at home and rented a room in @ lodging-house, He folded his coat for a pillow and, lying down on the floor, sent @ bullet through his heart, dying almost tn- stantly. Despondency is believed to fe been the caus pains Ee Ee WHAT A CHANCE FOR PIES! (Special to The Evening World.) ROSELLE PARK, N. J., Sept. 16— Hart 8. Van Fleet of Westfield avenue is the proud possessor of a pumpkin which welghs at the present time 250 pounds, and is still growing. As soon as the first frost strikes the pumpkin {t will be plucked and placed on exhi- bition In a store window and al fairs throughout the State during tha fall. ‘A big time will be had at the cutting of the pumpkin, as It will furnish piv to all Mr. Van Fleet's neighbors. Mr, Van Fleet has had several good offers for the pumpkin, but refuses to sell it. LEAN your teeth and rinse your mouth with Odol in the morning and before retiring—then your breath will be always delightfully fresh and your mouth free from dan- gerous impurities, Depactment Stores. All Druggists and Belore Selecting Your Apartment CONSULT THE “Apartment to Let” THE WORLD IT WILL SAVE You Time, Energy and Money The World’s “Apartment to Let’ Advertisements offer you the greatest variety of selection. the - nee eg

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