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‘THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, CZAR’ OFFICIALS INTHE PLOT T0 KLLSTOLYPIN Many Men High in Govern- t ment Implicated in Big Murder Conspiracy. SECRET INQUIRY MADE. ‘Potice Plans to Guard Russian { Emperor and Premier Not f as Rigid as Planned. @T. PETERSBURG, Sept. %1.—The tn- @tiry into the assassination of Premier * Beotypin at Kiev, with particular refer- | @mce to the revolutionary and police ele- ments involved, is being conducted per- | @enally by the Minister of Justice, M. Obtchesiovitoff. Already there are indi- ations of many ramifications, and com- icity on the part of prominent officials, Greater sonsations than those so far { Dublished are promised. Vice-Director ‘f the Department of Police Verigin ta @ater strong suspicion by the authort- , ties, who hold that he is in @ measure responsible for the outrage The protection of the Emperor and Wmprees and the Cabinet Ministers at Kiev formed the subject of departmental Gisoord. Governor-General Trepoft de- } manded general oversight of the protec- , ive measures, but was overridden by the Director of the Department of Police | Murloff. Trepott then tendered his resignation, which was not accepted. Kurloft, Verigin, Lieut.-Col. Spirido- | vitoh, of the Secret Service Police, and Col. Kultabkok, Chief of the Secret Po- Hice, organized the protection, which ; @omt_ $100,000, ‘While Verigin and Kurloff were at , Kiev on the eve of the Emperor's visit, ! Dmitry Begroff was consulted and given the responsible position of guarg- ing the Premier, as he promised to wack wpupposititious terrorists, Nina Afexzandrovna and Nicholas Jacovil- vich. It is incomprehensible to those ed in the inquiry how a subor- te, ae Verigin was, dared to diare- gard Btolypin'’s circular regarding Fevolutionary epies, and allow Bogroff, @ spy and an informer, to guard the Premier, without even eetting other @gents to watch him. Verigin was Kurloff's right hand man nd maintained close relations with Kurloff's family. Kurloff, against Stol- ypin’s most determined opposition, mar- ried the divorced wife of a young ad- jutant. Stolypin made the matter one Of personal confidence to the Emperor, but Kurloff’s influential supporters at court overruled the Premier, ‘The Novoe Vremya says that only a fraction of Minister Chtchagto- | vitoft's findings can ever be published. Patriotic reasons forbid the full ex- peas of the scandalous criminal tn. in high governmental circles leasing to Stolypin's sacrifice, ps ilale Tih asthe tay WHO IS THE BOSS MURPHY OF THE SUFFRAGETTES, HAH? Mrs. Gus Ruhlin Wants to Know Where She Is at in the Movement. Mrs. Gus Ruhlin believes that the suf- fragettes, of whom she 1s a vociferous member, have fallen under the domina- ¢ion of a boss. So she takes her pen in thand.and writes as follows: To the Editor of The Evfning Worlds What I should lle to now te—ts who is the Charley Murphy of the ‘Women suffrage party? And may I ese if the “incident of Mrs. Ruhiin closed,” who closed it without Gesites Mrs. Ruhlli the Senators from the and the “Thirty-ninth?”" ‘Who !# posing as the Grady and @e Hinman? Who am I supposed to be—Bayne, rGimfin, Newcomb or Sul- Mvan? The latter, I presume. A few women connected (at the ) of the party get together and de 0-and-#o shall be done. Then ‘they call the flook from the fleld and the command. If one should bey or assert her individual hte a8 a person who desires the vote, she is ignored by the unseen influence of a few rich women who Dave actually decided to wear a $15 het instead of @ $25 hat—while for the good of the cause working- women can't afford to pay more than five or seven for one they consider Deautiful; one for which they have worked sev Personally, I would be “Big Tim'—but {f there ts Bo Charles Murphy in W. 8. P. Suf- frage Party, who closed the Ruhlin @ater without that peraon’s con- @ent? Sincerely, SARAH RUHLIN, ‘Will somebody please siep up and an- @wer this portentous query? WOMAN HE SAW IN YARD WAS CLARK’S DEAD WIFE. She Had Fallen Two Stories in the Night While Getting a Drink, When John Clark, of No, 616 Third Avenue, Brooklyn, awoke at 8 o'clock this morning he found that his wite Helen was missing from the bed. He arose and rush n vindow 4 airs Mark sunimoned of the Fifth avenue two etories below. and found her ¢ Policeman Rogers, station, who in turn called Dr, Hall of the Seney Hosp! who sald death had been tnstantaneaus. The Clarks had a party In the home Jast night and retired at 1 ofclock, It Clark arose dure Ink at e which window , drugged with sleep, and fell to her death: gupposed that Mrs. <> -—- iors Fight Duel, Sept Arturo de Car ate of Havana of HAVANA, ricarte, editor of El De! a, Rl and Ramon 3. Varon Commercio of Clent fought @ duel with rate Varona was wounded in the ara, but not sevlously (Phe duel Was the result of a newspaper | contyover: the | | points out the danger SEPTEMBER 21, 1911. “Two Men in in a Woman’s Life: One She Loves and One She Weds” ‘THE KIND OF A MAN ‘ A WOMAN LOVES And the Two Men Are Often Vastly Dissimilar, in the Opinion ot Juliet Virginia Strauss. Her Advice Is for a Woman to “Harmonize Hersel) With Her Surroundings” and Stop Fretting. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. Aro there two men in a wom- en's life—the manu she loves end the man she marries? This ts the ques- tion Jultet Virginia Strauss asks and answers in the cur- rent number, of The Ladies’ Home Journal. To me the tn- uiry ecems conservative. In a wom- an’s life is one man, no man or many men. The woman who loves but one man other than her husband cares for him enough eventually either to over- come or disregard the laws which sep- ate them, or she cares for him 80 Uttle that, sooner or luter, he becomes but one of the many actors who, from season to season, fill the role of love in the puerlle, parlor drama of her life. Find the woman who says there have been but two men in her life—her hus- band and the man she loves—and you will have found the woman who h loved no man—enough. However, Mrs, Strauss alms not to philosophize, but to prescribe and to in- struct. “To some women the men they love and the men they marry no more alike than the lives they live and the lives they dream, Mrs. Strauss de- clares. ‘There is here a strong com- mentary upon the evil of d which is certainly one of the gr takes of womankind, We have no right to dream. Life 1s before us, full of beauty, full of suffering, full of Joy, full of sorrow. If we are nat big enough to cope with it we should not lay the blame on the other fellow. True, the other fellow may be in a sense ‘to blame,’ but the deflection of a fellow mortal, even though that fellow mortal rest and dearest, !s never @ for our failing, too." DREAM SHOULD NOT BE A NIGHTMARE. Yet has not Mrs. Strauss too nearly made a nightmare of her woman's dreams? To be sure, brokers may not dream while they sell thetr bonds, nor butchers dream while they saw their beef, but where may a@ man and a woman meet if {t be not in thelr won- to derful dream? To be tall enough keep one's feet on the ground w one’s head is in the clouds—there ts the perfect happiness. But in another paragraph Mre, Strauss of the sordid dream which makes a woman cast cov- etous eyes at the man who might have made the dream como true. “The great falling of women in the common walks of life ts their dissatis- faction with the things they have," she explains, “A woman has a longing and desire for finery, and she frets be the man she h arried cannot it to her, Then begins a general faction all along the line, and final she comes to regard herself as a fine creature, fall of tastes, yet wedded to an inferior who can never satisfy those tastes. A majority of the women you meet in poor or common cause give dissat homes will tell you, if they grow confi- dential, that they have ’ for ‘better things,’ but ‘he’ has nev buen able or else never willing to pro- vide them, This, I insist, ts a very attitude on our part, and one that by means of proper education we might come out of GOOD TASTE MAKES BEAUTIFUL WHAT WE HAVE. the first place, It 18 not good taste that makes us long for things; tt te bad taste, Good taste fs the quality that enables us to make beautiful and armontous the things we have, It Is probably envy, greed for luxury, {dle covetousness of what Is our neighbor's thac lead us to the discouraging con- clusion that in other circumstances we might have shone, There ls never any-. unjust “In RECOMMENDED Con rot THO ye Don'r GET “THE ONES THEY Love? thing but personal lack of fineness to keep you from being fine.’ Which is very true, indeed» but may be carried too far, as, for example, when Mra. Strauss declares “If a wo is going to live with a man at all she might as well be the wife of whatever he is.” That does not follow at all, because in many instances it would be far better were the woman to make the man the husband of what she is, But that, of course, resolves | \taelf into a struggle for the survival of | the fittest. ut _ many women," concludes Mrs. Strauss sadly, “hold themselves in an attitude of fine ladyhood, and regard the laboring person whom they are tached to as an inferior, lamenting fact that they might have done betier. “You can never do better than Just harmonise with your sur- semnenee ‘There are always soap water to keep clean with, a And you are called to the place you are in, not to the place you wish you were in. You are called to be the wife of the man you married; not the wife of the man wish you had married, Iife your husband for you. Moth- ‘will—measure out our allot- Fate cannot compel us to call the verdict she made for us @ doom. We can defeat her by our Own persons! attitude. Especially are the girl children of America fm need of plainer notions about the men they love and the they marry. So, quite obviourly, Jullet Virginia Strauss does not believe in her Ber- rd Shaw, and marriage, in her ey 8 an institution rather less interest! and somewhat more hazardous than a Christmas stocking. a PUBLIC CUP’S END NEAR. Police Will Enforce Prohibitory Law After Oct. 1, Phe police are going to see to tt that the New York public doesn't use any public drinking cups after Oct. 1. In a note to the members of the department to-day, Commissioner Waldo calls at- tention to the provisions of Section 189 of the Sanitary Gode, which says The use of & common drinking cup or receptacle for drinking water in any public place, or In any public institution, hotel, theatre, factory, public hall, public senool, or in any railway station or ferry house in the clty of New York, or the furnishing of such common drinking cup or | receptacle for use !s prohibited, The members of the police force are instructed to see that the law ts strictly enforced. — | CLERMONT’S CLOSE CALL. Dlaxe on Hudson Day Line Pier Al- mont Causes Her Destruction. (Special to The Evening World.) POUGHKEEPSIN, Sept. 21.—Fire swept @ part of the river front thts! morning, destroying the Hudson River Day Line plier, waiting room and coal pockets and the extensive coal storage sheds of Warren Foster | The replica of the Clermont, which was featured in the Hudson-Fulton celebration, was anchored off the pier. | The flames swept out and enveloped | her, The woodwork around the mast | nd stern Was burning when two fire- men rowed aboard and cast off her | hawsers. The tug Annie towed her into the out stream and the fire was put a Mortally in Bonfire, While p ing about a bonfire op- posite his home at No, 317 Bast One | Hundred and M¥ftt street to-day thre ‘ear-old Adam Kloss was mor- tally bu d. His Uttle sister was watching him from the window and rushed out, followed by her mother,» A policeman got the boy out of fire, but not before he thad Inhaled, flame. He was taken to Lebanon Hos- pital | WOMAN WITNESS young woman to tetity. servers were unable to reach her. knew she was at her home, THE KIND SHE MARRIES IN UNION BANK CASE DISAPPEARS Escapes in an Auto While De- tective Is on Watch Across Street. The committee of depositors of the efunct Union Bank of Brooklyn were informed Loutse D. Burkhardt, an {mportant wit- ness in the investigation now in prog- ress, has disappeared. last night in an automobile under the eyes of a detective who was watching her house at No. 173 Decatur atreet. to-day by detectives that Bhe got away Mi Burkhardt was David Sullivan's private secretary in the days when Sul- livan Traders’ Bank. All through the invest!- gation which has disclosed such ami banking methods the name of Mins Burkhardt has frequently been used by running the Mechanics & ing vane @ chance for honest work | Witnesses. She was Sullivan's cont-| 14 _ watch was put on the house for straightforward living in | ‘ential clerk and figured in many trans-| gay and night. The detectives had or- sphere to which you are called, | actions the investigators are anxious to rve the subpoena the moment be enlightened about. At the beginning of the investigation Miss Burkhardt promised to be pres- ent changed her mind. Polite r Deputy Banking Superinte: that she attend and testify were tg- nored. at all hearings, Later on she ests from lent Dodge ‘A subpoena was issued to compel the But process- They however, RCH MAN KILLED AS AUTO IS IT IN RAGE ON PARKWAY Police Close on Trail of Ma- chine That Sped Away as Milk Dealer Died. TWO COMPANIONS HURT Three Women in Party Return- ing From Coney When Fatal Collision Occurs on Parkway. | Brooklyn police are close on the tral! of the party tn the big black Packard touring car that ran into the machine of Willet M. Evans, a weal hy milk eater on Ocean Parkway, late lest night, killing him and injuring two of his compantons. They hope to aolre the mystéry withim a few hours. Sev- eral eyewitnesses to the accident have come forward and offered information that the police believe will lead to ehe arrest of those responsible for the ao- cident. Mr. Evans, who was sixty years old, his son, Wille: C., thirty-seven years old, and H. B. McDougall of Beerston, N. Y., and Frank Gedney of No. a Madjson street, Brooklyn, were retur ing from Evans's milk depot at West Fifth street, Coney Island, along the Parkway. They were ciusely fuiivwed by a large black Packard car, Accord+ Ing to eyewitnesses, there was evidently a spirit of rivairy between the two, for at the Willink entrance to Prospect Park the Packard took on an extra spurt in an effort to pass the Evans machine and in doing so caught the rear right wheel of the latter machine and the force threw the Evans car inst @ tree. Tho impact caused the car to rebound against an iron trolley pole, and the machine urned turtle, instantly killing Evans and throwing his son Willet a distance of fifteen feet. The other two members of the party were injured. McDougall had scalp wounds and a broken leg, and Gedney had many cuts and bruises. They were taken to the Kings’ County Hospital. According to witne continued on its Brewery, on Washington avenue, stopped and the majority of the mem- vérs of the party, which consisted of four men and three women, got out and went into the brewery. The car then continued on its way. At 3 o'clock this morning the police were informed ti 1 Packard car with smashed right front Itight wi it the corner of Flatbush avenue and Union street, Tho police were further told that @ man was sitting on the running board of the machine, A bicycle police at once sent out to Flatbush avenue and Union street, but when he arrived the machine of mystery had vantahed. = woman should appear. tve was on guard last night A across the street from the house. Short- ly after 11 o'clock a big blue limousine car drew up at the curb in front of Miss Burkhardt’s home. The young woman, carrying a satchel, rushed down: the steps and leaped into the automobile, assisted by a man who was in the car, Hiefore the astonished detective could sross the street the automobile was peeding away. He did not even get the number. ve She is pretty, not W hy ? old, has a fine figure, is interesting and dances beauti- sully. But she looks old, Her hair is gray. Fave you gray hair? Do you realize its effect on your appear- ance? Remember you sould look at least as young as you feel. Macdonald’s Gray Hair Restorer Your ut STeaeis| can get it, Take nothing else. These stores al Andrew Alexander | October Brides can choose slippers and shoe outfits here with leas stock, style and material, taking ting. The new slipper trimmings are particularly beautiful. | SIXTH AVENUE AT _NINETEENTH S' STREET. |] TWO UNDER CARS IN THE SUBWAY; ONE IS UNKURT Sailor Killed, but Woman Es- capes Alive After Eight Trains Pass Over Her. eFenahs MIGNONETTE GRAND In Fancy $700 Mahogany, B. Anderson, a satlor of the schooner Daisy Reed, whtch ts moored near the Battery, was killed to-day in the subs way at Bowling Green, Anderson, with two companions, came down Into the subway and walted for an uptown ex- press train. As the red iehts of a Brondway ex- | Press loomed at the lower end of the platform, Anderson lurched off tn the direction of a walting room. Te lost his balance and fell in (he path of the train, His body was taken from under the | third car badly mangled, His death completely sobered his companions. “More fortunate was a well dressed and intoxicated woman who wandered off the uptown platform at Ninety-sixth street. Although four local trains and four ex- | press trains passed over ner, she received | injuries only upon one leg and is ex-| pected to recover at the J. Hood Wright Hospital, where her identity has not been made known. A passenger noticed the woman upon | the south end of the platform, A few | minuten later two special officers found & woman's hat and pocketbook lying on the platform, but they did ‘not know sho whe lying unconscious between the express and local tracks. This discov: | ery was made by a #gnalman ‘Traffic was held up below Ninety-sixth street, and two Interborough employees | carried the woman back to the platform. She weighs about 14 pounds and ts 6) feet 5 inches tall, Her escape from the fate of the sailor 1s considered by the subway officials as miraculous. ceeded in producing the highest degree where an abundance of Wm. KNABE Established 1837, Moving Day Will soon be here. Before ycu rent the new home, let us show you how to save the rent of one Toom, or to add a room without increasing your rent. BY MKS, MAE MARTYN, short, thin hair there omoate a healthy, vi Ta hing better to wih than a go Irs. tonttant i alld wy Bae fromm any drag #101 akties halt cup seat Pint aleote Tair sod de id Geaucthally Yustsous ‘id tonte te @ positive remedy for ‘ining hair, Miss Ro: You will find the following lotidn general Vetm it moth am od Id’ water, THE OWEN DAVEN-O Will do it for you. All the comfort of a full-sized bed with separate springs and good mattress at night com- bined with all the uses of a beautiful Davenport by day. $28 and up 100 Different Styles. Made and Sold Only by D. T. 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