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| | ‘) »s “THATS THE MAN,” | Would Tax Bachelor tor Being Single, but the Old Maid Should BeExempt SAY 3 GIRLS ON SEEING RIGHESON Mysterious Witnesses Said to Have Seen Him With Avis Linnell Day She Died. - GUARDED BY POLICE. Grand Jury Expected to Find Blanket Indictment Against Pastor To-Day. BOSTON, Oct. 80.—The Grand Jvry was expected to find an indictment to- day against the Rev. Clarence V. T. Rieheson on a charge of murdering Avis Linnell, the Hyannis cholr singer, Who died from cyanide of potassium | atthe ¥. W. C. A. Oct. 14, but owing to reports of new evidence it is pos-| sible it may not act until Wednes- day or Thursday. Consideravle importance 1s attached to the visit of three young women to the Charles street jail yesterday in| company with « police inspector. | ‘They were asked if “that is the man I was admitted today py Chief I pector Dugan that the girls are three waltresses from a restaurant in which TWecheson and Avis Linne!l are thought to have dined on the fatal Saturday afternoon. It is said the gins recog- nized Richeson as having dined at the “cafe Saturday, Was apparent early in the day that | the Grand Jury's consideration was to he devoted almost entirely to the test!- mony of witnesses who either reside or do business in the vicinity of Immanuel Baptist Church, Cambridge, or near the home of Mr. and Mrs. ¥. H. Carter, with whom Mr. Richeson boarded. Among the witnesses who appeared tn the anteroom of the Grand Jury room this forenoon were William H. Green- wood, a close friend of the Carters Everett Page, a seventeen-year-old boy, who is said to have seen the accused clergyman on a street in Cambridge on the morning of Friday, Oct. 13, the day preceding Miss Linnell's death. It is Ikely Mrs. Linnell may be called again. She visited her daughter three days before the latter’s death, and the | miniater met her at the station, she ad mitted yesterday for the first time, ieading her to believe the meeting was fccidental. The police suspect he had learned from Avis of her mother's visit and met Mrs. Linnell for some apecial purpose. The police are anxious to find oe the exact conversation that took . Pont report to-day fs that the Grand Jury hes already had an indictment drawn, but has not voted on it. It is be- Meved the case will establish a prece- dent in this part of the country. The + indictment probably wil be what law yers call a “blanket” bill. MUST COVER ALL POSSIBLE MEANS OF CRIME. There is no paraiiel case in the his- tory of the State. While there have been cases of murder by poison, there is no case in which the circumstances are aimilar to those in this tragedy. To Assistant District-Attorney Dwyer has been assigned the task of drawing any pleading that may be ordered. The absence of evidence showing how the deadly poison was received by the girl Puzzles the prosecution to decide how to draw a@ pleading that will hold. In view of this, the pleader must set forth counts based on every conceivable man- ner in which the cyanide of potassium could have got into the girl's possession | through the instrumentality of the man ~ be charged with her death. count may charge that Richeson a the polson to the girl, one that he mt it by mail, another that he de- Uvered it by messenger, and so on, In the Rev. Mr. Richeson's church, the Immanuel Baptist, in Cambridge, | eervices were conducted yesterday by | Prof. John En » one of the ac- cused clergyman's former teachers at! Newton Theological Seminary. Neither in prayer, hymns nor sermon was there | any allusion to the situation of the Destor. pe eS THREE BUTCHERS FINED. Charged With Ustag Sulphurous Act@ an a Preservative—Eigh- No, 6 Third avenue, Samuel Steffans ‘of 78 Catherine street and Frank Pravato of No, 8 Catherine street, were fined $25 cach in the Court of Special Sessions to-day for using sulphurous acid as a preservative on meat. All three pleaded guilty. Board of Health inspectors charged | eighteen druggists with selling citrate | of magnesia below the standard, In some instances the drug, upon analysis, found to contain tartaric acid in- of citric acta, None of the stead druggists was prepared for trial and| upon the request of Assistant Corpora- tion Counsel Stieffel Justice Steinert fixed Noy, % as trial day for each, Ee, FATHER VAUGHAN’S LECTURE Will Speak at the Catholic Club on Nov, ® ‘The Rey. Father Vaughan, the cele- brated it preacher of London, ts to lecture ‘Thursday evening, Nov. 9% at the Catholle Club, No, 10 Central Park South. rresident Mulqueen will introduce her Vaughan, the subject of whose # later to be announced. on to members and guests will CURB A COLD ose hy “By the Time a Man in the Big Cities Has Enough Money to Marry His Ideal Is the Widow of a Millionaire’’—Ger- man State ‘Bachelor Income Tax’? on Un- married of Both Sex BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. At last a tax state, lating a tax upon NIXOITA. GRELLEY* SMITH annual increment. faster than light. of a bachelor tax may come up at Al thiak about it? ow I think, not that you care, that bachelorhood !s penance, that cause one doesn't approve of the rules one ‘s very foolish not to play the game. Because, after all, the harder the rules, the greater the victory. And there have to be rules and if there's to be any game. want a clergyman for an may prefer a justice of the umpire. peace. fairly and squagely. THE UNMARRIED ARE THE] REAL “DEADHEADS” OF LIFE. Bachelors don't do that. They merely buy a grand stand ticket and root for the victor. The question is, should they pay for the ticket or be let in on @ pass. ‘To me bachelors and old maids are the deadheads of life, the free passes with which Fate “papers” the theatre of the universe in or Ger to have « full house. But perhaps the view is eccentric. Miss Mary Nash, who plays the tele- phone girl in “The Woman" at the Republic Theatre, thinks !t 1s she a erday, that 1s, should wouldn't t be the very taxed, but | height of Injustice to make a woman pay for what may not, after all, be her fault? Néw I'm playing a bachelor girl, ora phone girl, and for weeks before I took this part I made @ point | of meeting and studying all the un- married professional ‘And the conclusion I've reached is: “Theye are so many thousand stenogtiphers. bookkeepers, cash- fers, saleswomen, &0,, because girls are looking for THE man nowadays instead of A man, The bachelor, on the contrary, is per- fectly contented with A woman— any woman—so long as she pro- tects him from THE woman. The jo bachelor exists because ‘8 particular, the male bachelor cause he’s WOT particular, “In other words, love must realize it is merely an anaesthetic for modern man. Woman loves that she may remember; man that he may, forget.” OLD BACHELORS MUST BLAME ONLY THEMSELVES. “But do you think the state can af- ford to delve into psychological mo- tives?” Ked. the only excuse state has for tn- terfering in the personal relations of men and women {sy what we might call the third dimension of matrimony—tne who without laws to pros might become a general “Of course, you know, th | childre tect the charge, N are equally guilty default to tie ra "Ot course they “put are, old bachelors Whe: can help ts undoubtedly from that he can al nan to Marry hit, in a to where there are bac } clubs with chefs a valet serv ding out their him on every block dition It's ve this ec choive, |ways find some ' should marry ork | Bat wh wn |like New Y apartinents arma to bedi es A at eat, “By the time o man has money accomplished fact! the luxurious irresponsibility of the human free lance should be paid for by an annual impost fixed by the But it remained for the Diet of Reuss, the par- Mament of a small state of the German Empire, to reduce this intellectual conviction to a reality by legis- Hereafter, within the confines of that principality, single men and women of more than thirty years of age must pay a tax of 5 per cent. on incomes ranging from $750 to $1,500. Bachelors of either sex enjoying larger incomes must surrender 10 per cent. of their Now, of course, Reuss is a long way from us; but thought travels even So, any day, when the Legislature wants to sidestep the question of factory fires or table the Woman Suffrage bill, the question Is marriage a luxury or a duty ‘lege or a penance? It all depends upon what you think about that. an umpire, | some sweet young womai You may|ticated, so I]/take him if he asks her. But| doesn't ask her, when by not asking the main thing ts to play the game! her he deliberately refuses to found a women I could. | the ideals of the modern woman, but | the | bachelors and old maids | nf ehildleasneds, of a | $y Miss Nash con- | A man's unmarried, on bachelors, male and female, is an ! For years theorists have held that the unmarried. Ibany. And, meantime, what do you Is bachelorhood a privi- emough to marry he hasn't dis- crimination enough to make « choice, All women look alike to him, more’s the pity. By that time his ideal woman is any Widow of a millionaire, “But he can choose. There's always iM, #0 unsophis- life that she'll When he eager for family, he should be cowardice. MUST GIVE HER THE “BENEFIT OF THE DOUBT.” “But whatever one may urge about it theoretically, we know a woman can't ask a man to marry her. Of course, she may do everything but that, gen- erally does if sufficiently love, but {t would certainly be most unfair to tax a single woman 10 per cent. of her income for not marrying when per- haps she's never had the chance to marry. “A bachelor is always such vol- Untarily. An old maid may be such voluntarily, one can't convict her of it. She would be entitled to the benefit of the doubt when it came to swearing off her bachelor tax. “Besides,” taxed for his Miss {s—the tax of loneliness, the tax of self- ishness—in short, the inescapable tax of sl : BANKER VAN HORN | ANSWERS WIFE'S | SUIT FOR $100,000 | Frank M, Van Horn, banker, filed an answer in the Supreme Court to-day to the writ brought by his wife, Mrs, Bu- ‘dora 8. Van Horn, for $100,000 for his | lewed fatlure to keep his gromise under separation agreement Mrs, Van Horn alleged she had start- i His Condition Is Volun-| tary, and He Deserves No Mercy, Says Mary Nash, but She May.Not Be to Blame for Hers, and Must Be Given the Benefit of the Doubt. D, MONDAY, OCTOBER ‘30 SONOFANARTIST (MORGAN CALLED — TWOKILLED BY GAS | ALITTLE HERO AT FIRE IN HIS HOME Saved, but He Loses Many Valuable Paintings. A few scraps of acorced and tat- tered canvas amid a pile of charred debris represents the life's work of Carl Strahlendorff, a landscape artist of Demarest, N. J., four miles north ‘of Englewood, Paintings that repre. sented the artistic career the painter were destroyed in a fire which nearly cost | the life of the artist and his family | early yesterday. As the flames rolled through Strah- lendorff's studio the artist fought with the friends who had eelzed him when he started to dash into the burning house, hoping to be able to rescue some of his treasured paintings. Then, realizing thes futility of the attempt, he broke down and wept as he watched best the fire. But for the herofsm of Strahlen- dorff's twelve-year-old son Arthur the J entire family would have lost their | Mves. Arthur was the first to be awak- jened by the fire. It started near the studio, which occupted one side of the large home Mr. Strahlendorff recently bullt. Without waiting to dress he ran through the house and awoke his father and mother. Then, in night clothing and barefooted, he dashed into the street. Down the main street of the sleeping village he ran, calling the alarm of fire at the top of hin abrill little voice, He reached the fire gong in the street Carl Strahlendorff's Family Is, efforts of the entire| in honor of the visit of Mrs, Motile Cot estivitles “Tasted 1 ot to-day to até r her parents David andy: meal ready @h@.. to call the family. no response to her higeet * (her grand She was mst by 8 Pale s ran into the room TO TELLOF FLYER AFTER CELEBRATING : INMILLINERY LINE DAUGHTER'S VISIT —— | pened the windows, They ivan Process Server Hunts for Fi- ‘Witamsburg Real Estate Man | screw, and apparentiy im torning o@tp , . the light, the nh » were: had bi nancier, but Subpoena Is and Wife Found Dead {turned ait ‘the way. around, allowing the gas to escape with full force. be Dr. Eckert, from Willlamsburg Hos” J to the police call end had been dead several” by Grandchild. Made Out for “James P.” | pital, wald the couple hours. respond Max Danziger, A process server was gent to-day WIth a weil to do re bpoena commanding J. P. Morgan tn Bankruptey forty-four years old, estate man, and bis wife Yetta, forty-th ars old, found dead In their home, No. 2 a To bs to appear before Reteres Peter B, Olney at No. 69 William street Third street, Willa : and tell what he knows apout the bust’ They had been asphyst ed an Tappe, a Fifth avenue covery was made by Annie Coben, a , arp “Progrede has gone into bankruptey, granddaughter, who to thé ; Hing In che campaign o@ The subpoena is made out for James P. Morgan, but Joseph Lichtenberg, attor- | ney for the receiver, sald the financier is the man the process server ie after. “T endeavored to have Morgan appear voluntarily in the proceeding: Mr. Litchenberg, “but not being tile to get into communication with him, 1 decided the only safe course to insur his appearance before the referee se to get the subpoena.” The papers set forth that Tappe has! given contradictory testimony. It 1s eed he had testified that when he n to « The Danzigers gave a reception tart He Pk 5 ee ee |) First Reduction Sale’ $25 Distinctive Costumes ): | started business, hie wife, Helen Jat- Now fray—from whom he ts divorced—and Plerpont Morgan had each given Reduced e To-Morrow him Tater he said it was a loan and as neither appears as a creditor it ssumed by the attorney they had an to Tuesday st in tho business. A subpoena NEWS for economical women desiring to obtain a typical $25 suit has sito) ol bor ou for the appear. at $16.66, All new, all interesting, made in many charmin ance of jen Jaffra: ways and bearing an assurance of tailored care and thoroughness that mean your immediate and long continued pleasure. Models After Foreign Makers—Tasseied Collars— Mammoth Revers—imported Materials “1 many of the leading | oclal and theatrical world | were In debt to him, “Did you ever ask them to pay you?” he was asked. “Oh, no," he answered, “they had probably forgotten about thelr bills and jington avenup, jdrawn to try his friend, Max Aronson, | STRUCK LANDLADY AND IS PARBOILED WITH HOT WATER Repulsed parerd Asks Police Only to “Get Me a Doctor.” A big, fatr-haired nian walked into the Fifth street station to-day and pointed to his face, which looked as if it had been parbolled. “I am John Johnson,” he said, I le at No. 868 Union avenue, Bronx. A lady threw a pan of water on me. She {s Mrs, Beres and lives at No. 613 East Fourteenth stre That is all I say. Get me a doctor. An ambulance surgeon came and ban- aged Johnson's burned face, Not an- other word could be got from the man, and as he refused to make any com- plaint the police let nm go home with- out investigating his story. An Evening World reporter found Mrs. Mary Beres on the third floor of No, 613 East Fourteenth street, plac- idly going ahead with her wash. “Yes,” I did it,” she said, “and why not. He is @ Hungarian and I am a Hungarian. He can't get work and I find him @ job. He boards with me and won't pay me, When he owes me $17 and don't pay I tell him to get out. He wants his clothes. 1 tell him to pay and then he gets them. He won't pay. Saturday ho says he will kill himself and sharpens a knife. I get a policeman and a doctor, but he 1s afraid to cut himself with the knife, Then he goes away. “This morning he comes back and tells me he must have his clothes, He | takes up my clothes stick and smashes | at me. What can I do but throw hot | water at him. Then he goes away | Jquick. If he comes again without {money I will have more water for him, That {s all.” Q | THIRTY DAYS FOR CONTEMPT. Eéward ©. Shi “and © Tried to Infla- ence Talesmen. Edward C. Shapiro of No. 1187 Wash- Bronx Borough, was committed to Ladlow Street Jail for thirty days by Judge Swann in General Sessions to-day for contempt of court. Shaptro's offense consisted in talking ito talesmen while a jury was being a chauffeur, on a charge of assault. | Three talesmen informed the Court that | Shapiro had asked them to be lentent in case they were drawn on the fury ed sult for a separation, and her hus- b admited the charges she made substantially true, and that his mental and physical powers had become ‘so weakened that he had last contro! of himself, He told 1 his business would tinued the suit, an articles of separa ne con- to sign nguned he it, Mrs. Van Horn , that | Pasteurized Milk is the best to drink. Its purity has been roved In {5 milk stations this year the joard of Health cut the death-rate of babies under one year to | 3-10 per cent asteurized Sheffield milk, # against death-rate last year, without teurized milk, of 17 per cent. of bal i under 12 months n iGreater New York Sheffield Farms Milk SOLD ny Sheflie!d Farms Si: son Decker Co, Executlve Officos, hat, | | Branches throughout New York and Yonsers and sounded it loudly. to the engine-house. ings and cries aroused the firemen they retu They thought the hoy had escaped from in a nightmare. the red ‘glare would they believe him. Strahlendorft succeeeded his wife, two other children destroyed. Neighbors succeeded in re- | moving @ plano and some of the | nishings, but | house was consumed. ‘The fire is believed caused by sparks from an open fire- place. EL PASO, Tex., Oct. 30.—Aviator C, Rodgers arived here at 3.45 P. M. yester- day after a filght from Fort Hancock. He will i way to the Pacific coast. ‘Then he ran on When his pound- T would not bother them or appear to be annoying them.’ Tappe satd that when he decided to start in business his wife took him to see Mr, Morgan, adding that Mrs, Tappe ‘an intimate friend of the fnancier. “Ha gave me $5,000," added Tappe. “Did you ever pay him? he asked. He replied he had offered to repay the money but Morgan wouldn't accept It. Whatever style you choose, becomingness is assured. The simplest, h afi maginable, striking just the correct note of i borate calling costumes w.th the un.que charm of faris-born c. cations, and such materials! Fashionable ou h suit- ings, satiny broadc!oths, and a whole army of serges and cheviots. All Smart Shades Sale at Al! Three Stores Remember— Alterations FREE sed at first to believe his story. Not until ‘they saw of the burning house as in getting and a woman west out of the house, but In F ? # Tappe cannot enlighten us," sald doing 40, he lost all opportunity to navel ye, *4 sentenbers, enorhaps Mr. Morgan his valued paintings. Jewelry belong-| can tell us something about the inside 14-16West 14th. ing to the Strahlendorfts' guest, and| Workings of Tappe's millinery establish. valued at several hundred dotiars, wal ment" NEW YORK. ment.”* 4604462 Fu Fulton § Street sn $31 Broads Street NEWARK LARGE STORES. MILLIONS of F. are fur- he Carrols F BIRMINGHAM, England, Miss Malaprop, owned by C Carroll, won the Hindlip Maiden F of 106 sovereigns, for two-year-olds, which was run at the opening of the Birmingham autumn meeting here to- day, The Witty Girl filly wax second and Golden Note third, Eighteen horses started in the race, the di tance of which was five furlon, straight. ything else in Oct, 30.— to have been en Rodgers Reaches El Pano, P, wwe Monday for Tucson on his |kee a rr BOON OPEN EVE’S UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK KITCHEN oa! i PIANOS and a reasonable price is equally to be desired. | both—good tone and a reasonable price. a fine singing quality, and the Waters prices are very reasonable, but in the interest of true economy and not at the sacrifice of quality. years’ time on a piano without interest or extras. catalogue with reduced prices and terms. Horace Waters @ Co. Three | 127 West 42d St., near Broadway. Stores using SYRUD atic and ELIXIR of SENNA <== FOR COLDS AND HEADACHES, INDIGESTION AND SOUR ATOMACH, GAS AND FERMENTATION, CONSTIPATION AND BILIOUSNESS, WITH MOST SATISFACTORY RESULTS. P NOTE THE NAME Jag CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CC (Founded 1845) ON EVERY. PACKAGE ‘OFTHE GENUINE A good tone is of supreme importance in a piano ‘THE WONDERFUL POPULARITY OF THE GENUINE SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA HAS LED UNSCRUPULOUS MANUFACTURERS TO OFFER IMITATIONS, IN ORDER TO MAKE A LARGER PROFIT AT THE EXPENSE OF THEIR The Waters Pianos and Player-Pianos offer The Waters tone is very sweet and musical, with ING TO DECEIVE YOU TELL HIM THAT ‘OU WISH THE GENUINE, MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO = ALL RELIABLE ORUGGISTS KNOW THAT ‘THERE tS BUT ONE GENUINE AND THAT [fT [8 MANU. FACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO ONLY NOTE THE NAME CALIFORNIA-FIG SYRUP.CO PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS,NEAR THE BOTTOM, AND IN I ‘THE CIRCLE,NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE,OF THE GENUINE ONE SIZE ONLY, FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING “onto PICTURE ORUGGISTS REGULAR PRICE SOc PER BOTTLE, (OF PACKAGE Also the Waters 3-Year System gives you three Call and let us demonstrate what we claitn for the Waters Pianos and Player-Pianos, or send postal for ‘SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA [5 ESPECIALLY ADAPTED TO THE NEEDS OF LADIES AND CHILDREN, AS IT 1S MILD AND PLEASANT GENTLE AND EFFECTIVE, AND ABSOLUTELY FREE FROM OBJECTIONABLE INGREDIENTS. IT IS EQUALLY posreaas OR WOMEN AND FOR MEN. YOUNG AND OLD FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTR. ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Cr: 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th Street. Harlem Branch (Open Evenings) | 254 W. 125th St., near 8th Ave. W.L. DOUGLAS 3, °*322 & *4 SHOES men WHO WEAR W.L. DOUCLAS SHOES MAKE NO EXPERIMENT ‘THE, STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS The assurance that goes with an estab. fished reputation is your assurance m buying W. L. Douglas shoes. Look in my store windows and inspect all the latest shapes, includin, Short Vamps which make the foot loo! smaller, also the Conservative Styles which have made W. L. Douglas a household word everywhere, If} could take you pea my large factories at Brockton, Mass, and show you how carefully W.L.Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they are war- OPEN ALL DAY ELECiION DAY 10% ALLOWED ON Al ‘ASH SALES, of nitcben bai yards Olictos! bEvRUUM k Dressing ‘This home constet and |s on exhibition nc! the ‘accompanying articles ‘nur warercoms. Our Libera Creait serms “% $60 Worth $3 Down , $75 Worth $5“ The. to M125 Weekly: u Kets 10 ‘ulecem, $20.00 5 ROOMS 30.00 veri | ranted to hold their shape, fit better and FURNISHED sete FURNISHED | wearlongerthan any othermakefor the price $65 $148 } CAUTION The seauine have w WRITE FOR iM! Mhode istand. WE PAY Pir Fee Gennes oohatat Wile Toth ee cated ie reo oe word OUR 1911 GRAND itiPips FURNITURE FREIGHT & Brom tas “a irae w. aye? HY ee aly hy Ne * eee Mare : , . R. FARI a ougias Stores in New York: caraLocue Everything for Housekeeping gla Yorks. 1770 ving ty 043 Kighth Avenus: is] Broadway. To Newark dem >