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THE EVEN “IDOL OF DRESDEN” Rearing of Children Women’s Greatest Glory, FOUND DEAD ON | BRINGS AFFINITY WO COST AER Opera Star Burrian Won't Part From “Beautiful Com- panion of Love,” He Says. WIFE BARS MARRIAGE, | Court Title Well Lost for Love Declares Tenor, Pursued All Over Europe. Cari Burtian, the Bohemian tenor {whose love songs have been heard at the Metropolitan Opera House since 1903, by turns Tannhauesor, Tristan, Parsifal, Lohengrin, Siegfried and Herod, is back in New York with Mrs. B. Leffler Dinges, for whose love he Draved the rage of a husband, the wrathful edict that stripped him of court honors and a long period of hide and seek with the German police and law officers. He ts held by the spell of the woman's deauty, he says. Sho is not to be his wife-he Is already provided in that re- epect—but will be his “beautiful com- panion in love,” by which flight of fancy he to-day designated one hitherto class!- fled as an affinity: They are just going on through life, hand in hand, he dream- ing of her beas/ and charms and she absorbing the wonderful melody of hi voice in its soulful roles. “IDOL OF DRESDEN” FLED FROM MERCHANT'S WRATH. They came by the liner Rotterdam last night. Separate staterooms were assigned to them. He is to resume his work at the Metropolitan Opera-House on Friday night, when he appears as | Tristan in ‘Tristan und sol The closest attention has been patd to the tenor since, two years ago, he left the Royal Opera in Dresden, where he was known as the “Idol of Dresden,” and ffea precipitately to Bohemia before the ire of a Dresden merchant, Herr Dinges, taxing along the wife. ‘When they came from the steamer the couple at once became the centre of in- terest. Had they been married? Did they intend to wed? Both questions camo to the front as logical queries. “Married?” asked the tenor, repeat- ing the question. we are not mar- ried, We will not be married. She ts my beautiful secretary and always tra ela with me. It is her beauty that is so | @reat. She cannot sing at all, but her beauty makes up for everything she may lack. “We are companions in love. Madly, ditndly, passionately, T love my sec! tary. She loves me—but we are be married. I have a son ten age and have been married twice. Mrs, Dinges 18 going to travel with me for- m | AFFINITY REFUSES TO TALK; | SHE'S “NOT A GENIUS.” The singer and his beautiful secre- tary went to the Hotel Navarre, where they took a suite on the seventh floor. When an effort was made to talk with Frau Dinges after the first ohat with the tenor, she replied over the hotel} telephone: “I no speak Englisi “Sprechen Deutsche?" reporter. “Ja, Ja, ja, ja! replied Frau Dinges Whereupon the interviewer explained, | fn bis best rathskeller German, that he| would fain hold speech with her, and) }| she replied in pretty accent: \ “Herr Burrian ts by the rehearsal gone. Maybe when he returns to the hotel he will you see, It is not pos- @idle you for me to see now | “Will you give me your picture the paper?” asked the reporter. “Why my pleture?” she answered, } “I am not @ genius; I am no singer.” ‘Tho soulmating 1# of little consequence } either to Herr Dinges or to Jeliine K., by which rather uncertain title the ten- or’s second wife 1s known to fame, As for Herr Dinges, he has a divorce; as for Jelline K., she has alimony of $3,000 @ yéqriqnd is fully aware of existing conditions, refusing, as her revenge, to permit voree that the tenor may marry the woman he loves. FEARED OCEAN BUT NOT LOVE VOYAGES. Hardly more than five years ago! Burrian first came over, He had won| great fame in Dresden and abroad, and it was with difficulty that the Metro- politan management got him aboard a ship, But he got over his fear of the ocean and has made a number of voyases. None of thenr is as interesting as his | three voyages on the waters of love, with two shipwrecks marking their history. Buwrian’s first wife died suddenly. Four years ago he came back with Jel- asked the for line K. as his second wife. She was fair and graceful, Then, while xinging Stegfried in the Dresden Opera I . he saw Frau Dinges in the aud ‘Then came telepathic vibration Dring such souls together. She every day he sang and me y @way from the opera house. | made his discovery. ‘The wife| and raved. ‘The German penal gives @ husband criminal redress, fe sovght it Taking the woman the tenor fied to Bohemla where he has al hop estate. | WIFE HELD HER PLACE AS LIV- ING BARRIER, | . | that came| The police followed and Jelline K heard the story of their love with bitter hatred, Would she step aside with a| @ivorce decree and | ve cominand | the situation? Not sne would make him support her and stand as a living barrier to the consummation of the ro- ce of Dresden. | They | the pair By The police still pursued jumped fron place to place edict his title of Roya was take) from Bur toward Am under cont Wh. This ‘ from him, the mana will «ow he has reasons for not bein | Jooked at me fixedly, Says Mgr. Falconio on Eve of Journey to Rome ROOF, BUTHOWDD | “It Is Impossible to Overestimate the Great Results When Energetic American Women Exert Their Influence for Good. a “A Good Woman Should Have in Mind,| Above All, the Proper Care of Her Family. “She Is First of All a Citizen of the Home, and if She Fulfils the Duties ot That Citizenship She Will Have No Leisure for Outside Affairs. “Men Revere, Love and Honor the Home Woman—No Other Can Compare With Her in Dignity and Honor. “It Should Be the Duty of Women to Ex- ert Their Powertul Influence to Combat the Divorce Evil. “I Earnestly Hope American Women, While They Inherit the Stateliness o1 Roman Matrons and the Courage or ’ Spartan Mothers, Will Cherish at the Same Time the Noble Mission of Wite- hood and Motherhood.” Cardinal Designate’s Farewell / Message to American Women: BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. The highest dignitaries of the Catholic Church in New York waited last night, that Diomede Fab conio, Apostolic Delegate at Washington and Cardinal- Designate, might deliver a farewell message to Amer- ican women. Priest followed priest up the wide and winding stairs that lead to the second floor of the Archbishop's Palace. For there was a reunion, a sort of spiritual Jollification, going on in the palace to mark the de parture this morning of the two Cardinals-Designate, Faleonto and Farley, on their way to Rome to be in- vested with the red hat—the highest honor within the gift of the Holy See. NIXO} GREELEY* SMITH Meantime a small, energetic elderly man, with brilliant black eyes set in an olive skin, paced nervously up and down the drawing-room on the floor below, his plain snuff-colored garments striking the one sombre note in a picture of scarlet and gold. For Cardinal-Designate Falconio, his hands clasped behind him, was framing his message to American women, while the goodly company upstairs waited his return, And, whoever they were, we were @]in married life, foodlier company below. For from one | divorce, side of the wall Leo XIII. smiled his} At this moment the secretary of the strango all-seeing smile upon the Car-|Papal Delegation, who, had been stand- dinal-Designate; the kind eyes of the ee bs bar rtattAaitlnallrees ee resent Pope gazed benigniy from the a Madison avenue aide of the palace on| Polly and captured the Cardinal-Deaig- the man he has chosen to honor so signally; and from the other aside of the room the pictured countenance of his brother in dignity, the new cardinal, Farley, looked a mute approval. HOLDS AMERICAN WOMEN THE HIGHEST ESTEEM. “T have nothing but sentiments of the highest esteem for American ladies, began the Cardinal-Designate, in his remarkable English. Not every one knows that Mgr. Falconio is an American citizen, by the way. ‘The Apostolic Delegate made his first visit to our country in the early sixties. ‘American women,” the Ww American cardinal continued, “are extremely well educated. They are full of energy, and it is impossible to overestimate the great results to be obtained when they exert their | Block From Fifth to Lenox infiunence for the real welfare of inven | Aves. Given Up to Invaders— “I earnestly hope they will conte | Colored Church in 138th St. to exercise thelr power for good as they have in the post. BUT’ — ‘Tho Cardinal-Designate paused,’ im- pressively, took a few silent turns up and down the room while drew a long breath and waited for the denunciation of the modern woman that I knew was) coming. “Z do not think it proper for any woman to go outside of the sphere which is assigned to her sex,” said His Eminence to be. “A good woman should have in mind, above all, the proper care of her family—she is first of all a citizen of the home, and if she fulfils adequately: the duties of that citi- zenship sho will have zo leisure for ontside affairs. In the home should be her heart and soul. There is no higher or holier mis- sion than hers—the care and edu- cation of children. WILL LOSE IN INFLUENCE BY ENTERING NEW FIELDS. “ghould she go, outside this sphere and mix in affairs which are unbecom- ing to a lady and the mother of a fam- | ily, then her prestige will be lost, and] the sublimity of the rank assigned to| her by the Almighty will be eclipsed. ‘There oan be no greater | vice, no greater glory, than the rearing of children, The woman | who looks properly after her home and children keeps her husband’ love. Men revere, honor and lo the home woman. No other woman can compare with her in dignity | and honor.” The Cardinal-Designate there would be no be taught their place, WHITES MOVE OU OF 13TH ST. A NEGROES MOVE clean-cut, New York's negro population is rapid- ly moving northward, Negro families have now invaded One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street in large numbers, In the block between Lenox and Fifth avenues but two white families remain, these occupying the houses at Nos, 28 and % To-day seventeen moving vans stood In this block removing the house- hold goods of white families, As fast as the whites move out the negroes move in, On the southeast corner of Lenox avenue and One Hundred Thirty- ninth street ts a six-story flat house, which 1s held by @ negro agent, White families who have occupied this build- ing are moving out and {t is to be tenanted by negroes, In One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street, between Lenox and Fifth ave- nues, are two large tenements occupied j by negroes, In this block stands the Roman Catholic Church of St. Mark the Evangelist. Directly across the street is being erected the Afro-American M. E. Church with a seating capacity of 800. The erection of this church Is taken to mean that the negroes e coming to #tay. On the corner of Fifth avenue and One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street i stands Public School No, 10, of which Miss Laura Chariton !s principal. The annex of the Wadleigh High School, of which Miss Katherine Spler is prin- cipal, also occupies this building, The high school is attended hundred young girls, if half expect-| have to pass through the negro section ing @ protest, a contradiction, Ho) to reach their classrooms, seemed to realize that the female of| The few white families who still live the species is such an omnipresent)in One Hundred and Thirty-ninth street creature these days that a Card{nal-) have announced their imtention of moy- Designate may be interviewed by @/ing as soon as their months are up or paused and | suffragette. I sald nothing, however,| their leases expire. and Mgr. Falconlo continued impres- sively: I earnestly hope that American wo-) men, while they inherit the statelines§! jon. sentiemann of the Roman matrons and the courage! (na pemocrats of Spartan mothers, will cherish at the! same time the noble mission assigned to them, that of wifehood and mother- hood. “Et phould be the duty of women to exert their powerful infuence to combat the divorce evil, the | greatest evil of our day, which is | undermining the life of families ean, se Ore Ore Leon eee An of society, and worked as a grocer's boy. “if mgn and women lived according| into the grocery business for to the rules laid down by our Blessed juccesatul. Redeemer in regard to their relations jughter and three sone of Brooklyn, ated several terms. He was a stanch of the late Democratic Boss, Hugh Me: Laauginiin fifty nate, carrying him off to the waiting friends who had given place to the ladies, in order that the ladies might by about four! many of whom| | i |BROOKLYN POLITICIAN DEAD. smann, one of the Old early to-day at his home, No. 641 Frank- lin avenue, of acute Indigestion after a/ two hours* 4llness, Mr, Schitemann was) Deputy Tax Commfssioner of Brooklyn and had been Excise Commissioner for friend He came nere trom Germany He went| imaelt | He leaves a widow, ere re: i eted 2: aaa I™@ WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMB ~ Saal Tenor Burrian’s Secretary-Affinity Attorney Morse rt would ben RGHESON AGAIN ASKSCHURCHTO. = to postpone anxious to hold a and this f © telepho gaged in the Southern attorney ean . take active charge of the trial. R the fight for his life in 15 in the Superior Criminal | SEARCH WHOLE STATE | FOR LOST BROOKLYNITE. Pastor Says He Feels Welfs ca of Parish Will Be Hurt by Charge Against Him. | re | Gregersen Last Seen Two Weeks Ago on Way to Yacht in Ulmer Park. wide police search Is being — Christian Gregersen, sup Jerintendent of the fre art BOSTON, Noy. 4.—The members of Ay Mbaea. gene ane c the Immanuel Baptist Church of ; alton street, Iirooklyn, | bridge have received as lett ned a for ago. It |from thetr pastor, Rev, Clarence V. T.! 44 feared he has met w 41 play. Richeson, under indictment for the al-| 4 married had always leged murder of Avis Linnell, urging the it fs said. There were no acceptance of his resignation as pastor hildren, but ha a 3 ar DO 40 of the church. His letter will be acted | 2 iy. A | upon at the next business meeting of bday . pier hg Pola them at No, 503 Sixth avenue, Brooklyn the church, on n ; ea The firat of the letters from the Ime| Of the morning of Nov. 1. Greworaly prisoned pastor was dated Nov. 1, two) Tse at BM Oulblh Teil weeks after his arrest and now el belt A the table awalting action, fs Pies was made publte follow la dated Nov 10, four days afte x she wanted to a had failed to act on the back that he hi "The text of the second letter is as fol as he wanted to catch the lone Ly e as not hear from Re [Dear Brethren—I cannot expres to| His wife has not heart from or so: you how deeply Tam touched at your lm since, Tt Has noon iat loyalty and manifestatic aid om es go to his work, | T thank you most sin I cannot but feel person Laurel, ever, that the welfare of the | hence cpealugel | might be prejud while tts min ATi dation is placed in his present position and I RO ae pr itehage hs therefore feel, notwithstanding my | | SPR Mes REE Re grateful ap) ation of your kindness aE id : that the church accept my resignation; | has been known to the stage for a num | of course leaving {t entirely to you how | ber of years Jand when the matter should be carried | In her petition to the Court, Miss | into effec hwarg sald all her friends know Losing out In the first skirmish 1 battle for the life of Rev Willlam A. Morse and P. ft counse| for the accused minis a Ke began the real work of preparing the|dress as No. f much embar- she 1 her ad: Forty-fourth street, EXTRAORDINARY SUIT, COAT AND DRESS SALE Women’s & Misses’ Suits $29.50 Values Up to $38.00 Women’s & Misses’ Dresse ; $24.75' Values Up to $45.00 Black Broadcloth Coats $24.50 Values Up to $35.00 22-24-26 THIRTY-FOURTH STREET, WEST. ER 14, 1911, rer} MAN GT THERE? Police of Bronx Mystified by| Strange Case of Emil | Riediers. A passenger on a ‘Third avenue train, which was passing through the private right of way between Alexander jand Willis ave ues in the Bronx, saw the body of a man lying on the root | | of one of the one-story bulldings along: | side the structure, H> notified a guard, {who left word of the discovery at the next station and the police of the Alex. | ander avenue station were notified and 1 y found on the root of No, 963 Kast | indred and Thirty-elghth street | the body of an old man, fully clothed. | Soon the excitement In the nelghberhood | ng of the body and th police brought out | Rosle Rieders of No. %1 East One Hun- dred and Thirty-elghth street, She sald the dead man was her father, Hmil | Meders, fifty-nine eave old, a baker | Dr. Holla, the ambulance surgeon who nded to a call, examined the body | id he was unable to determine cause death, There were no marks of violence and a cursory ex: | amination did not reveal any broken | | Nevertheless, it was apparent | that Rieders, who was unable to walle without the assistance of a cane, could | not have hed the roof, where his body was found, unless he had jumped | or fallen from the adjoining building on | the west, three stories high, in whtch he lived, or from the “L" structure on the east. | The apartment at No, %1 Hast One Hundred and Thirty-etghth street oc- | cupied by the Rieders family ts on the | top floor. ‘The only window, however, ns on an alrshaft twelve feet wide. | ders fallen from this window he would have dropped into a courtyard The body was found near the front of building, and from this fact the | inference was drawn by the poltce that the old man fell or jumped from the front part of the roof of the three-story | | house next door, Rieders si at 5 ot | sald he was gol the A her father left the | k this morning. He o look for work, jellies NO ELECTION EXPENSES. Supreme Court Justices Dantet F. Co- halan and Francis Key Pendleton, tn sworn affidavits filed with the County tlerk to-day, declared they spent abso- lutely nothing, directly or indireetly, to {ald them in thelr re-election to the bench at the election a week ago, Samuel Marks, Alderman t from ‘the ‘Thirty-third Aldermante District, a statement to the effect that he t $M Of this amount, he sald, he gave $200 to the Repu Committee of the Thirty-first Assembly | District. The Worlds Dentifrice As * Py f ‘ f i DOL is the first and only prepara. tion for cleansing the mouth and | teeth which absolutely counteracts the ses of microbiec fermentation, While all other preparations are effe ive only during the few moments! of application, the antiseptic and re-| freshing power of Odol continues| gently but, persistently for hours | afterwards, ‘This causes Odol to penctrate the interstices of the teeth and the mucous membrane of the mouth, to a certain extent impregnat ing them, and thus securing an after effect lastir;: other mouth or tooth wash can pro- for hours which no duce, not even approximately, All Druggists and Department Stores | Geo. Borgfeldt & Co. Chicago New York $00 Prascisce 25% to 50% Less Than Elsewhere To prove this we invite a comparison, based upon both quality and price, with any other furs in the city. We are man- ufacturers and sell direct to you, thus saving you middlemen’ profits. that if you can duplicate it at our price we will immediately refund your money. Our reputation for fair dealing, estab- lished by 15 years in business. piece is as represented. Natural Pony 336 Sixth Ave., AND STREET WEAR, ALSO SILK MUFFLERS, GLO’ CANES, ys SWEATERS, SHIRTS, HOUSECOATS, GOWNS, HOSIERY UNDe 4 52 ERWEAR REPRESENTING LATEST ENGLISH AND AMERICAN IDEAS. Ry ON WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH rs Rich, Fragrant, Delicious, Pure with natural f Cuffs, Anexceptional! arment, beautifully li the equal of ¢ from 8125 to $200. no idea of the quality of the furs and the high standard of workmanship. Ise in the city can you find values to approach them. Come and see for yourself. It is “built to last"—« fine. ‘There never was a better example looking, well finished coat, of | | of i! difference Haver “cheap” ki a and pensive.” Few coats at excellent fur and superior in | | (ice the price are as handsome in design and workmanship. 52 material or design, or as service inches long. ATTENTION IS DIRECTED TO OUR ATTRACTIVE STOCKS OF CRAVATS, FOUR-IN-HANDS AND OTHER NECKWEAR FOR DRESS ‘Ope IBID HO RHE eT SRT | be 45 West 34th St. Jsonsnsr Black Pony ENIOFF FURSS Every piece is sold with the positive underst: is your assurance that every "Near Seal Coat deserves particular inspecs tion, It is a beautifully modelled garment, 52 inches long, finished with that careful attention to the stnallest detail which is an assur of lasting satisfaction. 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