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CASSIDY MAKES QUICK SHIFT.IN "BRIBERY CAS Queens Boss and Candidate Willett Change Lawyers and Withdraw Habeas Corpus. BEFORE SCUDDER AGAIN Next Monday They Will Have to Give Bail and Plead to Charges. Joseph Caasidy, William Willett jr. @nd Louis T. Walter jr. are to ask for @ full hearing of the charge that they Sorruptly conspired to bring about the Nomination of Willett as a candidate’ for Justice of the Supreme Court. With new lawyers, new energy and a new ®lgn—everything new but the charges they arranged to-day for a full in- vestigation that will make the scandal of the November election a star event over the river. The three appeared to-day in the Bupreme Court of Queens County and asked Justice Kelly to dism the complaint for a writ of habeas corpus mhich was hastily made yesterday. Something must have happened in the Cassidy camp of a fast and strenuous nature, for Abraham Levy was on hand to represent Willett, where Col. Alexander Bacon had blossomed be- fore, and Max 1. Steuer appeared for Cassidy and Walter, succeeding Dana Wallace. Justice Kelly granted the motion to dismiss the application for the habeas corpus writ and remanded the defend- ants in custody of their new counsel unt!! Monday, when Justice Scudder ts to receive thelr pleas, Abraham Levy, counsel for Willett, satd that on Mon- day the defendants would ask for a continuance, and on the day xed by the court be prepared to go into a de- j tatled examination of all of the wit- { nesses, with cross-examination galore for all hands. ‘The delay will prob- ably be eight days from Monday. {The three men, by their then coun- [ fel. Col. Alexander Bacon and Dana lace, were surrendered to a Magise i trate, committed to the Queens Coun- ; ty Jail, and then asked Justice Kelly “Divine Sarah,” at 67, Would Wed Again, $ of the Supreme Court to release them upon a writ of habeas corpus, based upon the theory that the warrants were not supported by sufficient evi- 4 dence. It is presumed that the defendants saw that they had made a legal and tactt- ca) blunder in making the application. Sastice Kelly pointed out to counsel that Gene warrants merely constituted a charge and that the sufficiency of the charge was still open before Justice Scudder. Justice Kelly had already sent for the papers in the case when he wae apprised ‘of the new turn, He dropped his labors and allowed the case to gravitate back to the channel in which Justice Scudder left it. —.—e ORLANDO HARRIMAN ILL. Brother of Late Ratlroad King tn Serious Condition, | * Orlando Harriman, only surviving brother of the late E. H. Harriman, is {i with diabetes at his apartments at the Hotel Majestic. The ailment has ‘been troubling him for nearly @ year, but only recently has been #0 serious as to keep him in his room, _Mr, Harriman 1s interested in various ‘Amusement projects at Brighton Beach. He was the promoter and actual man- ager of the projects at Brighton Beach, which made it @ competitor for the aum- mer amusement demand once to be found only at the west end of Coney Island. He was for a long time at the head of the real estate department of the B. R. T., in which he 4s still deeply in- terested. Mr. Harriman was born sev- eral years earlier than his brother, the "Unton Pacific leader. —— ee IRISH DANCE FOR CHARITY. Claremen to Have Big Célebration at Annual Ball, ‘The annual charity entertainment and ball of the Claremen’s B. P, S. Associa- tion will be held at the Lexington Opera House next Saturday evening, Nov. %. It will be one of the season's strongest Irtsh affairs. ‘The concert by the famous Prof. Ward's Orchestra will commence at & c'clock. ‘The entertainment conducted by the White Rats Actors Union under the supervision of James L. Barry will + follow, after which the ball will be in ful swing. ‘There will be Irish dancing in a separ- ate hall. ee MRS. HOLME TO TESTIFY. Defendant's Statement in Aliena- tion Guit to Be Taken in Germany, A commission to take the testimony of Mrs, Lizzie Hastings Holme, now in Germany, who 1s being sued for $250,00 to the Supreme Court by Mrs. Sarah Stella Rogers Dunn for alleged aliena- ‘ehon of the affections of the latter's / pusband, James T. Dunn, was granted by Justice Seabury to-day. Mrs. Holme {1s the wife of Leicester Holme, who was secretary to Mayor Hugh J. Grant and later a City Court Mrs. Dunn's first husband was ie" Rosenbaum, a wealthy San Franciscan, who vommitted suicide, ‘The case has been draging along some Load —— Peace Banquet Postponed. he citizens’ peace banquet, which twas to have followed the peace mass- meeting to be held tn Carnegie Hall Dec 18. has been postponed till after th Senate has resumed consideration of the impending peace treaty, President Taft will speak at the banquet. On Dec, 19 the President will address the members of Economic Club at thelr annual Mme. Dornhands Still Holds Her Belief in Woman’s Love as the Great Redeeming Force of the World,and Her Life, Without Sacrifice, Full of Ennui and Self- ishness. “1 Believe in Love,’’ Says the Ever- Young Actress, and Ten Command- ments Are Too Many —Motherhood Makes Woman More Than Man's Inferior. NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Sarah Bernhardt says that she is not going to marry again, notwith- standing persist- ent rumor, which has made her the flancee of a twen- ty - six - year - old actor in her com- pany. In all the years cers SMITH that Mme, Bern- hardt has been before the public the versatility of her genius and of her press agents has made her everything but ridiculous. ‘The public has never been permitted a smile at the ex- pens eof the imperishable Sarah, and I believe Bernhardt -is far too intell!- gent to ring down the curtain of her phenomenal career on a laugh. At sixty-seven a woman may not be too old to fall in love, but in the eyes of the public, if not her own, she’s not quite young enough to marry. Undoubtedly Sarah believes in love; also in marriage, though she once re- marked that Ten Commandments are too many. In her most recent visit to the United States Mme. Bernhardt made a formal confession of faith to me during a trip I made with her from New York to Chicago. WOMAN'S LOVE THE GREAT RE- DEEMING FORCE OF THE WORLD “I believe in love,” she sald then. It 42 the greet, redeeming force of the world, A woman's Hfe without sacrifice, without the spirit of devo- tion that te the quintessence of fem- ninity, te full of ennut and selfisp- ness, Motherhood 4a the greatest ea- perience of any woman's Ufe.” Sarah, at the time she spoke, was & great-grandmother, the daughter of her son, Maurice Bernhardt, having become the mother of a little gil two years before. Sarah's comments on love had grown out of a discussion of the character of Monna Vanna, who, she insisted, did not re love her husband, or she would not have becn willing to sacrifice her honor as a wife to relieve her be- leaguered and starving city. “Monna Vanna had that tranquil con- Jugal affection, which 1s not romance nor poetry, but which is the foundation of many homes,”” Mme, Bernhardt de- clared, “Perhaps it is the best founda- tion for marriage,” she added, “for when you build in the tropics of pas- sion, you have to look out for earth- quakes. id “The soul of Monna Vanna burnec with @ great devotion to her people. ‘This devotion to humanity is very fre- quent among women, though it {s not generally understood, Love—passionate love—has been judged to be the main> spring and motive of all our actions But women are capable of the greatest acts of devotion and sacrifice for a people, a cause or an idea. GREAT SITUATION MAKES A GREAT WOMAN. "I do not mean the exceptional woman —I am not sure that there are any ex- ceptional women. In my opinion the great situation, the great need, draws the great man or woman to meet it from the mass of commonplace citizens, takes him or her, hitherto much like the rest, and makes them over to its require- mente, ‘The peng of Gevotion, her sacrific high as its source, the need of the man or the people which calls it forth. here are those who think this public devotion should have political expres- sion, The question of votes for women, while not yet serious in France, is of the hour in England and the United States. The laws in your country are very just to woman, In France they leave very much to be desired, “With everything that concerns the personal control of her fortune or earn- | ings, or the equai guardianship of her children, I am in entire accord, But to vote 1 have no desire. Politics 1s 90 dirty. And for one who controls it there re a thousand unreasoning slaves, 0 me,Z must confess, the idea of » woman deputy, of a woman minister, seems ridiculous. Mot that I question her capacity. Goa would not have confided the future to @ being he found inferlor—but can you imagine a woman minister making ® speech from the tribune when she was to have» child in » few weeks! “You urge that there Js nothing in ma- ternity wolch should exelte any but toe profoundest feelings of reverence and awe, and that woman should not yicld her pulitival igi» dhiougin tear of con- tuct with debased minds, 1 agree wit you as to the hopeless debasement of those wao find anything to laugh at in| the most sucred fact of existence, Nu- poleon ordered bis soldiers to present tT HE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1911.' Frain REMAA But She Dare Not Invite Public Laugh RECORD FOR RAPID | FROMHIS SPEEDING arms to an expectant mother. right. “But a woman minister could not de- liver an address at such a time without knowing that @ little too much fervor, 4 little too much excitement of debate, might endanger the future of her child. Her oratory or her heir must suffer. There would be a thousand such com- plications. The advocates of woman suf- frage cite the queens of history as ar- guments. We all know that these women governed through thelr minis- ters. No woman !s so much a slave as @ queen, Rven to-day queens suffer the greatest indignity that can be put upon @ woman—an invasion of the privacy of birth. “Imagine having to feel that certain officials must be present at the birth of one's child to attest that one 1s not at- tempting an imposture upon the coun- try. I cannot imagine a woman sub- mitting to such ‘humiliation. I should think she would rise up and drive them forth with whips. Yet that is what queens endure; that 1s what the hum- blest woman in the land fs protected trom. “Motherhood is the supreme rea- eon for woman's existence. It gives her ber completest happiness.” BELIEVES IN MARRIAGE FOR ALL WOMEN. Several years before this conversation Mme. Berhbardt was asked by an in- terviewor in Paris if she believed in marriage for actresses as much as for He was she answered. “Every young woman, no matter what her oc- cupation, rich or poor, chorus girl or princess, should carve out her own should follow her natural — bet, wherever it may lead her, If her ideal points t» marriage, let her marry. The married couples of the stage are just ay happy 4s those in private life.” Mme. Bernbardt’s devotion to her son, Maurice, has been the one fixed star of the constantly shifting horizon of her Me would kill myself if {t were not for my son!” she told a reporter a few years ago. It 1s sald that on the occa- sion of his initiation into the game of poker in a New York club Maurice Inst in one evening $3,000, which was che fully paid by his fond mother. Once, when asked what her prodigy did for a living, Sarah is sald to have replied: “Why, nothing! Didn't I say that he had plenty of means? He makes verse —pretty verses—sometimes on .the bea tiful eyes of his wife and sometimes something else. He does nothing be- sides that. “But he {s such a good son, love him as much as ever, live for, He has fought four dueié for my sake, Ob, the suspense and the dread when I knew him to face his antagonist! | “He fought with the sword every tr And he never received a scratch. H very strong in fencing, and a splend! pistol shot as well, they say, And is now so happy with his wife! They often make me think that I, after aii, made a botch of my life." <> GAS CHILDREN’S PLAYTHING. Tots | and I He is all 1 Nearly Amphyxtated Ate Turning Jets to “Smell It.” Mrs. Anna Schwartz of No. Ninety-seventh street went m to-day and locked her thre Walter, flve years old; Morris, and Birdie, three, in her The youngsters amused the turning on the jets , in order to" four, urtme) welves t of Ure gas smell the f | to 4 to blan 5 it off, Walt into h bed the ery. didn't know erled ins beean ris 1 my climbed that baby their owr leant them erying Into the rooms. taken to the rain, By the time Dr, Dyas of Reception Hospital arrived they all right again, neigh» and choli The ch roof and ors had hea and idren broke we were of Our Lady of whien Rey, t night at Niblo's Jen, ‘Third avenus and One Hundred and Seventieth street, | An excellent vaudeville programme Merey, ireslin | been arranged. the paroofai school fund, ean agg AO ANAS SLES NTA LANE a mcr names atte mie emLasnat = the| into |‘ ' the 1 re| et out in the! the the ‘The proceeds will go to | # ARAAPD SPRL ANA RRRREAL SA RARARA RRA SS ORRAN ALORA NES ARAB RA! RABEL ARPPPL SSR RPRRRAR AY augi INQUIRY PROBABLE; FAGTSMAY BETOLD Missing Minister va alt Royal | Rector and Cannot Be Re- moved Except on Charges, LONDO! erick » Nov. Wh en Rey. Fred- King George's chap after being “giv en time it was Senerally assumed that the royal court Would be spared the embarrassment of jany raking over of the accusations re- | sponsible liserace. It transpires to-day that this was a mistake, “The probably Will have to de an Invests tion It seems that the young clergyman refused to resign the rectorship of Sandringham when asked to and still he when he vanished. His cha) y to the Ki M he ever, he lain was held only during his jesty’s pie and trom this he missed Sandringham rectorship, how- ived uy court lered dey mm the dno until and every prospect which t 89 anxious to wrar ts on his ) assumed name | JERKED FROM AUTCMOBILE BY TACLLEY WIRE. | ng low Hoe aves 1 Sixty-minth an auto- neck and chin and by be ing thrown to Maly ‘ Leban na home, No. 1552 Long feilow Bronx. The a ers, J 4 doctor from went to his avenue, the wned by Jackson, 1 boul ay years @ track pWay train Lenox d by orning on the walker, was ki o'clock this Becond street, Big’ Gunster ie Made Fif- teen and a Half Voyages in Eleven Months. The hardest worked steamship on the seven seas is the big Cunarder, Lusitania. When she nosed her way through the fog in the East river, this Morning, and slid into her dock at 10 o'clock, she completed fifteen and a halt round trips across the Atlantic tn @ few days over eleven months. On her return to Liverpool, she will have made sixteen round trips in eleven months and seventeen days. No liner has ever been so rushed before, There was a big passenger list, but fow notables were abroad. Though the trip was rough, the Lusitania plunged through the waves at top speed. She would have docked an hour eariler, but for the thick atmosphere in the river. Louls Tracy, the novelist, was a pas- Benger. He has not been in the United States for eight years. One of the ob- Jects of his trip is to look at @ hole in the ground out in Colorado, which is the grave of « large chunk of his earnings as an author. He was per- suaded that the hole in the ground was & mine, J. Norton Grimth, M. P., a hustling type of young Engilshman, arrived on the Lusitania on his way to Vancouver, B. C., and Canadian cites. He ts work- ing to advance a plan to encourage !m- migration from England to Cana Although he ts a soldier and was aide- de-camp to Lord Roberts in the Hoer War, he is essentially a man of peace. “My {dea," he said, “ts that the up- building of the British empire, espe- clally on this side of the world, will tend to consolidate the Anglo-Saxon race. Such a consolidation would be the most powerful ‘or that could be exerted in enforcing world peace. Among the passengers wore F, C. the producer of light oper Rt ee = * eA +. horseman, who {Is contemplating @ career trainer on the English turf, Mrs, Charles Dana Gibson and the Countess Langter Villars. WIFE DECLARES BLOODGOOD SPENT | $2 500 OVERNIGHT | Young Banker and Wife Bring Counter Actions in Plea for Divorce. Saturday | Harry L. Bloodgood, the banking firm of H. 1c Di Wall street, f the exclusive Racquet and Tennis and| i Anthony clubs, has sued his wife, Hel Hamiem Bloodgood, of No, 231 Amsterdam avenue, for divorce, and re- celved in answer to his complaint coun-| ff ter-charges alleging cruelty and non- support, | At the home of Mrs. Bloodgood it was) stated by a woman friend this afternoon | that the young woman had -etallated | | with both a separation and divor sult. The couple were married two years ago and, according to the wife's affiday the last y married life wa. strenuous | She charges that she gave her fasi- jonable and clubby young husband to Invest for her two w married, r disposed of the hin 1s one of th |leged in the w | Mrs, Bloodgo connected with F, Bachman &| and a member | were | night." al ts of cruelty vuntercharges avers when, In Feb remind | r husband that since their marrlag One » had not pald the rent of thelr suites iy Jin thet Holland House, the Hotel Willard Model Like and other places, he str r, knocked Picture her to the floor, her on a bed and t» Moher. This attack so tore 48, hurled pw a desk on top stunning ‘4, Roman Striped $ Messaline Silk Blcuse Mail orders fiiled—None C.O. D. Coat Reductions $18 Reversible Coats $20 Polo Long Coats $22.50 Kersey Coats 0.” An event too important to miss. coats change prices to-morrow LUSITANIA BREAKS FIRE GRIEF HURLED GROSS-SEA TRIPS) AUTOBY COLLISION On Way to Blaze io Blan Lange of Brooklyn and Chauffeur Are Tossed Over Fence. Their tittle red automobile hit broad- side by a heavy limousine as they were speeding to a fire on Manhattan ave- nue, Brooklyn, early to-day, Battalion Chiet James Langdon and his driver, Joseph Sullivan, were huried from the car over an iron fence into the dry basin of @ fountain, Both lay eo atill that Poltoeman Carpenter of the Clymer street station, who saw the crash, thought they were dead. ‘The collision ocourred at Bedford and Diviston avenues, where Bedford avenue makes @ sudden turn. ‘The limouatne belonged to fhe Bryant Motor Car Company of No. 41 West Bizty-third street, Manhattan, and was driven by Henry Granien of Halcyon Road, New Rochelle. The only pas- wenger wae Daniel Ford of No. 82 West Fortieth .:reet, Manhattan. Both Langdon and Sullivan were pain- ifafly out and bruised. Grarden suffered alight scratches; Ford was uninjured. M heeey Carpenter, seeing the smash, je station house, a block away, told ‘Taeut Lyman end hastened back with Pollcemen Stoney and Oble. When the officers arrived Langdon and Bulll- van were just climbing back over the three-foot fence that surrounds the fountain. Langdon te Acting Deputy Fire Chief of the Willlamaburs district. amen TWO KILLED IN TRAIN WRECK. Others Badly Injured When Care nm Ratlway, Crash on fou WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—Two men were killed and a number of other per- eons were badly injured in a head-on collision early to-day at Scotiand, Qa., between passenger train No. 14 of the Southern Ratlway, from Chattanooga and Atlanta, bound to Jacksonville, and an extra train, bound north. Engineer Brantley of the passenger train and an express messenger were killed. Specials 98 Strikingly stylish—beautiful and trustworthy, undoubted- ly just what you mind for the TI pg festivities, only pig Hs what you expected to pay. New Callot Model They'd regularly sell for $4.00, but if your wise, you'll take advantage tae this May holiday price. copied an by Meee Callot design, fine white lace yokeand ct reeaes d silk revere plain messaline which also trims opposite side—rose pearl buttons, King’s blue and black stripe, purple and black, copenhagen and black or brown and black. These a ma ue braneh near One Hundred and}? ‘Noodgood all he fire escape to an adjoining apart ment From January to Apri!, 10, Mrs, Bloodgood in her affidavit, band frequently struck fists and boxed hor ears, livia at the Holland H at this tin Later on at the Hotel Willard he beat her, On Christmas Eve, continu: her h her They apport though } han $100 a week. Mrs, Bloody: ending th and’s sul does lout dojerminat and her any her her countersuits | she amoun 1 is able and exclusive ight of f that to ¢ clubs, to dres nion | ie health, ~ x 3 , legea Mes. Bloodgood, her huaband better appreciate this sa'e, Excellent ma- TERRE ts anes Se RE ae terials, superior workmanship and a variety niost captivating. M xtures, ker- a ago from # Sanitarium and was se a ager meer from $18, $2) and $22.50 to $10.75. Belated cold weather has caused stocks to beccme over-crowded and go they must if even at a sacr:fice. 25 Distinct Styles Compare them with the high-priced gar- ntents ot! er houses are offering, and you'll Vicuna cloths and plaid back cloak- s. Varicus!y trimmed in velvet, fringe, se. in / frogs ana b-aids, the major ty serving the double purpose of day or evening wear. Alterations FREE SALE Al ALL THREE STORES Pe ment on West Sixty xth street Mrs. Hloodgood ¢ as evidence of her hus 4 ORY SOE eae AIRS bd 14 and 16 West Ith St.—New York f the World's verics between | a» 460 and 462 Fulton Street—-Brooklyn jt ne Giants and Athleti 645-65) Broad Street Newark, N. J. song? es 8B SEVEN-TIME WORLD WANT WORKS ALL THE nie Gr with @ razor, lie had returned |{WEEK. ORDER ONE 10-DAY AND PROSPER. . DIAMOND RINGS 1-4 Carat, $9 1-2 18 OST’S | SATURDAY DRESS SALE Thanksgiving Day next Thure- day! Here's the D: that will ‘ contribute to your enjoymentand © = emart appearance. g An exceptionally pretty model —daintily made and superbly finished. Just the garment fer the festal occasion. An actual $17.50 vale. aq Satin messaline, in all the choicest D shades that have found acceptance among the smartest dressers. Kimono sleeves, round Dutch collar of lace, dainty piping of contrasting color, i tastefully trimmed with silk fringe im “ harmonizing tint Seventeen distinctive styles are shown in the full range of sizes for women sad mis: each style having some particu- lar charm of its own. The material alone could not be had at the price for which POST sells the complete dr ready to wear. Alterations FREE J. L. POST S. W. Cor. 4th Street and Union Square KONDON'S CATARRHAL || JELLY ¢. l= Booties, weal, ciransen, A single avpiica! Bovdhaagten Used Regularly on Thousands of Tables, and Will Soon Be * Used on Thousands More— En 4. " Sauce It’s great for meats, game and fish, 10c. | At Grocers and DgWicatcasem Stores, | Madebyl. Pritchar601 Spnag St.N.Y,