The evening world. Newspaper, January 10, 1912, Page 3

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LADEN WITH GEMS, AE IS ARRESTED ON Int de Seeks to Land With $30,000 in Jewels, Ne “8 ws REUCHER BATTLED SEA. Tempestuous Passage Brings Vessel to Port Like Glisten- ing Iceberg. Coated tn glistening ice from” the water line tot tips of her mast Hamburg An an we Miuehe tad in port from Ham yoay wth a it of parsengers for A lawinter vovaxe, ‘Thé Blache wa of the only, two trangatlantic are We to-day The other was the Fabre liner Germania, which was also coated with toe, Stiff gales met tie Blucher all the Ay Across, but It Vas not until yesters ay the stanch van ints the veal ne in the w wf rough weather. Om niueket she scounterad the nortne ster that yoen whilati over Now York since Mo nigint. \rthur M. Waitt, president of the gard Third Rail Company, No. 165 Jway, and « veteran ocean travel- T, Was on th with the captain Blocher ran into the tempest. A Waitt said on landing to-day that mwas the royehest weather he had en in twenty-one crossings of the At- intl. “Hvery wave," he sald, “broke into spray that deluged the bridge and froze ae'Y fell. The captain and his assist- ante on the bridge were coated with ice ev@ry little while and had to retire into the pilot house to thaw out. A great viany of the passengers were quite un- omfertable yesterday and last night are glad to get on shore.” MANY NOT LOOKING FOR WAR, TRAVELER DECLARES. Mr. Waitt and nie wite have been om @ visit to Mra Waltt's sister, Mre hmidt, in Baden Baden, Mri hmidt returned with Mr. and Mra. Rt to visit them for a fow weeks, jeir home in this city. ° fe abroad, Mr. Waitt talked to| vty: many men of affairs and knowi- a) of political conditions in Ger m@ay. He found ali these men unant moun in the belief that Germany { not Hs anger of engaging !n warfare with power, ror William," declared Me. wee, “although called a war lord, 16 really @ powerful Influence for peace. The German people do not want war {the Emperor docs not want war. German people will protect thelr indggtrial expansion, hut they 4o not bel! @ they will have to go to war to @ezak, the Russian tenor, came on the Blucher with his accom. anlgt, Prof. Oskar Iuchs. Slezak will indertake a conc pur until the mid- ry, when he will Join the n Company and appear in A private detective, Al P. Rink, yarded the Blucher at Quarantine and »ok@d up a second cabin passenger, Nochin Rewayn. Rink bad a cable m sage from the Chief of Pullce of War- sa, Istating Rewzyn was in possession of valuable gems obtained by fraudulent means. zyn had a dig collection of gems ‘qt kinds and sizes. He proved to be king Jewelry store. The star plece collection was a yellow dlamond \Wehting 233-4 carats, He declared his sams to the oustoms authorities as worth 30,000 rubles—about $18,300. in American money, Actually, the collec- em was timated to be worth about $99,000, but Rewsyn aut he bought th “ins cheaply in pawnstops and other plates in Russta and was bringing them ete to sell. He had onty about $1,000 tn money, less than one-ninth the sum re- iaired to pay the duty on his gems ard ewels, GEMS CUSTODIAN |S HOLDING PENDING MESSAGE, “My intention,” said Rewgyn, “ts to poy. $1,000 in duty and take out al much as I can for that sum, leaving the rest in the custody of the Govern- ment. Whon I sell the first batch I wilt pay duty and take out more, He insisted he had bought and paid iim own money for jon, Nevertheless, he we held pos at mit further advices from the Chief "Police of Warsaw. ‘4mmigration Inspector Roman Dobler pjected the first and second cabin ngere on the Blucher to @ close inspection ae they left the ship, The impiigration authorities have found iddny persone who would be barred if tiky came to this country in the steer- agp have been engaging cabin passage aH entering without any great trou: ol. No passengers of that aort were fabnd on the Blucher to-day, THE RANGE RIDERS. * Have you enjoyed “The Two-Gun Man?” Rvery ogding tt and talking aout tt one else has. Everybody's i | her work {s often cut out for her low would you Ike to read an even | per ee ey recent itn ter cowboy story by the same ea Sion should vyghor? toa t up. jou may. wever, n PitE RANGE ‘by Charles |@ definite job, if not as a Alen Seltzer, author « ie Tworun | Of 8 mother: then, in sone y Bvt: Mf," will bes to-morrow’s Evening | object at first, but I think that a few Warld. ars’ trial would convince even th at's a story you have no more right | husbands, ‘Tae woman's surplus nar tollmiss than to miss your breakfast yous energy would find some other ute orlipay day {let than by way of her t | Don't forget Range Riders’ | “As things are now, I cannot see what wit begin in ows Evening the husband gets out of with th Wed. talking woman,” concluded Miss May- after to-morrow, tt WoL DATED LINER Nachin eanet Is Held When | »| The every gem in hia) lis Island on Rink’s complaint to, Marion Fairfax, Author of | “The Talker,’ Who Has' Fixed the Significant | Modern Figure in Her| Play, Says That Type’ Simply Wastes Energy, but Accomplishes Noth- ing. } | Feminine Flippancy on} | Peritous Subjects and. Inflated Egotism of To-, Day Is Reaction From Too Much Friday Night} Prayer Meeting of Fifty Years Ago. | Marguerite Mooers Marshall. clubwoman has at last come | Into her own. With her pseudo-culture, | | her Inflated egotism, her complete lack of any genuine and dignified accom- Plishiment, she is the significant figure in Marion Fairfax's clever play, “The! ‘Talker. i “The Talker” ts that very common | | type of modern woman who vaccinates | her brain with every idea that com along, esult being a continuous conversational inflammation, Yesterday I discussed her Inter dramatic ‘final with Miss Fairfax. | In private ite, by the way, she ts Mrs, | ‘Tully Marshall, wife of the actor, and| as charming a young woman ever | turned her pen into @ scalpel. Under} & cornet of soft brown braids, 4 pair | of big brown eyes meet one with an! expression that is at once alert and| pondering, and the thin, sensitive lips are equally ready with » emile or a ntle sarcasm. “The trouble with the average Amert- can woman is that she doesn’t know her piace,” Miss Fairfax began in a ting » Musical voice. She is Uke Mohammed's coffin, suspended tn the air between heaven and earth and belonging to neither. |SHE DOES NOTHING TO JUSTIFY HER EXISTENCE. “The woman in my play is the woman of the great middie class, whose !.us- band is not and never will be rich, but will for many years earn ‘a good, .fair | salary.” This woman is pretty, vi but, so fer. | clous, socially attractive, 8 I can see, worth absolutely nothing. | 1 can't think that she justifies her ex- istence simply by eating three meals a day. Yet what else does she do? She has no commanding social position where the influence of sheer beauty and | graciousness would have its value for the world, She has no children and probably doesn't want any. She liv in a flat and doés her housekeeping by pressing 4 button. What's her exouse for ving . the world?” “She joins women's clubs,” I sug. gested. “And what earthly good does that do!” exclaimed the heretical Miss Fair- tex, “What have the women's clube ff Mew York really accomplished Desides @ never-ending see of dis- cussion? It's talk, talk, talk, and even if there are no immediately tragic consequences, as in my play, there's such an awfal waste of energy. If locomotive spent all ite time blowing off steam it would mever get anywhere! “And then the Kind of tatk! I don't know what's got into the modern wom- an, It has happened that I have at- tended various teas and social gath- eringas of women in tne last year or two, and I have been, not shocked, but | utterly astounded at the things that were said. HER CONVERSATION MARKED BY EXTREME FLIPPANCY. “1 guppose is @ reaction from too much Friday night prayer-meeting fifty ears ago, but flippancy 1s the sine qua |non of the modern woman's conversa tion, though the heavens and ail tie wods fall in the process, And yet | liknow pertectly well that every one of |those women I met would be found dead rather than in a really compromis- ing altuation, “The woman who has thought out her own philosophy of life, woo is really original and unconventional, is not the woman who ts always talking radic Be ust because she has | to live her own life she ha | cost, an e dare not advise others lto emulate her own defiance. | “% have nothing to say against @ | woman who, after carefully consid- | ering her partioulor problem, solves | dt in some way which tradition has nanied unsafe or wrong, Then the consequences of her act speak for her, If suffering 1 he te the sufferor, hor example. But {t's the women who are afraid to act and who take it out im talk who are dangerous!” “Rut is there no salvation for the | talkers I arked. |THE TALKING WOMAN AFTER FIFTY A SAD SIGHT. “It they would lake ‘A Misy Fairfax. “It t end ts always tras sudden one, as in my play, because more sad the mes a trage n ing y isa She has done nothing, and now her t for doing 1s past. Shi tles with the young: “But motherhood remedy for this we work, Let h thing. If sie a to bring up fi 4 not even any h veretin It is simply and do some- husband choose young cits THE EVENIN Nothing but “‘ Talk, Talk, Talk,’’ To Women’s Clubs of New York Flood of eal INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., J believed to know about New York City and Many of the witne by Ortie McManigal, the cor ‘erde, words, words," I quoted. = vat attended divorce prooeedin, making tl pro. ns are not to | old girls tnt miter, who for three days has been @%-| ony purporting to be in the hand |The freed wife had been aick for three | contravene the constitution i amined by United States Attorney | writing of other defendants were por. | nonths and was attended by Dr. Victor ae c Charles W. Miller. As the former ag-| mitted by tha Court to remain in the| Meltzer, Bhe wae fifty-six years old ‘Three Die in Fire. rr eomplice of John J. MoNamara, eecre-|#ecord, hut the Court ruled out witnes: | Deach came suddenly walle her two! posyoN, Jan. —A na{ “T suppose Tare: tronentee of the International Ae. Jerome H. Prats testiinony identifying | daughters were beside her, Jentid, were suffocated tn ° be ‘ he handwriting. The private funeral service will take | to Willard st in the West End, laat th : ‘ : © body may be sent te i oF iiaent hovse, which was | never a structures oreseed by cepan shan’ cone | MAYOR NOTA CANDIDATE, [/1ins: Tne body, mar. Se. sent to Alne faite wiry net ucodheter seh tractors, McManigal 18 said to have! \ age egg ee p tly mentioned men who have not hereto-| Wetsonm Saye He Hasn't Planne, fore been named elther at Los Angeles, Make Gaynor President. Cal, or elsewhere, | eo . poration Counsel Archibald R i are ai MeManjgal continued to-day to ©) Watson tw not engaged In any move- ove: ate Santaiaisel tn dst iE aye ment designed to urge the candidacy of ment from MoNamara’s office are al-/an inievence was Hoe PR eeey Man Sto omorrowu, wUrsaay leged to have alded the witness to) contly published statement of John D. i ea recat urentrey Paint EI UE tor ~~ Seton Suits | Distinctive Dresses particularly with referc to the!nomtnation of the Mayor by the 7 $1,000 a month allowed McNamara “for tional Democratic Convention, When Now organizing purposedemend for which! Mr, Watson was shown Mr, Crimmina's he was required to give no accounting. | statement to-day tie Corporation Coun Reduced | Reduced The Government's efforts are centred | el gasd pa on finding out how many people had| “Mr. Crimmins as well as @ large To f knowledge of the use to which the| number of other prominent citizens f tu money was put. have to my knowledge from time to oy sukuitiee Aol Ii & S20:V Sue) —__—.____—_ time expressed Interest In Mayor Gay- Ne season's greatest |. Penres, £000 Mews such Noss BANKER EARL CELEBRATES, °F a8 « Presidential possibility, but Pes } as no other store has priat- the statement that I am now or ever suit opportunity —choic-| ed this season, Just the ae insainen GNA Mane Bala! expect fo be in charge of a movement est gathering of high- opportune saving youbave a to bring the Mayor's nazne before the f edell Clear- Beles ae Vonmeatulate President, |Nattonal Convention 19 erroneous, 1 suits at a Bedell Clear-/been awaiting, Styles are Baward Fart, Presi nt of the Na-/1s expected of me that I shall devote ance price--unitiny every || y far the newest of the tonal Nassan fF at Naseau and|my time and attention to my offfetal virtue of the practical and , season, garments are all Beekinan streets, to-day rated the/duties, I know the Mayor weil enough the artistic newest |fresh and dainty, invest twenty-fifth anniversary to know that any other course would > sateriala, |ment not to be surpass:d thon with that Institu be distasteful to him mn. “iy syle d nelle nig dar te! Te, Hawa of the bank were guy with flowers sent ne ¢ The Sra i ¢ ie Retell teenie sala > ar fitia Wanker tan 5 , fro olive Becell bary le. oy friends of the banker, an woll as tho] DIX TO NAME HIS OWN MAN. FJ ranving from $15 to|live Becell bargain sa alogeloratat oiher Auancial ineeltscons) ¢ $25. | Silks Serges, Chiffons nan oe and | @ 4 iT y snd he received many telegrams and | Ax Wants Meal ndorsem: Mixtures Serges, Chev ots! It is v rful y other ma ot ¢ Mee | for Doty's enor. Hicheat indi Tig {the least, that d of diree- i c hty} f P Mt which a | ALBANY, Jan, 10.—It was reported here ent in every model | £actifice so niu 0 See aie caerege | AG that Gov, Dix nad asked some apparent in ¢ i ietia, Gur dressed arn seal ented to Mr. Bari jof the lead physicians of New York fabrics bot smoo' nd creations and are fash- 4 Bnd Beam City to maine the man to succeed Dr. | Poueht Charmin CoRtt ler rec eck $ OF COLD INSTR Doty as Health Officer of the Port of iL Hn leading Dee AY DEMERS. E08 als DIE STREET. [sew york and skirts in leading ex-|with latest conceits in it was stated at the Executive Cham- clusive mod some trimm Every one isa Witliam 2 Collapses in Brooks A Gee nat eae es firmelt oiheraoh man Se Mb ft ae lyn While on Way to Work, v A bite te tailore | perfection. Coat whether by day, for st One death from 1 occurred tn |inent of t linings of exquis te or evening or thea Brook! A eurly this m William Colors and sizes for all. Surely it would not street, was on hik Way to work ‘ BLOWN UNDER AUTO BY WIND A chance that will net) possible cat t he suddeniy collapsed ae ae come again, See them prices, e ° oxeph Kip a seventy Warran M4 B pens > years old, ascr Fourth av No eC. 0, D. ald and D revive hii, nue at Eighth streot at 6 o'clock last] Carran did not respond to treatment | evening when a gumt of wind blew ht 4 Magon called Dr. ldarber, of the in front of an automovile, He was 1 Ser Hospital, When the physician moved to Bellevue Hospital with a| arrived, Carran was still conselous, but | broken leg and other injuries. in great distress and died a few © automobile was owned by Mrs | utes lat he doctor sa'd the death Joseph J, White of No, 1 Lexington wus due to the excessty man’s weakened condition, N.Y. MEN NAMED BY MMANIGAL IN DYNAMITE CASE sons Said to Know Inside of Explosions Here. poenas for scores of persons who are oxp) in Peuusylvania, sees are said to ti called because of new disclosures m: for Per- ‘ ‘an. 10,—@ud- ons tn de ntessed dyni cold and the a’ Connecting Link. CHICAGO, Jan. nue, who, with a friend, Mrs WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUA BEEF PACKERS WIN FIGHT TO EXCLUDE POOL EVIDENCE Court Decides Against Gov-|.;, ernment in Effort to Form 10,—Untted States Judge Carpenter to-day struck from the record in the trial packers charged with criminal viola of the ten Chicago sentation of the evidence to the jury without definite connecting Hnke woul: be prejudicial to the defendants. Other papers bearing similar gota Scott, | was being driven by Adolph Weinhauer, WIRELESS TELLS OSCAR DIVORCED «MIT DEAD | | Son Put Hammerstein Aboard | Ship Without Breaking | “WHAT WAS THE — “There Was Nothing He Could | Do,” Says Arthur, After Ship Sails, USE?” | With hts divorced wife, Mrs. Metvina | Hammerstein, lying dead in her apart- (ments at the Cornwall, No, 2% Weat Ninetleth street, Oscar Haimmersiein sailed for London to-day on tho Lust! tanta, Mra, Hammerstein died last night of heart failure. one-time husband, Arthur Hammerstein, the second son by a former marriage, No one told tho excorted his |father to the pler, and after the ship jsalled admitted that he had kept Mra | Hammerstein's death a secret | “What was the use? he inquired | bluntly, "It was all over, They had not lived together for years, ‘Ther | was nothing that he could do. He had | important business in London, anyway, Jand it was better Just tolet him go Jalong. I shall send him a wireless this afternoon and break the news.” Mr. Hammerstein was in high spirits three years ago, the bride being a Miss Jacobi, Mr. Hammerstein and his wife, who ia now dead, lived apart for many years. Their opinions on are voiced In two quotations. Mr. Ham- dishes; then sits opposite ver and deals the cards, They never meet any one, never know any one, Mrs. Hammerstein's reply to thin was | racteristic, She said think the manager's wife who 1s jealous of her husband !# stupid, If there !s cause for It, then the man te not worth the woman's torturing her- self on his account.’ On Jan, 28 last Mra, Hammerstein, having established residence at South Nyack, im Rockiand County, where she had been living with daughter Stella, brought @ suit for divorce, The proceedings were kept quiet and the de Ohio, Ilinots, Towa and other points in| ton of the Sherman law, certain papert| taus of the testimony and accusatty: the Middle Went were issued to-day by | 87d letters bearing notations purportin« | were never made public. It was und to be in the handwriting ef J. Ogden | stood that Mrs. Jlammerstein merely re- the Government officiais who are Con-| Armour, one of the defendants. ferred to “divers women." On June 17 ducting the Federal Grand Jury's inves} ne ruling was on motion of the de-| sie was granted an interlocutory decree | tigation of (he dynamite conspiracy tense, widca contended that the pre} vnich was made final three montha late Lt ty declared that Mrs, Hammerstein's Jeath was superinduced by the distress | the | ALL THREE STORES = ae meratein once said: ‘A theatrical man cannot be a pin-| ochle husband. A pinochie husband works certain hours, He never comes home @ second late, and never falls to call his wife at certain hours of the day, He never gots anywhere in life. After eupper he helps his wife with the Y 10, he went up the gangplank, He had| been here only a few days. } ‘Mra, Melvina Hammerstein was the impresarto’s second wife, and bore h his two daughters, Stella, the actress, who is his chum, and Mrs, Hosa ‘Tosto- vin, The sons, Harry, Arthur, William and Abraham, were the children of his first wife. The second marriago was OSCAR contracted at Montromery, Ala., thirty- TOY BALLOON INVENTOR. 77, esticity | 1912. Oscar Hammerstein, Who Is on Sea, and Divorced Wife, Who Is Dead “4 TAAMME STEIN | “FINGY” CONNERS SAYS DEMOCRATS WILL WIN IF THEY'LL BE NICE. the Waldorf-Astoria to-day FIGHT T0 SAVE RICHESON FROM CHAIR IS BEGUN Father of Violet Edmands Takes Leading Part in Seek- ‘ing a Commutation. FOSS STORMED. GOV. Flood of Letters Pouring In on Him, Many of Them Pro testing Against Clemency. a) to The F wots hos Jan. 10-Following a confers ence at the Pa House to-day be tween Moses Grant Edmands and At torneys Lee and M counsel for Rev V. T Richesort, now under of death for the murder of Mr. Morse said T will file with the Governor in a fe wiays 9 petition for the cammuta- tion of t ntence passed upon Rav | Mr. Ric a to that of for Ife, [cannot say at this time when the petition will be filed with the Gov- ernor, but ft will be ina few days at the outside Jov. Foss la crowded with the Richeson advocating enouncing com Attorney John L. 1a Virginian | counsel of the y ung clergyman, made preparations to-day to leave for home, and he expects to reach Lynchburg to row afternoon, He will not return here until a petition for commutation ts Mint Cuero [heard by Gov. Foss Aust Cease Ou irelling and Next) “the courtroom scene of yeatortay, tn 4 Presidential Election Will which Richeson pleaded guilty of the Be Easy murder of Mixs Linnell, who the Dis- Pa A sonia she triet-Attorney now belleves wae his ingy onners, arrayed in @ P@8t) wire, had no {ll effects upon the young coat and coon skin cap with ear laps, er, and to-day the jail phystelan rted him tn nearly perfect health. rn Ruff, Mr. Connors plunged Into It was reported early day that ALWAYS SLEEPS IN A TUB. |« pouticat dissection and exciaimed: | Richeson had wuftered a collapse atter Phe Democrats can win and will win | hts bia rance before J aeecenay ee ie President “if, | but Dr , who has been his med He Never Wears Socks—Fifty |e ,Rext_ tirerkientin! oles ey [leat ation ed today that K : ind you- they behave themselve: borat Cents a Day Enough to Live On, | that 1 mean if the Democrats cease | would ¢ He Saves $4 of $8 a Week quarrelling among themselves, get to kother and stick together, victory wilt Ath a | thomcalt9 The Evening Wort = | Sravall SbitKa: pasty a tale BRIZABETH,: N Wee, tLe the Democrats do not divide them- pn married Henry Carpe of Weatileld, inventor | selves into r rvatives st mummer, or at least of the toy n, has Just colebrata and don't stop t who is a] went through ne ceremon which led hin ® nth birthday Here are | radieal and w vative, and girl to ve tint she was his wife, some of bis un rules of fe thereby mise t nee, nothing phe ropa ace rappngey ater |<nothing, I say-—cus prevent a, Demo. 85,000 for Finger: He be conte a day enough for fe trlumph in the nation. Re Refore Justicn Rlackmar, in the lanpconecto1WecOn ts |pubtionne are divided now and are fight-| Brooklyn Supreme Court te Minw * i ater oer ing over the radl and conservative} imma Wi! ams, teen years old of Pe ootart f'aH the toy im [01 Progrensive issues, and Bo one! No, 245 Washington street, was award We a hie patent o knows among them who is @ radteal] gq $5,000 nthe G, HL Har for $00, 1 who Ik a conservative. ‘They @re] rig Company, manufacturers at No, 45 Ho now earns #% a week and saves up in the air in (hat respect the| york street. Mias Williams last three half of tt | Domocrats don't want to ape them and] angers while pine position ae wet {nto that sort of a snart r chips Ina machine. INCOME TAX UPHELD. © Republican toaet te going to be hy by Taft wit it a doubt, and MADISON, Wis, Jan, 10.—-Wiseonsin's | ® peaten ail « the BAM ; Income Tax law, enacted by the last ate wolng to take sonatitutionad by | Harn and bags with % A | ERD ALER Wee ede ere (Marto and onaciees stee| Don’t Fail to Save 1 a ile : OP ito: Ste LES elle ttg ont tall for that Poosevett stum, | where you can, This tea aids. fe arent a by He is beaten now, and 1 guesa he eerie ait, Aw for ‘Taft, what has he} fs strength goes twice as far, cot ato break the trusts? He says to] | tore the A callie rh ninety-nine iuerts and oe eee yee did that tn ose | jolated in a diffe » of ta » ‘Trusts, ny . . + sumer, the public lation for pe | passed upon and (416 WEST 44" STREET NEW YORK on na ard 6 olau wtlong are f the law sare attll the # dress." > The Simple om tho Buffalo Expres) you have led an adventur- sald the young stranger, ad- e ancient mariner, answe the mariner, "I nothin’ » with an adven+ i) my CEYLON TEA One Quality—the Best White Rese Cotte, BestAroma and Flaver, ; Great Reduction Sale FURS FROM TRAPPER TO WEARER e' Buy the “FAMOUS » KRAMER FURS” direct from America’: leading manufacturers at our wholesale sales- room and save the mid- dleman's enormous profit. KRAMER FURS KNOWN THE WORLD OVER “SINCE 1873." Our Wnvlesale Prices Reduced N PONY COATS (not GENTE Bt ae wold by retailers is bo: vo. ‘Our '$26. 00 io. WoL KRAMER FUR CO. 13 EAST 16TH STREET, Bw at and Sth Ay “ Pianos Tone @ Quality Unequaled Superior to All O.hars Send for Catalogue and Prices WISSNER WAREROOMS 96 Sth Ave., cor. 15th St., N. Y, 65-57 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn

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