The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1912, Page 3

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\) BILLIONS TIED UP UNTIL EQUITABLE WALLS COMEDOWN —St Wouldn’t Be Safe to Tackle Mercantile Safe Deposit Vaults Sooner. NEW DANGER IN THAW. Ice Support to Tottering Walls Melts—No One Permitted in Burned Structure. Financtal men estimated roughly to- day that at least $2,000,000,000 was rep- resented in the securities, cash and| Jewelry buried tn the vaults of the Mer- cantile Saf Deposit Company dn the| burned Equitable Building. An oMcer of the Equitable Life Assurance So- clety pointed out that hundreds of the largest brokerage houses, bonding and momgage concerns, banks kept all thelr securities in the Mercantile vaults. Several of the wealthiest finan. clera in the vity, he sald, were patrons ot the company, and he named the Harrimans and Goulds among them. | Despite the assurance of officers of | the Mercantile, who have established | | temporary quarters at No. 2) Nassau street, that the contents of the vaults are uninjured, Wall street will anxious until they are opened. Chief 1 Inspector O'Connor of the Building De- partment sald it might be two weeks or a month before the vaults were even ceastble. “The walls of the Equitable Bullding Will have to be torn down," said In- spector O'Connor, “before the hundreds of tons of debris that cover the Mer-| cantile vaults can be removed. ‘Then| the debris will have to be removed, and! before this can be accomplished there are tons of ice that, unless the cold | + adates, will have to be steamed or cut out. | CAN’T TELL WHETHER VAULTS | ARE SAFE OR NOT. | “There has been no one any nearer the vaults than inspectors of the Build- | ing Department. Nw one can tell abso- | lutely whether or not they are unin- jured. ‘This won't be known until they | are opened. From the little that can| ‘de seen st te surmised they are all! right." 8. H, Walker, safe expert of the Hall Bafe Companl, No. 339 Broadway, 1s con- fident the Mercantile vaults are in good condition, “However,” said Mr, Walker, “no ono can state that absolutely untf they are opened. They may have suffered from condensation. ‘The excessive heat inside the vaults during the fire, then the cold | of the freezing water afterward will ause moisture on the inside, But I! -don't think this would penetrate the safety deposit boxes, because htére is an | air chanmber between the exterior walle | of the vault and the boxes, “If I had anything to do with it I ‘would not allow tho vaults opened for at Yeast a month, The Baltimore fire’con- vinced us that It is dnngerous to open | @ny vault that has suffered intense heat | unless we are positive the intertor is the fame temperature as the outside. To ‘be safe about this, the metal must be chilled.” antile Safe Deposit Company sheltered in its vaults at least 10,000 boxes. In price they ranged from 85 to 90. There Is no record kept of the con- tents, and officers of the company d olared they could give no idea of the wealth they concealed. BUILDING PROTECTION SHED) OVER BROADWAY SIDEWALK. Because the rise in temperature hae softened the tce which has been prop- ping up the tottering Broadway walls of the Equitadi Building since tt burned mast Tues the Bullding De- partment to-day onlered that nobody, on any business whater should be permitted under or near that part of the ruins, except men of the Depart. ment who are cautiously building a ued of heavy beams over the Rroad- way sidewalk from Cedar to ne streets, om the protection of this shed an effort will be made to shore up the walls and to pull parts of them down gradually, Every able-bodied man who applied for work was hired by Supt. Shannon of Canavan Brothers. The Bullding Department was very strict In enforcing the order against al- | lowing anybody to enter the ruins, IDil- Non Broderick, exa er for the State Insurance Department, was forbidden to try to reach his former offices In search | of papers which he sald were of very g@reat value, eplejack Frede: ik Walker, hired by the Equitable officials to g vough the ruins hunting for stray pers, Was told he could not even enter the rotunda, | Inspector O'Connell sald there hit be a crash of the wails at any mom An acetyline blast app: tus 3 sot up on the Cedar street side of the pullding at noon, With tt was begun the work of meiting away the steel bars at the windows of the second vault of the Mercan Deposit Company, in which the body of Fr believed to Ho. AMERICAN EXCHANGE BANK TENANTS GO BACK, Much of the Pine street side of the ‘ullding was shored up yesterday and the street was declared safe, Many of the tenants of the American Exchan National Bank went back to thelr de- serted quarters. ‘The bank !tself, how- ever, did not reoccupy Its floors in the building. A great crowd of bank messengers and others with time for observation on thelr hands were greatly interested in the efforts of a gang of laborers to take the ice off the great plate glass window of the bank offices, The window ts evated with fce which varies from six | @ S@ehteen inches in thickness, Wee Aes been made, were % be tes," the young woman who made her and the Veiled Woman, found study of that pa been called [I b | safe Love Is Vanishin | Men Fear to Write Love Notes Even on Type- writer and Are So Guarded in Speech That Next Generation of Girls Will Have to ‘Propose, Says Marian Cox. ‘Women in Love Are Ex- acting and Flippant, Men Egotistical and Vulgar;” Girl Who Seeks Match With For- tune, Not Love, Is Nor- mal One. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Love is pol- icy for @ wo- man, folly for a man.” After Ovid-Martan Cox. a new trea- e has been writ: | if on the art of! or as its| neator, Marian « nrefers to call it, verne + it “Ars Amorts.’ RIXOLA, In her new book, GREELEY® SMITH siirituat Curios: literary “The Crowds offers @ pro-| sion that has “tender,” perhaps, because untender of all. “Women in love are exacting and fippant—m ‘otistical and vul- Gar. Love is no longor splendid, but is @ malady we all consider morbid, so that indifference of the heart has become the fashion. In New York women still play the game of love, but only for amuse- ment or for profit.” The author of this astonishine state- ment !3 @ young and happlly married woman who with her husband lives at No. 11 East Thirty-elsnth street, When I saw her yesterday Mrs, Cox told me sho :s to start this week on a trip around the world for the purpose of “broadening her art.” But when you have read the sophisti- cated and clever phitosophy of Mra. you will wonder If there are any new worlds for her to conquer, any new voyages of discovery for her to take. MEN ARE AFRAID OF WOMEN WHO LOVE. “Love has icen so fatal to women,” Mra, Cox remarked. "It alone has made them the dupes of en and of society, as well ag the dupes of nature, “It should be th: aim of women to efont love in themselves; at least un- til the day when they have won the respect of men sufficiently to be able to show their sexual preferences, some: thing they have never yet done fully, though it is the only human right worth having. From my opservation,” Mrs. ox continued, “I have discovered thi debut with men do not really want love from women, Their own laws have created this fear in them, Only think of our breach of promise, ation of affe suits and you will understand why men have become afraid of women with « heart “To-day men fear to write let- ters, oven typewritten letters, to their sweothearts, and what is a love without love-letters? “Men have become so guarded in speech that the next generation of girls will have to propose and will to suggest lifelong support, matrimong, so that their will not be suspected. fear the heart so much that to-day @ man indulges only in some romnoe of reason, such as marry- ing a wife who can be an advertise ment of her husband's prosperity, or for social respectability, valu- ablo to doctors and lawyers.” “yhen you do not believe in marry- H I inquired, d by spring— ambitions Mra, Cox replied. yo in Inte marriages. “Love has @ value, of course, I¥ fe the only preservative of youth in women aud of the primitive in men to-day. It is the salt in mod- erm life which will preserve our hearts from withering completely, and gives asa salutary way of act- ing the fool. LOVE FATAL TO WOMAN'S 8U- PREMACY AND CHARM. “But love {s the one thing which, since time immemorial, has destroyed @ woman's supremacy and charm, Fr trom love in ourselves we are all virgin Bruniildes, enrapturing all men, but © we are mastered by our Slegfrieds |intelligence and vanity, never love, but | «mony and allen- | T HE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY 165, 1912. Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publishing Co. ADVERTISEMENT OF HIS PROSPER! tune {s not to be charming when she loves.’ “Love 1s really the most unbecoming of passions to women. That is why beautiful women, when possessed of only lend themselv:s to be loved. “Fortunately for the world, nearly all women have conquered romantic love in themselves. Women are #"! born very old, We are all equipped with the | lessons of the past. And throughout the past women have been denied all personal initiative, fancy, choice and | even candor in love, until now the func- | | tion 48 quite aborted, perverted or atro- | phied in them, | WHY THE CHARMING WOMAN | HAS NO HEART. “Emotions that are concealed are weakened and finally destroyed like plants kept in the dark. “And women have been forced by public opinion during all the centuries to conceal their hearts so effectually that it Js now quite natural that they should have none, or that—when one does accidentally possess a heart—tt 1s an unsound thing. And all the really charming women tn soclety are with- out hearts, Instead of the heart they | have ambition, and their lusts and ap. | petites are merely for power. “Her maternity makes wor worshipper of power these mean the security of her ohildren, | Th re the woman who marries for | wealth ig the one who is truest to her womanhood (and you will notice that| she is the woman who ts most admired and liked by her own sex), and the woman who marrles for a portioniess | love or—still truer to love—sives herself | without marriage 1s a traitor to her sex, who punish her accordingly. Women have always leagued against love, for they scent In ft thelr enemy. | THE “FORTUNE HUNTING” GIRL| 18 NORMAL ONE. “The modern girl one sees everywhere in quest of the millionaire does not do- serve the opprobrium given her by the | social reformers, for she {s in reality the normal, sound feminine being, and | the girls who marry beneath them, | sometimes eloping with their father’s and chauffeurs, are the degen- n the nd success, for | Mrs. Cox paused. She had reached | the reductio ad absunium of her phi- losophy. Perhaps when she returns from her trip around the work she will realize that the girl who marries & chauffeur {s several centuries ahead of th who marries to hi one, I Gon't think we need have any doubt about it, really, for Mrs, Cox is a very clever young woman, who fully deserves the eulogy Max Nordau wrote of hor first book: “A remarkable exploit. The author | has a fino literary temperament, | thoughts, emottons, a rich and complex | ersonality; her road will be an ascc ing one, leading to the summits of ——_— LOCKED DOORS BRING FINE. Dress Manufacturer Convicted of Locking | Justice Steinert, Salmon and Mayo, in |Special Sessions to-day, Imposed a fine of $25 on Nathan Krauskopf, manufac- | turer of ehildr: dresses at No. 88?) Fourth avenue, for keeping the doors of | his shop locked while his employees were at work, | | The evidence showed 12 women and five men were at work tn the shop| when State Labor Department tnspec- | tors found the doors locked Oct. 2% last. | A fine of $75 was tmposed upon the a Hix Employees, | on we become Weak, powerless and stup!d, like all other women, ‘To love is the one and only fatality to women, There- fore taroughout the ages they have un- nsciously sought to render theme elves incapable of It, Women Who are supremely dowered with charm conquered all possi- bility of 1 themselves. And yet they have ther t nature in sensi Hlity and ht. Goethe is the only reat r who has perceived an ink- ng of the truth, Judging from his re- mark t \ Woman's greatest misfor- betting among the sportively tnelined was It ¢ the window would n before t »» was finished partment ofelally with- firin of J. G McGrory & Co, of No, 4 | West Elghteenth street for violation of ‘the law relating to the employment of children under sixteen years of age, You Know the Name even if not the quality of this tea, It pays to know both: WhiteRose drew from e ruins to-day and the Mi sneaaueats me | GEYLON TEA No attempt is to be made to enter the Equitable ” "s security d cash q Fauits until tie Iifowivas walieare ty DoUble Strength Saves Half The p nany hund. worth of policies « vults, In vid dol nich loans day whieh a eet White Rose Coffre, Only 6c, Per Pound, “ME MARRIES A WIFE WHO CAN BE AN g, tor Men Are Afraid of It MAFIA DEATH SIGN And Women Find It Is Fatal to Their Charms HALISWIINESSIN (The New York World), Puce rt wee DISCARD | oe GOCIAL POWER 13 AW PowEeRFUL BECAUSE ‘TF 1S FO UNCERTAIN” je and T treated him, too, The boy |had two wounds and Arnessan only one. [That does not make any great differ- | J jenee, ‘The one thing that however, struck me, at the time I treated Arnes- jsan, way the state of the mars mind. | He had a wife and two chiliren and mas worrie Depression tends to weak- en the inoculation, “People a wrong {dea of the Pasteur tment They believe !t | makes the patient immune forever. The {truth 1s, fmmunity is not sure after a year, A death, however, from recurring bies before that time I¥ so unusual at I would say Arnessan’s case fe one tn a thousand, IN SPITE OF CURE, PUZZLES DOCTORS Arnessan Succumbs After Pas- | h tre “Hy pphobla is a disease of slow teur Tréatment Had Sup- jdevetopment and consequently the in- oculation takes effect slowly. The treatment {9 suposed to arrest the velopment of the disease and gradually fdrive it out. ‘To do this fully requires, In some cases, twenty-four days, After the first inoculation, If the disease docs posedly Made Him Immune. The death of Carl 1. Arnessan from | rables, after he was supposedly cured | NOt appear, the patient 14 si But tt ven months azo by the Pasteur treat-{{¥dtophobla once manifests ttself, Saye: i i ‘“\ nothing can be done, ‘The end ts swift ment, has aroused the interest of the medical world. Arnessan was bit treated for rable and certatn HOPE TO FIND AID TO SCIENCE IN FATAL CASE. “Both the boy, Carlo Dolce, and Ar- ten by a mad dog and He was discharged as cured and was apparently in g004/nessan got the same treatment, Ar- health, Last Saturday night he Was|nessan came to me from St. Johi attacked by hydrophobia and died at the| Hospital, where his wound had been J. Hood Wright Hospital. An autopsy | first cauterized. I have no doubt the waa halon ithevboay. order, Work was done properly. I ald not Dr. 4 rit |give them the treatment for intense Plies a Alas sae prin rabies, as none of the wounda was near |the face or the nerves of the brain. of hyfrophobla, gave the treatment to| They got the regular troatment, #lightly: Arnonsan at the time he was bitten. changed from the one devised by P. To-day, Dr. Bartholow was almost at|teur. ‘This consisted of two innooul @ lost to account for he reourrenoe of |ttiona the firmt and second day and one the disease. |datly for the next seventeen days, The “There can ‘be only two reasons for |intense treatment would have been four the development of hydrophobia at this |ipnoculations the first and mecond day and one dally for the next twenty-four late date," De. Bartholow said. “Wither | fnyg Arnessan was bitten by some other dog! “he boy took the treatmont better or the treatment did not take complete than Arnessan. He had nothing to effect, Ihave heard @ butcher's dog in| worry about, while Arnessan had his hia netghborhood liked his hand a short | family on his mind, As I remember, he the ago. If there was any aitght scratch |did not show the same hopeful signs on his hand at the time and the dog | the boy did. fi es rey | “Al wounds should be oauterized at had rabies, that would account for it | once, ‘The number of lives lost through 1 am going to huve the dog examined. | carelessness and delay ts terrible. BOY BITTEN RECOVERS, MAN SUCCUMBS, ‘Phe Pastour treatment which I ad- BUT) ‘Tho brain of Arnessan was examined to-day by Dra, Smith, Wittison, Fahn stook and Oler. Dr. Bartholow will ex- 1 [amine the cerebro-spinal cord and the minimtered to Arnessan, seven month jnervous gangila In the hope of diavove: ago, seemed to lake effect. There was ling something that will ald sctence tn boy, Carlo DolC®-also bitten at the | fighting hydrophobla. oe McGibbon & Co. Have Removed to Nos. 1 and 3 West 37th Street Near Sth Avenue. As a special inducement, to acquaint the public with the unequalled facilities of our beautiful new store, we offer a 10% JANUARY DISCOUNT in all departments, This discount !s especially n relation to our handsome assortments of HOUSEHOLD LINENS, LACES AND LINGERIE The same McGibbon standard of quality which has always been s feature of this establishment will be matntained in our new location, DEPENDABLE FURNISHINGS FOR SELECT HOMES ae Seon S r Police | rone would go and get his wife, STORY OF MURDER; oo |Ferrone, Accused Wife Slayer, and Brother in Courtroom Make Mute Threats. MYSTERY. Believe Prisoner Was Sought for Murder of Ma- | mie Cunningham. ¥ He related their conversation as fol- Ly ET ‘a lows: Father Is Found Kneeling at Win- “Katle, won't you come back and live dow Which, It Seems, He with me? asked Ferrone. et “No. T only came back to save my Tried to Open. xiuy \ CaN atte we a ata Alarmed by the odor of gas yesterday on't you # me a kiss ey morning, Mra, Samuel Kata, Mving on “phen Taw Berrone wake a motion] t@ second floor of No, 8 Bay ‘Titre with hia arm," sald Janfortorl, Cdid| teenth street, Brooklyn, called Patrol tr ri of hand. West street ee Lille Joseph Perrone, on trial before Judge | Will Foster and a jury in the Court of Gen={P mu \ ona for the murder of hts ve wife, Katle, and whom District-Attor. | to-day ney Whitman and the police suspec in the mysterious murder of Mamte Cunningham, fifteen yeara ago, he witnesses today give evider n that tha id him to the ele carefully seanned the features juror before he turned his ate a tallor, of No, a0 West On ed and Forty-eventh street i la Went to Philadetphta three! days before the murter of Katle Fe rone, briny at her bac had left husband before and to tive brother In Philadelphia, rone came to my uncle's shoe on Broadway Sunday evening, sald Gennalla, “He sald, girl ts in the hospital and "t get well unless my wife comes back, She does nothing all day but call for her mama. Won't you go to Philadelphia and get my wife and save my child? “Then he cut off my Mrs. to Fer. ome time with her shop Oct erled and child's leg.’ 1 ‘They have told him 1 but he must promise that he would not harm her tf 1 did. ‘1 not that kind of a man,’ was his reply." FERRONE GIVES DEATH SIGN; WITNESS BLANCHES. At this potnt of the witness's testl- mony Ferrone, who had been Hastentng intently, put the fingers of his right hand between MMs teeth and bit them hard. A few who saw the action rec- ognized tt as the death sign of the Genalla saw the sign and turned It was soveral minutes before Genallor uuld_-procec went to Philadelphia and saw Katie,” continued the witness slowly and {na low tone. “I told her that her husband had sent me to bring her back to her sick child, ‘T would do anything for my ohild,’ she sald, ‘but I cannot go back to my husband. T want to be an honest woman, not a bexgar, and Unat's what would happen if T went back to himy ** Judge Foster's attention was thym dl- rected toward the | ck of the court room, where an Italian was leaning far out of his seat, In an effort to attract Gennalla's attention, is right fore- finger was tytween his teeth, Judge Foster learned that the man was Fer rone's brother, and notified Capt. Fan: ning of the court attendana to watoh the man, and If the action was repeated to fect him from the room. “When wo left Philadelphia,” contin- ued the witness, “Katie caarried a amall package. On our return we went to my uncle's shop, and Joseph Ferrone came there, He asked his wife to come back and live with him, She sald ‘No,’ but she wanted to see her child. “Ferrone sald he would take her to the hospital, but she did not want to go with him alone, She told me she w afraid to go with him and asked me to accompany her, I was sick and could not, ao I aent my nephews with her, A Perfect Digestion Delicious & Piquant AW: Sauce with soups, salads, meats and fish unequalled Invaluable in the cooking St, James Importing w York (Importers) J. GLASSBERG Announces the Opening of A BRANCH STORE AT 225 West 42d St. Weet of Broadway with the most exclusive selection of FOOT WEAR The stock represents all original styles of Oxfords, Pumps, Satin Silppers for every occasion. All sizes and shades are represented. Also Our Celebrated SHORT VAMP SHOES French and Cuban Heel, in Velvet and All Leathers FAIR PRICNS IN BOTH BTORBS, J. GLASSBERG 225 WEST 42D AT, west of Broadway, IRD AYE. NEW YORK, i 1ith Bt Tilusteated Catalogue Free, Open Br'gs tn 0. James nephew, teatifled to following Ferrone | and his wife when they left the she ore she left ti package and took from She slipped it In the pock SAW HIM THREATEN AFTER SHE |», SPURNED HIM. | dh) t eee whether he had a nd or not, for when T heard them|rooms of Morris Kind, on the floor Be talking about kissing [had fallen a few | tow, uind them, as E thought they | Ty opin the door Flannagan ha@ to re eee. a celitte else until the} £FCe aside the body of a bull dog that hody of Mra Ferrone was found xome| 24d been suiTocated. In the front Foon time later In. the evening, her throat; 4% Morris Kind, ®neeling at a Wile having been cut with a razor, A tazor| GOW, his hands grasping the sill, demds was found some distance from the body.| In another room was the body of; Bis had been ese was found in BOYS WITNESSES OF THE WIFE) that apparently had been accidentally MURDER. turned on, staggered to the window. to Three boys, Richard T ». 21olopen it and died in the attempt. The One Hundred and Worty-ffth|dog also had seemingly tried to eave . hoor ‘Tyrrel and William | Mmself by placing his nose in the erack f No, 128 Broadhurst | of the front door to get fresh alr. testify that they we Z| ——_—_— one art hit wife w ° ‘ occurred ral times during the pr fe comptained, Beautiful Plush and Mixture Models A continued sensational coat event, values far eclipse any of our previous remark- able offers. Bedell Bargains, and nowhere would it be pos- sible to equal it. wilderi unhea| finest > 645-65! Broad Street Newark, N. J. i! i Franklin Piano In your home. Come to the Fischer Piano Factory and learn why the Factory Salesroom, 417 West 28th Street, Near %h Avenue. Oldest Piano Makersin New York and material, and only our newest and best are presented to you at this Handsomely Satin Lined They are without a peer—combin- ing the French idea of dressiness and materials emphatic; warmth without weight; fabrics rough weaves in mixtures, vicunas and black cloths, Allerations FREE. SALE AT ALL THREE STORES thop sho untied the] into the room nsatnat the objection of it a revol the t of her « “nit ee GAS FUMES KiLL MAN AND HIS YOUNG SOW, n Janfortorl, Gennalla's | iyiiing in his|man Flannagan, who broke into the fon, Sydney, phyxtated. It js presumed the father, awakened by gas whitch was escaping from @ jet aged fourteen, also @s- Ken from tt and one Mra. Fe yne'e 14 your sunlight, that fhe gloomy when you were wot aaa wit were interrnp! he saidiy replied. “That inva you had L the habtt ther J vag rv very few min« nad tr what you thouglt of me." *10 To-Morrow, Tuesday, These Best Bedell garments at greatest : Every model be- ingly handsome in both style rd-of price. Many Like Picture tailoring—the supremacy of cluding smooth and 14:16 West 4th Street—New York 460 & 462 Fulton Street—Brooklyn SAVE A DOLLAR A STEP—here we sell without the heavy expense of separately conducted stores. $10 Down Places a Splendid possession of a reliable piano is no longer a lusury. Sale Price $185, surely worth $250. J. & C. Fischer Bankers Trust Company build- ing will be ready for occupancy April 15th. The building has been made absolutely fireproof by the most modern methods. A number of desirable offices are for rent and may be exam- ined on the Premises, For particulars apply at Banke ers Trust Company. 7 Wall St., or Douglas Robinson, Charles S, Brown Company, 128 Broadway.

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