The evening world. Newspaper, February 27, 1912, Page 3

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HUNT FOR HIDDEN $500,008 DRIVES p A WOMAN INSANE ines Wes. Batien, Romuarried Wilow @f Federal Bank Wree Comumnitied to Asylum. CLAIMED TO HAVE CASH. Attorney for Receiver of Closed Bank Believes the Fund Was Healiy Hidden. 4 A Alspaten ¢t: feago to-day an- Nounced that Mrs, ‘‘heresa K. Hatten, the remarried widow of David Roth- eokild, wrecker of the Federal bank, ha@ Been committed to an institution in that city as insane. George W. Ginze, attemney for the receivers of the defunct dawk, declared this action would in no way effect the search being made for the 600,000 that Rothechiid ts supposed to have secreted. “Tam not surprised at the news,’ Ae. Glaze, * said : since Mrs. Batten made vember the news about @ hus been drinking very 7 condition has been euch @ome time that I have been looking her committment. We have secured the information Pr yn and we hai the books and papers she hed.” 3ira, Batten's brother, Dr. Leo Keasell ef this city, acquiesced in sending her ‘to the Dunning Institution after ashe ta been pronounced mentaty un- by two Chicago physicians. BATTEN’S FIRST HUSBAND KILLED HIMSELF. Batten is the daughter of Louis who resides at the Majestic sterney Néstien and eentence to Sing Sing— the bank wrecker told her he had man- aged to get hold of about $500,000 from the Federal Bank and hed placed it in @ cafe deposit vault. He pleaded with his wife to stand by him while he was @apving his ten-year sentence. As an inducement he turned over to her the keys te the it, but did mot mention ‘whteh safe deposit company he had vest, He died before his sentence was completed. The widow was unable to , loenée ghe money. @he Aid secure pos- seasten of etl of her husband's private papers and boxes and these she re- tained. Rothschild's death the Dee Moines, there married Eugene Batt New Yorker, Batten had le! an@ family in East Orange, fad secured a South Dakota divorce. ‘The first Mrs. Beiien heard of this and hed the divorce sei aside as defective. ‘The second Mrs. Batten separated from him until he went to Sioux Falls, 8. D., and secured a genuine divorce, she working as a nurse in a Des Motnes hospital in the while. They were remarried. NOTORIETY CAUSES NEW HUS- BAND TO LOSE JOB. St. Lo} large jewetr: He had this p tion nine deys when his wife made pub- Mo the facts that Rothschild had hid- Gen part of the wealth of the Federal liank. The notoriety caused Batten to place, Attorney Glaze went to we and learned Batten had left He effected a reconciliation, necessary to call and fore of the were such that { him b fore a grand hat he knew Mrs, Batien's cond: that trip,” sald Mr. Gla: up trying to learn « and returnad to New Y was informed fhe had normal seit 9 reg 1 went out there. This time I was successful, as I was able to veim boxes and trunks that were stored in (he Wabash depot and which have bem useful to me in trying to locate this money, wiich I really bel! exiets." Batten took Wife to Philadelphia re he abandoned yw York, but learn- in December, hee, She came to \ ing her Yusband had gone to Reno, New., che atarted after him. “@he had told me,” said Mr. Glaze, “that there was a trunk in Des Moines which contained valuable papers. 1 told her to gct it and when she left rae whe sald she would. The next T heard was that she was in Reno, She seized the trunk the her and, who had filed H ry IN CHICAGO SHE HAD MONEY IN SKIRT. Qére, Batten was next heard from in Qhleago about two weeks ago. She sewed up returning to in ker skirt New York to restore it to the de- postters of the Federal bank Mi Glage surmised from the accounts of her escapades ont that she was drimking Neavily his susp! wag confirmed whon she was e¢ fort to fli wealth is tts ffect upon to cents of trusted, Ito are vests 9 had and thelr . ld men pout the ng eac from at raat whe ne wive thon crcl. Daa West in tho n who wiv iow, fore 1 | foot *lEaoTIsM TOO OFTEN CLOUDS; -~ + | ef *& THE LEN TEN LOOKING GLASS ¥ | What the Married Woman Sees as She Gazes Therein—First of a Series of Articles by | Nixola Greeley-Smith. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publithing Co. (The New York World). THAT HE: Asteo AY Suppose, After Selfishness or Vanity Is Reflected, | All Women Should Resolre Not to Talk About Themselves Nor to Begin a Sentence With “«T’’ Nor End One With “ Me.” But the Sacrifice of the Fair Sex Runs to Less Sweets, | While the Men, Instead of Taking a Pledge Not to Bully Nor Brag, Forego | Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Lent is upon us. And Lent, as we all know, is a period of reflection and penance. During these forty | days dedicated to sacrifice the lessened consumption of | —— ice-cream ecda and caramels will testify to the humble and contrite heart of femininity, while men will dimin- isa their customary lfbations and burnt offerings— otherwise wines, liquors and cigars. Yet a month from now, when spring sweeps into town, trailing her new green draperies over our muddy sidewalks, and with the Easter lily for a taper lights her | lamps in the shrubé and treetops of the parks, we shail go back to soda and brandy—and soda, to caramels and | erreur’ SraTHs cigars with a zest gained from fasting. And meantime we shall Lave hugged close our spiritual vices and indulgences, the little foibles and vanities we really care for and that no Leuten sermons can make | us sacrifice even for forty days. _ TAND COT HER HUSBAND Mave A Moment TO FIMSELP WIGHT iner of the home, {the domestic third: “Z thought you told me you were coming right home from the office? | & called you up at 5 o'clock they sald you had been gone fifteen minutes. Mow you know it doesn’t take but twenty minutes to get up here, Besides, that box of matches you hi at dinner was marked ‘Enickerbocker Motel,’ and you @ it when you wont out : parted, ‘ WE SEE OURSELVES AS OUR nee mite ho is too eentimental ts per- | 1 ly dinner ine But for a every afternoon to apend the | FF Ily fine he 2 ae . Pa TT id Eel el a oe Fa PnP inthe mnening He remained in Phi ‘or when we gaze into the Lenten lformer who Originated that exasperating ally sllpshod—who neod brassteres for Feet ae te Ray Soeae of the sertous Looking-Glage, which the meditative |accusation, “You don't love me ny their brains, frilla on thelr souls. The|night. Ughter'a fllneas Int Y: spirit of the season holds up to us ail,| More!” It ts she who takes literally the | cult of the body has been so well! — d ine Athy conditior LAST DA SOF THE GREA TEST We sce ourselves very much as we ap-| Words of Leonatus Posthumous when he and scalp felt Imoge: rms about hin neck in the! last act: “Hang there like frutt, my soul, till the tree dic.” No matter how a mun may be engaged, to our nelghbors, but rather than forswear the particular vice of selfish- ness or vanity or whatever ‘t may be the glass reveats to us, we surrender | ai other In aval ied viainted the things that we don't realiy cheri#h | preparing @ brief in a difoult case, oF =the cigars or tals or caramels! playing a har..*ss but intricate game that are relatively easy to give up. lof solitaire, ahe feels privileged to hang Supposs all the women in the [on his neck and remark at intervals of world could be induced te take the ‘two or three minutes; “Pay some atten- same Lenten resoluticn, “For forty |tioh to me." “What are you thinking days I promise not to talk about about now?" “I don't believe you care myself—to begin uo single scn- | whether I am here or not.” tonoe with Z and to end no single Or the Lenten Looking-Giass may pre- rogate to a! sentence with nie. sent her !mage in the most ungractous persons to Suppose every man allve should ine aspect of a!!—as the able cross-exam- competency’ augurate the sacrificial season by take | = ing this pledge: | ‘For forty days I wi bully | neither man nor woman, nor bluf nor brag to them.” Mon have lived forty days without It Is posaible that certain of might survive these mor of the sp! And rare and church on Easter mo! ‘At any rate, a peep in the Lenten, Looking-Glass will do us all good, !f oniy we have eyes for what !t shows us. for the mind than for the complexto It is the defects of the spirit that th Lenten Looking-Giass reveals, and if look in it to-morrow we may fin few hints for hu AN W.—To de t number of attacks on a will on th testator to draw o1 under the te Senator 1 a bill introduc: n last night, ask the vin swe would take to ing! AND DIMS THE CRYSTAL. Women fond of introspection, of eelf analysis, of crystal saziag into their own souls, But the crystal {s too often clouded and dimmed by egotiem. The Lenten Looking-Glass tg not flatter- tng, But suppose the married woman | wtops a moment before tt, and then telis Harris Oculists deserve your implicit confidence us what the mirror reveals to her? Perhaps sho sces a re of herself Every Oculist retained by the Optical House at a matinee, wa with lghted of M. H. Harris is a Registered Physician of wide experience and unquestioned skill. You can entrust your eyes to him with an assurance that he fully realizes his responsibility to you; that he doe care whether you buy’ glasses of us or not. Hundreds of people come to our eight stores every year to whom our Oculists ree “You do not need glasses." This, to some folks, seern “too good to be true.’ But sincerely, honestly it rue—every blessed word « f it. It is because we piye just such service that we've ex- panded from a 2 by 4 “‘salesroom"” to the Largest Retail Optical House in the world, with eight “professional Offices” in three cities. Pay $5.00 or $10.00, if you will, for the advice of private nder avowal of sps the heroine and eyes the ¢ 9 wha ¢ heeks the gallant her heroine's thritl, wir love seems to - all the world In that dim the hero’ her a glorio. to look at theatre, aur similarly fired, she eas of sentiment She is transported to am unreal world of romance, and when she Ipaves the theatre she carries with her the face and memory of & matinee idol who probably beats not jerness has evaporated as reached home, dis- her matinee toggery and had practitioners—but remember, it’s money needlessly spent. Annes with her, tushond | The, Nt Harris Glasses, whether they cost $2.00 or ousnems has closed about her more, are-guaranteed to give you entire satisfaction awaln, and tf 9: chance her husband is feeling #entimental and kisses her or | "Your money back if you want it.” 54 West 125th St, near Lenox Ave. ‘42 Coli mbus Ave., dint and R2nd Sta. 6N St., near Jobe &:. 00 Brondway, “ar Will’ by, Bkiys 139 Fulton 8t., opp. A. &S, Bkiy: sh lL have @ headache. | LOOKING GLASS MAY SHOW A | DIFFERENT PICTURE. 3 Wst3tonhis he Taat on Look» | now | Preached in the last ten years that we | are in far more need of beauty doctors ground of the mental incapacity of the Store at No, / a person may, a commission of five inquire into the matter of her hair or makes touse 54 Rast 23rd 6t., near Fourth Ave Ne exelgime, “O, Cy » Optical 27 West 84thBt,, bet. bthandéth Aves be ao 9 or, t fee OUTS. *'WAGESOF CRIME * DOLED BY JUDGES TO GUILTY CROOKS an Old Offenders Get Terms in Prison; LET US MAKE YOU FAT 50¢c Box Free We Will Prove at Our Own Expense That It Is No Longer Necessary to Be Thin, ani and ee | | | ' Mercy to. the Novices. Here te the record of rente sims posed by Judges of the Court of Gens eral Sensions BY JUDGE CRAIN. J. Ford. a Mart Nine No. Kast | : | teenth street; possoesion of revolver, no | Y prior conviction. Pleaded gullty, Fined Nor GM coukaueo Henry Pothoff tr, No. 1 Walton ave. | nue Brows possesion of rev er Pleaded guilt Mimtra Ref H Convicted in 1600 of petty larceny and then sentenced * Juvenile Asylum, Sylvester Jackson, No. 322 West For. tleth Pieaded street; ion prior pb Rutlty, Penitentiary one y revolver, | onvietion Lata Hondr Feinsing: and FY arceny; plended gullty | viction, Conmnttted to Waverley Home, BY JUDGE MULQUEEN, Cacsare No. Gt East | Hundred and 1 treet, rape | prison for not n five y and six What wout Well, Ol One! st Iw bor of Surmol”? State rauwous dosing, te Hon BY atenal ca lal Fitth ave: | aded | nue; tndte | euilty to Viction, Penitentiary for #)x inontts BY JUDGE ROSALSKY. tl | John J. Blech, No. 174 Woodbine reet; | th rr grand cen pleaded SHE indicted grand lar ' Lined st gullty of petty larceny; no prier con: | if ter te } vietton, Ser suspended BY JUDGE O'SULLIVAN, 1m West Sixty rel tn nd offense Tn 1906 was burglary and In 1% 3% DeeRees William Wilson, No. Fe not wine hind street » third in a Heo) ree for W years. of attempted went to F |MISS NICOLL PASSES mira Reformatory, CRISIS IN HER ILLNESS.! 77.50 'soniu i e yemtenn | ait ph ag ony ie pr KNOX ABOARD CRUISER ; [Sune iol Phtetepia: bat apere| ENTERS HARBOR AT COLON, | core ST.—-The United States | Ss sume se wt sin Tuan |, || Uae Largest Popular Priced Fur House inthe Country fa with hia wito and daughter, | S0% Secrowry Of ite: nateoe have = and he paid that the phy: mn board, anchors jevery confdence in Miss 6.30 this morning. | Th M nh tt went to attend a fall as the guest o} | lesa ee ioe TMG NOW FASHIONABLE |Cloa ~ SUL ur Co.,| | penile She | Women Favor Parted Locks, Puffs, Pom- 254 6” Bertween | } passed a pett eet tha, the | padours, Gereasy pie Going Ont. Cay Ave ; 16” and 17% present fashic without puffs and Gave Wrong Store Number, systematic use of a stimulating * In a news item yesterday 3 HAIR HEALTH contains all af euts needed by It destroys courages rapid concern- FUR SALE EVER HELD Closing Out |! ing the death of little Gertrude Gold- | the health-giving in stein from eating adulterated candy |the starved hair rohased in &@ @tore near her home at | dandruff germs No. 10 One Hundred and Seven. | growth of strong, new hur. Those teenth street The Evening World wave | ho pete ssly dry, faded looking locks grow | the number of Ben Hresiau's store as ene lustrous a! yout and the arance iP You can druggist’s for S00 or 81. 00 | from the Philo Hay Spec. | he he No. 2 East One Hundred and Seven. | Wh ‘teenth street, instead of No, 12. The is kept by avother man. Our intire Fur Stock Without Reserve At Usheard of Reductions $65 Karakul ul Coats, 24.98 54 inch fon high tustro fne curl, (24 98 whole skin, foreign dycd; richly lined with brocaded silk; former price was $05.00. Maurice Penn. The World’s Greatesi SILK STORE Fourth Ave. at 24th St., N. Y. Location: ‘Two doors from @3rd Street $ On ways lock east of Metropolitan Tower. DON’T pay retail prices for silk when you can buy by the yard every weave, textureand coloring at our wholesale store at manufac- turer’s prices and effect amazing savings. Come and compare. 14.98 19.98 24.98 39.98 $100 Mink Marmot Coats (Full Length) 39.98 $32.50 Baltic Seal Coats (Full Length). . $60 Russian Pony Coats (Full Length). . $85 Russian Pony Coats (Full Length). . $100 French Seal Coats (Full Length) $35 Black Fox Sets.... $50 Pointed Fox Sets RO MKT ALS gos ba baie ds 04 $20 Russian Lynx Sets. 4.98 $20 Blue Wolf Sets 4.98 Furs Purchased Now Stored Free of Charge at End of Season 12.98 12.98 oo 19.98 Ss Tickles the Palates of A Who Know Tea ETL Y Muis to Consumer Looms to Wearer Rogers Thompson Givernaud Co., Fourth Avenue at 24th St., N. Y,

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