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oan IN CASE” Rev. Martyn’s, Fiancee Breaks Engagement After Disclosures by Mysterious Female. AFFAIR STIRS CHURCH. Eimhursi Parson, Once “Rub- ber-Neck” Yacht Spieler, Was Twite Divorced. Ajmysterious wonvan, wito appeared Bt Eimburs:, Queens vorough, a few Gays after the announcement of the et agement of the Kev. Ferrer Martyn, Pastor of te Baptiet Church, and Mis Grace Tayivr, starved a totin of gossip that led to the disappoarance of the Rev. Mr. Martyn, His present where- @bouts is unknown to any one in Elm- burst But Mr Mortyn's past history ts Known th Minh: sat and the people there Mave been taikicg of nothing else for ays past. Tho: he he nos been at- Voroed twice, tha! he once suddenly ree Bigned the pasiorite of a church tn Ridgewood, N. J, because of stories -eireulated concerning him, and that in Bie varied career he has acted asa Megaphone lecturer on a “rubdberneck” Faoht are ali now matters of knowiled to his parishioners, Mr. Martyn {s forty-seven years old and homely of features, but possessed Of undoubted magnetiam. Ho ts the sort Of man Who attracts women, but arow the suspicions of men, Perhaps that is why Mr. Woodhull of Elmhurst w Bever friendly with the pasior of the Baptist Ch veh, Mx. Woodhull ts the brother-in-law Of Miss Grace Taylor, a beautiful girl of twenty, who lives with her widowed Motker and her sister and brother-in- law at No, 107 Third street. She wi the leader of the Sunday school class Mr, Martyn’s church. ‘The attentions of the pastor to the Jeader of the Sunday school aroused a Jot of gossip in the congregation Inst winter and spring. Mr. Woodhull and Ke wife advised Miss Taylor ugainet Ustening to the blandishments of the Pastor, and their opposition was known _ te Mr. Martyn, who a month ago start- hia congregation by announcing the pulpit that he was going to Posign. He explained he wan about to on the lecture platform. The con- tion refuned to accept his resig. Bation. After a conforence with the Board of Truster Mr. Martyn consented Ste remain with the church until Aug. 1, Then followed the announcement of hie engagement to Mins Taylor. “WOMAN IN THE CASE” BREAKS UP ENGAGEMENT. ‘This announcement was only two days @'4 When there appeared in Kimhurat erious womaniin the case. She at the Taylor home and visited the rustecr, As A result of hor vislt Mr. aud Mrs. Woodhull visited Manhat- tee und looked wp ye carver of the Rev. -lartyn, “Thelr report to Trustees was tn the re of w boribsiell, The trustees @ummened Mr. Mar yn betor wand Pecliod the facia aiioned by Mr. and Mrs, Woodhull, My. Martyn wracetully ad- nphes the ailegations wer an but protested he had resolved “to @ diferent sort of Lit Its reas + tion wis a: on the spot be Taylor, upon being advisod of tho Wities of Mr. Martyn before his a at Elmburst, promptly broke the @eagement. The pastor visited her ana Bought to break her resolution, but she! Was firm.” Then Mr. Martyn disap. from Elmhurst and Mis zai, W order to avoid him should her, went to visit friends fo EXPOSES HIS PAST writer, once pastor of the Bloomingdale Reformed Church and the Thirty-fourth Street Reformed Church, Manhattan, and the Pilgrim Congregational Chdreh, St Louis, The son inherited much of hie father’s brilliant gifts. He entered the ministry, but gave It up in 1996, ‘He married a Miss Jones of Bt. Louis, and she divorced him in 1897, He then married @ Brooklyn girl and travelled & popular lecturer, le was a most entertaining man | the platform, a smooth, @racetfl taik Who lightened his @iscofirses with tim: iy anecdotes, wit and flashes of sentinvent that appealed to the romantic and sent mental. “But he lacked bustens dires- though it has becn ald that he ‘made equally good « humor- {st or as“eob” writer, At length he relurned to St. Louls. On the way there with his second wife their baby died, EVEN A MEGAPHONE COULDN'T DESTROY CHARM. Lie stay was not long in the Western nna' the preacher knight ot Kis Way again, headed 1 worked in Boston N H nd Manchesi It was in LM6 that a sight-neet js chy, recogn: hi hired him as These trips could not leciared him 1 megaphone artists that ever funneled a voice. During these mexaphone symphonies he became acquaint with Mise Mary Sheehan of Pitt She had never in the Smoky City heard anything so entrancing, and when she returned home an exchange of letters began, Her dream ended Sept, 18, 1906, when she had Mar- tyn arrested, charging that sho had given him an opal and diamond ring to be repaired and he had not returned it. Then Miss Freda Swicker made @ Aimilar charge. She was an artist and Martyn had been filled with admiration at the gold-beater’s art displayed on some of her Jowelry and had suggested some equally aesthetic improvements, Misa Swicker met the suave Mr. Mar tyn In @ boarding house at No. & bs le Twenty-fifth atreet in October, 1904. was introduced as a young min! and she made no objection when ‘offered to have the diamond ring re- fet. She said he disappeared, and 5! So impressed was art engaging young minister that she made @ dotatied pencil sketch of him during thelr boarding house talks. And when she came to face him in court she had with her the drawing whioh she had made in the first glow of their agree- able friendship, In default of $1,000 bail Martyn was locked in the Tombs, whore he re- mained until the complaints were with- érawn. tected HUSBAND'S BROTHER HELD FOR FIRING AT WOMAN. Varesi Was Discovered Trying to Climb in Window Dur- ing the Night. John Varesi of No. 804 West Twenty- sixth street, who was arrested last night at the instance of a woman call- ‘ng herself Mre, Mabel Frecon Varest of No. 124 West Sixty-third etreet, was held in the West Side Court to-day in $1,000 ball on the charge of attem; felonious assault. Mre Varesi said 4 the prisoner had tried to climb in window of her bedroom at 8 clock yesterday morning and had fired two shots at when he was discovered. A detoctive produced before Magistra Appleton a long knife with the initials “@. V." out in the handle, which he had found on the window sill, ‘The compAaining witness said that el thought she had been marred last Aug- ust to Valentine Varesi, a brotier a tho prisoner, but tha after he left her on April 10 with $1,800 in cash and $3,00) worth of Jewels which she had pro- | Oured on memorandum from a jeweller's firm with the intention of sho discovered that what hibited to ier as a loense to wed in New Je was fraudulent The the mothe: of @ ten-months-old baby, which she had placed in an institution shortly after ite térth. Her family tn Philadeiph'a te wealthy, whe sald, and she will cume into possession of $16 000 when she reaches the age of twenty one next year. —=——__ Aviator Escapes In Fall. May %4.—Victor of the few who have crossed the Eng- sh channel in a monoplane, fell while making @ trial fight here this morning and was caught under the wreck of his machine. He escaped, however, with ‘ad cuts about the head and a king up. ke Jacob Astor jf ntastic, semi-scientific —————— “A Journey in Other‘Worlds.” Ie a original pie ing wh the adventures; story, deal-’ y of earthly ex- among THE t ING WORLD, Styles From the Ark to the Airship In Fashion’s Spring Joke on Woman WRAP OF BLACK VOILE” COLLAR ANO GUFRS OF ORAY SATR' Take Almost Any Two Old Gowns, Mix Well To- gether and There You Have the Latest, Up- to-the-Second Creation from Paris. Here Are Cassocks and Turbans, the Fichu of °40, the Grand Mon- arque, the Biarritz of °70 and the Panier of °80—All Good. Fashion seems to be playing a hui Joke on femininity this spring. One cannot believe the couturiers are in earnest—the way they have culled styles the days of the civil war, and jumbled them cheerfully together tn one grand rechauffe of costume—if one may be ® culinary expression in con- Rection with serious sartorial matters. ‘There is the cassock gown of ecclesi- astical suggestion and the East Indian turban that is Oriental*and qutte the antithesis of the prim cassock. There is the demure fichu of the 160 period and the’ gay costume of the Grand Monarque, with coat, waistcoat, sleeve frills and even knee breeches cleverly simulated. There the gay Biarritz, brought out by Drecoll, which is re- miniacent of the early seventies; and there 1s, of course, the panier, which may eugsest.stately Colonial times, the lively court of the Little Trianon, or the early eighties, according to the way it is draped, The real truth of the matter seems to be that the courturiers themsclves do not know which way the apple will fall— or the itghtning will strike—in this tran- nition period when almost anything may happen in the way of styles. Something definite has been promised by autumn and meanwhile the canny dresemakers are frisking about over the periods of fashion, stopping only at the high places, and sure that in the final evolution of an established style, one or the other of their selections will draw the lucky number. GOWN OF TWO MATERIALS AIDS HER WHO “MAKES OVER. The gown of two materials is one of the whimstes of the moment and it tx @ fashion to bring Joy to the soul the woman who has to “make over. Provided two old gowns do not flash too radically in color there is no reason why they should not be combined into one charming, up-to-the minute costum A pretty géwn of this sort ts illus. trated in the simple model of striped @ilk, intended for afternoon bridge or vielting wear. White taffote, candy- striped with. black, and pale blue taf. feta similarly striped with white are combined in this costume and the me- likely to manage, ‘The upper part of the bodice and the sieeve are the pale blue and white tuff; the lower bodice, the peplum and the cuffs are back and white; and the Peplum is fn scalloped effect—in other words oontrived from left-over scraps. The largest. bit of material used is the Mack and white striped tune, which turna black; in blancheuse, or washes women, fashion over a petticoat of the blue and wDite fabric, thie latter beng lengthened by a narrow ruffle of black Touches of mia black taffeta, a smart belt and many blue glass buttons make this little gown very smart; and for all ite “made-over" suggestion it is a Paris jodel, convincingly modern in price, A ue and white hat, blue parasol and white silk gloves, embroidered delicately in blue, complete the costum: HERE 18 ONE REMINISCENT OF THE ‘30'S, Reminiscent of the thirties ts the be- ruffled gown of shot taffeta. Even tho hat worn with this gown suggests the when dashing plumed considered the grand inine riding costume gracefully and cor- rectly habited unless several yards of skirt and @ sweeping plume trailed out Dehind hi This gown ls of shot tafteta tn & dar from every century and every period|mure blue-gray effect, and the plain of dress from Biblical times down to! colored taffet ¢ | Mfference of styles. As far as conform- IDA Ud Ol Siwe sce HUBBY'S DETECTIVE GAVE TIPS TO WIFE, | | Van Wagner First Man Held by Law Against Double- Cross Sleuthing. The first prosecution under a law Passed in 1910, designed to prevent pri- vate detectives in divorce proceedings from working both aids to their finan. advantage, was begun tn Yor’ Court to-day, when Samuel Van Wagner, a private detective, was arraigned on! ja charge of divulging confidential tn- | formation gained by him while he was in the employ of Sacnuel F. Paterson, & cotton goods manufacturer of Ho- anoke, Va. The complainant wag Will- lam Mollwraith, the manager of a de- tective agency. Mcliwraith was retained in March of this year by Paterson to watch Mrs. Paterson, who was separated from her hi nd and living in New York. Pat- "aon aleo spent much of his time here, stopping at the Hotel Martinique. The work of investigation was turned over by Mcliwraith to Van Wagner, one of his operatives. vi Wagner, according to the com- plaint, volunteered to give Mrs. Pater- son information about certain acts of her husband and, without solicitation, told V, N. Roadstrum, Mra. Patterson’ lawyer, some stories which would help | Mrs. Paterson in @ cross suit against her husband. The actions of Van Wag- her were promptly reported by Mr. Roadstrum to Mr. Paterson and Me- Tiwraith, Mr. Roadstrum was a witness against Van Wagner in court to-day. Another witness was Elizabeth Adams, a very Pretty woman, describing herself as an | actress, who sald she was a friend of | Paterson. ok BUT LOST BOTH WAYS SHOOTS HIMSELF WHEN ARRESTED ON Life as Detective Finds Him in Albany. (Special to The Evening World.) ALBANY, May %.—Albert Law Town- end, who was indicted in New York City for bigamy yesterday, shot him- elf In the right temple in this city to- jay immediately after he had been ar- |rested by an Albany detective. He was | taken to St. Peter's Hospital, where he | died The police received a telegram from Inspector Hughes on Wednesday re- questing that they arrest Albert Law Townsend, twenty-eight years old, of Nght build and fair skin and five feet, seven inches tall, The telegram askel that he be held awaiting the arrival of & bench warrant Detective John Heed found that Townsend had been in Albany at the| Hampton Hotel. He left the hotel Wednesday to go to Kingston, saying | that he would be back to-day Re waited for him to-day and got him at| the hotel. They walked along togeth when Townsend asked permission to go down into the restaurant. | Reed went with him and while watt-| ing for him heard @ shot. Townsend | tha: on to Ange- ple lived together » and had two ch dren. Last January Townsend disap: peared. Mrs. Townsend got no word from him until Feb. n she cetved @ letter fr jean't face you and the oh | am in a better financial tained, fade, }but he Interborough “Prov paled and t H George Finlay recovered a verditet | yesterday for $1,500 damages ft the ; Supreme Court against the Taf - jough for false arrest and imps {ment. Justice Gavegan, told him, hOw- e that unless he acecpted $1,000 the verdio: would be set aside as excessive. | It was testified that Finlay blocked | ™ ._ [the door of a subway A magistrate Albert Townsend Ends His|neia him guitty of disorderly conduct, s ruling was then brought his aetion, gan ch mar Se Tw, nduct in the afbway You Couldn't tire Mo to Woar Dress Shields Again! 1 Uso That Marvel, arvel, PERSPI-BOt Rip out the dress shields fae Aresses, girls! Rip them ou Reed them any more, ‘svootately 4 tN will your 3) Ee Hl ‘a’ ; i | cterised Fine ‘pro~ i ii found unconscious on the ‘loor of lt Hi the room he had gone into. | AH It te stated in the indictment found | Ta eset a because of a big soppy perspiration spot at the arm-pits, It doesn’t matter how oe ee or fang 4 | your cloth! iz, or how stuffy and May be indoors, in the theatre, ied | room or concert-hall, PERSPI-! aa will keep your arm-pits just as BROARCLOTH LINED WITH AmMEmRICAN Btavty Satin. trimming ts deep blue in shade. The pinked ruffles, put on with cords, the lines of pinked quilling on the skirt and the funny little puffed oversleeve are all 1830 in style, and the quaintness of the gown is increased by the demure fichu over the shoulder. In the thirties the fichu was valled a “handkerchief and was used to cover the bare shoulders and bosom, all gowns, for some reason or other, being made very low in the neck. Sometimes the “handkerchief was tucked inside the edge of the gown instead of being draped over it, and the more it puffed out Ike @ pouter pigeon the smarter it was, Another old fashion revived this sea- on is the galter boot, with a top of | contrasting fabric and buttons set di-| rectly down the outer side In a stratght | line, Buttoned boots are ‘extremely fashion: ax they were in the dec- ades preceding and- succeeding the | vil war, and all footwear has the| me daintiness and prettiness that marked shoe fashions in those days. HARLEQUIN BOOTS GIVE A NOVEL EFFECT, A new boot of the summer is a Har. lequin affair in. magpie coloring, outside of the boot is of whit buckslitn with white pearl buttons—for of course this ‘boot, I smart models, is. of the buttoned genus, The white buck- kin stops short’at the seam down the front and instep and at the back seam, over the heel, and the inner side of the boot ts of black calf. The effect of @ palr of boots in this style is weird, but the boote are so smartly cut and @o dainty in line that sume women will Wear them with success, Two summer /wraps. are pletured and one cannot but remark the absolute ity with any definite style-standard goes, they might belong to fashion eras twenty years apart instead of: being Intended: for: the same summer, Both are supposed to be motor wraps, for use over dainty , and borate afternoon costumes, and both hall’ from Parl one from the aristocratic Rue Paix and the other from the authortt: tive Place Vendome. DRAPED WRAP SUITABLE FOR STATELY FIGURE. ed edges ov @ graceful crossing the front diagonally from neck to knee give the wrap a luxurious’ suggestion, and! the color, which does not appear tn the | black and white print, ts #uperd—taupo | broadcloth of Ight, beautiful quality being lined with ..mariean Renuty satin, The fringe matches the broadcloth, and | panels of the American Renuty ‘sat'n| show between the slashed edges of tho cape. ‘The seoond wrap ts particularly chic with beautiful nes azd the stmpitetty | which commends itself to women of fae- | tidlous taste, Black valle, pin-#triped | with white, 1s dropped over gray taffeta, and the collar and cuffs are of pale gray tin, white pearl buttons and satin ope adding an effective touch of con- trast. tte PLEA FOR FLOOD VICTIMS. h-Committees Named, and Churches WI) De Asked to Help, The special committer polated. by the Mayor to gollect tugis for the sufferers from the Southern floods held a meeting yést \ City Hall and appointed »: to raise funds on the Stock Exchange and in the theatrical district. Other | \ committees, representing merchants, Senkere, hotel men and other branches AFTERNOON be thd _FOR BRIDG! of business, will be appointed later. The ministers of all the churches in the city are to be asked to call the at- tention of their congregations to the | existing conditions and Mayors of all cities having more than 2,000 popula- tion will be asked to raise money, The total of the contributions re- ceived in this city so far 1s $3,888.60, In the st made public yesterday there were many good-sized subscriptions, Edwin Gould gave $500, “A Friend, | $250; William B, Thompson, Robert W. De Forest each. and Herman ‘Ridder $10) Miss Adams testified that, early one morning, while Van Wagner was in Mr. Paterson's employ, she was called to the telephone in her apartment. Van Wagner told her he was at Churchill's with Mr. Paterson, who was in a bad way and that she showld come right down and take care of him. Mi Adams said she was suspicious of some | sort of a trap and refused to leave her | home. Van Wagner, who lives at No. Ut! West One Hundred and Fifth street, was held in $1,000 ra .N Magistrate | ed by O'Connor. The bond his mother. eet EXCISE RAIDS STOP. Day Nettea sixty Others « Have Closed State Excise Commission Farley's spectacular crusade against the small wine shops in Greater New York, which caused such a flutter in many districts yesterday, came to a sudden end to-day. Althodgh he had 6d ad- dresses on his lists he is not gaing to raid any more shops and confiscate any more rum for the time being. ‘The raiding was continued last night and many shops were closed in Man- hattan and Brooklyn. Sixty places in all were visited, The public manner of the raids yesterday served as well as a proclamation to the violators of the law and the majority of the sus- pected shops were shut and had dis- posed of their rum. The raiding was discontinued on the theory that the tip has been sufficiently promulgated to give warning to all the lawbreakors. Commissioner Farley would not say when the crusade would be resumed. ergh for the Senate. WASHINGTON, May %4.—Representa- tive Lindbergh of Minnesota to-day an- nounced his candidacy for the United Senate, to succeed Senator Nelson, whose term expires next March, None, of the Minnesota deleg: tion would Yiscuss Mr. action, “Got My Sore } in It Right!— Foot —TIZ’ “A TIZ Bath, My Boy, allz Bath! “You Ca Can't Beat it for Tired, Aching Feet; ; Corns and Bunions!" Send for FREE Trial Package of TIZ To sale thie man © tender-foot? y-walker—-one wha TI your teat are eo tired when ¢ none to your heart your feet aloag and tt» the misery you ever had han aettied dn your feet, look at the happy TIZ man in the pletu You can be happy-footed just the same. Tf you have corns and buniona that every: body seems to step on, just think of thie TIZ, Hi 4, abi {ous Xoo. ‘This taan ‘used “THz. an snow he has mo move ten W, chafed, bi “Sure! 1 Use TIZ Every Time for Any Foot T: bl swollen, tired, emelly feet, corns, callouses or bunions, you put your ‘ou feel the happiness like mountain ozone to lungs, et ina TIZ KA: | Nothing else but TZ can give you this) happy foot feeling. Don't accept any sud- | atitutes, TIE, 25 conte © box. cold everywhere, an@ recommended by ail dru; partment and wenere) stores. Write to- to Walter Luther Dodge & Co., 1228 South ‘Wabash Ave., Chicago, I1l., for @ tree trial red, RES*RES Woe alle GANbate a as the back of your hand,—just f--¥. 4 There'll bo no moro running of colors {in colored gowns, at the arm-pits: No more miscry from rolled up dress shield that form @ ropy wad under the arms. No more humiliation! Just fy bo PERSPI-NO will do it all. It der, applied with a pad. A pad in cech y Townsend committed bigamy by marry- ing Estelle Tobin in St. Jerome's Roman Catholic Church in the ewax. His wife did not hear of the se Juntil several weeks {called upon Distric y Whit jand asked that her husband be prose: |cuted. She said she did not now when he met Miss T ut ved that | his attachment for her had caused him | |to leave home. For several years he| was employed as a travelling agent for the Globe Indemnity Company elty. James McCreery & Co. 34th Street 23rd Street VEILS & HANDKERCHIEFS. 1m noth sitres, box, It's done in @ minute. Never tn Jures or stains the fabric, Nps Satisfaction gusranteed or money PERSPI-NO is for aist’s at 25¢ a box, or sen of this of price, by the Poi 3 On Saturday, May the 25th. Novelty champagne. signs. Women’s Shadow Lace value 2.50, sheer or heavy weights. formerly 1.00, Women’s French Linen, hand-heme’ stitched. formerly 2.00, ¥ doz. 1.35. Women’s Irish Linen, hand-embroid- ered initials. formerly 2.00, 1 doz. 706 1.25 dozen FUR STORAGE Dry Cold Air—New Improved Method. Storage Vault on Premises. Furs, Fur Trimmed Garments and Rugs received for storage. Charges for alterations and repairs are lower during the Summer months. Telephone 6380 Greeley. especially how others succeed i ers, homes, investments, Telatives, etc., they seek: Mewsyapers “COMBINED. 896 More Than the Herald 04 More Than the Herald. 147 World “Business Oppor 186 More Than tho Me 269 World ‘Real Estate” Ads. Get Sunday World Ads. in fi bargains, ding The Way of the World It’s well for all to know what is going on about them— vosi tions, the lost articles 2,512 World “Help Wanted” and “Situation Wanted” Ads. Hasan. 958 Mo: ALL THE @ OTTER Kew York ztovuing 643 World “To Let” Ads. Yesterday— Yesterday— 180 World “Summer Resort” Ads, Yesterday-— 115 More Than the Herald. World Ads. for Variety, Circulation and Results, Veils —black on white, black on flesh color and black on 1.75 White Shadow Lace Veils, floral de- value 1.50, Trish Linen Handkerchiefs, m Ready To-Day! [ 95c work- ing