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SLAYERS LAUGHED AS GIRL IN AUTO Driver Witnessed Tragedy in Bridgeport Suburb and Summoned Police. MURDERER CONFESSES. — Four Prisoners Taken and a Posse Searches Country for Missing Man. Es WAS SHOT DOWN, {What iia iihat “In My Case Untruthful-| of a Joseph Buonnomo, meén arrested murder woman one of the four in connection with the known ai Rose White and confessed at to-day that he was the man who shot her to death while several others who noon | LOVE’S FLAME KEPT hed accompanied them in an automo- bile to a lonely spot on the outskirts of Stratford laughed at the “show.” He sald the woman was his wife, and jthat they had come from Chicago to- ‘gether yesterday, This part of the con- fession is not entirely believed by the Police, who think the murder was the Tesuit of the woman's efforts to shake oft tite white slaver's yoke, In the woman's pocket was found a card bearing the name of an investi- gator for the Vice Commission in Chi- cago, and from their knowledge of the woman's movements and those of one of the four men now under arrest, the police are convinced she gave informa- “My Home Is Happy Be- tion concerning those in the souls,” fled to Bridgeport from Chicago and was followed by a man picked to | ki her, GIRL LURED Last night at 8.15 she was in a restau- rant in Water street in that city. automobile stopped in front of the place. five men in the tonneau. four of them at first. They were waving to her and calling She replied in kind, Then she There were She pantering remarks. the open window, saw the fifth man, and she screamed, through IN AUTO TO HER- DEATH. saw only ‘traffic in The girl got ups from the ta’ walked unsteadily urb of Bridgeport. George Hull, the the driver of the car. gaged him, telling bim they were going on.a woman friend, said the bass, finally, te Britgepor “pinay a joke” “Stop the car,” Hull slowed up. At that time he was jg deception of any sort in the courtship. feven miles from the city, Mills. ‘The five men and the inaly. “You can drive on, now,” sald the man with the base voice. The chauffeur had not deen patd. He demurred, into the muzzle of a revolver. Then the to the machine. A alf aozen hands reached out and halt d her Into the tonneau. ay (oward Stratford, a sub- who has a stand near Poitce Headquarter: The men had.en- near women got out. and looked the next instant He drove, An le and Peck's on. ‘With the first rattle of the engine a apurt of flame leaped from the revolver The men were stand. Hull looked back woman. she pleaded for her life. a semicircle Four of them were laughing ax The fifth had, in front Just sent a bullet into her body. of ¢ lina 1s deceived ‘There were four more reports in suc; @gasion, so rapid that the last of them | Was an echo when the woman fell dead. Hull speeded up his machine and raced | ness Destroyed the! Home,” Writes ‘Mrs. B.,”” Who Asserts “A Liar Is Poor Company, but to Be Married to One Is Awful,” and She Says “Courtship Days Should Be Trial Days.”’ BRIGHT BY LOYALTY. cause My Wife and il ‘Pull Together,’ and We! Find Our Greatest Bliss in Being Just to One Another,” Asserts “R. T. S.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. A But isn't there deception in every courtship? Blamour, its mystic She did not seem to leave the car will- or land, and the prelude of marriage becomes a rather sordid affair, rule, Edwin does not deveive Angelina deliberately when he goes a-court- ing. Angelina does not mislead purposely her adored Edwin, Edwin is misled as to the voyage upon which they are about to embark together, bloom, its fairy Would there be able seamen enough to man the good ship Mat- imony if some of us were not “ghanghatea” aboard her? Would there be recruits enongh for Gen- eral Cupid's vast standing army if some were not conscripted, if others were not lured to enliet by flaming pictures of dalliance under tropic skios? be 1 Rah gta I Saeed aa pele lataaaataabal + tar a Makes A W171 ER ind 4 yn 4 H THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OOTOBER 23, NINTH ARTICLE OF A SERIES Happy home . 000600000000000000000800000 Start Right or the ‘Whole Scheme Fails, Is the Opinion of an Unhappy Wife Copyright, 1912, by the Press Publishing Co. (Tue New York World.) TRIPS OF oS WITH WHITE GIRLS Against Him in Federal In- quiry at Chicago. HE EXPECTED TROUBLE. Deeded $200,000 to Mother in Anticipation of His Arrest, ARE TOLD T0 JURY Brother of i Praga Testifies CHTCAGO, Oct, Damaging tentt- mony againat Jack Sohnson was given tu the Grand Jury tosduy by Charles Johnson, brother of the pugilist, and a mulatto young woman satd to be & friend of Chartes Johnson, The brother MARRIAGE as Fest FURROW SHE OTHERS”. CikE A FIELD ~ (F ThE AS CROOKED SO ARE mas. S. and this girl testifet against hie Nhter because Johnson cvused the arrest of b brother Chartes ment two weeks aR! tained by the Grand Jury to leak. torney Charles KE. Mrs, Cameron-Faiconet, ctle Cameron, was called Grand Jury to-day, and it was before to any one elne. TOLD HOW JOHNSON TOOK GIRLS ON TRIPS. a charge of ombenzle- Every one connected in any way with tho investigation was cautioned to-day not to allow any of the information ob- At Erbstein representing mother of Lue the under- stood that he way told nat to give any more information lo newspapermen or “Marriage is Ike a ploughed field. If the first furrow {s crooked, the chances are the whole meadow will be.” This fragment of philosophy is sup plied to us by a wife who states frankly that her married life has been unhappy, but who, from hey own failure, has deduced certain rules for a happy home. In her view of the merry comedy or the clouded tragedy of marriage, Cupid becomes the Ploughboy of the Western World, If his first furrow is atraight, if the initial year of mar- riage is @ success, then all of life stretches before one like a smiling meadow. If the first furrow is crooked she believes little farmer Love might as well take his hand DPT GRE ELEY<SMITH from the plough, for his field will never produce a crop of happiness. nd the first furrow is crooked if there Take away its unreal music, its Nght that never {fs on sea Asa Yet Ange- character and luxury of the And why not? the chances are the whole meadow will be. MRS. B, LOYALTY KEEPS THE FLAME OF LOVE BRIGHT. WHEN “SHE OFFERS ENCOURAGING WORDS mere Some THING RE ' on MONTH THINGS GO WRONG" &.S.S. repeat that we have a happy Why? Because we make and as Spencer 8 “Lik Uke." I admit bein nistic, yet life is made pleasa y my life's companion who 0 ‘$s encouraging words when things go wi has put more vim and v life an ever pay But I ng for her and th one on'y. wh SY —. —_>—— THIRD AVENUE “L” PASSENGERS FORCED her for. Uttle TO WALK ON TRACKS} Three Machines in € refused to walt f1 trains and walked the tracks to the stations, Hundreds in the trains walked five and six blocks before they reached stations and descended to the street. A repair crew after half an hour's work put the signal in working of some ous Ww and the power was switched on The accident affected the traffle sugh the entire system and it was over an hour before either north or southbound trains were running on thelr schedule —_— AUTOS CRASH IN FIFTH AVE. ‘The wet pay ent of Fifth avenue was which three this morning irst a Fifth ave- » of collisions in aly piles were ini . however, that Charles Johnson tod the Grand Jury of numerous instances where his brother Jack took young white girls on private when on the- atrical tours, carrying them from State to State, and ki x himself surround- ed @ith them at his training when Aight. He furnished names with Johnson on his travels. “published in a in each of which woman and a negro. these booklets are Rave," and “My Brown Ma hewe books, ernment investigators claim, “Love Knows the Gov have purpose of negroes. Negroes have been known, they eay, to get this kind of Ilterature before girls whom they wish through reading the to interest, cleverly men, A Governmeent invest sald that in the gatherin he had learned that the n called roms white girls have been parentage as vic not draw the tor sald, as c parents are A\ ator of evidenci nt of the wm tigator as causes for miu ing the eh of the ming. Saloons where whites and blacks are camps he was preparing for a prize- and ad- dresses of several giris who were taken Government investigators to-day un- varthed a series of paper-backed love Chicago print romance war woven «bout relations between a white Sample titles of No Affalr With a Golden- been written and widely distributed for the interesting white girls in written love tales, the white girls’ minds grasp te suggestion’ contained in the books and are easler prey for designing black to-day ces beween nekro men and rls of foreign The following ure given by the inves- the two races in affairs such as © machines phen Dear Madam: You ask “What is “ ! ty-fourth sireet, th User fuel to keep the flame of we auto stage, Boling south on the ave- lave Nigh) and brant and clear th\9 nue, collided with a Kesner & Co, deliv happy home?” May I for the Trains Tied Up Forty-five} cry‘aut benetit of those who e entering e ‘ashed permitted to drink together. Restaurants where white waltresses and men, girls are negroes dack to Police Headquarters. Suppose old Dame Nature, the recruit- co ieee arene cig eee CAUGHT ONE MAN RUNNING] Ing officer for General Cupid, instead of} povaity to our ideals and loyalty to THE WRONG WAY. | painting fairy visions for Angeiina’s be-| those who have a right to our love. The woman's body lay in the road,| Uazzled eyes, should say to her coldly:| ‘The loyalty which will prevent one put there was no trace of the men.! “I offer you in exchange for your youth) from criticising ts the same loyalty Arousing residente of Stratford, the|and beauty, for your young ardor, your| that diecovers virtues and helps Policemen quickly organized posses. them to thrive, ‘Think the best and ‘There are thick woods fringing the road, The trail led in the direction of Bilberry Some of the policemen thelr volunteer aides circled the swamp and cut off retreat. Swamp. began to beat through the soggy, reed | in, pe craliewsy Somme were Eround., In the. middie of the| ONG J0l8 the a Fe nm Who. Fp ve been the lights that brightened swamp they found two men. One sald] ¢#!ly and work ic nd late, who feed! the path when thé shadows came he was Francisco Pizzcheni, proprietor beg terrae te machines, whose vt anes A BRIDE OF ‘56, of a Bridgeport restaurant at No, 39} and whose st are mortgaged to} Cnion suuare. ‘The other described lim-| the maintenance of homes they are too| THEY MAKE THEIR HOME HAPPY) self as James Mattio of No, 130 South] twed to enjoy?” BY PULLING TOGETHER. avenue, Bridgeport. Twn the main road, a mile from the we oe ae | Dear Madam: A home to be happy place where the shooting occurred, Her-| ( . yee tied could have many elements and con- bert M. Booth of Stratford, was hasten-| the Gruesome bones of life. 3 te | ditions, Some think a happy home ing to Join one of sses. mance that clot th Fowy | is attuined wien the father goes oft thonght (t strange that am hurrying in the opposite direction, and thus the third of the five men was caught. In his pocket was found a cand on which was printed “Andrew Lutz, Chicago.” The the woman He is believed to have deen the man who did the shooting, fourth man taurant from while with the auto to-day. Th pe Then the others should be ar 5 VICTIM OF TRAGEDY CHICAGO, Oct, 2%.—The police here say that th n who was found murdered ne: ratford, Ci known in the South district as Rose White and that left the city ently at the beginning of the antievice crusade, It is satd that at the time of the exodus many cards Were given the unfortunate wom Alice Phillips Aldrich, ts connected with the Chicago Law and an KNOWN IN CHICAGO. by Mrs, Order League, v the names “James Heynolds" is ‘sald to be an error, there being no such number, The he address here. marks,” “Well, answered the devoted mother. don't care so much for speaking my- sif, but that gentleman's gestures do 60 amie the bab; Sai ies No. street found in a small n Frances 1 101 East (From the Washingt we adhe Sixt nebook with Aa! other persons mentioned are not known i ) seemed to enjoy that ovator's re- ADACHE fete ony rested } aded| who and *| and) a geant addressed him as follows: " Nature dece START RIGHT OR YOU'LL BE ALL dreams, a life of hard work, help {t to come to pass. This theory sething onl WE M1 565 been gut te praction & de oes na enil doubt, in many happy homes, but Would Edwin, reer pate (care 6 walt flesh. And Romance is glamour, iusion, is deception, When the scientists have quite robbed us of {t and the engenists with their everlasting Mendels law have re- @uced marriage to @ laboratory formula, it is my opinion that no more volun weddings will oo- cur and the State will have to con- script its moghers as Continental countries still conscript their sol- ater e us a som Th e are Interesting by Evening World readers for happy home: WRONG THEREAFTER, Dear Madam: As there are many causes that destroy the human body, so there are many Ills that destroy happy marriage. In my case Jt Was untruthfulness, A law at any time {8 poor company, but to be married to one is awful, As a fever takes away the vitality of the human body, just so untruth. fulness robs marriage of love, trust, harmony and the many other gifts @ happy union has to bestow. Courtship days are, or should be, trial days, when the dispositions, likes and disiikes, should be care- fully noticed, If each would act as {f under oath, truthfully and honest- ly, they would know each other per- much as they will. { ‘ecipes | Ws that love and loyaity on @ periodical boozing spell; others have that periodical quarreling spell while others love to live in peace and harmony, Yet all in turn call theirs a happy home. Mine is @ happy home because we “pull to- wether.” Whether it {s good or bad, We talk things over and always come to a definite conclusion (of course | sugyested by my wife), Ours is @ simple, hum rome with nothing Meantime, if we don't want such a| Dut the simple every-day style. My hortible state of affairs to prevail we| Wife 18 in business with me all day Will have to keep on letting Love and! #nd sul finds time to keep the home neat and tidy,| Other wives who are not in business rarely find lime even to keep it so, We have one daugh- ter of eleven years who also lives the simple life and helps us to make that home happy. We find our greutest happiness in being wruthful, honest and just to one another We are tied down to business and nost of our time there, time for our home, yet I fectly on thelr wedding day, and both, would not have to confess ey id not know the other had ‘so mi vl faults, Marriage ts like @ ploug Ger, Ts he Gres row le rookes AOR wt a wit la wilted Minutes and Many Get Shocked by Third Rail Thousands of passengers on the rd avenue elevated were forced to walk the tracks of t tnx the rush to-day, many of them slight when their wet clothing brushed against the hou recelving shocks contact rail, The forty-tive-minute blockade was caused by the short cir- euiting of a signal just above Division street which burned out the feed cable, The accident occu at $45, Sige nal N, located on the downtown track at Division street, went out of com-| mission and halted all) southbound trafic, A thin spiral of smoke told the \ motorman of the first stalled train of] the short circuit, The signal depart- ment Was notilied, but before it could get to the scene the fire had spread to the the side of the The power large feed cable along track, was cut off on all tracks below Ninth street, which tmmcdiately stopped northbound and southbound traffic, ‘The passengers on the trains below Ninth street left the cars and walked to the nearest stations, Those in the stalled tr Ss above Ninth street in xome to bring t 4 the motor ther and n cases persuade tra: aged to walk throweh f «nother to the station method was not practicabl stances as some of the motormen fused to bring their curs up to the trains ahead of them. Ag the tle-up continued for almost an hour the passengers, with the exeeption sae were ine an automobile of the Silk Finishing America, The three ma- slightly damaged, but no any of was hurt, one will continue FREE whether elected or not. the 1912 crop tobacco is perts to be the % % % %, ANOTHER 16 PAGES With Perhaps you don’t know that fropoansed by ex- We sell only the finest productions of Porto Rico’s famous cigar factories, ,, Each has its own distinc- ‘\y tive appeal for prefer- ence. Instance Ricoro 6 cents and up Sena un an FREE=== | girls. The employment of white girls as ico, * Cigars to enter duty your party is of Porto Rican 4 5 Ht Hy best in years. LY t rd a J NITED IGAR STORES MAGAZINE Handy Size 24 PAGES IN COLORS Next SUNDAY WORLD Nu Vaudeville theatres where negro acts are on the same bilt with acts by white . Mtool, Cover, Carts cashiers where negroes are patrons. every one whose tentimony would tawe SAVY6 THE PUGILIST DEEDED| him. ‘ag $200,000 TO MOTH: ‘When Charles Johnson emerged from the Grand Jury room he emitted @ jong drawn out “whew.” He intimated that he had given up some facts about Jack a that re aoe in @ bad itght td would wee what act the ‘Government "ook or revenge on on count of his recent arrest at his brothor’s He said Jack had been expecting trouble and séveral days before he was arrested he déeded to his mother, Mrs. Tina Jackson, about $200,000 worth of property. He said also that Jack called him on the telephone and invited hia to como over and see him and forget about his having Charles arreated. Charles to- day said he believed Johnson knew then that trouble was about to overtake him and wanted to be on good terms with government investigators have threatening cials are investigating. Aft was found that Luetie Cam eron could not testify to-day because government attorney Herry F called to Eigin, where his mother wuddenly, the girl wae taken the Grand Pacific Hotel. She there with r mother all Fg 4 guarded by deputies. wed to talk with no o bet mother and Deputy Mars’ feilles until her testimony bef Grand Jury ‘s completed. Bt To-morrow, Thursday Beautiful $22.50 Models $] 3 75 Refined, beautiful suits, entirely foreign in tailoring appearance to anything you have seen under $22.50, with, styles fully their equal and materials’ the best the Bedell System of Stores can furnish. Hip-Length Cutaways Postillion Coats Half-Belted Norfolks The newest and therefore the smartest effect at every point. Cutaways, Norfolks jacket models, exquisite in i drapery general style tone. Several copics of imported mod: rough two-tone mixtures. Also iagonals, serges and cheviots in all th colors of the Autumn leaves. 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