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merenrer yt |. GAY AUTO RES {SHOULD THE WIFE BE THE BOSS POOSSSSSS SOSHSSSSOTSSSSSSESISSSSSSSSIVSOSSSOIOS9IIS9 f ‘i \ ~ SUS FORDNORE FIGURE IN ROEHN Woman Friend of Mrs. Roehn Testifies She Went Along to Prevent Suspicion. EACH ASKS FOR DECREE. | The Co-Respondent Named by: ! Husband Makes Defense for Himself. | Mrs. Rhea Scully appeared to-day as fore Justice MoCall in the Supreme Court and testified in the com. plicated matrimontal troubies of Ernest KH Roehn, a plumbing contractor tn the Bronx, and Mra, Bthel Roehn. Mrs, Roehn asky for an absolute div allewng that Mr. Roehn was he Park Ho Park avenue | One Hundred and Tenth street, with two women. Mr. Mdehn brings @ counter . He names Arthur Me- ther Bronx plumbing con- or, as co-respondent usually accompanied Mrs “t when she went riding with Mr, Roehn Me- Sorley in hiv automovile,” Mrs, Seully testified. “After we three had deen out together several times Mrs, Roehn sald she would Kke to have Mr, MoSoriey | meet Mr. Rochn so he could dodge him | if he ever saw Roehn coming. Finally #.@ introduced the men, calling Mr. Me- Norley ‘Mr, Disrow.’ She told me she foved Mr. McSorley and would like to! tiarry him, and she asked me if 1) would help put Mr, Roohn in a bad| way 80 she could get a divorce.” H WITNESS SAYS SHE KNEW CO-RESPONDENT WAS NAMED. | _ “Didn't she know Mr. Me8orley was! ‘married and had a child?” asked coun- | eel for Moforley, who !# defending him. | Self in ws capacity of co-reapondent. Yes," sald the witness, “she knew that, but she sald jie didn't love wife because she d!1 not take prover care of his clothes. ‘Later on,” tinued the witness, “Mr, Roebn w opping up in Sulli- van County for his health, and Mrs. Koehn, Mr. MvSorley and I went in the car to see aim. Mrs. Roehn rove beside Mr. MeSorley in the front seat and I rode in the tonneau until we were near Mr. Roehn's place. Then she and! J changed places. When we left M Roehn was seated alone in the tonneau, Dut as soon as iere out of might 8! = moved Into (. scat beside Mr, Me- Korley. “Instead of coming straight to York, we went to the Delaware W Gap. MoSorley agreed that they should | epend the night there. 1 cane back to! New York on the evening tran.” “When did you see Mrs. Ro esked 1. N, Jacobson, " the next day," M sald New York | ace whe fare Water Gap Was so hot, that she ond Mr. MeSor!oy | mush annoyed during the nigh Roebn say that she and Soriey occupied the ¥ame apart- Did Mrs, replied Mrs, soully, blushing. | ehn contends his wife conspired to | n found in the Park Hotel with GOVERNOR ORDERS | Brush = TRE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 1913. Copyright, 1913, by The Press Pubiis! iz Co. (The New York World). “MEN ARE Lire MuLes, FOR € THe AND ALL YOU GET IS 4 KICK HE NEEDS 4 GooD LicreGt He NEEDS & “THEY SHOULD MATTERS® CONFERON ALL BRUSHTOEXPLAN ESHPE OF GL Suffolk County Sheriff Must Show Cause Why He Should Not Be Removed. Sheriff Brush of Suffolk County was to-day served with notice to show cause why ke should not be removed by Gov, Sulzer on account of charges grow- ing ou; of the escape of Miss Ey r Harris fvom the jali at Riverhead six weeks ago, The Shertf is ordered to appear at Aibany before. ti or Feb. 4. Mr, wformed ‘The Evenng World to- he would nave a cunplete defense Ast any attack which his political enemies could snake under cover of the rather coinicai departure of Miss Harris, It was brought out by investigation da, “Men Are Like Mules—If You Try to Force Them} You Get Only a Kick for Your Pains—A Man Thinks He is IT, So Let Him Think So,” Writes “Adele L.” “Both Husband and Wife Should Confer on All Matters Relative to the Home and Its Govern- ment—Be Firm with Children,” Says “‘R.G.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Should the wife be the bose?. Yes, absolutely of the things which are properly within her province. And just as.absolutely she should refrain from dictation or interference in matters within the jurisdiction of the other partner. Yesterday a mas- culine reader, while agreeing with the general conception of marriage as @ partnership, urged that in all) Partnerships there must be a su- preme head, or arbiter, to whom dis- puted points should be submitted for final decision, Needless to say, he thought this court of last resort should be the husband, And he {fs right, in so far as a de- cision may affect the specia' fleld which tho husband as a partner has agreed with his wife should be re- garded as his. But if the thing tn dispute belongs properly to the spe- olal stewardship of the wife, then she is the absolute head, the final ar- biter, the court of last resort. And if two partners differ beyond the [Nixora GREELEY. En | possibility of reconciliation, they face, as all other partners face In the| ‘ same dilemma—a dissolution. mesccescoooooooss Last Article of a Serie eeeeooees Let Her Fire the Cook and Run the House, but Not Mix in Hubby’s Business AfFatr. .,. ec conserine woe pric rush tom Fee vit ise A STRICT MAN KeEpt A WOMAN UP TO THE MARK. IR HGS EASY GOWG SHE'LL GET THE KIMONO haABiIT" ' HOWARD GOULD SUED BY HIS FORMER WIFE FOR MLERY BIL Himself With Preparations on Eve of Sister’s Wedding. On tt ried to Finley J. Shepard, tf him Katherine Gould, by Mra the wife mony of $36,000, Howard Gould is 0 for the nuptials and r sister, the Duch: th her hush je Talleyra’ Starts Litigation as He Busies even of the day on which his sister, Miss Helen Gould, is to be mar- vard Gould has been served with notice to defend @ legal action brought against Clemmone who obtained a legal separation from him with agnual alt- susy preparing tertaning his , the Duke, and thelr BLEAN, DONT AK, VOLE ASQUTHS | TPTREHTES ister, Going Home, Regrets Newspapermen’s Curiosity. ‘The Ki r Wilhelm tf. satied for | europe to-day with @ large passenger Hat for thi time of the year. There wore over 4 cabin passengers aod the| | steerage was well filled. Among the! pansengers were Violet Asquith, the | daughter of the Premier of Bngland, and the Countess of Aberdeen, who ha’ been ‘n the United States on @ sigh! Seeing trip. Mies Asquith’s, mother was reported ia Lor to be the subject of William Watson's poem, “A Woman With a Ser- pent’s Tongue,” but that Mine Aequith horself pomibly enjoys a reputaton in London for sharp, biting conversation was made evident by her comments en methods of Ami in journalism. The reporters and newspapers of thie cout try, she sald, are too curiow, too inslate ent, too devoted to searching out mat- tera of no interest save to the persons directly concerned. “In England,” ehe said, “we allow the preasmen to approach and glean infor- mation. We do not allow them to ques- tion us on matters proposed by them- Is not Mkely to breed inaccurt responsible reports of the doings of pub- Ne persons Miss Asquith sald she did not think so. She was quite caustic In her comments on the photographers who dog the steps Prominent and refused to admit pher ubiquitous and daring American rival. i ‘As to society, literature, art, polit architecture, railroad travel, hotels, saf- frage, the drama or the weather m the United States, Mise Asquith had La od No opinions for expression. Netther had the Countess of Aberdeen, Vinie Daly, a member of the noied Daly family of comedians, was a pes- senger on the K Witheim i. T' erstwhile eylphitke and Agile Vinie te no longer such. “No,” she said sadiy, “T’'m not going abroad to play in London or Paris or Berlin, I'm going to a place called Kis- sengen, in Germany, where they engase to take fat off people. Gase on me. I weigh 153 pounds. I should weigh not more than 12%, The Kigsengen treat- ment, I hope, will separate me froin that twenty-seven points of excess too, too sold Lavee ; ihe ils “I am careful about eating, I< lee and w all rules looking to ping the up contral, but I get stout just the same. So T think it muat be singing that makes me fat— the deep breathing necessary to proper use of the voice. You'll notice that nearly all women alngers are stout, and many of the men singers, too.”’ “I aay, Miss Daly," put in Ewan Jus- tice, the champion heavywel@ht of the North German Lloyd passenger depart- ment, “if you find they are able to make good over there at Kissengen, would you" mind dropping me a@ line to that effect?” English photogra- hie function as his siater’s venture won the matrimonial sea, for the notice, | filed with the Supreme Court to-day sets forth that he will not be called to ‘BOY HEROES SAVE BURG FLAG AT BLAZE SCHOOL and Scorch Hands Snatch- | ing “Old Glory.” ‘The big incident in a Hitle fire soare in Public Sohool No. M, at No, 7 Weat ‘Thirty-Afth street, thie afternoon, wi the remoue of tie Ameriean flag by two Mttie lade, vearing the good old Co- fonial names of Oscar Tumerito and John Patrick Keenan, They got ¢heir hands Ulstered, too, and this is how tt beppened: Principat John Grotecioss has a desk on @ platform in the assembly room on the top floor of the four-story building, Which @ccommodates 1,600 pupils. Be- sides the assembly room which waa un- occupied at the time, there are seven class rooma on the top floor, Atl the pupi@ on this floor, %0 in number, are boys. Back of the assembly room and sep- arated from it by curtains is the class- room of Mim MoLaughlin, who teaches thirty boys. One of these, John Rose, weeted in the rear of the room, saw emoke coming through the curtains, atood up and notified the teacher, with raleed band, in a matter-of-fact way. ‘The platform in the assembly room was on fire. ° Mis Malaughiin immediately sent Rost and several other boys to inform the other teachers on the floor, and two of these teachers, William Van Cott and Albert Pepis, sounded the fire drill bell and started for water buckets kept for the purpose of extinguishing fires before they can get @ wtart. In the American fag. draped in fromt of the principal's desk, js in danger. ‘Please, mise,” they aah thelr = “can we go in and get the jag? Permission was given. Tumerits and Keenan steyped out of Hine, ran into the assembly room, tore the smok- ing flag from the desk and caught up with their classmates before they had reached the ground floor. All the pupile were in the etreet in leas than two minutes, Mr. Van Cott extinguished the fire with three buckets of water, and ten minutes after the fire drill was aounded the children were back in their classrooms, Somebody turned in a fire alarm, but the firemen had nothing to do except make an in- apection of the score desk and platform and the bilatered hands of Oscar Tumerito and John Patrick Kee nan. ———— EEE ‘Thisis what you hear— “Give mea package!” CIGARETTES) mean time the boye had formed {n line und were fimg out. Paseing through the hall, some of the Doya could sre the fire through the open Goorway of the assembly room. Little Tumerito and Keenan noticed that the Bonwit TELLER & Co. | Will Close Out Wednesday 250_Women's Suits 1850 2400 34.50 Formeriy 35.00 to 75.00 ‘Season's beat models of clevrons, velveteen, cordurey, velour de laine, broad. ¥ lath, refine ead wevety fabrics. 50 Afternoon & Evening Wraps 39.50 Formerly For afternoon wear, of black faille For evening wear, of up to 75.00 silk, lined and trimmed. in French colorings. 250 Women’s. Coats little son, the Prince de Sagan, ghat he ‘ There is no necessity in marriage for the single court of last resort. The duties of the two partners {n the business of matrimony are so diver- is unable to accept service of the notice © women. McSorley denies that he is | after tie escape that there wei ‘ Mo ike es Enecer were ays) of trial in his wife's action. His attor Guilty of !mpropriety with Mrs. Roelin.|to the jail in possession of unofficial 14.75 2450 39.50 ey, Representative Mar y. | Persons and that if Miss Harris had gent, so differentiated, that a husband has about as much business to boss|,,,.. Ped date faa eect fae Formerly up te 75.00 jtaken tae trouble to go down to the hig wife in matters which are properly her concern as the Secretar: 1 Chinchilles, boucles, astrachan, carac broadcloth, seal plus | y of rane base 1 y na, THREE WIVES IN COURT a coe ele aids | Riad the Treasury would have if he undertook to tell the Secretary of the Inte- however, Mr. Gould will sy pepe peta turning rior how to run his department. And, needless to say, the wife—the Se:-| " to Fecover. frota the'| eontractag 18, Ha) Se) HAT when” they sk. She is charged with) @ large scale, and no au- retary of the Interlor, to carry out the vomparison—has everything she SOME MARRYING MAN’ xpecting to Face Only Two, He Is Overwhelmed and | Admits He’s a Bigamist. Char Weiff, thirty-four years old, of No. 617 Bust One Hundred and Fitty- sixth street, early in life acquired the | ‘marrying habit, but he was arrested ‘only for bigamy. He sat in Harlem court to-day before Magistrate Herbert and three of his wives, Two other wives were restrained from appearitg at his trial owing to the fact that they had departed this life previous to the) domestic branching out of the head of; their families, Welft pleaded guilty, for there wes| nothing elae to be doi Magistrate Herbert held him for trial and fixed his ‘ormation to her where- since she motored away from the front door early one December morning. oners were permitted to leave the jail to do chores for Riverhei residents and to atten re show. . Saalzburg of Sheriff Brush appeared Suffolk C 7 River! about tion of the recent Grand Jury and di miss all of the attendants in the jail before the day and sald he was who were there at the time J walked out, He had not been alge to complete the arrangeme The: first dismissal might take pla any time, said, and others wld follow rapidly The Board of Supervisors took no action, Some time ago a committee was named by the boand to Inv the jail and the Sheriff's afta’ this committee has not done in public. Its members have bee: ing quietly, but they made no report to-day. ——— |RINTELEN TRYING AGAIN TO BREAK HIS AUNT’S WILL. Dall at $5,000, which he did not furnish, Wife No. 1 was a pretty girl, Anna/ Neteller, twenty-six yearm old, of No, 12 w t One Hundred and Eighteenth treet, She said that she had been mar-| vied to Weiff, who used Martin Yamber, on Se # ehild by him two years old the name of| 1903, and he Wile No 2 was married by Ravol M, Seldel, who was in court prepared to testify, Shi hal her eight-months-old child in her acvms, and cared for thiee children of Weiff by one of his wives now dead, r marriage she was ss Lena was Miss Ida Kranz, thirty old, and was married to Weift on > Rabbi Max Fried, who performed the ceremony, was in court, This wile sail she aad $800 of Jewelry, which her and furnisied tie house in whted vi with the proceeds, Tuey lived yy six Weeks When ste learned had another wife. Sve found that he he wa sarrested ff was prepared to see both wivos but when ve saw wife No. t sithin the rail be tarew up his ve up. — - Cost fc. Ter Bes; Wer $ 00. Bed + Crces Cough Drops. Brerywhere,—Adrt, vant on wilt w ine sitting, hands and 4 usband | The second trial of the sult of Joseph * Rintelen to break the will of iis maldey aunt, Miss Elizabeth Rintelen, | was becun before Justice Benedict and a jury in the Supreme Court In Brook- lyn this morning, Miss Rintelen died in 1910 and left the bulk of @ $190,000 estate (to Miss Rose D. Schafer, daughter of Frank Schaefer of V Let The rest of the 8 | remembered in the will, and | Rintelen was let $1,006 | he did not contest the w flung conditions | brough; sult immedia | will, A Jury found a verdict wus the will out the Appellate Division or- dered a new trial. Mr, Rintelen alles: + persur undue influenc consptary | to defraud. On July 1 Miss fine | telen, upon appticasion | the w fe and both subscribed to the ware 1M y the suit avd che wlal is ascvacting a giea {of interest. It was also charged that other pris- aff to Riverhead with"! Board of Supervisors at | ; LET THE WIFE FIRE THE COOK | AND SUCH, To define the respective duties of the |Partners in matrimony seems elemen> | tary and unnecessary. It s obvious that jf the wife wants to change the butcher or discharge the cook, her decialon on \ those and similar potnts should be con- sidered as final. Similarly 1f the husband as Secretary of the Treasury decides that he 4s paying more rent than he can afford or that the interests of his buai- ness require that the family should re- move to another city, he ts entitled to the last and determining word. There are, of cour: are less easily bands’ or the wiver’ special business, o- preoccupation. Many things are separa- ble in this way, and in @ well-balanced family each has power and authority enough to satisfy him or her, and both shculd be ready to arbitrate the other's. ‘There are few diffoulties in any pertaership which cannot be met end mastered by intelligent, rea- sonable and sympathetic disous- Giom, and the only successful arbi- ter of the Giferences between a husband and « wife is their love for each other, The Mague Con- ference of the home should take matters the nearest and dearest, Other than these two, are, sad should be kept, outsiders. ‘Thove is absolutely excuse for the wife domestic difficulties to practically every woman she knows. It is a disconcert- ing thought that men are so much more loyal in the little things, and women in the big things of marriage, that more women than men perpetrate the little linfidelities and disioyalties of speech NO OUTSIDERS SHOULD BE CALLED IN, No mother,-no sister, no friend,” ts competent to arbitrate between a woman { her husband, and should not be spon to do #0. If, loving each Justification or prattles of her nnot settle thelr diMeul- there is no hope for! 1: ts actually ended, The husband who feels tha! ne * |e entitied to the tinal word on ali mat. ! sers within and without the household an anacironian ta this century. | When the feudal #ystem has departed ‘grom else in civilisation, there ie ne \ can manage in looking after her own affairs, reason why {tt should survive in the h Where it does survive, no gen- ome is possible, the ders I have lei # of two Evening World rv as the last word In this discussion. SHE LETS HE;. HUSBAND THINK HE IS THE BOS! Dear Madam: I have as much spunk and can hol4 my own with any man on any subject, but I have Sense enough not to try It. Men are ke mules, If you try to force them you get only @ Kick for your pains, A man thinks he is IT, so let him think #0, Put him on @ pedes*:! and he will try to pon it. But down him and boss him, and he won't alm very high. My home is the centre of Joy, because 1 oll up the machin- ery of life with tact and ‘Ind words and let the man rule, A strict man Weber Heilbroner | Announce Their Half-Yearly Sale of Men’s Hosiery | 29 cents a pair will keep a woman up to the mark «and straight front looking but If he is easy going and dorsn't care, she Wlil get the Kimono habit and will find that worse to combat than the loss of the backbone 1 have @ bossy man and am glad of it. He keeps a woman up to the age in ap- pearance and everything else, ana if she has tact and kindness she can wind him about her fingers in all im- portant things. ADELE L, HUSBAND AND WIFE SHOULD DO TEAM WORK. Dear Madam: I consider both hus- and and wife should confer upon all matters relative to the homme and its government, Children, if any, should be reared under a gentir and firm wuldance, Bossing 1s eliminated from my home entirely. In a union of af- fection nelther man nor woman wil attempt to boss the other, We cons fer peaceably over any difficulty that Taft Re WASHINGTON, Jan Taft returned to Wash A.M. to-day from his irip phia, New York and New Which Le left Pr Mrs. Taft, Mis |e Moore, Mrs, ‘Taft's sister, and | Secretary Char os iliiles a [Rn The parsy the Waite House, War drven wt once to | Consisting “of Silk, Lisle, and Silk and Lisle Mixtures, in Black, Plain Colors, Fancy Stripes and Figures Every Pair Warranted 50 Cent Quality Also a Quantity of Pure Thread Silk Hose of Their Regular $1.00 Quality 65 Cents a Pair No Seconds or Imperfect Goods in This or Any Other Weber and Heilbroner Sale Ten Stores in Manhattan 757 Pros 5° Neseau 4and and Fifth Avenue ay 1185 foa ao Cor land Advance Spring Models Crepe de Chine Waists 5.50 Sailor collar efiects, collars of Ggured ratine or striped silk. Perfectly washable. Fifth Avenue at 38th Street Best & Co. Will Hold a Sale of Women’s $5 Walking Boots At 3.50 To-morrow, Wednesday An especially fine custom last shoe of most expert workmanship from our regular stock Extra high arch, broad tread, one and one-half inch Cuban heel, fitting very snug at the heel and with medium round toe, Leathers of Black and Tan Russia Calf and imported Calf- skin; dull kid top, FIFTH AVE. At Thirty-fifth St.