The evening world. Newspaper, February 1, 1913, Page 3

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FORTUNE TELLER > 8 CONVICTED ‘BY ~THE ICTAERIPH dury Before Judge Malone finds That Mrs. Dio Tried to Blackmail Dr. Tandlich. | INCE, NO DELAY IN SENT Judge Immediately Fixes Pen-. Years in Prison, | The propriety of the use of the dicto- @raph ass “third arm” Police was established rhldnight this morning wi Judge Malone's part of th: of the secret after | Jury in General Sessions retuned a ve @ullty against Mra. Fannte Dio, a charged with rting to! 1,000 from Dr. Saamu No. 629 Lexington avenne. T Uttle strument, hidden oehind @ safe in the physictan’s office, pleied up whispered conversations and carrie’ tem down into the basement, where! Central Office Detective Oswald, an ex-| Pert stenographer, sat with ear pieces! imped on taking stenographic notes of every word uttered. 80 convincing was the proof of the woman's guilt, as ertaviished by tae] Conversation picket up by the dicto- raph, that Judge Matone immediately inposed sentence upon the fortune tellor, nding her to Auburn State Prison fo: Not less than three years nor more than | €ve years and ix months. | Mre. Dio, alleging that she represent- @4 @ man upon whose sister she de- Glared Dr. Tandlich had performed 20 (egal operation, demanded “hush money.” Being tnnocent, the physician | refused to pay. There were several con- ferences in his office, participated in by am unknown lawyer, representing Mra. Die, and the doctor. These conversa- ‘anditeh | blackmaH. ‘The Uictograph was set up in Judg Malone's courtroom during the trial, and court bere wearing the receivers, stood before a jury and obeyed instruc: oun witiepered into the dictograph from ‘Tee feature of the trial re e trial was the tee- timeny of Kelly Mf. Turner, who per-| Cocted the 1 iver fetograph as te get a $10,000 check Denk where one ie not | hands of unscrupulous | instruments might be| rning trade secrete, army family secrets. There is to danger in the promiscuous hese instrument: made and leased if it iC os several hun- for legal and wroper purposes, None ie ever sold e@atrignt.” Mr. Turner further told of wonderful experiments he had made with the in rument, such as having King of! conversation whis- | from the tra He told, too, of his perfection | of the rheostat, by which, like a wire | the wh vices of one or two conspirators © | heard, though a hundred other pe: may be talking at the same time. ‘The dictagraph an a “third arin” for etectives first came into prominence in the Los Angeles Times cxp! fa which the MoNam in *? vestigation and in the Atlantic city 1s dermanic investigatior MRS. DUNN REOPENS SUT FOR LENATN AEANST MRS. HOLME tre. ‘Sara! Stella Dunn got per sion from Justice JHendrick to-day to | reopen an alienation suit against Mrs. Lissle Hastings Holme for $260,000) diay- | ages which was discontinued in the Su- preme Court in May, 1913, when Mra. Dunn failed to prosecute. Mrs. Duan charges that Mrs. Holme eloped with James J. Dunn, her husband, and went with him to Mexico tn December, 194) Dunn, a former hotel man of Franciaco shot himeelf in an Atlantic City Hotel in July, 199, after he had lest a fortune of $200,000, Mrs, Di began her sult before the # continued to press It for so: her husband's death, Mr ‘ the wife of Leicester Molme, to Mayor Hugh J. Girant, a city court judge. 1 Qfve. Dunn states that differencos with hep former lawyer caused her to permit! the default. She declares her intention | to prosecute the cass with due celerity ‘Tee Court granted her leave to renew previded she payer the defendants’ at- temmeys $10) costs. opposition ys Mvs. affidavit fro} and n aking it impossi her to tra ‘Phe doctor declars to give testimony wou dan ger hey The tawyer further claims that Mrs. Denn ie Hving in Hoxurio York at a fasion hes an automobile 4 not in need husband left 0, the law pA Rood Ail tiene teld the whole story of the iq | band’s partner and he has IS THE ID ON WHAT Ri. Qoprright, 1913, ty The Prem Mublishing Os, (Tie New Tork Wostd, AL AGE TO MARRY? LARY. IS MARRIAGE POSSIBLE Preferences Range From 25 to 60 Years And From $25 a Week Up, ‘‘No One Ought to Marry Before 25--There Are Too Many Early Mar- riages Chiefly Because ‘George Has Such Love-| ly Eyes and Kate Is Such alty ai From Three to Five | @ Peachy Waltzer’,’’| Writes ““R. M.” iI Am in Love With a Man of 60 and We Hope to Be Married,’ Says “Happy Woman,”’ Who Is 28, and She Adds, “I Choose Him Rather Than Any of the Young Men I Have Known.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Marriage, of course, {8 possible on any salary or none. Some very suc- cessful unions have been undertaken with a sublime disregard of the bread and cheese generally looked upon as concomitant with kisses. It is ried for what she Is. Fo romantic minds perhaps the association of money with marriage Seems irredeemably soréia. But the more the money problem is Gisoussed before the ceremony the lees it 1s Likely to cause dissension afterward, T have little sy timental {dea that her youth, beauty and love are all the dower a young girl needs, Certainly a man in love will marry her for this trinity of attrac- UTES HIS SHARE. these rather intangible assets are contributed {n some measure by the young man also, He too has youth, love and a modicum of manly beauty. In addition he has his earning capacity nd perhaps some property, The Eu- rm an dower simply represents an equivalent contribution to the feunda- tion of a family made by the wife. But it is unfair to impose upon an already overburdened father the addl- tional task of providing dowers for his daughters, Tt is an unconscious recoge nition of father's tragedy that set #0 many young girls to earning thelr own livings, and when such girls meet the men they want to marry the sensible, Reiptul, self-respecting thing to do ts to join with the future husband in sav. ing money for their home, Then th wife becomes in every sense the hus practical ommon sense respect for her capacity which the mere instinct of chivalry would never insure her, & young woman who has earned $10 or or $20 & week before marriage has the satisfaction of knowing in dollars and cents what her time and service are worth to her home end husband, And if in addition she is able to reflect that the home itself owes its being partly to her own efforts But Who passes merely one financial tutelage to another when she be- comes a wife. not expect every girl to agree this view, I know that there are many women who feel that the woman who accepts a man as her husband confers au overwhelming gift upon him to which nothing he has to offer Is even partially equivalent, Their views, they care to express them, should prove very interesting and would shad more light upon the perplexing probe lems of the ideal age and the neces sary income for successfu) marriage, The opinions of Evening World readers follow: THINKS $15 NOT ENOUGH AND 20 YEARS TOO YOUNG, Dear M 1 am twenty-three years age and am in love with a lady my own age. We have cares fully considered the marriage prob: lem and have desided not to marry until We are twenty-five, she earning $18 per week and [ get $22, ave ulated in two tine we wil! ve waved enough, with what we already have, to buy our own home or at least be moderately comfortable, 3 Usimk thet ! i "KATE 15 SUCH A PEACHIC * Geon ‘WALTZER® sheen Sucw Lovely eves | are married, saving money during the interval to buy thelr own home, This seems to me a wholly admirable arrangement, for it combines the romance of the American marriage for love and the Continental mar riage for the foundation of a family. This girl chooses the man and in a sense provides her own dower, yet assures herself that she is to ve mar- | | | 1 | | ‘TUS REASON FoR MOST EARL MARRIAGES ACCORDING To “a.m.” \ perhaps unnecessary to explain that the inquiry as to when marriage is Possible must be taken to mean when ie it possible to an intelligent deing to whom the wish is not always father and mother to immediate ac tion, who. lets “I dire not” dictate to “I would!” In other worde, we are seeking to discover on what salary a temperate, considerate, balanced mortal may ask another to share everything but the bills. To me it is astonishing how very moderate and eensible the youths of the period seem to be on this subject. A young gentleman in Buffalo informs us to-day that he is twenty-three years old and engaged to a girl of the same age. His salary is now $22 a week, hers $18, and they intend to wait.two years before they twenty-eight. The girl who meets this man should be about twenty- two and marry him about the time of her twenty-fifth birthday, Beture these ages, each should be busy with study, self-improvement and useful work. rgely at fault s sirls with the task of finding man.” A man of twenty-Tive and a girl of twenty-two are both about equal in development and sensible enough to see each other as human beings and not as angels. Children of such patents will be strong enough for the police force. HL “LIVE” RAIL PUTS POLICE RESCUING HORSES IN PERIL Jump for Linés from Trolley Excavation When Motor- man Shouts Warning. to be married before twenty 1s fool- ishness, as it is seldom that the Isht one” comes along before twenty-five, I have noticed many of my friends who married young and I find quite a few of them wish themselves out of it, eome because they"find it hard to make ends meet and others because they have eince met the ones they should have mar- ried. No man or woman, in my opinion, ought to marry before twen- ty-five. It is only in exceptional cases that a young man is earning sufficient before that age to keep a wife. All young persons love to have @ good time and to go to this party or that ball, which is impossible after marriay At twenty-five they are beginning to eettle down and fully appreciate a home of their own and they do not have to envy others who are able to be out enjoying themselves, I think if our American Birla were brought up in the know!- edge of how to take care of a hus- band, instead of being the novel reading, flirting, dress lovers that most of them are, there would be fewer divorces and less marriages at an early age, chiefly ‘When @ motorman who understood th peril they were in came up and yel “Jump for your lives, quick, and don't touch those horses; you'll be electro: cuted sure!” Patrolman Friedrich and hal a dozen comrades of the Elizabeth street station jumped for their lives all right early to-~ay, Byewitnesses say it wan a. lightning performance, and the policemen admit they made no delay worth mentioning, They just rolled out of the hole in heap. How they escaped electrocution & pussle to electricians, ‘The policemen were trying to rescue @ handsome pair of horses that had fallen into an excavation at @ street car crossover at Canal and Centre streets, and lay, kicking and etruggiing, one on each side of the “live” rail chammel. After the policemen had saved themeelves and the current had been turned off it took three wrecking wagon crews, eighteen men, two hours with « derrick to get the horses out. The horses belong to T. J. Blaney of No, 7 Union street, Brooklyn, and had been hired to take Mr. and Mrs. John L, Russell of No. 62 Fifth street, that borough, and thelr friend, Mra. W. T. Roach of No. 81 Plam street, to a ception at the Hotel Pla: Manhattan. They were badly injured and probably will have to be killed. On the wi home, shortly after 1 A. M. to-day, the driver, Patrick Hart, of No, 485 St. John's place, Brooklyn, SHE PREFERS A MAN OF 60 TO A YOUNG MAN, Dear Madam: I have nowa the constant note of protest against young women marrying elderty men, and while | am probably an excep- tion, and it may be a mistake in the majority of cases for a woman to marry @ man considerably older than herself, personally I prefer the elder- ly man. I am twenty-eight years of age, have a friend who is now near sixty, whom I have known for four years, and who mentally and spirit- ually satiofics More than any young man I have ever met. We hope to be married soon, and from ™y Present knowledge of him think We Will be as happy as mortals can be, for, an already atated, he pos- Hemen two of the necessary attrie butes of real love, sympathy of mind and soul, and he a healthy, well Preserved man with happy, whole- ome ideas, Thave been at business for the last @f0ve down Broadway and along Canal ton yours and have met all kinda of |#tTeet intending to oross Manhattan Bridge. When he reached Centre men, young and old, and I am proud and happy to Intrust my future to an old man, Whom I can truthfully say 1 street he misunderstood the lamps show- early love, and whom I would | With careful driving, and pitched into choose in preference to any young |the excavation four feet deep. Hart man I have ever known, His ex- | Was thrown out but not hurt, The oc- | jeupants of the brougham were only \whaken up. Patrolman Friedrich and his comrades leaped into the hole and were trying to free the horses when @ plow car of jthe Fourth and Madison avenues line }came up and the motorman saw the danger they were in, | He shouted to them that !f one of lthe shoes of the horses touched the |itive rail, horses and would- cuere would be Instantly kille: | then that the po! f life has made him kind, and appreciative, which can be waid of very few young men. I do not advise @ girl to refuse the friendship of a man because of dif- ference in awe, for, with Mra. Strong In "David Copperfield," I believe “there {s no disparity in marriage Mke unsuitaditity of mind and pur. pose,” and Tam convinced that “my fove ix founded upon a rock and | will endure.” ites that the p HAPPY WOMAN, AGED m8, | ,73%, DONoT MAN SHOULD BE 28 AND GIRL 25 while Hart sat be: weeping 10) ing of lis horses and talk- at the sult 7 aT TIME oF MARRIAGE. jing to them. {Hs passengers had taken ear Madam: A man should find | a Sasicah and continued thelr journey the right girl when he is twenty- | sree Marry Ber when be is addut | ing where he could get by in safety | © 'B, Moware of 126 Aaimais seeiety, RG SCH ab a AN NR TO NPR Le IO oe cam tr pay na OF HER LITTLE Mrs. "OLD MAN ARG_MORE CONSIDER AMD APPRECIATIVE’ Sarge ne “wapey SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 19 WOMAN"-AGE 28 LEADS FOR RESCUE BABY, BURNED A YEAR AO O'Keefe’s Mind Gives Way and She Rushes Into A woman fully dressed St, Nicholas avenue, “My baby ts burning. afire,” she cried as she home. Mildtum followed, into the Colonial Hotel, at In the door “I was just going out to of the children woke up you.” rightful da woman's name~—was taken Hospital and later ward at Bellevu The O'Kee! s—father, Gailed for Ireland to-day. sailed without them : os Yormer A Former Alderman George who recently ran for the Second avenue early with violating Section 982 Code, relative to the slot machines, ‘Three weeks ago Mr. ley Miller of No. 670 Fi lyn, neighbors and friends sells, who figured in last hap, fell into the same ex Gear,” said the man in the door. Street With Bare Feet. except as to shoes and stockings early to-day rushed up to Policeman Mildium of the Lenox avenue station on fixed post at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Her clothes are started back finding it hard to keep the rapid pace she set. She went One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street and Eighth ave- nue, and up to a suite on the third floor, the policeman and ti ‘woman met a man who looked as tf he head been dreselng against dme look for you, “One end missed “Have you called @ Gootor for the burned baby?” asked the policeman, ‘The other man shook his head. ‘It was @ year ago, in Baltimore, that I got the doctor for the baby,” he sad, ‘The baby 1s dead, but my wife often ts as YOU Ree her now—liven over that . Hannali O'Keete—that was the to Marlem to the observation mother and three small children—had arrived from Baltimore last night and were to have The steamor rman Arrested. J. Schneider, office of As- semblytmnan on the “Bull Moose" tloket, Was arrested in his saloon at No. tonday 19 charged of the Penal maintenance of Detectives Chrietian and | Donnegan oharge that when they went into Schneider's saloon they saw men porting nickels into several slot ma- chines. was sent for and he onlered the hommes removed to # veterinary surgeon's, of the Rui night's 4 vavation In | taxicab on their way home from a din- |ner at the Hotel McAlp! , Mer Barrowly escaped deat ind Mr. Mil- 7 HUSBAND PLOTTED 'SWAING!, BRIDE'53, “TO RALROAD HER "TAL SAS WEE Returns Show « =iztet: sornars of) Their nterupted Romance ot Brooklyn Awarded Alimony on Remarkable Charge. | ‘ | ‘Mrs. Elisabeth Bonar, the wife of a wealthy Brooklyn manufacturer of fur | warments, was to-day awarded $100 @ | month altmony and 6980 counsel fees by | Justice Kapper tn the Kings County | Supreme Court. The order was made after the Justice had heard the woman's story of a remarkable conspiracy that | che charged her husband Gustav with | having engineered against her tn Ag- must, 1912, Mrs, Bonnard, who was married tn August, 198, ts living with her three Nttle girls at No, 189 Welton etreet, | Brooklyn. Her husband, so ahe charges in fer @utt for eeparation, which ta brought on the grounds of crueky and an—an employee in his factory—at Ne. 114 Berrian street, Brooklyn. According to Mra. Bonnard her hus 16, 1913, in out hin head on the chandeter, He went out, but oon returned with a policeman, and Mrs. Honnard was placed under ar- | reat. At the station house she was told that her husband charged her with as- sulting him with an axe, The case came wp next day in the Jersey Avenue Court. Despite her protestations of in- nocence Mra, Bonnard was held for trial | Mrs. Bonnard after spending a night of misery in the Raymond Street Jail, | employed a lawyer and was released on | dail, When the came to trial be- fore Justice Aspinall the jury disagreed and the indictment was finally dia- missed. Mra, Honnard says she nar- rowly ecaped being railrouded to pris- on, In her complaint she seta forth nu: | merous acta-of alleged cruelty from al- | most the instant of her marriage. At that time she was working.in her hua- band’s factory and continued to do #0 after the wedding, In 191, she saya, when Gustav, thelr firat child, was dying, Bonnard expelled her from the room and refused to allow her to eve the child. “Get back to the shop and go to work,” she declares he sald when she Prot In came up behind he she was at work out j and | she came to and told her she | ] | desertion, te living with another wom- } | ted. February, 1911, she says, Bonnard n the ehop while nd pulled @ chair Then he kicked next day, when man stopepd her BURGLARS FEAST, DRINK WINE, ROB TILL AND KICK THE CAT Leader of Cracksmen Lets Four Others Into a Brooklytr Saloon to Aid Him. When E4ward Higsins jr. entered his father’s saloon at No.9 Court street, Brooklyn, of which he is manager, at 6 o'clock this morning he w. met by the cat, The cat's left eye was closed 4 his head, which was swollen, was Plainer than words his ‘We've had a h-l of a The cash drawer was open and the twenty-two dollars and ome cents which should have been in it for change on the early morning watch, was missing, In the back room Mr. Higgins Jr. found the remnants of what had been an unostentatious but sub- stantial feast. No cloth had been laid. Five plates were on the table, ditto empty glasses, aino five empty aardine boxes, innumorable crackers and five empty quart champagne bottles, Some one evidently hid in the cellar last night when the saloon was closed and coming out of concealment when quiet reigned on Court and Schermer- hora streets, had opened the Goor on the latter thoroughfaro, As caterer and bartender he had been a magnificent hort to tho four guests he let in through the door. The cat, instead of «iving the alarm, had joined the company, or had tried evidently asked sardines, kicked him in the head, Detectives Brosnahan and Sullivan, who Were sent to the saloon, sighed as they gazed on that awful waste of good wine on auch unworthy voll. They couldn't even form @ theory | aw to the identity of the nervy robbers. ee | pendents Give Katee. | YOUNGSTOWN, 0., Feb. bout | 18,000 employees in ‘tho independent | tron and steel mills in this locallty were notified to-day of a 10 per cent. in- |creane tn wages. The increase is in- | tended to equal that made by the United States Steel Corporation, A real baby soap F'SINOL Soap is areal baby soap because it is absolutely free from the h a ep beby skin and scalp troubles. Your Drugsiet calls Reine! Geng Ste and Resins! Otaiment Ote, to, One of the guests of whom he had | HUMAN CLOTHESRACK, ‘Taree setts and Twe Ovesssats PARTED 35 EARS ARE NEDA the Plains Ends in Long- z ts i i 8 i | to Princeton for a course in European economic policies next fall. ‘ATI TURKISH BLEND CIGARETTES The ness of this clever -blend has given it a country-wide popularity! and terminated a romance of the Nebraska plains of thirty-five years ago, Alfred 7. Sutphen, sixty-one years old, was the groom, and the bride of firty-three had been Mise Mary Richards of Lodgepole, Neb. The two were aweethearta thirty-five years ago. Their families lived on adjoining ranches and Lodgepole, with Its scattered and atrag- sling houses, one or two saloons, meeting house and poat-office, “city.” He was twenty-aix eighteen. They rode the pl: re together, Picture books together, and wont in’ together, She played the or- @an and their voices blended tn vocal harmony tn the rendition of hymns and some of the songs of the day, Then came a family dispute over the boundary lines of the ranches, One day Alfred and George Richards, his Sweotheart’s brother, met on the plains and, dismounting from their horses, went at each other. They used no Weapons but thelr flats, but st must have been some battle. George was worsted and then, indeed, was the fam- Sly row @ breach beyond repair. The man, thinking the girl eided with her family, didn't wait to get her view: on the matter. He eold out and went to California, Two yeara in the gold mines of the new El Dorado, with more or less good Alfred sailed for Austra- entured into the sheep busi- and on the ranges at the Anti- podes fortu miled on him. He never married. Somehow he never forgot the wirl of bis youth. Three mont ago Sutphen eold out and returned to his native country, Lodgepole proved a lodestone to him. His Parents had died and his sisters had moved away with their husbands. So the man had got completely out of pbeaeacy touch with hte He resolved to call u; heart and calculated upon’ ehomennts presents upon her children @rand- child: iy 1338-1340 BROADWAY Near Gates Ave., B’kiyn family of hardy sone and peed honk daughters, The man ¢rem Austral: otill ek him and oa Mary went to ie met fing gli and were married, 54 “We @oing to make up for what ve lost 0 our, youth,” ald the aged it husky and fine toolkin, i Ain't we Mary?” evilcibeal And Mary, gerene and ha a foolishness abo soued ep ar ut her, just look her big husband and emiled. It's Best to Remember that every organ of the wonderful human body is dependent upon every other. If your liver goes wrong your blood will be impure; if your bowels are inactive your stomach and digestion will show it. And one trouble leads to another. eechams Fills have become the most famous and the most approved family remedy in the world. They are known for their wonderful and unrivaled power to cause regular, natural action of the liver and bowels. They are gentle, safe but sure. Beecham’s Pills benefit every organ of the body—brighten the eye, clear the brain, tone the nerves and increase vigor—because they Remove the First Cause of Trouble fer women with bes. Sold everywhere, 1 The Adventures of One-Dollar Bill Adventure 9 Quite tired was I of city life with all its noise and worr My doctor said: buy a farm : and buy it in a hurry, “The country alr will do you good— besides you can make money Through poultry, gardening and stock; through butter, eggs and honey.” My doctor knows a thing or t : I took his advice . me 49 And through a World Want a@ § found a fine farm in a trice; If you but knew the fun i have, een though you had to borrow,” You'd surely buy a farm yourself through World Want ads, to. morrow, poy Sunday World Ads. For Best Farm Bargains Always

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