The evening world. Newspaper, February 4, 1913, Page 3

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ISCOGKTNLSABAY WAS WES AB SHOP CHARGE The Butler in Banker’s House | Swears He Served Drinks Constantly by Stealth. RESTRAINT ONCE USED. Threat to Sue for Divorce Made Irrationaily, Allen- ist Testifies. G@everal affidavits fied with Coart Justice Hendrick by Janies Oun- Gmghem Bishop, millionaire parther in jense, three neurologists, a nurse and @ butler formerly em- dy the Bishops tell of large q@Pantities of alcoho! consumed vy Mrs. of whitey, rye j Physicians and Surgeons, swore eM@davit that Mre. Bishop's con- @uoh in April, 1010, that it necessary to have four nurees in charge of her and te her looked in her apartment. 16TS SIGNED COMMITMENT TO INSTITUTION, eMdavkh wes that of Dr. Batley, « cneuiting physician for Manhattan Gtate Hospital for the Tamane and attending physician of the Tetitute, who, with Dr, 1. Dane, was called into con- on Mrs. Bishop's case, sccord- fag to the aMdavite, on May $1, 10610, ‘Im view of Mra. Bishop's excitement, @nger end violence,’ he ewore, “and in ‘view of her charges of cruelty and tn- MMelity against her husband, for no @ whioh charges could I find reasonable amie in fact, Dr. Dana and 1, on Dec. @, 19%, signel the medical certificate for @ epecial commitment to St. Vin- cent’s Rotreat, at Harrison, N.Y. This Dr. Dana said in hie aMduvit ho had deen informed that Mre, Bishop drank twelve bottles of beer a day, benites gin and oooktails, Dr, Dana alno awore that tn hia pres ence Mra. Bishop had spoken bitterly ef @ “certain lady to whom she re ferred as a biackmaiier.” Farther on em his aMdavit he ead Mrs, Bishop nad tol him her husbend was trying to get her to sell her stook ine water company to get her ‘more in his power,” an4 that Mise Morgow, the trained nurse who went to Dgypt with ber in 1909, had “entered into an agree ment with Mr, Bishop to look for signs @f mental dleorter while wavelling swith her.” WMth Morris, the nuree, described in €m the walle with hoe trees while call- ing @ them. James P. Munro, the butler, tald i his Qfidavit of serving drinks secretly 0 Mrs, Bishop, eometimes advancing the meney for bottled goods frem his own Prior to the time the four be swore, she had 1h an @ bottle of Hike that, and I would eeng up e siase ef whiskey to her. She always told me ‘mot to let any one mee that I was ringing whiekey to hor. PFTEEN COOKTAIL6 A DAY, BUTLER SWEARS., “loft Mra, Bishop tn the fall of 1910, 3 emme beck again ehertly sefore her Gaughters went te Burope tn April, 1014, She wae drinking @ great deal then, but drank Martial cocktalls. Gometimes she would drink ag many «6 Goerteen or Attoen cocktatls a day, 1 these top her, She would tell them behind the eoreen or be- jacks er some place where would not notice it, or te im the bathroom, returned to New York she drink, but drank then prin- whiskey, I remember, in when Mrs, Bishop cracked ‘Mr. Bishop's room, I had Bishep a great deal of that day,” —___ 4, F. H. MEYER DEAD. Veteren Ship Owner Saw Fizet @toam Ocean Ldner Arvive Here. é ik ti HH &Co., general agents of the Hamburg-amertoan Lane from 18/7 to 4689, died to-day at hie home in Ho- bokeu, Mr, Meyer was born at Bremea, Germany, in 187, He bacame connected with the Kunh . in 184. In 1880 Mover rat ateamer uf Man n line enter this AT IS ~ Ideale Centre on Love in Marriage, at Thirty He No Longer Thinks of Love in Marriage, but of Love AND Marriage —in His Opinion Differ- ent Things,”’ Writes a Reader. “I Should Say in New York $20 a Week Is About the Least on Which a Couple Can Keep the Body and Soul of Love Together,” He Adds. thirty he no longer thinks she cooked herself. The problem of Tetirement from useful occupations, Not a field for better work and greater eMctoncy. The greatest of all servant Problems ts that of the wife of the 5 or $9 @ week man who fools that she ts above doing ner own, housework, ‘These remarks are founded more upon my wife'e observations of her friends than upon original research by me; Dut I indorse every word she says on the eubject. The ‘deal age to marry la when you have found the {deal girl, and she ts willing to take you—and Marriage ‘8 possible whenever she says it to," SOMETHING FOR THE MODERN Q@IRL TO EXPLAIN, ‘These remarks by a masouline reader ‘@ontain an acousation against the modorn girl which there ts soms evidence to wapport. ‘There are # great many poor men fm Mew Work whose honseholds count in two women, one to do the work, the cooking and cleaning, Ona the other to gossip with the Rext door neighbor ev accompany her to bargain sales. And of these the former at $18 © month is far the move useful member aoctety. I have often tried to understand the etate of mind of the wife who renders Ro equivalent for the support and pro- tection given her by her husband except jin the intangible ooin af affection, 1 have tried to analyne hor fee!lngs for the man who tuys her porterhouse steak and her tallor-made sults, And I have not succeeded, Be it understood that the womaa who bears @ child and gives her time and thought and effort to bringing (t up to decent citizenship ts fully as selt-support- ing as any man that ever lived. But those wives who don’t have children and who employ other women to care for a ead GET THE BEST FOR YOUR SUNDAY NEWSPAPER MONEY, Hore are some of the big specials to go forth with copies of next Sunday « Werld Coupon good at any World oMfce for an old war-time picture of Lincoln and his Cabinets Another twenty-four-page Magasiue— elzteen pages In colors—crowided ‘vith Mustrated artioles of extraordinary i. tereat; Words and music of “Sympathy,” soug bit in “The Firefly” at the Casuo Theatre; 4 sixteen-pago Joke Book—witty say ings, funny pictures, droll stories, rid- Giles, tricks, puzzles, &c, Some of tho bfg Magazine articles are: OMciad photograph of Fatina, favorite wife of the Su and story of ife tn the Turkish Harer liow princes, dukes, kings and earls ‘tall in’ behind Tony Drexel, the wealthy American; The astounding craze for gambling jamong women; Wonderful ni and jattey nrote “Reminiscences New York's seven greatest chefs; rly Steamahijy bass He retired | Society's next dance-the One ston fn 18% op account uf iil health, He is| Sggmuel Maryland ‘bs U. & @ursived ey ino . 7 Son The Patriotic Smuggtor,"” a short ator eons, oty of whom, > Mever fe Homerville; vire-director of the Hamiung-Ameriean Om Paniiee 7 Wireless House, @ new Line In New York, gertel story of love ead tragedy by ee Arthur Frain: Red Cross of Cou; Drops. Tel your newsdealer in afvence to core tnroet, 6, por bes, Aart, eave smu a copy of apat Punday'e World, ate “At Twenty-five a Man's. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. 6 A twenty‘ive @ man’s ideals centre upon love in marriage. At prepared yy THE Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publ! “AT 25 ALL MIS CREAMS i | | of love in marriage, but of love ANT marriage, in his opinion different things. For he has seen too muck of life. The {deal age for a young man to marry is whenever he can, whenever the girl be wants will have him, It ie for her to devide upon what salary she ts willing to keep house for him. I should say that in New York $20 @ week is about the least upon which any young couple can keep the body and soul of Jove together. If their love no fou) they can manage on less, for they will not need the soul food of books, pictures, theatres and lectures. ‘There cannot be any fixed minimum income, however, for the reason that the antecedents and environment of each couple affect the cost of living for them. My wife married me when I wan twenty-seven years old and I earned $25 a week. On that sum we lived well, bought current books and picturos, went to the theatre once in awhilo and gave an occasional dinner to our friends which marriage in New York {s complicated by the fact that the average girl who worked for a Mving or helped her mother with the housework before she was marriod wants to hire some ane to cook and swoep for her afterward. She looke upon marriage as a thetr households—how and why do they uve? WOMEN ARE DIVIDED INTO TWO CLASSES. Women, wives, mothers and epinsters may be divided into two clasees—the eolf-supporting and the sex-supported. It seems to me that the wife who has no exouse for being save to fill a tea gown or read a hotel bill of fare, belongs in the latter most anenviable class, And #0 too does the woman who, marrying ® poor man, refuses to meet the re- eponsibiiities te do the work of a poor man's wife, If men would only understand it, the so-called movement to emanci- pate women is really @ movement to emancipate men from that thralldom of stx-support. Ze give women rights is to confront th with responsibilities, and the woman who says that she Gesires no rights is invariably the womaa whe refuses responsibili- Hes. ‘The weman who |e an active house- Xkeoper and a mother earns her living aa honestly and generally more aniu- ously than her husband, bat the woman who {s neither-how about her? Men Are al] too chivalrous to tel) the truth ebout her, but women don't have to he chivalrous and they know | wt @ man and such @ woman \foved me I would value her affection no more, 1 would hold tt than I do that of my doga who love me perhaps a little for myself hut mainiy heowuse I supply thetr break. fasts and dinners, their collars and leashes, their bedding and their kennels, Yot there are uch women and they contrivute te make marriage mere dit- fioult, Another masculine reader oontrfoutes the following letter on the teat age for marriage: LEAVE IT TO THE YOUNG FOLK TO FIGURE OUT, Dear Madam: Peara to me that there has been a whole lot of dis- | cussion about @ few casual remarks | passed by a Heanvilie prof, and as | | view the detate, being nigh onto a quarter century old, by gosh, It should be left to the nelghbors’ sons and daughters of that age to com- Pute, I myself am unbridled, but I ain't a-woin to be much longer, by oriokety, I'm just hankering to lay | hold of some dark tady with bine eyes, and a velvety skin, and I ain't a-goin to walt until I em thirty, not by a gosh dorn wight. The way I cateulate {9 that f @ man be in to get married, and he don't twenty-five he w Nope en he's reached th iy years ho's seen sq inuch of life that just naturally ata't enough getup in him to get married, ‘Dais be # Fact. JOSH SIMPKENS. Woman Dro nover cause he Dead tn Street. Brunella Mir twenty years oll, a tearais, dropped dead at oelock + day on the tireet at the eorner of Ono Hundred and ‘Twenty-axth street and | Seervlagrese arena, She wes on her | way to piace exp aoa corvems trom bet home a: No, te Wost One Hundred and Twenty-eizth etrect be body was taken to the Harlem orgue. ARE OF. HOME AND MARMAGS Bo ne higher | ishing Co. (The New York World), READS THE BIBLE ON SINKING SHIP Capt. “Jim” of the Florence B. Getson is a Praying Man at Home, Capt. “im” Geteon of Lunendure, XN. fi, reached here to-day on the United ‘Fruit Company's eteamer Mixtacia, from West Infian and Central American Porte, prepared te start life all over again. Capt. “Jim's" little eshooner, the Florence 1. Geteon, lies at the bottom of the wen about 9 miles south ef Dar muta, and the skipper fe on tte way home to tell nia wife how the @htp she christened and which wae named after hor sank on her maiden voyage, ‘The skipper ‘a a typical “Mue-noser,"* and for many yeare he miled on and cCommantied amal! coasting schooners of the variety fmown es “apple-treers,” from the Mot that they taice thetr hear Inga trom landmarte along shore, He saved up hia earnings, or what he could of them, borrowed and acrapad and gave notes tl he @ot enomgh about A year ago to lay the keel of tha Foranoe M. Geteon, 6AID HE COULD TAKE HER AROUND THE HORN, She was finished last Ootober and of a nvhooner as the maritime folk of Lunenburg had ever clapped thetr ayen on, She had two tapering mamts, and although she was enly 1 tons register, Captain Jim" declared he'd take her around the Hora i Jniy if need he, Hor bullder and owner hustled around and raisot a charter. Tt was for St Maries in the Danish Wont Indles, and consinted of shooks and lumber, Ile wot & cargo of salt for the homeward voyage, which began on Deo, #1 lant. * ‘The day after New e¥ar's the Gatien Ddegan to t into trouble. The cargo had. been y stowed and she didn't Hilfe to the big seas that began to roll | down on her, All that night It bl w jhard aud @t daybrewk on Jan, & the Getson was stagmering along an best! shoe could under a po | of a headeat | By dusk the wind let | the » thaudkerehlet ne could But hardly bad ralseg a few feat before down swept the wale again and tn @ trice both the eal a8 ag skip and go to church at ty nking of nen, tt & masted he { the Geison wa | uadly strained | THEN CAPTAIN “JIM” GOT OUT | HIS BIBLE, anno at ih the wa | wot oul hls Blole and read the or two Me maid today that he bi more firmly than ever in being a praying sidpper ince the losg of the Geison for he waa atil! holding forth. haueted crew kept tho p when up over the rim of she opens we “AT THIRTY HE'S SEEN TOO Muce OF LIFE” writes ‘) 8.5/ ae nS al ty oe Ne a lle, vis AIL, “ay “Aayyy AND S RESUED Was Aeciared to be about as trim @ hit! IDEAL AGE TO MARRY? % ON WHAT SALARY IS MARRIAGE POSSIBLE? ‘When Your Girl Is Willing Is the Time and the Salary Part Is 1 for Her to Decide’’ 1 | horison came the achooner Success, an- ‘other ‘blue-noner,” bearing bang down |on the Getson. The skipper shoved hin Bible in his pocket, @ot his papers and ahronometer and then watted with his crew while a oat from the Success Up into hig lee, One by one the crew got into the | Doat, Capt “Jim” standing by his ship till the last, when he carefully hauled down the red ensign which had beon fastened, jack down, to the atump of the main mast, and whioh he oarried with him on board the Success, As j the Success headed away the Geteon went to the hottom, bs “You sea,” aaid Capt. “Jim” to-day, the wife, bought that ten hi self for the new ship, and she thought @ heap of it, and it's all that's left of the Getson now. But that’s the way of the eea, and I'm lucky to be alive” ‘The Success took Capt, “Jim” and nie crew to fan Andreas, mall port in Colombia, from whence they reached Colon, where the British Conaul sent them nerth on the Gixatola, One of the o.ew, however, liked the @uccess #0 well that he stayed by her, signing on as an A, B, ——---—. SUFFRAGETTES PL/.STER POLICE STATION WITH “VOTES FOR WOMEN.” Then Drop Thelr Paste Brushes and Walt to Be Arrested—Given a Week In Jaf, LONDON, Feb, 4.--Th anffra- ‘pottes, armed with buckets of pante jand big brushes, plastered the facade jof Marihoreugh Street Poltoe Station |with ‘Vetes for Women” posters and | Women's foolal and Polltical Union proclamations to-day, and then stood lby and allowet nualvan te be ar. | rented, Arraigned m Bow Street they refuned to give their names and were given they choice of $6 fine er a week in Jatl. They chose imprisonment, Se SEEEEEEREE NALSH NEW MAGISTRATE, | Gaynor Tells Former Police Deputy 1s Sparingly, Mayor Gaynor to-day appointed ‘Third | Deputy Pollce Commisuioner John J, Walsh to succeed the inte Magiswate | Harris, who died suddenly last week, In @ letter to the new Magistrate, May Gaynor pald: | to Use Warr | ou will help me to carry out my Purpose ani poitoy of not looking up copie tor trivial offenses tn advance of trial. In that way people escapo being | taken by force jin advance of Pa little and f 4 locked up er balled tria ants b 4 Awmed pereons of falr wta ing who are socused of minor offenses, the better course ie to mmomon them er notify |them te appenr, Two Magtetrates re- | fused to do this.” CUPIO'S TRILOGY FAILS 10 MIX WITH | Tennessee Schoolgtri Adds Matrimony to Studies, but “Nell” Spoils Course. GOES BACK TO PLATO. Hegeman, Dashing Young Mo- torist, Woos, Wins, but Soon Is Divorced. Besides pondering over the | Dialogues of Plato, the Odes of Horace and the Problems of Euclid as a resident student at an exclusive girls’ finishing school in Riverside Drive, Mise Lorena Neat Perry, of the Southern branch of the family whitch helped montd American hlatory, stole time to become amazingly accomplished, 1 became Kknonwon to-day, in a Tritogy of Upld, a sudject not strictly on the academy's curre culum., The trilogy has three intensely dramatio chapters which may be appropiately headed “A Springtime Wooing,” “A Summer. time Wedding" and “A Winter time Divorce.” Besides the hero- ine and hero there ts the villainess in the person of Nell (character. fsties known but antecedents vague). The end came today when Supreme Court Justice New- burger signed @ decree which made Miss Perry a divorcee ab though @ achoot girl atti. Chapter I.—Springtime. In the fa! of 1911 Romanso Nelson Perry of Memphis, Tenn., one of the State'n leading citizens, who raced his | Gramatteo upstairs to get come electric that| light bulbs, and when the youth failed family tree back to the trunk gave Oliver Hasard Perry to his coun- try, sent his daughter Lorena to fin her studies in New York and absorb some metropolitan atmosphere. tall, lovely and accomplished, and soon the favorite of the academy. Gay, debonair young men about town found easy access to the dances and|SLAYER’S receptions given at the school. And eo it happened that Joseph Lar- combe Hegeman, dashing, handsome and a Lochinvar, met Lorena, ‘Tie said the tender heart of the schoolgirl pelted ner ribe furiously the firet waits they had. Would she take a epin in his new racer? time she could make up an excuse to wet out, That wae the next afternoon. They whirled through Central Park, up te Larchmont, along the Drive and back, @he left the car near the school, | rane; but she left her beart with the autotst. Until epring drove the lingering shreds | him. of winter away, Lorena’s reports weekly forwarded to her parents had been marked “excellent” and ‘very good" by her teachers, Now they became “poor.” her eyes began to gare far out over the Hludwon and whe wae constantly getting loave te vielt “girl friende” in the elty. Of course, the render knows Lorena was with Flegeman in his low @ray speeder, And Hageman proved as apeedy a wooor as he was h driver, Summertime. term was nearly ended, Chapter I. The scheo} Lorena just paesed her classes and, aad to afd, she had ne prises or awards to show expectant relatives, She would retumn, yee, teacher, mext fall and try in the Trilowy, ‘That Saturday ate t up the neoond drama ef the series, She fltted through the gates at noon, Hard by were Jon and iis racer, the chugging engines tmpatiently pounding, There was @ lurch, Hegeman threw the high speed on and away they miided to the City Hall, Lorena wrote herealt ures” and Joe sail he was an and lived iq West Twenty- third street, He admitted thirty years and Lorene bravely eancunced hersalf twenty, although she waa twe years younger. Hegeman gave his father's name as John N. Hennett Hegeman and his mother as Clara Hobby Horton Lorena eorrectly tated. her Pame and said her Mother was Mary Neal FPenderson, from Syraquse, rhe deception over, Lorena and Joe rwed themselves be led to the rch of all nations’ tn the basement ‘oh jof City Mall, under Mayor Gaynor’s lomeca, wheve Herman W. Bayer, than an Alderman, did the rest. Joe accom panied his bride as fur South as Mem- | phils. Lorena r od home two weeks | while Joe hung around @ hot 4 thon | tha newlyweds it to the seashore, | she told the dear folka at home, with & girl chum for the sumine sha to stay Chapter I1,- -Wintertime. choo! reopened and found Lorena ready, None knew her secret, The Owing to the Death of | Mr. Frank A. Merrall \ All «4 Our Stores Will Remain Cl 1 All Day Wednesday, February Filth, Acker, Merrall & Condit Company father's | eirte aaa! HER CURRICULUM | teh | Gowan went up. Ret Hardly | Gramatteo’s body was past her seventeenth year, Lorena was/ the elevator well and the car. Why, well, er—yes, the firet|/st fing Ming Prison during the week ! j ether in Joe's ted euler! GAVEHER $2500 Magnate’s Wife Admits Con- ‘Diok" Santis, a Van- derbiit Cup epecd merchant, wae loung-| doning Offenses When She Ing about the office and recognised Le “ rena ae the “cute little trick” he had Received Check. ; eoen in J ac ‘i ignorant ef Lorene’s ‘M. MaDonald testined partiowtacty peeved because of Jove sore Sauer Gavegan, in the poste whe renboute the race pilot, in @ spirit ? Of mischlevousness, anewered that he | CTS Mle morning, thet she had Sow Ruensed Joe was out with “Nell, bringing @ maction der an abeo- ‘Neil! Oh, dear, what shall I det Gtvores from James P. MaDon- ejaculated Lorena. Then she went back @ refireed financier, largeiy te- to her achool and wrote @ full and frank MMe genercaity ia giving her ao confession to her parents, The firet of @9,000 at the peyoholegical train out of Memphis brought several of Lorena’s relatives to New York. Unknown to Joo, the Perrys watched MMe every move, Soon, very eoon, eapied Joe and the winsome “Nell, ohte, moment. Mre. MeDonaid held the sheck for that amount, dated Jen. % 1907, drawn to her order and signed by | e chubby little doll-faced girl, to: it. When detectives discovered that Joe and * went away on @ long trip toxether, the Perrys engaged B. M, Garde, Assistant District- Attorney of Richmond County, and the lawyer brought sult in the Supreme Court to dissolve the marriage. ‘The day tor the trial was eet, and all unknown to her tutore and clase-mates lorena got excused to “de some shop- ping with @ relative from Memphis” and hurried down to Justice Newbure gers court. Hegeman ve. Hegeman was ‘the first cage called. It wae econ ever with and Lorena wae back at her clase im time for the afternoon seasten. ‘ioscan KILLED BY AN ELEVATOR IN THE P. R. R. STATION, Electrician’s Helper, Sent on Errand, Falls to Return and Body is Found in Shaft. John Gramatteo, eighteen yeare old, of No, 820 Hast One Hundred and Four- teenth treet, an clectrician's helper |°! amployed in the Pennysiventa Railroad ‘Terminal, Seventh avenue and Thirty- second etreet, was killed early today in an elevator, Bugene MeGowan, olares, ghe money. Mr. MoDonald had taken the etand in hie own behalf and had declared phi matioally that beth the fernti paid for whh her own & foreman, sent to retura after Afteen minutes Me- bo passed an elevator, and noticed stat: platform near the ear. Th ice eay between ‘The police and Coronere men ere in- OAeDeasid quevity. vestigating. @ moment. Then DEATH DATE FIXED. 2 om Malraney Witt to mecewtea at Stes Dering Week of March 17. ALBANY, Feb, 4—John Mutraney, whe killed Patrick MoBreen ‘ork, City om Oot. 4 1021, will be electrocuted of March 17, 018, The date wae fized to-day by the Court of Appeals, Patrick MoBreen wae known as the Priest.” He owned « ea- loon at No, 7 Tenth avenue, Mul- held him up et the point revo! ees tad whee ee resisted whet ‘Twenty— ‘Twenty smokes” of choicest and purest tobaccos, The Turkish- blend of most attractive quality! Diettetively Individual Wille ctroliing through the park 1 lest ng witch the other Amd on returning home | found ay Gag hed ren eway; “Oh dear! oh dear! what wil you Gor” my wite, in Ceara, exclaimed; The watch, a gift, was highly prized; the’ dog was widely famed, “Don't cry,” eaid |, “I think | know @ow we can get them back; All it requires is action, prompt, end just @ little tact.” 1 phoned 4000 Beekman a World “Lost and Found” ad.-- ‘ A man returned the watch; the dog was’ wrought back by a led. ! 2p rabens 1 your “Lost end Pound” ed. tn New York City, morning or es, Sun, Tribune and Press DROPPED DIVORCE SUITWHEN HUBBY Sie TB

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