The evening world. Newspaper, February 25, 1913, Page 3

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- PAORLER GIRL HELD * ATATLANTICCITY: Disappeared After Brooklyn} Society Man’s Arrest and Is Found in Hotel. | SONS OF RICH ACCUSED. ! MAUANTIC CITY, N. J, Fed. %5.—| ‘Martha Beatrice Kohler, the seventeen: | yeat-old Brooklyn girl who disappeared | from her home Inst Saturday night and) ame here with a companion, Miss Grace Cem, wee arrested at the Hotel Chai-! fonte to<lay upon orders of James P, Kohler, her father, and te being held) ‘atl he comes to get her. That the arrest of tio pretty young | gel, who ts wanted an a witness against | ‘Walter G. Doyle, now facing a serious oviminal charge, caused great unens!- Nese to those interested in keeping her mt of the Jurisdiction of the New York | court was evidenced by the excitement | manifested Dy a man passing under the name of Smith when he heard from ‘Miss Cox that Martha had been taken te police headquarters, Miss Cox and! Smith disappeared trom the hotel ehort- | ly after the runaway girl had been taken In charge by a detective. ‘The Kohler girl wan arrested ty De-! testive Apple of the Central Office, on a warrant sworn out by Chief of Police Malcolm Woodruff. Tho «irl's father communicated with Woodruff last night and asked him to hold his daugntor | until he himself could come down to) take her home with him, | DETECTIVES WATCHES HER) HOTEL ALL NIGHT. i Not wishing to keep the girl in a cell overnight, Woodruff postponed making (he arrest until to-day, though he de- talled @ detective to keep a watch ov the hotel al! night to prevent the po bility of her escxping with her com- panion. { ‘Within ten minutes after she heart | Mastha Kohler had been arrested Miss Cox, who is a striking blonde of the; vivacio ype, paid her bill and that of | Martha Kohler and burtedly left the| hotel. It-wae learned at the hotel that a man who always presented @ card bearing ‘the name of Smith has been a frequent Visitor at the hotel, calling upon the; young women, since their arrival. They | say he was prosperous looking and | sometimes took them out to lunch or for | Boaréwall wheel chair rides. \ Mies Kohler disappeared from her | home, No. 390 East Seventeenth street, ; Flatbush, last Saturday nixht, following | the lodging of a criminal complaint) against Doyle, who is prominent young | member of Brooklyn society, by Kobler'’s brother, Philip, last Tuesday. After hie daughter's disappearance Koh- Bev laid before District-Attorney Cropsey | @ome usiy facts concerning a coterie of ‘weaithy young Brooklyn society men ‘whe possess automodiles and unlimited q@penting money, and who, he claimed Brey upon young and impressionable ates. Tt is wala to-day that the Distriot-At- | terney has in his possession evidence t tay before the Grand Jury and that eo mame of & son of @ former high @y officia) in Brooklyn is linked with | Doyle's in the sensational incidents cul- | qitnating in the disappearance of Koh- lero daughter. @BTS CLUE TO DAUGHTER FROM | SCHOOL TEACHER. | It was only Inet night that Kobler got | & definite clue to the whereabouts of | Big daughter and that came from Miss) Sadie Hermelian, a teacher in Public) Schoo! No. 10, a close friend of Mi! Kohler, who was subpoenaed by Ko ler as the chief witness against Doyle; in the prosecution bagun against him, | ‘When the father of the missing girl) went to Miss Hermaiian'’s home, at No. 108 Powell street, East New York, last night, and demanded to eee her, he w met by the statement that the young woman was not at home, Later Kohler retarned with a detective. Miss Hermaltan, daughter was accompanied to Atlantic | City by Miss Grace Cox, who lives at | the Hotel! Mohawk and who {6 said to| be an intimate acquaintance bo of | Mise Kobler and of the young men of Doyle's acquaintance. DEMANDS THAT DOYLE’S BAIL BE INCREASED. When Doyle, already under $1,000 bail, accepted by Judge Forker at the timo | of his arrest, last Tuesday, appeared in the Flatbush Avenue Court to-day, his sounscl, Robert H. Elder, moved for an immediate trial of the case? But Koller, | usalating Assistant Distric Goldstein, urged an adjour: March 4, because of the absence of his daughter. Upon Kohler's representations, Magis- trate Geismar raised Doyle's bail to | $2,000, and a new bond was subsequently drawn. Koblor and his son, Philip, then started immediately for Atlantic ‘Olty to bring back the runaway girl. Lett to Fr. se by Robbers, WEW BRITALY, Conn., Fed, %.—Fac- tory hands on thelr way to work eariy yesterday found Dr. L. E, Dary uncon- sctous tn an alley, with his nd hands .{rostbitten, When he had par- tially recovered he sald that as he was going home from a call @ highwayman bim insensible and robbed him of “RB According to a Woman’s Sharp Vis “Each Man Is the Centre of Hie Own Solar Sys- tem in Which He Ex- pects all Feminine Planets to Turn Meekly About the Source of Father Dect wi | ares Wealthy | ‘Their Light and Glory,” . Brooklyn Youths Lure Girls Writes “Astronomer.” 5 1 With Autos. | . a i s “Woman Is a Selfish) Monster — She Ie a Dreadful Fibber—As a Grafter She Has the New York Police Skin- ned a Thousand Ways from Sunday,” Says “Insurance Agent.” BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITBH. VERY man views himself as the centre of the universe round which a whole system of feminine planets revolves. He believes pro- ¢oundly that the distinction of being his wife, his mother or his ree Q) MXCLA GREELEY S ir sun's fault that the planets turn lishments of their own. necessary light. ana an may feel about some of the persons that take their light and warmth and clothes and and butter from him. And he, too, knows that they have not the Recessary light to do otherwise. ‘Man has been the central sun round which the whole family life volves for centuries, Mo is yet a Always will be so loug as women are finauctally dependent upon him, any thousands of @o long as so m able-bodied and able-minded wom who cling to social uselessness ‘the symbcl of social value, One of the mos ing pleces of sculpture now on in the Armory $$ @ group of small bronzes by J. Mowbri Siarne called “The Parasites," whe are shown prostr. groups of women fore the erect Independent the ttle eon stands be- but every woman save one de him, fe on her knees, This woman stands foursquare to the world, just as the man | himself does, and the sculptor has given; @ fine intimation of poise and power to) Ww the vision not been ler charming of the parasitic vouchsafed to se! HEAVY BURDENS THAT MANY A MAN HAS TO BEAR. Many an ordinary man feels it when oppressed with burdens that seem greater than he can bear. if he does bear them and surmount them It ts jonly natural that he should view him- self as in some measure the central sun of lives dependent upon mothers, of course fine as that of an and should not be clas Then, though he did not gee the fr is sad to think Wi young school teacher, she passed out compelled to prostrate under the door of her room a bit of; themselves be Man that their chile paper upon which was written the name dren may not r. ‘of the Atlantic City hotel where, she| But while they do a great many men said, Martha Kohler was staying. From | wil! believe, as "Astronomer" says, that | Kohler learned his! they are the sources of light and glory. | And why not? ‘A letter from @ masculine reader cite the chiof faults of moderna woman that f with the truth and that she is a grafter, both defects which are tho logical reault of the perpetually plastic womanhood. Perhaps these allegations are true of a small number of women—precisely the small number who do not make an ade- quate return to men for the benefits they receive from them, Incidentally the modern Woman seens much more satise fled with man than he Is with her, For nore men than women so far have taken a peep into the Lenten Looking se and sent me the result of thelr observations, Verhaps We may assume that Woman s satistled with Man just as he is, A FEW OF THE SINS WOMEN ARE ACCUSED OF, Dear Madam: On the average, men and women are no better than each vuier, The woman may excel in kome virtues, but place the man in her position and he will be just as good, He may acquire hikher pray ciples in some respects, but again circumstances would give the sane to her in bis place. Here are a few of women's sins as I have observed Shean Cxom the calendar gf arery dag iolefeintelntetnininininteininieininfelninteletoieieleiebeieinielehelebiainieininbebeinie GLASS ound him. He can't help it. \be moments when he would be glad to see Venus and Saturn and Uranus and all the rest of them rush off somewhere and set up little separate estab- But he knows they can’t; that they haven't the tote , nininintelainletotebletolelatnteleinte deinielatnieleleteiniete! Copyright, 1013, by The Press Publishing Co tis New Yo ve Wortd), COMPANIONS FLEE Steprrenze Conceit Modern Man’s, Fault, | “wow Mamy POOR LUNATICS DOES SHE DANGLE On THE END OF weR BTRWG” WANES “SURANCY ASCENT” sister is the greatest any woman can achieve and that Life has crowned her in Him. This is what the Lenten Looking Glass reveals to me—each man the centre of his own little solar system, in which he expects all fem- inine planets to turn meekly and re- spectfully about the source of their Nght and glory. What is the matter with the modern man? His Supreme Conceit! ASTRONOMER.” Many women other than the writer of this letter have seen a similar vision in the Mirror of Meditation. Perhaps they are not so far astray in their astronomical discoveries, but, after all, isn’t the average man a little justified in his assumption that he is the great central sun dis- penser of ardor and life to feminine planets? It is not altogether the There must life, Woman {s @ selfish monster. 5he ts @ dreadful—well, say fibber. As @ graft he has the New York Police skinned @ thousand ways from Sunday, Surely Satan himself hee taken lessons in tempting from her and has never been able to acquire all the knowledge of hi eacher, She is & short-sighted {diot. She is an ill-tempered cyclone. And Jealous! Why, her jealousy simply can't find room for itself. If the fallen angels were expelled from heaven through Dride there must be some better place from which woman will be expelled if she is to get her equa! deserts. I would like to see the person who has ever heard the word “spendthrift’ without thinking of a woman, If she ts not RS, ANKUR RELEASED ON BAL ERED BY THONG Suffragettes in Court With Party Banners, Are Held in Check by Officers. fsn't she the mother of the most heinous cruelty? I have seen honest, hard-working husbands put forth thelr very best endeavors to provide her with com- forts, yet she criticised their efforte and taunted them with the more fore tunate results of other men, Isn't she a selfish monster? As for being { @ cunning juggler with the truth, | she boasts of the art so openly that it {s unnecessary to quote instances | of proof, What worse form of graft could there be than aring the finest sentiments of @ man’s soul with @ smile tu order to bleed his pocket- EPSOM, Enaland, Feb, %--On her Promise and that of her counsel that she would attempt to Incite no furthor violence and make no public appgarance until after her hearing, Mra, Emmetine Pankhurst, milltant suffragette leader, to-day was released on $2,800 bond and remanded for trial at noon to-morrow on the charge that she instigated the; book on a good time? How many | dgestruction of the Lioyd George house poor lunatics does she dangle on the , at Walton Heath a week ago, end of her string, then fing them to [omy surrey County Court room wan the four corners of the earth just for the sport of secing thein scatter? he cause of countless aid a murderess do mor packed to capacity when Str Willlam Vincent mounted the be: ch and ordered the prisoner brought tnto the dock, Every man knows the power of her |Scores of suffragettes with yellow bai nplations, for what wouldn't he do | ners of the men’s Social and Political the woinan he loves? She will | Union arose as two batilf_s led Mra, nd the oney at @ bargain | Pankhurst into the room but court at- salo for a few paltry trifles that she | taches prevented any outburat, | wilt not enjoy. Then she will spend | There was bilef testimony to show that | months of vorry and mixery lying to | the Crown desired Mrs, Panihurst held her husand, and trying to make up | for the dynamiting of the new home of the deficiency. Could you !magine a |the Chancoilor of the Exchequer, be- more idiotic trick? cause : own assertion in @ speeoh | lf there anything with more |@t Cardife that sho would nasune all | false pride than a woman tt certainty | the re* Dit Then a Aa3'B de- | docs not walk on two legs. What |! was rajuested and granted, Mrs. | could be worse torture to @ manthan | Panishurst 5 not aaked to peal as | to nave his sincere love betrayed? | the offense with wi ch she is charged | Does woman ever betray it? Well, £ | i# an indic one ge crowd of men and women aur- | rounded the court building and the ap- | pearance of Mrs, Pankhurst was great. Jed with cheers and the tuwns- People shouting down the suffragettes) with the boos. | Fourteen years’ penal ma pun'smnent | should worry. I hope no one will think ma rude for mentioning these few small faults, for really a woman's larger sins are unmentionabdle, Her virtues are usually on exhibition right on the surface, Her faulte are hidden, So boos, tude tm the! | what harm can there be in whisper Ey SPUN UA | tng Just @ few of the Uttle ones waen | ™ ONE at eae | | The Evening World will protect us | Shree on which she wi J | from brickbats and things? But | pea ha | | never min, gilt, you are the aweate SUICIDE BY SHOOTING, | est litde creatures God ever mage. | | ‘And, good or bad, @ man simply can't [Hyman Fella Despondent Over | live without you! Lons of Money, bd INSURANCE AGENT. \ | Tynan Fellks, twenty-one years oM,| Lincoly Bodyguard Dies, | ae Fos FOAD aaa Gi eta Contr the tried ia © today by dhoottng | the bodyguard of President Abraham » nad Follis had a Lincoln op We mg his assass, | lon, died at his home, No. 4A iva jatreet, Brookiyn, yesterday in his nin. second year, He had been MI! only four| ins iy tudily and Sia, OT ers, erst Sones served aeons jlate he had been work as a waiter, | a yee Now + !but bad been out of employment tor cans ot the Raaisten Belang, ileal nth street and T $80 'n the vent fal rl javenue ¢ s ¥* Since then he has heen despondent, al! Aen ten THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, aie a nenee | nN AMANE UCD ‘DICANC COD QW N) lens ccttcuctter.tet * . | j company of another Sixth Article; ‘LAWYER M ver Byala ie et eae Se e a Ww ‘s Birth- of a Series rectly after (he alleged raldy aad + inletebeeiebeletel-teleeietetob went to the Hotel Endicott, where she BIND HERSELF 10 PERIURY,SHESAYS Amazing Document Filed in Mrs, Myer’s Suit Against Walter M. Chandler. | ion RI MUST KEEP SILENT, TOO. | Alleged to Have Agreed to Ac-) cept His Judgment Absolute- ly in Business Matters. | Charges that’ Walter M. Chandler, the away her intorest in her husband's ¢s- | tate to hm were brought out to-~dey in| the Mtigation between the widow and/ Ceandier. Mrs, Myers acmuses Chant- ler of @efrauding her of more than ($80,000, Mre. Myers, in a bill of particulars filed in the Supreme Court, reveals « document which she allexes she aixned | for Chandler, in which ehe promised not only to accept his Judgment in all mat- tera relating to her affaire, but agrocd, under @ penalty of 9,000, to be pald to Chandler, to swear to any accounting he Might file for the estate, and not to talk to @ soul about any of the affaires in which he or she might be engaged. Lawyers who saw the document sald | {t was without precedent in the history | Of the New York courts, that it might | bind the waman to perjure herself or to | ewear away her own property. | Under its terms Mra. Myers alleges he was forced to swear away her own property. In ber statement to the Court she ways latming that he had advanced to her from her personal funds $3,000 for which he had no urity, he demanded from her (Ms. Myers) an assignment of her interest in the te, and when she hesitated to execute it threatened to ex- pose her to public ridicule and disgrece by Gleclosing knowledge he had of plain- tiffe reqistering at @ hotel as Mrs. V. P. Myers before her marriage, and threatening further to make her a wash lady at Bing Sing. Mra, Myers says she did as Chandler told her. Later the question of eomo property at Rockaway came up. Chend- ler told her, ahe seye, that the prop- erty was worthless. She eu ted thet ehe go and talk it over with eome friends. He threatened to sue her for $6,000 under the allence contract if she talked with anybody, She declares that ehe eigned the property away without @ cent, ond that now he finds that It fe warth $50,000, Part of the agreement that Mra. My- ers saye Chandler drew up and made her sign reads: T will hold myself tn readiness at all times to act promptly upon the advice and suggestion of the said ‘Walter M, Chandler, i without queation upon the advi Kd wugees- tion of my counsel. It de further agreed by me that I will not Giscums elther directly or in- directly the affairs of the sald entate (the Myers’ estate) with any one else except my sald attorney, Waletter M. Chandler. It te finally agreed by me that ahould I fail In any regard in carry- Whites “ASTRONOMER* NEW NOISE IN TOWN; SOME NOISE IS NOYES, Alfred Noyes, the Engtish poet tinguished be he haz been nake a living by his art, having n this, country for his fi . visit, tegular Staff Poet of The Evening Vorld (Spondee Lodge, No. 7, Order of jgamated Rhymstors) was un- schackled and led from his cage to @ typewriting machine. And thit was the rot he wrote: LINES TO A, NOYES. Welcome! Your spirit ts that of this Town, | A. Noyes. | Join in the chorus, the rattle-bang| ing out the terms of this agreement, chorus. or if I should refuee to sign and Reading the big score of Life that's be fore us, ing, or if I should obstruct in any A. Noyes. way the final settlement of the oa- Millions of white and of yellow and| tate in any manner that may seem brown. Half of us savage and half of us clown, All of us chanting the gore that's be battle-bang Walter M. ratve all right te the commissions aforesaid and to the $1,000 aforesaid, or to any unpald part thereof, and I aleo agren that Naquidated damages in the amount of $5,000 whall be due to my attorney, rip-roaring, village of quiet and calm, Oftering poets the blessedest balm— B Also they gave you @ lau: ye Washington Star.) nd palm Seats you are happy since your Didn't get through his long years of party Won | sweat. | “No,” repiied the relentle Person. Welcome! |eotne pleasure of polltice is ty hin- Welcoine, Noyea! Gered by the fact that you can't rejoice New York is packed with It, stacked im a victory without giving somabody with Mt, racked with it— yo. don’t Ike @ chance to rejoice along NOISE! with you.” “Distmctvely individual "* The ettractivencses of pu: choice tobaccos has particular emokere to pATIN CIGARETTES The “distinctively indi. vidual" amoke quality of these eplendid Turkish- blend cigarcttcs has result. ed in an unprecedented demand in ¢!:'s country. Walter M, Chandler, | Cries of Van Brink, | WITH PIMPLES { } ' _ } “Ethel, Ethel, don't be eo crunl; please | Suffered Three Years. Used Resinel. , let me see baby a moment,” walled a Now Not a Pimple to Be Seen. ' little gray-haired man, loaning on @ heavy walking atick in Pursuit of a handsomely gowned woman | jand child as they burried from @ hear- | ing before | Court to-d The woman, Mra, Ethel Van Brink, i her five-year-old daughter Genie, fled down the stairway, protected by a aroup of lawyers and than one hundred persons tn only Progressive elected to Coneress | rijors were startled by the anguish of from New York County, used blackmail! the man's voice and crowded on his to force Mra. Florence M. Myers to sig | heels. hand of th ment floor. “Genie, Genie, come see papa a mo- | ment!” shrieked the man hobbling along. |“Oh, Ethel, how can you bu so wicked? an: | | ‘Kranich & Bach---Harlem Warerooms RUSHED BY WIFE FROM COURTHOUSE |Pretty Woman Speeds Across Wait moment, won't you, Piles, ete, Stape Itching please, please — bw His voice broke in sobs as he reached ; the door and saw his wife and child | write for sampler racing across City Hall Park. ‘Then the | Chemical Co. Baltimore, Ma, father, wao is Louis Van Drink, @ . 7 ; wealthy anctloneer at No. 18! Broad. way, stood on the court house #teps, weeping. Mr, Van Brink had compeleht his wito to produce their child on a writ of ha- beas corpus, He asked Justice Davis ’ for permission to see Genie, ‘The Court Grected Mra, Van Brink's lawyer, Charles L, Hoffman, to show cause later in the day why the father could not have access to the child ings were the first public intimation that the V 7 twat they lived in @ handsome home has been started, but the husband de- clarad his wife proposed to make him the defendant in a divorce auit “She went to Lakewood with Genie Fov.7," Mr, Van Brink explained told me she was ill, and we parted on most friendly terms, duc house to live while my wife was away. 1 was dured to invite her to my house. “One night my mother-in-law, others of my wife's relatives and some detece tives and lawyers broke into my apart. “The Greatest Piano Values | Harlem Warerooms, at 16 West 125th Street Bow Hives with the child. He says he ‘was denied an interview or the peiviene Of seeing the baby. He engaged ward Hymes of No. & Liberty street to obtain a writ of habeas corpus. ‘The Van Brinks have been marris® @ix years. Mre. Van Brink is sald to Ge wealthy in_her own ri FACE COVERED City Hall Park Deaf to who lmped,| “1 had deen troubdted for the past three ; years with pimples whfch completely eev- ; ered my face and meck, The pimples Would come out, fester up and cause me | to “pick at them, feeling very uncome le. I tried most all kinds of facta but with no effect. of Resinol Boa Instant retief, atice Davis in the Supreme | friends. More the cor- Mra. Van Brink, jutching tho lid, ran across the base Resinot has been @ ription and house- for tteRing trow okie chapped doctor'e p remedy dandrutt, The proceet- Unul Fav, 0 Brinks had parted, West Ninoty-elghth atreet. No imomal action involving the coupls Never purchase a poisonous tablet or liquid. when you can always get TYREE'’S ANTISEPTIC. _ POWDER Absolutely harmless. One 25¢ bow, | makes 2 gallons standard solution| ~ Send for Booklet and Sample, 2. 6. TYREE, Chemist. Wadhineten. B.@. Best&Co. Layettes and Nursery Furnishings Everything for the Comfort and Adornment of Infants and Children. : ; Fresh Importations of new fashions and ma- ‘ terials with many novelties from our own workrooms, forming a beautiful display of dainty garments in soft fabrics and colorings At Moderate Prices The large assortments include everything from the most simple machine-made garments to the most exquisite hand-work. Complete Layettes Of Machine-made wear......----From 14,75 to 50.00]: | Entirely Hand-made Layettes from 78.00 up A Complete Showing of Nursery Furnishings « Hampers, Bureaus, Weighing Scales, | Bath Tubs, Toilet Specialties, j Bassinets, Cribs and Bedding i FIFTH AVE. At Thirty-Fifth St. “She ‘Then I was intros 4 to a woman who came to my We Ever Heard Of!” was the opinion expressed by some of the purchasers on Saturday at the SPECIAL WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY SALE OF ; Pianos and Player-Pianos at the 16 West 125th Street—Only We expected the sale to carry through this week, but from present indications it will be finished by Wednesday Evening. There fore, if you are in the market for a Piano or Player-Piano decide quickly, Think of buying a magnificent Kranich & Bach Piano, in appearance and condition, for $250; original price $450 when new! New Mendelssohn Pianos, slightly shopworn (hardly noticeable, $165 and $175, Original Prices $225 and $250, at which they are sold all over the United States. An 88-note Player-Piano—scarcely distinguishable from a new one--at only $345, including bench, These are a few specimens of those left. In no other Piano Store ' in Greater New York is it possible to exceed such Money-Saving opportunities, or find Easier Monthiy Terms Offered Kranich & Bach

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