Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
} ST FLEES : ‘FROM DETECTIVES ~ CLAD INPAJAMAS If Mr. Roselle Had Had on His Ghoes They Might Never Have Caught Him. H h st Wage Girls Resent It, Says Miss Anne Morgan| FOUNDATIACKING | “The Girle Do Everything for Themselves, and the Only Help We Give Them Ie in Showing Them How to Help Themeelvee. “The Girls Get no More from Us Than We Get from Them. We Teach Them no More Then They Teach Us. ak WHAT WIVES PLOT CAPTURE. No, 4 and No. 2 Lay Trap for ‘+ «Joint Husbarid After He Deceives Them. Qvear Allen Roselle’s wild dash ‘a though the streets of the Bronx very “* "early thié morning, clad only In @ suit of yellow pajamas, ended in the Tremont polos station. Later Magistrate Corrt- * @ew held ‘him without ball in the Mor+ ‘|. Misanta Court to await the action of the * Qraha Jury on a charge Of bigamy. Ro- & elie’s dash for liberty was made from + (/ thq-home of Mrs. Mary G. Barry Roselle, ‘wt No, 1842 Anthony avenue, whither }*) Mr@. Ida Martha Boylo Roselle led De- tectives McLaughlin and Kennedy after he and the other Mrs, Roselle had 4 Pitted together to allow thelr husband to retire, unsuspicious of the arrest that « Maa-in store for him. +,But out of his bed leaped Roselle (gna down the stairs he tore to rush into the strect, taking no heed of his ‘ware feet, which the hard pavements eat and bruised. He travelled lke the wind. “If he had had his shoes on there’a.no telling how far he'd have . TUN, say tho detectives, As it was, they caught him after a few blocks at Web- w+ ster and Tremont avenues. + In court he acted as his own law- yer and refused to make any ‘state: ment except to ay he was not guilty | and would walve examination, Mrs. Ida Martha Boyle Roselle did enough talking, however, for the whole fam- ily, Her story revealed Roselle as the vietim of a marrying mania, They met in 1908, she sald, and were marripd after three months, For a few weeks they were happy. Then Roselle began to stay out nights. She trailed him after a while and was horrified to Alscover another Mrs. Roselle, between whom and if the ‘gallant Roselle was dividing his time, Tne women got thele heads together, trapped Roselle @n@ had him arrested. He Was sen- ténced to three years in State prison and went to Sing Sing. -Before he left prison the first wife Wed and Mrs, Ida Martha Boyle Roselle #aid sbe hecame reconciled to her hus- , band and went to live with him again, although she had learned at hts trial for bigamy that he had onge served two ‘years in Sing Sing for robbery, How- » he promised to reform and her {n- ation was Bo great that she took fey’ him back, bg aa went well then until last Novem- beg, when he began to stay away from f) hame again, and recently wife No. 2 | Ege that the roaming Roselle had ry ene met Mrs, Barry, a charming widow P despite her five children, at a cabaret +B show. They had been married in Ho- boken Feb, 18 last, and again in the Catholic Church of the Holy Spirit at Aqueduct and Burnside avenues last May 35 Wife No, 2 called on Wife No. 3 and the women arranged that the one with en Rosell@ spent last night should mfortable and unsus- sible, while the other to arrest him, Both women performed their parts, but only fhe Jack of his shoes kept Roselle from i) Pyimg over the fields and far away. BUMP OF AUTOMOBILES RENEWS OLD FRIENDSHIP. . kawyer Booth Escapes Serious Mis- hap, but He Refuses to Proses cute Offending Chauffeur, ‘ ‘A speeding automobile ran #0 close to 4i9¢ r of Henry H. Booth, a lawyer, of ® , 16 Elm street, Flushing, in Hoffman Rowlevard, Newtown, I. 1, this morn- ing that a rear mud guard of Booth's m ne was broken and his car was alewed off the road, whese only expert haadiing by the kept it from overturning, Booth blew his horn and ® policeman, further up the road, wloped the speeding car, When Booth came up he was surprised e d/dp’ the other car Mrs, Joseph a rontyn, with whom and her the lawyer had béen friends pe They -had lost track of each othe when they moved to Long Island, ‘Due lawyer declined to press any charge against Mrs. Davis's chauffenr, Samuel Zwambler, but Mrs, Davis in | a that he be arrested and taken to fr "Phe Pushing Court “He was driving carelessly and at fotty mites an hor she said, “I ‘ehell appear aguinst him. He disobeyed $ ‘orders against specding.” im court Mr, Booth persuaded her } to drop the charge. He refused to pros- j eoute, and a very badly frightened } seiiqufteur drove Mrs. Davin away In her } ear. HIPPING NEWS me j LMANAU POI TODAY. Pun room g ALIBI wets Ou times. 13 t PPRT OF SEW YORK, } ARRIVED. Kremep ' “davann Mami enos Demerara “Every Girl Can and Should Put Something Aside for Her Vacation, no Matter What Her Salary Is, Not Only Because She needs the Rest, but Because the Rest Will In- crease Her Efficiency. “I Am Sick of Hearing Talk About the Poor Working Girl. Nothing Could Have Been Finer Than Their Repudiation of the Sug- gestion of the Chicago Vice Commission That a Girl Needs to Be Paid $8 a Week to Remain Moral. “We Will Never Get a Living Wage for Women Until We Have Enabled Them to Earn t (Aad Nixola Greeley-Smith. MORGAN SAYS: pe To-day no girl need for to-day, at least, there is a distinct advantage in not being masculine. No boys will be admitted or allowed at the dance and moving picture show to be given to-night on Recreation Pier 24 by the Vacation Savings Fund and by Miss Anne Morgan, Mrs, August Belmont and other well known women who have interested themselves in this society of girls who work for a living. Any girl, old or young, may go to the party if she wishes, by applying for a ticket or tickets to the head- quarters of the Fund at No, 105 ‘West Fortieth street. Fund gave a ball to which both men a triumph. When I heard that the end-of-the-season dance of 1913 was to be a hen party I wondered why. So I asked Miss Morgan, whom I saw yesterday afternoon in the li- ~brary of her home at No. 219 Mad- ison avenue. ‘The daughter of J. Pierpont Morgan {is of course in mourning for her | father. Nevertheless she is so much interested in the success of the Vaca- tion Savings Fund dance that she will attend it and do everything im her power to make it a success. Yesterday the Morgan home had an effect of muffled splendor, for its famous pictures had put on their hot weather veils of net and its furniture wore its summer coverings: of flowered cretonne. Miss. Morgan answered my question|day after day at the same unluspiring frankly. toll, it 1s no wonder that many of th “There {9 no reason-for having -only| have their imaginations stunted and fail women at the dance beyond the fact bala for apee that iife holds t Vacation|® steater pleasure than getting away the greatest joys are those that cost to helping girls to use thelr tmaginu-| nothing or nearly nothing. tlons and so realize the value of the! «At the picnic which we gave in the pleasures that are at every door, We! Bronx recently every girl paid her own have tried to show them how easy’ It) way, 10 cents, and there was a very is to have recreation that lives up to| imple lunch which the committee of the meaning of the word, that re-cre-|#iTls In charge of the arrangements ates, makes over, giving greater energy looked after. This summer we are to have three excursion trips on a barge and efficiency for the work to come, as which has been given to us for those well as supplying @ rest from the work occasions, but the girls themselves will that Is p: Pay for the refreshments 4 for tl GROWS TO 12,000 MEMBERSHIP (us. To-night the music will be su As; | plied by the Consolidated Gas Band, aN BIGHTEBN MONTHS, organization of the employees of the Eighteen months ago the ‘Vacation gus company, which dom bare you know Savings Fund was unknown. To-day about."* we have 12,000 members, who pay into! I was sure I didn't, But then I em the fund $2,000 a week, which of course| always being aptonished -by the things represents money saved for their vaca-|I don’t know. One of the things I tions and for entertainments such us| thought I knew, however, was that on the dance to-night or the pienic we] occasions where women like Misa Mor- had some time ago in Bronx Park. wan or Mrs, Belmont lend themselves “Z want everybody to under- to social projects like the Vacation Fund dance there are ten women who take Part because Miss Morgan or Mra, Bel- mont will be there, for one who hi ®enulne interest in the thing itself, I sald as much to Miss Mors “T am sure that isn't plied, “The girls are inter exactly as we are in them, They are independent. All we do is to suggest forms of entertainment, to receive their savings and to prepare lists of board- ing places for vacation which we Investigated, But the girls alwa write to the housekeepers and make their own arrangements. In fact, they are in every way self-respecting, inde- pendent little Americans, just as they ought to be, Beyond such purposes as outlined we aim to make girin more efficient in their work and conse quently for themselves, We will never be able to get @ living wage for women until we have enabled them to But our main interest ts to help girla to recreation, We have no immediate concern with the minimum wage or related problemas, and I don't see that it can do any good for me to utter generalities concerning them." Of everything Misa Morgan sald this was perhaps the most characterlatic en One thing et a time, one bridge at a time, seems to be the text to which she has vowed herself, For Instance, Miss Morgan says that while @he is not an opponent of woman suf- he regards many things as more and more important And all, the characteriatic euddenly, in the direct and em- phatic manner she bas inherited from her father, “that the girls do everything for themselves, and that the only help we give them is im showing them how to be of use to themscives and to each other. They get no more from us than we get from them. We teach them more than they teach us.” “After your experience with the 12,000 members of the fund," I suggested, “it must be possible for you to give can opinion as to what is the least amount of money upon which it Is possible to Tt 1s always possible to save," Miss Morgan answered. “Every girl can and should put aside a few cents a week for her vacation, no matter what her salary is, not only because she needs the rest, but because the rest itself will Increaso her efficiency for her work. 1 am sick of hearing endless talk about the ‘poor working girl,’ ’and I know the girls themselves are disgusted by it. Nothing could have been finer than their ropudiation of the suggestion of the Chicago Vice Comsission that @ girl needagio be paid a week to re- n moral,” | “Then you don't belleve in the mint- mum wage for working women which Is still so much talked aboutt”* “I think it's perfect nonsense to pre- tend that a girl who ts immoral on # a | week will lead a virtuous life on $8," Miss Morgan answered, “I think wages have nothing to do with the question of morality, and the girlie themselves Were the first to resent the suggestion |thet the minimum wage ts the remedy | for minimum morals, Of course we will Jal have to see that working women are pald wages upon which they can ‘live, but it 1s .false and ridiculous to assert that there is a direct relation between the wages of women and their morality, And working women w first to point this oGt—another indica- juon. I think, that they are their own best helpers, SHOW THEM HOW TO MAKE MOST OF CHANCES. “The idea I have’ jn regard to estan poorly pald working women ts that wri the howto sane them how to use the chances, wale outing crete diMculty and problem take And yet the in main, Be iy rman. lee om Donnelly, @ boss truck- man, of No, 38 Dominick street, was elected by the Democratic members of the Board of Aldermen to-day to suc- ceed the late William Drescher of the First District, Donnelly ts well knows in the First District and is a member of the regular Tammany district or- panization. ——. + All Well Abeara ship. sh and say to herself “How I wish I were a boy,” | Last year the Vacation Savings) and women were invited, and it was) THE EVENING WOBLD, ‘TURSDAY JUNE 8, 1913 No Cure for Minimum Morals; WOMEN WH? THUG ot GIRL DIES ROMANCE BERIND WOMAN MISSING IN BOAT HINTED Theory That Mrs. Houseman Was Robbed and Slain Is Abandoned. ‘The police of the Canarsie Harbor Squad have dofinitely abandoned their first theory that Mrs, Olga Houseman, the young and pretty wife of a Brook:yn manufacturer, now missing = ‘er summer camp at Plum Beach sinoe Sat- urday night, was either ¢ a or done away with by the roustabouts of the Jamaica and Sheepshead Bay water ways, Acting upon reliable information, they are continuing to work, as indicated In tho later editions of The Evening Worki yesterday, upon tho belief that Mrs. Houseman left her husband’s camp voluntarily, and that she is safe now. Bearch ts being made along the fishing wharves and boathouses of Canarsie and Sheepshead Bay for a man who, it Is believed, can throw a good deal of light upon Mrs, Houseman’s movements after she pushed out froin the shore of Pluin Beach alone in her skiff on Saturday evening. ‘The finding of the skiff in which Mra. Houseman had embarked, with a broken oar in the bottom and a shred of green cloth caught under the oarlock, does. not sway the police from thelr firm be- Hef that Mra, Houseman has not come to any harm, It is belleved that had she stepped froin one boat into an- other one, wherein friends might be, h skirt could have caught on the oa lock and a piece been ripped from Ik. The broken oar is accounted for on sev- eral hypotheses—pushing off a sandbar or fending off a larger boat could have done that. To-day Houseman and a brother of his put over to Barren Island in a launch, shoved up Gunnixan’s creek to where the floating skiff found by Gun- nigan last night was moored, and {den- tif_ed the skiff as the one in which Mra, Houseman had disappeared on Satur- day night. Houseman towed the skiff back to Plum Bi: ———— WHO HAS $1,000,000,0007 $1,000,000,000 was lost right here in New York—lost, stolen under the very noses of the watching police, $1,000,000,000: That's a billion dol- lars, If “money talks” what a story lies behind that stolen billion! «+ A New York story. The kind one al- ways wants to read—and gets a chance to about once in ten years. “THE MAN WITH A BILLION.” That's the name of the story. It is by John A. Moroso. And it will get hold of you trom the very first chapter. “THE MAN WITH A BILLION” will begin serial publication in to-morrow’s Wor!ld, it to-morrow, Don't forget. You afford to. MAN WITH A pul wn orp your wiention with bors aan 1 KILLING OF CHILD BY A GIRL IN AUTO plains of Improper Use of Sheepshead Bay Streets. Reeve of No, 210 Keap atreet, Brooklyn, authorities take action to stop the pra Motordrome track by auto speed mobile of Ming Reeve,at about 8 o'clock the eyes of his fathor and moth died a few minutes later while he wi the car of Miss Reeve whtn after striking the boy. “It may be true,” sald Mr. Lentino, stopped, factory, was ill, as the police say, know what I saw. “T saw Mies Reeve, who te appar- ently about twenty years old and of excitable temperament, and who ts a familiar figure on the circuit, pass our house ten minutes before my boy was struck, I only ING THE BOY. “When she came same direction, after about the time it would have taken her to go around the street circle which moat of the apeeders near here use, the boy was in the atreet, His mother, who is now il in bed, and myself were watching him. Hi @ bright, active boy, and we were not afraid that he would not get out of the way when he heard an automobile horn, “When Miss Reeve came along the second time me did not sound her horn as she turned into. Sheepshead Bay avenue and did not @lacken speed as she turned. My wife and myself saw the whole thing. Don’t ask me to talk about that. I cannot und man in sight at the time and none er. by a stranger in another car and taken to the hospital.” curb in front of the j@ chasing a ball in ed from th mobile striking him. George was assured that Miss Reeve MAY END SPEEDING Father of Emil Lentino Com- Michael Lentino, of No, 1625 Sheepe- head Bay road, father of seven-year-old Emil Lentino, who was killed by an automobile driven by Miss Lillian H. made a demand to-day that the city tice of using Sheepshead Bay road, Emmons street and Ocean avenue as a Little Emil was struck by the auto- lant night while he was playing under He being taken to Coney Island Howpital in = = the car of a man who had run up beside who is an inspector in a machinery ‘that Mins Reeve wae hurry- ing to @ hospital where her mother BOTH PARENTS WERE WATCH. im, going in the tand how the police could have made a relable report as to the responsibility for the accident when thef was not « police- rived until after the boy was vicked up Policeman George of the @heepshead Bay station said @ number of witnesses! of the accident had told’ him that the car driven by Miss Reeve was going at moderate speed, and that the boy bound- uto- uch & way that !t was impossible to areal “BIRTHDAY GAS INBOUDOR | FOR KING Gf WOMAN IN STORE| NEAROPENWHDOW) LITAKT Wind ic oa Out Lights in|Placard Left at Ruins 684 Beat Him With Fists, Pursue] Pretty. Miss Strutt’s Room as_| mous Boat House at Ox Him Into’Street and Renew She Dozes Over Book. Burned by Suffragi the Battle, Death stole in through the window in| LONDON, June &—Fred newsite | the beutiful home of Peleg Strutt, on | mous boathouse and Afty beats’ the highest point of ploturesque Bigh-| ford were burned early to-day land Helghte, Brookiyn, early to-day. | tant suffragettes were saspectes: | The arm visitor fled with the tite of /frasette literature was i winsome Louise Strutt. Mise Strutt was | pvous ne Pisce and thle a twenty-five years ol, delighted with! « day reminder life and delightful to behold. she was] Gorges” sige? i" adored dy her family and @ multitude of re A saff-wene Argpe did To-day is the King’s birthday, abode of femininity, and from ite Rough's was frewountes Wy Seay windows can be glimpsed a large part | fort University students and ot the Greater City, and the waters of | ‘hem kept privately owned boats Jamaica Bay sparkle in the distance, | The fire wae well under way ‘The young woman loved the quiet and | covered. ao charm of her* boudoir and delighted, i" , when entertainment langed, to retire/ COOK WITH BIG NAME AND. BIG KNIFE TO THE RES MEN MBRELY LOOK ON. Assailant Is Knocked Almost Senseless by Policeman’s Club and Locked Up. ‘The screams of a woman and calls for help coming from the haberdashery of Mrs. Annie Jacobs, at No. 627 Mlushing avenue, Brooklyn, to-day were heard by many pereons, and through the open shop door they saw Mra. Jacobs strug- gilng with a man who atruck her in the face with his fat and tried to break the grip with which she clung to his knees, ‘The women had been knocked down, but she hung on and continued to scream. . Though there were several men in the crowd not one of them went to the wom- an's assistance, but half a dozen women shoppers dashed into the store and beat the man about the head with their fists and their handbags. He turned on them, slugging right and left, and several of the women wi knocked down, They never let up their attack, but added their screama to those of Mra, Jacobs, until there was pande- montum in the shop, At Inst the man struck several of the women to the floor and managed to tear himself free from the grasp of the others. Then he rushed into the street hatiess and with his clothing torn, ‘The women, their faces bruteed from the man's blows, followed him Iike furies men in the street looked on the women caught the man again, Again there was « fight in which the fugitive used his fist against his as- sailanta as though they had been men, He had fought himself free the second thme when Policeman Bender of the Blymer etreet station came up on ~ run, policeman burst through the vatba of women and grabbed the man, As the women fell back the man turned hie full attention to the police- man and presently had suceeded in knocking Bender down, he took to his heels again. Bender was up and after the man in a momeht and half a block away overtook z ~ ho aang & iow acriue'eaate head: F eli ic it a Ce or $ et Re E at Half Price It landed glancingly and the man é@tag- gered, Bender w upon him instantly In order to close out our season’s models in Felicita and rained blows on the fighting man beautiful, until he senseless, the station. corsets ever shown in this market), we ae offer a limited number of them at exactly half price, as follows: / There the prisoner said he was John O'Connell, living in the Concord Hotel Sie dncten ets tan ollanea te Gre At.......+. 82,50, 3.00, 4.25, 5.00, 6.25, 10.00 Formerly... .§5.00, 6.00, 8.50, 10.00, 12.50, 20.00 * James McCutcheon & Co., ~ 5th Ave., 33d & 34th Sts. station, eaid that he had entered he ——Se= early. Partly disrobing, she would te on her bed and read. Oftentimes she fell asleep, awakening later in the eve- . or early in the morning to find gee ~ from the jets and hear the wind waned through the curtains before the open window. 4 Tast night Ming Strutt retired early <9 with @ favorite book, She did not ap-| Illos Tkonoklesticleocien, @ pevr at breakfast and a maid was sent] with ao 4 jong to warn her of the time, A knock beh nigy ! i brought no response and the maid ope. x the door. Gas almost overpo ered her and her screams brought the f.mil to the room, ‘There on the bed, partly dressed, lay the body of Mise Strutt. Gas was flow- ing from two open jets. A screen was before the window and the filmy cur- tains were moulded into wralthe by the wind, An ambulance call to the Bradford Street Honpital brot glance showed that some hours befor, Yet Dr. worked half an hour trying desperately to coax back some latent snr ee life Minn Strutt had evidently fallen over her book, which was still saapea in her left hand. The wind had tinguished the lights, but failed carry away the heavy fumes ceping gas. By degrees the overcame, the sleeper and slowly painlessly the pretty girl's own ‘went out. were held without dell for trial & Magistrate Appleton in West Side Ost Then he dragged the man to place and bought three handkerchiefs and a cap, Then he had left and ahe had returned to @ room behind the store. Presently she looked out into the store and saw that the man had crept in again and was busy behind the counter going through the till and helping him- self to articles of clothing. She ran out and grabbed him and then began the fight in which the women rescuers had joined. Magistrate Walsh in the Manhattan avenue court remanded ('Connel} to a {If cell for examination to-morrow. tectiven Rief and Behan said they recos- [U nized him as a man who wan relensed on last March 4 from the penitentiary | QZ on Blackwell's Island, where ho had | P<Gresi ea] deen sent for robbery ‘two years ago In the Still Waters of the Hudson at the Foot of 79th Street and Riverside Drive Lies the Old- ‘Conve’ Ship- “SUCCESS” This Wonderful Vessel Has Made History Berhaut fe geht et bony yg) i at neue wae fhe Jy Derhemged Aftee_ All Tue, Toone: Nothing Being Omitted be) Hes Semen Freight ond. Their SuAtertngs ues Oa) eee at eee a ae we Kuewn in the Mistery of The Regular Price of Admission is fixed firmly at 50 Cents, EVENING ‘WaRED paz ly can save half price on all tick: Clip this Pa It is Worth 25¢ wejihons Agnany. te Digna CONVICT SHIP 1 COUPON OWENTY-EING CENTS Opportunity, Are You Really Gol of the Most Vital Factor of the Betterment af pee Age? stopped the car within twelve feet of the