The evening world. Newspaper, June 11, 1913, Page 1

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SPIRING AMBASSADOR SUED FOR DIVORCE _ Probably fair to-night and Thereday; warmer, “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ Copyetaht. 1018, by The Frese Pubiishing Os. (The New FORMER MRS. DUKE NAMED IN SEPARATION CASE BY EXCONGRESSMAN FILED 5 Wirt ‘Sars. Late es oad of ee > WOMEN OF FASHION vil ge cnc dig )POESN’'T WANT DIVORCE Plans Actlon for $150,000 . Damages After Shadow- ing Pair Two Years. Mire. Catharine Soper Pence, the wife @f former Congressman Lafayette Pence ef Colorado, who has been mentioned 88 & Possible appointee to an Ambasaa- @orship under the present Administra- tion, to-day filed papers in a suit for weparation against him, charging ex- treme cruelty and abandonment. For Proof of cruelty she alleges continued ‘@leconduct on his part with Mrs, Liliisa | on . Duke, Givorced wife of J. B. Dube. @e tobacco millionaire, for tyo ma 6} Galt years, to an extent which would ‘errant her injasking for a divorce if Whe cared to give her husband the op- Poertunity to marry the former Mrs. Dake. Mra, Pence has also instructed her @ttorney, Ciark L. Jordan, to bring mult Mra, Duke, who is believed to don suit, for ailenation of her hus- band’s affections. ‘The sult for separation, according to Mrs. Pence, followed :wenty-five years married life in which she never once ted her hu.band's loyalty or his @omestic probity. ABANDONED POUR DAYS AFTER BARS. DUKE BECAME HI6 CLIENT. “When they were married, in 1888, Mrs. Bence was the beautiful Catharine Goper, one of the two daughters of Col. Robert Soper of Georgetown, Ky., re- mewned even in the blue grass country for ber beauty, To-day, with halr so white that {t is brilliant, and a soft, complexion and dusky black eyes, igented the charms of her girlhood. Bhe explains in the papers that after Doing for four years a member of the Projects, acting as District-Attorney in Denver for four Years and spending one term in Con- | hg Ped entered into a partnership mer Deputy AtotrneyGenerai @ichener in Washington, D, C., in No- 10, To them came Lillian N. as thelr firat client, wite al- feges, Four days asserts in + Ror comp'sint, Mr. nce abandoned er, Since Geptember of the following je has not contributed to her rt, Mra, Pence charges that detectives in ‘her emplo,, obtaining the assistance of nd telephone girls in the Bei- Bord apartments on upper Broadway, @atisfied her that Mr. Pence and Mre. Duke were living the same apart- ments. The two, she says, discovered that ing watched, and Mrs, Duke sublet her apartment, Thereaf- * tr she went with Pence to the Ebett House in Washington, the complaint @ays, and to Cuba. @AYS PENCE ASKED FOR DI- VORCE TWO YEARS AGO. On their return to this city they moved @ato gub-let rooms in the Clifton Apart- ments in Riverside Drive, the complaint eolates, “My agents tried to obtain the oa...» means of information at the Clifton which they had at the Belnoré,” sara Pence told an Evening World reporter, it were unable to do 60, because the employees the aki they had been previously engaged by Mrs, Duke and it would not be honorable for them to hholp me.” Pence lives at the Rockingham ents, Broadway and Fifty-stxth rited enough from tat ly, independently of oecute her sult vigor bag tiations for said, “began in 1! told me he thought to di arranged. ‘A man came on from Colorado who was * testify to misconduct of Mr. Pence! FLOCK TO RECOVER STOLEN VALUABLES $10,000 Worth of Loot From Riverside Drive Homes in Negro's Possession. ‘Women of Riverside Drive attended a matinee to-day in the West One Hun- dred and Twenty-fifth street police sta- tion, All afternoon they were Gaxed in identifying goods which they hed given. up for lost, heving been Molen from them at various times in last four months. econ Flewkins this morning saw & Negte @e Inte « pewnshap at One Mua’ red and Twenty-fourth etrest md Thied avenue, As he passed the door, the negro was trying to pledge « aliver bread tray. The poilcewan questioned im and made hi open @ bag he car- In the bag was about $80 worth of sliver. Hawkins placed the man under arrest and took him to the West One Hundred and Twenty-fitth atreet potice tion. The prisoner said he Was William Keen. He gave two addresses, one at No, 71 East One Hundred and Thirty- fourth street, the other at No, 1M West One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street. He was found to have a furnished room at each place, and at both places the police unearthed a treasure treve, Sil- ver, clothing, cloaks, coats and jewelry ‘of all kinds were found. Two trunks and two suitcases were loaded with loot, and a patrol wagon was impressed to take the goods to the station house. The goods were laid out ‘as best the accommodations of the eta- tion permitted. Then the people who have been rotifying the police for sev- eral months past of burglaries in their partments, were telephoned, and the Procession of fashionably dressed wom- came in automobiles, they came on bus and car, There was a fine selection for them from which to choose, “There's my gold-mesh bag! one ‘would exclaim, ‘There's my fur coat!” from another, and #0 they went through the collection of watches, ickping, diamond rings and brooches, ’bragelets, mesh bags, auit cases, grips, men's fine clothing, gaudy wajets and the latest thing in Coats and hate. Mrs. Joneph Indig of No. 227 Riverside Drive identified a suitcase and a lot of silver, The superintendent of the apart- ment house at No. 5 Riveraide Drive said that Keen had been employed there During Seely, lost more than all the r cluding @ $1,000 fur ovat belonging to Miss Blossom. The coat was recovered by Lieut, Buckley in an Eighth avenue pawnehip this morning, It had been amount will stretch to when the inva- sion of the pawnshops has Seen con- cluded. Fifty pawntickets were found on Keen, He had pledged the loot he stole for in- credfbly small amounts. One suitcase filled with ellver he turned over for $12.60, The police are busy this after- noon in the pawnshops along Eighth, Lenox and Third avenues, and are being rewarded by the return of goods of al! descriptions in nearly every shop. To- night will be “gentlemen's” night et the West One Hundred and Twenty-ftth street police station, f° the men were not at home this afternoon to learn of the finding of their missing clotting aad caemeaat STE! POUNDED BELOW 50 IN RAID ON THE MARKET ‘Excitement on Floor of Ex- change When Banking ‘In- terests Fail to Protect. STOCKS ARE UNLOADED. ‘Government Suit Responsible for New Attack All Along the Line. Wall street was utterly demoralized when the stock market closed to-day. A sydden collapse of the market occur- ring in the fast half hour before closing threw the Street into the most panicky atate It has reached since the beginning of the unrest which has existed in the Street now for many days, It was witih a feeling of relief that brokers saw the market close and real- {se that there were vouchsafed to them several hours before the morning's opening™in which courage ané@ con- fdqnce might be“ somewhat restored. But thy realised, too, that probably ‘only fome assurance from the Admin- ieteation mt Washington ‘favorable to business interests and indicative of a NEW YORK, WEDNES Ex- Divorcee She let-up in the present attack of Attor- || ney-General McReynolds on big inter ests could prevent a panic. Various reagons were assigned for the sudden upheaval of the market this aftérnoon, Chief among these was Mr. McReynolds’s sult against the Quaker Oats Company, which was opened by the Department of Justice in Chicago CANAD! ul east 1c SHARES OF. FOR SALE, Tt was r ‘ao the first gun in the fight on trusts, and its influence immediately apparent. Then, too, there could be no confidence borrowed from the attitude of Congress on the on the market of 2,000 shares of Ca dian Pacific, which were offered Joneph Walker &@ big London tent by operating for Harry Con- it the same moment threw 3,000 of the shares on the already unateady market. As a result the stock dropped two points apd more, : immediately stopping at 210 1-4, and it opened the flood gates of Haquidation, Instantly there were blocks of Bteel, Union Pacific, St. Paul, New York Cen- tral, Southern Pacific, Reading, Baltt- more and Ohio, Northern Pacific and Erie thrown on the weakening market. All over the Exchange rushed wild ru- mors of trouble in big houses, es- pecially in two or three big Montreal concerns whose failure was looked for momentarily. ANOTHER ATTACK CENTRES ON UNITED STATES STEEL. As usual the objective point was Steel, As in the big rald of yesterday the forces centred about this post and # battle royal ensued. Yeaterday the stock was hammered down to 6%, but there it rallied, and the cheers could ve heard for three blooks as the frenzied men on the floor realized that the land-|‘ slide had been stopped. To-day the scene was repeated, only this time there was not the big banking support which had saved the day yer- terday. Thousands of shares of Steet the stock came again the cheers of yesterday. were traded in around 50%, the stock broke through #, There wi a wild scene about the post and the crowd on the floor shrieked an‘ yelled as the stock was pounded a1 down to 49%, where 2,100 shares were traded in. As the market closed the stock had rallied only an eighth of @ point and the day ended with Stee! at 6, a new low water mark for the present reid, In ail, 104,000 shares had been traded in. ‘The sales of Canadian Pacific, total- 14,000 shares, were probably the recorded on the Exohange . The stock opened at 217 8-4, went to 377-6 and then smashed downward mre GRAND: VIZIER IN CONSTANTINOPLE Mahmoud Schefket Pasha Shot by Two Men as He Rides in His Automobile. CONSTANTINOPLE, June 1.—The Turkish Grand Visiter, Mahmoud Schet- ket Pasha, was assassinated to-day by ‘two men armed with revolvers, who attacked him while he was proceeding in his motorcar to th Tbraham Bey, the alde-de- Mahmoud Schefket Pasha, wa killed by the ageassina. It is understood that the men who committed the crime are civilians. It ts believed in Government circles here that the assassination of the Grand Vizier was the outoome of a plot against the Committee of Union and Progress. ‘Mahmoud Schefket Pasha had held office as Grand Visier since Jan, %, this when bee Pasha resigned. On the zim Pas! the com- mander of the Turkish army at Cha- talja nes, was shot dead during » Gemonstration in Constantinople. | A pure Arab and a =ative of BagJad, Mahmoud Schefket Pasha was brought ntinople with his family when boy. After studying at the he graduated when mn years old with the highest He was a great favorite of the former Sultan, Abdul Hamid, who ap- pointed him to the General Staff. Sub- sequently he proceeded to Germany and stayed there ten yeara studying the ore ganization of the German army, Despite his close intimacy with Ab- dul Hamid, the Grand Visier was the moving spirit in fostering the military revolution which brought about that Sultan's fall CITY TO PROVIDE HOME FOR MORGAN ART LOAN. Board of Estimate to Vote $750,000 for New Wing to Metro- politan Museum. The great art collection of the late J. Plerpont Morgan will at Inst be housed in « wing of the Motropolitan Museum of Art. ‘This wan made certain to-day when It Was announced that the Hoard of Estimate will appropriate $750,000 for the purpose of building & wing to the museum to properly aoc- comodate the great collection which ia! to be loaned to the city for an indefls| nite period. As soon work will 3 the money is authorised rt on the new wing rt ulokly a bape bide can be adver- |“ Cireulation Books Oper 1913. DAY, JUNE 11, Congressman and Suing Wife; Says Stole Love TO RESTORE DEAD BY SENDING BLOOD INTO THE REART Prof. chan bas i Tells Medical So- ciety of Experiment With Pneumonia Patient. Bringing the dead back to life again 1s actually possible, in the estimation of Prof. A. Ia Soreai of Fordham Univers- ity an@ Flower Hospital, through the transfusion of new tlood: through the left aide of the heart. Prof. Soreal told of an experiment in which he had act- ually restored .a pneumonia patient whose respiration had disappeared, in a lecture in Brooklyn last night. His paper was a sensational topic of discun- sion to-day among members of the Homeopathic ociety of Kings County who heard him. “If @ way could be found to transtuge ‘blood into the left side of the heart 40 that pure blood could be sent promptly to all parte of the body, there ie no doubt but what many deaths from acute diseases and from accidents that Inter- fere with the functions of the heart co be prevented and the patients restored,’ remained and have ted the blood vesnele with those of another dog and transfused pparently lifeless animal & Perfect and in way satisfactory return to normal if continued the speaker, m “AN experiment with a pneumonia pa: tlent was not s0 spectacular, but even more gratifying in its result. This pa- (lent was actually without respiration by any teste known to me and actually mortbund to all human knowledge, when I made a transfusion of blood from @ normal man through the jugu> lar vein of the patient. The return to life wes so prompt that It was all but miraculous, Eventual recovery fol- lowed, “TL have no doubt that if such trans fusions could be made promptly, the death rete could be lowered materially It |, of course, matter io reach the sieht cart by way of the Jumu' ff the left side of this organ could be over- lives could be DUFFY GRAFT CASE GOES 10 THE JURY ON GOFF'S CHARGE Ex-Police Sergeant, on Stand in Own Defense, Says Wife Kept Bank Account. $1,361 IN ‘ONE “MONTH. Defendant Swears He Took No Bribes From Gambler Roth for Protection. ‘The fate of former Pollee Sergesst Peter J. Duffy is in the hands of the jury, which ts to decide whether or not he took = gambier’s money in payment aaggroweuing in one month, but he thought his wife had done eo, MAKES SPECIFIC DENIAL OF GRAFT CHARGES, On @irect examination Duffy, a ing the usual preliminary questions bis counsel, said he was Corty-four years old, the father of three children and had been @ member of the police force eeventeen years when the present charges were brought against him. He then entered upon @ specific denial of every damaging statement mace by former Policeman Eugene Fox, ~ sus Roth and other witnesses for the prose- cution, Though admitting friendship with Fox and a speaking acquaintance with Roth, the proprietor of the West One Hun- dred and Bighteenth street poker reom, Duffy denied that he had ever received from Fos @ lst of the “protected” gambling resorts in the relocated Har- im district, denied that he had ever hed for oF received money from Roth that he had ever sent Ashley Shea, a fellow gambler, to Roth to se him to aft against him, That done, Levy turned Duffy over to Nott for cross-examina- tion. OF DUFFY MADE INVEST: MENTS IN REAL ESTATE. In opening the cross examination Nott had tl jefendant dete!! the aum- ber of yeara he had served as @ plain clothes man under ex-Inspector Bwee- ney during the latter's captaincy and in what stations he had served, He | Ciil brought out the fact that four years ago Duffy's wife bousht a piece of property on Radford avenue, Yonkers, and built an apartmen: on it. The Court would not permit Duffy to anawer Nott'a questions as to how much the house and lot cost. Nott also t Duffy to admit that his wife had ne-family When the Assistant District-Attorney began to ask Duffy about the bank accounts he had in the Yonkers @avings Bank and the First National Yonkers, Justice Goff at fret sustained Levy's strenuous objections, but later, after argument by Nott, reversed his ruling and Instructed the witness to answer, One of the questions Duffy did not have to answer was whether oF not he now possessed « bank account of $67,000, Duffy said that In July of last year his bank balance was only §1:000. He admitted the following deposits in Firet National: Aug. 2, 61,100; Aug, m7, ALL H MONEY TO HIS WIFE. When Duffy declared that he did not make these Geposits and that it must have been his wife whe took these various sums to the bank, Nott sud» denly asked him: “What do you do with your money?” Bank of | ST Promebty fair to-night @n@ Thercéay) warmer, to All.” 18 PAGES HARVEY LADEW'S YACHT NEW YORKERS ABOARD, SEED BY IAPANES Columbia Carrying Party of Society Leaders on Oriental Cruise, En- ters a Forbidden Port and Is Held by Officials. ENTIRE SAILING PARTY PLACED UNDER ARE Almost. Unheard of Action, Under Old Law, May Lead to | Complication With U.S, TOW, June —Tis Amel yet Cvs, wh owt J: Harvey Ladew 6¢'New York ind th’ party aoard, was seizéd"to between Kobe aint Nagasaki. Arka yochs bad put into Waksh ja’ for reg, sad since tal Jone of the ports open to foreign commerce, because of the proximity” the party are being held there. Baseball Games To-Day NATIONAL LEA LEAGUE. AT CHICAGO. GUANTS— 002000 Go— 010000 AT PITTSBURGH. BROO! JURGH— #3102320 AT CINCINNATI. AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK. IcAGO— oe01000 NEW YORK— 0000000 AT WASHINGTON, O1T— 0710002 WASHINGTON— @oo000000 AT PHILADELPHIA. Lovuis— 0000 LADELPHIA— oo10 AT BOSTON. CLEVELAND— 104000 BOSTON— 0000065 FOR BA ry PAGE at} AND 13, KLY i 00000002 1-38 i sma ot Japanese forts, the boat was put under arrest and the members Of © ° meee 9) * ‘The experience of J. Harvey Ladew 1) |and his yaehting party aboard the 196+) foot fleet yacht Columbia, coming af It does in the midst of the present jstrained relations between Japan amd; ‘the Untted States over the Calif | question, may.assume the aspect of ag International affair. YACHT @£IZURE aN Al UNHEARD-OF AFFAIR. 5 ‘The selsure of a foreign yacht tm Japanese waters ‘a en almost unheard. | f procedure, and the Japanese authoris | ties have invoked an eid law that Bas we reaty territoriality agreement with foreign nations. He a i i E nt fl Ocean to Bombay. Thence made, and after that the run down through the Straits of to Singapore, It was designed to go to |The party planned to either in Yokohama o: Shangba!l and return to trans-Siberian railreed ‘The arrival of the Columbia wae in Yokohama papers on Ladew then said that cruise back through th @manghai, and to Kiang River to Hankow Wakayama, the path in Japan. than @ dosen white BARNES F Opposes Shoarm and Colby in Mie Attack om Direct Primartes, § | A Gebate behing closed doors will’ held to-night on the Direct L AND RACING SEE] bili in the room of the Independent of Bt, Mik eel Ber dive ncn’ Ninety-ninth street ang —_——— Chu Mi THE FRITZ! SCHEFF SHOW. seve avenue of whieh the Rev, Peters is pastor, He will Words an@d music of one of the| side at the meeting. William song hits of “Mile, Modiste,” by Vic- will try to prove that there should Airest primary. Bainbridge Colby ag tor Herbert, will be given to the] clarence J. Shearn will tel Bim @unday World Magasine next Sus- e!

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