The evening world. Newspaper, June 24, 1913, Page 3

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ms i. J Game Laws Off for Protection of Hearts While All Except Cupid Are On Vacation Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World), Inspector O’Brien “Ge Helped Force Thieves’ Fa- | gin Tell Secrets, | oxpested to follow and relieve the organt- tom ation of anxiety caused for a long time _ ECRY: the tnetts. Py Rader and his brother ‘Moe” were be tancdlore Aagistant Diatrict-Attorneys Boat- ay.» Wee Gnd Moskowits more than two to-day and named a dosen “mer- **ehamte” to whom they disposed of goods Se ty by Isidor’s Hupils, Rader’e ca- is being looked up closely on in- formation t he was also head pf ronathe “pl et trust.” “Years of knocking around with de- <w» teetives as @ stool pigeon and in other ~~ @apacities,” Rader said, “put me on to many of their tricks, Asser many G4 not leave their homes ‘before noon every day and that those who were on uty generelly spent the mornings in the courts, I directed the boys who ‘Worked for me to do their stealing tn the mornings. == GAYS DETECTIVES HELPED HIM os f[@rought the goods to one of my ey 0 When business was good the boys were Gbdle to steal at least cwo or three truck- we deeds of merchandise every mort. ee The value of each trom $39 to sE) teem, The high grade stuff, if standard articles, I sold at a good price, Patentod articles were returned to thelr o “throust the detectives I had egainst whom nq barge ie pending, was caught by a iceman last fall in an attempt at and was indicted. When hs owne ‘wp for trial in General Sessions in Octo- orster last through his brothe>s influence - Re was acquitted, ~~" “Keay sent some of his. detective friends down to court,” said “Moe,” or~“end thay gave. me a good character. ¢ PeTye asia they had sent me to where I | "wae caught on police business.” Ividor Rader, in a talk with As- District-Attorney Moscowits to- gorroborated much that her husband told about the payment of mon jo 8@. detectives, She sald she had wit- *‘pessed payments. Young members of * ‘Rafer’s yang corroborated Rader’s cun- Keseion, said he kad threatend to wend them to jail if they did not ¢o his ing. Zerriio, said to be a fence like put on trial before Judge General Sessions this after- waa indicted Jan. 31, charged #!¥ale Coathes, Suilin to testify against Zerrilo. The District-Attorney has not y jcated with the Police Depart- ooncerning Reader's confession. ts’ Association claims ef the credit for the return of Ra- to New York County from Kings ity, where he had been indicted but ‘to trial, A member of the ’ Association, a loser through of Rader's gang, complained the organisation thet rapid progress QiVE O'BRIEN OR REVELATIONS. a8 iT na é i i ie 2EEoe fi s { é zfs of police experience he wtter than @ layman the in the quickest and most results from the Poltoe De- E ; = g ¥ot im we =@perement. He has found the way’ %}'’ crentemg his complaints to the plates, the best gotion is obtained and have .been able to give our mem- weal yeoults, when they com: IN AND EMPLOYERS KNEW + NOTHING OF GRAFT, ‘works under the direction of tee of city conditions and or- oes, of which John C, Eames of . Claflin & Co, ts the chairman. the confession of Rader, the dnepector hag been in co-opera- with the pollos and the District- ftice, There has been no the association regarding between the thieves and ‘this angte of Rader’s confession, ‘Brien insists his time hes been de- 2 to the interests of the organisa- . the recovery of its property and if the thi only, “SHB WAS 4 Ofaur au> HAD A BANK Row as Oc as Twar® ELLIS ISLAND TOO SMALL FOR RUSH OF {MMIGRANTS. 32,000 Arrivals in One Week Breaks the Record of Recent Years, * The unusually large number of @teerage passengers arriving on eteam- ere here for the last six weeks has the capacity of Bills Island. ‘the ist- and for the taking care of 5,000 immi- grants, The number arriving since the annual spring rush reached ite height Tan from 2,000 to 32,000 @ week. The latter number, which arrived in the week ending June 14, was the largest arriving in one week in the memory of any of the officials. Some complaint has been made by the friends of arriving immigrants because It has been necessary to hold them on the ships until room can be made for them on Ellis Island. Three thousand Passengers were held over night on ships arriving yesterday, but all of them were passed through the entry formalities early to-day. ———.—_ CRACK COLLEGE OARSMEN TO SEE HENLEY REGATTA. for Europe To-Day, Not Talking About English Stroke. Averill Harriman, son of the Inte ratl- ‘way magnate, and coach for Yale; W4- Kirby, who English stroke to the grew of ‘the blue, salled on the Kaiser Wilhelm Il to-day. MM. Goodale, No. 6 and L. 8. Chanler, stroke for Harvard, were alsc among the passengers. The entire paity will take in the Henley regatta. Speaking of the English stroke, Mr. Harriman ‘said that he was not yet Prepared to give an opinion on it Mr. Kirby said that it could not be expected that a crew could pick it up success- fully in one season. One thing he liked about the races was that the crews had selected graduates for their coaches in- stead of professional coaches, When the Harv men were asked they thought of the English » they smiled and Chanler said: ‘ell, we beat them, didn't wer’ ‘WOMAN AN AUTO BANDIT, CHICAGO POLICE REPORT. Prisoner Hokis Four-Year-Old Baby in Arms When Arraigned in Court, CHICAGO, June 24.— Holding her ur-year-old daughter in her a?ins, irs, Irene Bruenner was arraigned ‘to-day to answer the cherge tha! held up the proprietor of a dry goods store at the point of a revolver late Saturday ‘night, rifled the cash drawer of $60 and fied in a taxicab, Mrs. Bruenner, called by the police “The First Woman Auto Bandit" on record, was réleased on $8,000 bond to- day after she had paced her cell for several hours, carrying the child in her arms. She declared that both she and her husband, Josep!: Bruenn tazleab proprietor, would prove Identification of the taxicab 1; ich the woman hold-up made her escape, the police claim, will prove their case. a im Auburn Prison, June %4.—Joseph Bratka, of Erie County, Inmate of Auburn prison, aommitted sulcid: cell last night by hangi bedstrap to a hook in waa serving Ix years for m and had than two years more to serve, Warden Rattigan said he had Hot been punished for infractivos and THE ONE Twa i away Nad Fall Will Bring the Usual Boasts of Strings Caught and in Confdenee the Stories of Wary Ones Who Got Away—Only Two Won’t Tell of Catches or Even Admit Fish- ing, the Wife at the Seashore and the Husband Left in Town. By Nixola Greeley-Smith, The Flirting Season is here. Now that everybody but Cupid is entitled to @ vacation, heart hunters—veterans and novices—should get out their tackle and look it over, just as the fisherman examines his reels and files, And at the hour of the third drink men too will compare notes of the season's filrtations, And then all of us save the Derpetual heart-hunters will settle down to sober citizenship for the rest of the year, There will be two sorts of firts Who will not tell each other of the tring of hearts they caught nor eyeo admit they went fishing. They are the summer widow and the reof garden widower, the wife by the sea shore and the husband she left in town, ‘ ‘WHAT 18 FLIRTATION, TO WHAT DOES IT LEAD? ‘What ie dirtation? Mow does it Giger from love? Is it justifiable pastime or reprehensible practice to be discouraged by the stern mor- ? Should men and womes Sirt? rican boye and girls and men flirt too much? Our young joy @ liberty not accorded to ywhere else in the civilized Do they abuse it? Or fs the of the honor system on whic! of our nation- To begin with, what is firtation? %t is ao sparkle in the blood, o Gentle fermentation which if long continued may become life’s great- it is the star to every wandering * is in my opinion the most ex- definition of love that has ever been written, Bo it should be easy enough to dis- tinguish a start from a will-o'-the-wiap, to tell flirtation from love. And yet many unhappy marriages are made and are broken md women are unable to A man forsakes into will mayed as @ child when he tries to do- mesticate a June bug in @ paper box arid finds that it has lon its light and looks like any other brown, uninterest- ing thin, FLIRTATION SKIRTS THE BOR- DER OF INFATUATION, George Meredith, in advising a young map to lear to. dlatingwisn between {scences as to what |flirtation should be 1 shall be giad to the tennis fiend his rackets or the Pedestrian looks over his knapsack before taking the open road. Of course, there are persons who hunt or fish for hearts all the year round JAPANESE-AMERICAN BOY BABY CONSECRATED. MINNEAPOLIS, year ago Roy T. Japan, and Miss Mona Golberteon, a Mi girl, were married by Rev. ee 5 Utter Loneliness in His Efforts ‘ to Do Good Oppresses Him, He Says, “when I read the rag-bag newspa- pore I certainly make up my mind that nobody loves ” eald Mayor Gay nor to-day in Ing more than 900 Graduating pupils of the Thirty-thira {end Thirty-Agth Districts {n Williame- burg, “and often I make up my mind | that mgbedy loves me at all.” | sate Hower ned taken an hie text the 8 i i ft i | ; til, bir 2 "iy i HEL Hes il i i § : i Hi | rf | t ; i I; iH i Hj i fy bE Fi it i z : Hi : sf fa an to be [ . < i i “aeo| Being Celebrated To-Day at the White House. WASHINGTON, June %.—Thia Is the twenty-cighth wedding anniversary of end Mre. Wilson, and a quiet in the White House Misocs Joasie HH] [et the. family. years ago to-day that Thomas Woodrow ‘Wileon—he was called Tom Wilson then and the young belle started North to take her piace in the house of @ professor in a girls’ semi- nary. ">. |SPOOKS ASKED FOR $500, portunity. He took it to indicate that in defiance of game Jaws or the/G, L. Morrill. Yesterday their two-|*tUsl poverty was not very perils of poaching. But in general the open season for hearts begins just as the June wed- dings are over and continues till the last vacationist has returned to town. When he gets back, more particularly when she gets back, we will hear tales of the strings of monthsgold doy, George Washington Masuda, was consecrated, the Rev. Mr. ‘Morrill officiating, The service is ea!1 to have deen ique, Mr. Morrill formerly was @ Baptist minister and does not approve Of sprinkling as the form of baptism and the baby was too young for im- The parents were anxious not only that the child should receive some INVITES A REAL CIRCUS TO CAPITOL AT ALBANY. Senator Thompson , Introduces a Resolution and It Is Referred to Fish hearts that were captured, and, as/ form of baptinm, but they eleo were| ALBANY, N. ¥., June 4.—This was usual, of coursé, the tallest tale will d@al with “the great big fellow that Got away.” Officially, of course, such fish don't get away from girls. When the string of conquest is small they report that they got tired pull- ing them in, or that they threw back a lot of little fellows that they didn’t want. But unofficially, when women who like each other get together and tell the truth to each other as they never have told it to men, there will be an exchange of facts, real stories of nibbles of wary fish that ran away with the line or ducked under the rocks and snapped it, or got off with the hook still in their quivering gills. love and infatuation, sald that love is Datient, it knows how to wait through distance and disappointment, as infatu- ation cannot; in fact, that the capacity for waiting ts the only thing by which true love may be determined. Flirtation, of course, merely skints the ‘border line of infatuation. ts love in miniature, Many good and earnest per- sons are opposed to flirtation. There is Still @ widespread tradition to the ef- fect that “a girl's firey kiss belongs to her flance” But how far this belief af- fecta life and conduct and how:far It le Merely an srohaic decoration ef eti- quette columns, &c., I don't pretend to say. I know there are a great many igirls atill in high echool who could not quality for this ideal of perfection, For boys and. girls begin to flirt very early with us and in the main innocently and harmlessly enough. If any heart-hunter has any informa- }ton which he or she thinks of value on the general subject of when and how to filrt and any opinions or remini- game laws of hear from him or her, ae DYING ON DIPLOMA DAY, Worry About Her Grad Caused Iliness of a G ‘The triymph that Genevieve Hoonan. of No, 280 Kearny avenue, Kearny, N. J., was to have to-night at the graduation tom exercises of Bt. Cecilia's Parochial School | terday afternoon, discoveerd the body of |Faetier Ma: firm in their Perform the ceremony, Hence & compromise wan agreed upon, The boy was consecrated, the minister using the Bible an American flag in the ceremony, pledging the father and mother to teach the youngster patriot- jem and piety. Morrill recently acquired consieradle publicity in an energetic defense of the Japanese people and a severe oritt clsm of the California Alien bill, He is pastor of the People’s Church. pitied eile RIVAL’S 10-MINUTE KISS CAUSED WIFE TO KILL, Mrs. Augusta Scheiber Makes Novel Defense at Trial for Shoot. ing Husband. ‘MBMPHIG, Tenn., June 4.—Temporary insanity caused by witnessing @ ten- minute kiss between her husband and the woman she accuses of breaking up her home was the “Wefense offered by Mra, Augustus @cheiber at her trial on the charge of having killed Sohelber, a wealthy lumberman, last Maron. “Mr, Scheiber told me at supper, Maroh 11, that he was going to » lum- bermen’s meeting that night,” she sald. “I was suspicious, and after he had Gone I get 2 revolver, cloak and veil, and went to the Howell home. My husban was there, Standi near a dining. room window, I heard them talking about me, and heard Mrs. Howell call me an ‘old devil.’ Then I got in through window and saw Mrs. Howell kiss my husband about ten minutes without tap. wht crazed me, and I ran all and began shooting.” —_— MRS, SULZER FOUND BODY. m Roadway While ire that the Rev. Mr, Came Upon It ALBANY, June 4.—It became known to-day that the women who, while au- tomobiling in Rennselaer County yes- eirous day in Albany. In the midst of the Senate session, Senator Thompaon, @ Republican, arose and solemnly intro- Guced the following resolution: “Whereas public duty devolves on everybody to improve conditions in any echeme of life, and, “Whereas, a cirous is an institution of long atanding in our country, and is pecullarly subject to new and unusual suggestions for Improvement in its features, “Whereas, political evolution has developed a condition in our State Capitol which may be of interest to the circus, “Resolved, that the clrous be and hereby 1s invited to the State Cag- itol.”* Lieut.-Gov. Glynn, after the laughter which the resolution aroused had eub- aided, referred it to the committes on forest, fish and game. pose ho Se: DOCK CONTRACTOR CO.’s SUBWAY BID LOWEST. Eleven Seek Contract for Broadway Section, Houston Street to Union Square Eleven bids ye opened to-day, in the Public Service Commission rooma, for the construction of Section No. 4 nt t Broadway-Fourth Avenue Rapid Tran: Railroad, which ts to be operated ‘y the New York Muntoipal Railway Corpora- tion (Brooklyn Rapid Transit) under ine dual system contract. Unofficial totals obtained from ten of the eleven bidders indicate that the Deck Contracting Company te low bid- der, at 62,578,000, the Necar Daniels Com- pany next, at 02,651,000, with the Degnun Contracting Company third, at $3,785.00, Section No. 4 begins between Houa:un and Bleecker streets in Broadway and runs under Union Square to 0 feet north of Fourteenth street. giant ses EN ; HONORS MAINE SURVIVORS. ing Breaks Of Vace- will not be here, Bhe may not sive out |# motorcyclist near his broken machine | then to Make @ Couple of Citizens. || the day, for she is dying of heart dir- ease. It was worry over her standing that brought on her iliness. Several eke ago she began to fear that her in studies would not be high enough to enable her to win the coveted dip'oma and she grew so anxious that her health was broken. —>___ Boy Falls From Swing. A aad ending came to the playing of | truant on the part of James Angoin, thirteen years old, and Cornelius Walsh, | twelve, of No, 1759 Bathga in the Bronx, and Arthu fourteen, of No, 1762 Bathgate ‘The boyn went to @ lot cf homes, and rigged up a ewt who was int and tumbled or Fordham Hospital boy had sua’ base of the aul, by the side of the Albany-Pittsfeld road, were Mrs. William Sulzer, wife of the Governor, and her sisters, the Misses Rodelheim, The women, unrecognized at the time, assisted in “first aid” efforts to revive the man. Upon the arrival of physiol: it was declared Mfe had been extinct t Papers in the dead motor- cyoliet’s pockets gave his name as Ar. thur Eé@dy of Kington a travelling salesman, Mrs, @ulzer practined the pro- fesston of nursing before her ma: ——a— Rev. Dr, Garéner-Murphy Lead, "The Rev. Dr. Edgar Gardner-Murphy, founder of the National Child Labor Commit end author of indancy,” ts dead ix monthe wiih heart He was forty-four, ind iea.ce culjdren. @ wie and two Justice Manning of the Brooklyn Bu- | Preme Court over from his sum- | of the Maine citizens. They jorge Schwarts, fifty-five years old, | @ first class cook the Paducah, and ‘Thomas Kell; writer on the same vessel. Both @ been in the navy for twenty-eight years, Schw was born in Hanover, while Kelly was born in Ireland. vo! the oplum trafic wae given to-day when the House Weye and Means Coni- yesterday a tax BUT WARRANTS ONLY CAME. ee Policeman Baited Brooklyn Fortune Tellers With imaginary $792 and Took Them.to Court, Jemes Blair Potter of No, Schermerhorn ostreet,. Brooklyn, and Lena Schmidt, whe acted as his assist- ant in @ fortune telling etudie at No, 206 Sebermerhorn street, were ar- ralgned before Magistrate Kempner in the Adame Street Police Court this af- ternoon charged with fortune telling. Policeman William Harrar teatiged that he called at the studio last Thura- day and was admitted by the maid, whom he told that he had $792 with him and wanted to invest $700 in a Grocery store. He wanted to know if the time were right to make @ good in- veatment. She told him to put $2 in a Bible which she handed him and told him to klae the book. Just then Blair en: tered and made Harrar.deposit an- other $2 in the book. Then Blair told Harrar: “The ghoste are against you, but I wil) discuss your case and see what I can do for you.” Diair told Harrar to call at his home the next day and bring $500 with him. Harrar called, but he brought two warrants instesd of the money. re adjourned until to-day. fF put Blair under bond to refrain from fortune telly for a month and h Girl on her promise to leave the State. EDWY CLAYTON SET FREE. Chemiet Convicted With suffra- gwettes Wi! Huager Strike. LONDON, June %—Edwy Clayton, the analytical chemist whe was sent- enced to twenty-one months’ imprison- ment on June 17 for censpiracy to commit malicious damage to property in conjunction with the militant suf, fragette leaders, was released from Jail to-day in @ very weak condition, ae the reqpit of a “hanger strike.” It appears from statements made by released prisoners that other convicts who are not suffragiete, have followed the example of the suffragettes, Three | ur men now decline to eat food in orieun and are being forcibly fed. THE TIDES, WON'T SOMEONE NOUS A FLAG NEAR STATUE OF LEERY te = Be tate Might Lay Down His Life ie It and Stop Writing Letes the time comes for me the Great Unknown I the American flag in my face toward the Statue of ——————> —— DON'T WANT PARADISE ment Might Be Unjust. ‘The acquisition of the site of Pasaéise | Park a» part of the Fort George, acquisition of any land at < George for park purposes, dectartng: jf the cltipdirendy had enough part P erty and that there was no need af @ © park in that particular Jocality, lecuasion had proceeded fer some time President McAneny perp = those present that the hearing had called merely to determine whether not there were to be additions te original site and pete pass rk proposition as a wi President ‘MeAneny expressed the fon that the plan of assessment Boys’ and Girls’ Play Shoes Tan or black Russia Calfskin—stout welted soles—no nails or tacks to hurt the foot—white duck lining which makes | a clean, sweet shoe. Of course the sole leather tip is the feature. Sizes 6 to 12, $2.25

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