The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1913, Page 3

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, ) . {! | \ )\ ty , 4 ""Whien the case of McArthur vs. Tatum ¢ (Ney, father of three RICH ARS. TATU ARREST BY SISTER BLAMED ON FATHER ——— awyer Says Girl’s Charge | Between Div Parents. DENIES ATTACK STORY. Young Woman Not Beaten + Nor Urged to Marry Against +, Her Will, He Declares. Malie@ again in the court of Justice @teths Peace C. B. Johnson of Walton, Delaware County, N. ¥., July 17, the Sefense. will atiribute the bringing of Ma.ection.to a combination of hysteria @m the part of the complainant and ~fdesire on the part of her father to ‘Wing about « realignment of the fam- My Wterests In order to ald in a civil @tilen pending against his first wife / «fhe principals in criminal action @ Walton are Mrs. John C. Tatum, wwhowe husband is a cotton broker and at No. 29 Church street, Yatda as being worth severai millions, s Mre. ister, Kathryn Me- Arthur, daughter of J Bech street, Hichmond Hill “Mise McArthur told her story on the ‘Witness stand in Walton Thursday. She tevtified that because she had refused to ‘Warry Frederick W. Peters jr, won of @ ‘New York manufacturer at No. 310 East enty-second street, and because she ‘ila retused to attend a luncheon at her Wister’s home in Great Neck, L. 1, at ‘Which the engagement was to be an: mounced, her er had beaten her, ‘Pated her hair and kicked he: No COERCION TO MAK! Ne WED, SAYS LAWYER. Terence J. McManus of Olcott, Gruber, ynge & McManus, No. 170 Broa: y, who represented Mrs. Tatum at the ‘hearing In Walton, sald to-d “There was no assault made on Miss “Wearthur by Mrs. Tatum. The facts “wate, as nearly as 1 “Wieertain, chat Mi um Op MoAr- Ret the eng: ir to Mr. Peters solely on the ground wort vt @ young man who fd make a creditable addition to the Gimily, For years Miss McArthur had Hived on the bounty of Mrs, Tatum. She been vent to a select boarding schoo had been given a trip to Europa, a chaperon, at the @xpense of her ‘pliter and brother-in-law. In fact, neither Mrs. met Mr. GIRL Tatum. No pres- it to bear on the , @rl to marry Mr. Peters, although Mi PN Districte—Entries in Two Start Monday, Others a Week Later— Whole of Greater City Rushing Into the Race. Ad4 five more Better Babies Contests to big city-wide series organized by ‘The Evening World and the Babies’ Wel- fare Association! Five more sections of the city have entered the race, each anzious to prove that At has the brightest and healthiest kiddie in New York. ‘Two of the competing sections will be Bin to enter thelr contestants on Mon- Gay next. Three others will open their books for registration one week later. In each of these contests The Evening World will award money prizes for the healthiest babies, a committee of well kn8wn physicians in each case acting as the judges. From 2 to 4 P, M. Monday afternoon the Little’ Mothers’ Ald Association, No. 2% Second avenue, will register entrants bétween the age of three months and living In the district bounded jenth and Twenty-elghth streets enue to: the East Riv on between, the me hours each noon thereafter except on Saturdays and Sundays up to and inciuding Wednesday, Aug. 13. Par- ticulars of this contest’are published in another place on this page. BROOKLYN IN LINE FOR BECOND CONTEST. to the fore on by le School 91, is bound to be a hunrmer. The contest district Includes a territory in which eleven public and five parochial schools are located. ‘The Play Ground Association of Pub- Ue School 1%, at Fourth avenue and Fourteenth street, will be the headquar- ters for tl rugsie, with Wesley C. Cox prinetpal charge” « The boundaries of the distr! roll place Prospect Fi ih street, Tenth avenue, _Twen- enue, Twen- GENEVA LENO, Neigh! Association, No. 1188 Broadway, swings into line with three big contests. Full details of these con- tests will appear in the Evening World om Monday. Meanwhile in that section of Brooklyn where the first ‘Setter Babies Contest’ bas been going on, the question ts: who wen the Evening World prises? ‘The last of the .06 tots in the bis Publie School No. %1 was Judged, yesterday by the committee of phyqiclans and now the parents of the little entrants and their brothers a ty-fourth Thirty-sixth street and Beventh avenue, Bighth. av ‘ninth street and Gowenus Bay, Gowanus Canai, Fifth Street Basin and Fourth avenue. Registrations of entrants will begin at School No, 14 Monday at 1 P. M, and continue until 5 P. M. Registra- tlons will go on dally thereatter be- Gnd Mra. Tatum belleved he would ma! ‘her a good husband. “On the day the assault is sald to have been committed Mr, and Mra Tatum had gone to Delaware County to bring Miss McArthur hom: Miss Me- Artht was in her bedroom and Mra, ‘Tatum spoke to her about her refuse) te attend the ment luncheon and edout other mat especially the girl's friendship for a Dr. Mason, who Mrs. Tatue: understood married and the ren, Miss McAr- thur became hy: cal and her sister to restrain her. The women tad gooner clinched than they were eep- Mrs. Tatum certainly did her ister no bodily harm and witnesses will Be Produced to prove it. SAYS FATHER ARRANGED FOR DAUGHTER'S ARR the father of the women, James ‘McArthur, separated trom his wife, the children divided into factions, the three gtrla siding with their mother and the three sons taking their father's part. ‘After @ Reno divorce the father married ‘egain. There is pending a civil action, Breught by McArthur ‘wile te compel the restoration of certain ‘parcels of realty which he had deeded to er defore their differences arose. Mrs, ‘Fetum has been particularly influential i the family councils, When McArthur heard of the inci- @ent in Delaware County he is said to fave related it to Attorney William E. @tewart of Long Island City, who rep- ‘esents him in the civil action against hie wife; and it wae Stewart who went ‘@e,Delaware County and interested him- elf in the swearing out of warrant , Mra Tatum. After the de 5 ‘pas \pad ite inning in court the J a facts will have been estab- sat the factory of the Peters Manu- Wacturjos Co. No. 310 East Twenty- gecond street, it was said yesterday that Frederick W. Peters is in Maine ‘ns vacation. John C, Tatum said yesterday he ‘would’ not discuss the matter, — -EXONERATES LAWYER BOHAN Appellate Division yesterday dis- charges against Owen W. Boban, S lawyer of No. @ Park Row, who has under investigation by the Bar As- the result of accusations against him by Warren I. Lee and Joseph K, Van Denbury public schoo! ition with an elleged poodle fund" for the @f the charges on July ‘hat Mr. Bohan hed «phe eum of $3,500 ae Insertion ro inted draft je then pro; eer New York Charter of cbrtain grovisio! ons oof" the optalot that ng ‘lam o! co “a tween the same hours, except Sunday, up to and including Monday, Aug. 2% One week from Monday all the babies in Manhattan, living betwe Four- teenth and Forty-second streets, Fifth avenue and the Hudson River, will be given a chance to assert thelr ex- cellence. TO ANNOUNCE FHREE MORE CONTESTS ON MONDAY. On that date, July 21, the Chelsea tion babi Clean House a Big Factor near firsts have been marked by examining physician, his Judgment must be passed upon by the full committee of examiners, The list of prise winners with their plotures will appear in the Evening World upon announcement of results by In Keeping Your Baby Well| Keep Not Only Your Baby and Self Clean, but Your Apartment, the Wi ‘House, arid Even Try and Reform Your Neighbors. Dr. 8. Josephine Baker assures moth- ers to-day that a clean home is one of the most important things of all in keeping a baby well. “In this talk,” ehe says, “I am going to take the motto of the Babies" Welfare Association during the cleanup campaign. 1 do #0 because we want to make thie cleanup work stretch out end run right on through keep clean for that reason, That's @ 004 reaso: “But it isn't the only reason, nor ts it the best reason by a good deal. Ki CLEAN FOR HEALTH, AS WELL A8 LOOK! “The chief reason for keeping things clean is that you may keep weil. Bome people can keep well with dirt around favoraols to male teachers jp’ them, That's because they are lucky. You are not all lucky. “Dirt Killa hundreds of men and women, every year. It kills THOU- SANDS OF BABIES. Let me tell you why, “In the fret place, by dirt I mean filth, matter that is left to Ife around where it doesn't belong, where it rote a the year, “It does not do much good to clean up things 1f you don’t keep the cleaned up, 40 when you've once cleaned up for bal keep clean for them. “Land it hi to interest some people tired to do anything but go to bed. We don't see much of the place, and it doesn't make much difference how things look anyhow." “They think the only reason for keep- ing clean is the looks of the thin; most of you like to have things 1, of course, and you try to “Thie dirt is placed where the bac- teria or disease germs I have told about grow by the. million, Th germs cause most sickness. Without dirt no germs can ————————————— Facts About Better Babies’ Contest To Start July 14 at Little Mothers’ Aid Contest headquarters, the Little Mothers’ Aid Association, No. 3% Second avenue, Boundaries of contest diptrict—From Seventh to Twenty-elghth street and from Fifth avenue to the East River. Any child living within these boundaries, from the age of three months to five yeare, le eligible as & contestant, fi Registration of children as entrants begins Monday, July 14, at No. 28 Second avenue, at 3 FP, M., and continues until ¢ P. M. Registrations will Bo on between the same houre each day thereafter, except on Gaturdays and +. ‘ : ee ee os -_ §Sea BVantea WORLD, SATURDAY Wide Series of Better Babies’ Contests Four in Manhattan, ——. | Grows Out of a Civil Suit | Mroney Prises to Health- rer = et aap WIFE OF BROKER Welfare Association’s ment) SAYS HIS AFFINITY Another for Brooklyn... Hall Says Neglect Also’ | . Was Responsible for Fatal Accident to Her Son. § jSUES INAMORATA, TOO. | Husband Says Daughter Was Recently Chum of Miss , Kohler of Brooklyn. Guit for a separation begun by ‘Mra. Elle L. Hall of Cornwall apart- ments at Bi lway and Ninetieth ateeet, against Charles M. Hall, p= defore Justice Scudder in the Supr Court in Brooklyn today. Mre. Hal who hae three daughters, asked for (00 @ month alimony and $2,000 counsel fee. Justice Scudder allowed her $200 a month and 9100 counsel fee. \ In her complaint Mrs. Hall asserted that she had lived happily with Mr. Hall from their marriage in 184 until July in 1987, when he became acquainted with “one Miss Seaman, now known as Em- ma F. Smith,” and, because of her at- teritions and blandishments, was lured away from his family. She asserts that Emma F. @mith is housekeeping for Mr. Hall at No. 20 Lexington avenue, that he maintains fast and thorough- Bred horses and fine carriages, in which he goes driving with ssid Emma F, Smith; he goes to late parties with sald Emma F. Smith and with the same Emma F. Smith returns to the apart- ment where they live. Mr, Hall's salary, she eaid, was 97,600 &@ year and was reduced from $4,000 sev- eral years ago because he neglected the business to pay attention to Emma F. Smith. ‘Mrs. Hall also says ¢hat their fourteen- year-old eon would not have been ki recently in @ railroad crossing accident in Now Jersey had he had the attention ané care of a father. = In hie answering affidavit regarding the altmony, Sfr. Hail assorted that his ‘was now living in far better style than himeelf and thet his salary was eaten wp by payments of various debts, some of which were contracted on his wife's account. He also sald that his wife could hardly regard him as a PETER attorney, James P. Kohler, home their eighteen-year-old daughter Vivian insisted on staying, and ask Mr. Kohler to send her home. Tt was Mr, Kohler’e daugh made aensational charges number of wealthy young mei lyn early-this summer and then refused to back up the charges in court. Mrn,: Hall started suit against Emma F..@mith in February, apking $5,000 for allenation of her husband's affections, and asked for an injunction keeping away from Mr. Hall. The Injunction was not granted, The swt ts pending. peace Acie $250 REWARD OFFERED "FOR NEWS OF LOST GIRL Boy Scouts Join Searching Parties in Hunt for Young Woman Missing a Week. GOSHEN, N. ¥., July 12—No clue has yet been found to the whereabouts of ‘Miss Beulah Reeve, who has been miss- ing since Monday, To-day the girl parents, belleving she has been kid- napped, are offering @ reward of 9260 for news of her. Search parties, including a number of Boy Scouts, are working day and night, hunting ‘through woods and wadii waist deop in swamps despite » of mosquitoes. Four ponds dregsed, = * The young woman was staying with a mi ingtonville, and it not, until Thu day she was known to be missing. An- other sister, Beulah's twin, wrote, ask- ing where Beulah was and saying she had been feeling anxious about her. —_—_——_ BLNOR KENNEY | bies Will Be Judged r Health Contest Prizes | Scraping. wherever you can reach with hot soapsuds and ‘by pouring {t down the pipes. Kvery little while, too, you shad better‘ pour into your drains chilo- ride of ime or something else that you use to kill germs. Your doctor wilt tell you what ts best to use, DUST IN NOOKS AND CRANNIES A GRAVE MENACE. fies away away a great “Think for a moment about this filth that ts allowed to Ne around your homes, in the streets, the cellars, the backyards, on the fire-emcapes and On| yoo. out for dust. You are very the roofs, even, I am sorry to aay, | ithe nooks and corners of some homes, |V/MflY not to notice the little dust that ‘Would you like to have this ditt | tmosayy isl erat anaenind curtains, in your food? . i 10 @ place for germs to grow BAe Le aa tn Dust gore all through the air and y c "Mavery fy that comes around carries| tod. but tate rear ween ate ete a little of it, and et time he| breathe the alr: i ies alt Ao your food he leaves a little of | Hivery particle of it ts UKely | te tere gout wincneg one, ur clean to have in it hundreda of microbes | ay poss! that may get into your etomach and fills pegs nly dag Ltd ot! POURS A POISON UPON. GIRL. blood, grow there and make you sick. |into your rooms as much as possible Spereeneae CLEANLINESS OFTEN MEANS | Sunlight helps to kill germs, LIFE FOR BABY. INE A fe net encagh to heap vourenie "Some grown men and women, as I| fice can 7 peso leat at have told you, are strong enough tol them, It there ts filth Just outelde of ight off these germs and keep weil. | your door, on the stairs, in the vad oe Most bables are not. If there are dirt | in the areaway, on ho root or on the and files around, the kerma are pretty | tire ewcape, flies are golng to carry the likely to get at your baby. hat in why. 3 weyenciean up fer ihe] Cee” As Helen Kagan, @ stenographer of No, 600 Bast One Hundred and Thirty- aixth street, was returning from a moy- ing picture show with her sister Pau- Hne last night some one stole up be- hind her and poured a scorching pow- der down the back of her low neck walst ‘Thinking that it was a match or the girl cried out, attracting anersby, one of whom sum- i 3 i i i there are still other people your place cleas, tut try to get mbulance. She was still in who understand how important it is| ‘me Jemiter of the Ronse tn Dr. Marin arrived trom to keep clean and really try to do ao,| Walc® you lve to Beep the prem. | lincoln Hospital. : le pronounced the : But they don't know how. They scrub| seee cleam. Set © geod example to [burning due (o @ Po! wages bowser: After and aweep every part of thelr homes | yomr elghbors aad get thei to | {featinent the young woman want to that shows. They seem to think dirt| Xeep thelr hemee cless. Tou kaew |Ner home, Te ma ee tt vue doesn't matter if you can't m Miew do © great deal of hauling Ll a ee aie . “But ro beck and forth. ‘Thon there ts tae |” fe you can't. The will get 00 it] gtore aud factory im your ne wee 00 ; even if you don't reach it with your! qney may be @inty. See Pind LONDON, July 18—The Morning Post Bree. can't got the people who rua them | says a marriage has been arranged be- Rent We, any garbage collect, “Se: |' ‘se eae abe tween Miss Helen Goudy, only ehild of bawe even when it is carefully kept in @ pall is dangerous. The germs can breed there as well as though it was scat- fered around your rooms. “Don't let your solled clothes stay sround long; remember, germs breed in the late William Goudy of Chicago, and his neighbors. You may have neighbors | Gerard Leigh, an officer in the First who simply won't keep clean, One thing you can do, though—you can keep your neighbor's fltes from v'alting you and bringing bis disease germs clean is pretty important and it Is not pink broker at No. 64 Wall atreet, went them, “Wash the baby’s clothes Just as soon as they are soiled. Never leave any or filth around your baby if you w tu keep It well. See that all cracka an corners of your rooms are kept thor-' f oughly cleaned. You can do this Wy with them, You shuuid have in all your windows to keep no simple as it may look at first sight the doctor and wurwe at the milk ut; constantly Caht the jon about it, You can tell them would the diseases themae if you | about your own particular home and them coming, for remember, the the things around It and they can give | you almilar rules that will Mt right there TO WIN A GIRL POP ‘ WHEN FIVE PINK SPOTS APPEAR ee OmICAGO, July 18.—To win “the only girl/’ all you hive to Ge fe to “watoh for the five red- pots in the humas eure” to propose, and you'll cere If radiating lines are pink. they / denote health and a pure and Deautiful love. Pink and yellow, with red dart- 4“ from head, irritability. Yellowish green, @ lack of me tality. Drooping lines, dit health. MOB'S BARE FEET SAVE WOMAN TRAMPLED BY SCORES IN FIRE PANIC': Half a Hundred Neighbors Stamp on Mrs. Blackman, but She Is Unhurt. Mra. Anna Blackman, thirty-five years old, owes her life to the fact that her pantc-stricken neighbors, who trampled on her in the smoke-filig? hall of her home at No. 09 Orchard street early to- day, did not stop to put on their shoes when they jumped out of bed and started downstairs, 4 ‘There are five in the Blackman fam- fly. Abraham, the husband, bed the two older children, Abraham jr., eight, and Maz, thirteen, by the Blackman wee cartying i j i When he went back to rouse the tem- ante the building was already in an up- roar and the stairs were crowded, After he had extricated Mrs, Black- man he called a doctor, Her hurts were nothing more eerious than druises. Little Hilda, who wae shielded by hee mother, escaped without injury, ———— CONTRADICTS QUEEN, QUITS ROYAL PARTY Lady Mar apd Kellie, Friend of the’ King, Invited to Leave After Tiff on Suffrage. LONDON, July 12.—Great surprise was occasioned when Lady Mar and Kellie, one of the guests of Lord Derby at Knowsley Hall for the house party dur- ing the visit of the King and Queea, suddenly returned to London, while the King and Queen are still at Knowsley Hall, It Ie reported that the cudden exit fol- lowed an acrimonious discussion of wom. suffrage between the Queen and Queen ts militant, eupporter of the cause, After the argument, which ts eaid to have waxed exceedingly warm at times, Lady Mar and Kellie in said to have been a4- vined that she had better make ber adieu as quickly as possible, ‘The incident is all the more surprising, "| aa it ie welljknown that Lady Mar and Kellie is one of the few with whom the King In on terms of intimate friend- ship. POLICE CHARGE. THEFT OR FORGERY ON YOUTH Accused Says He Found Check and Some One Else Forged His Indorsement. Beventeon-year-old Benjamin Fur+ ofsky, a dark, curly-hatred lad, who looks even lem than the age which he admits, is in the hands of the police, charged with having stolen and forged a check for $112 un Jan. 3 last. The check on which Furofsky Is held was made on the Title Guarantee and Trust Company by Emily R. Heinecke in favor of Mra, Minnie Meyer of No, 121 Henry str executrix for the estate of Henry C, Meyer, and was in payment of Interest charge 1 Mr that latter had the check, he with Furofwky’s name and above {t the indorsement of the executrix, Investigation showed that Louis Marshinsky, a grocer of No. 953 Hoe avenue, the Bronx, had cashed the check for young Furofeky. In the Tombs the boy sald he had found the check in Hester street. He admitted cashing it, but he declar that some one else must have put hi name on It, as he could not write Eng. ous Combustion PRU STORE RE SOUND LKE STNG OF SHALL BOMBS Exploding Pottles: Cause Cry of Black Hand as 24: Famk lies Scuttle to Street. The twenty-four families resident is the six-story tenement at No. 7% Ctla- ton street know the Black Hand Oy reputation, So can tmagine the commotion early to-dey when Spentane- Druckmen's drug store floor and diew up about « dosen Policeman Gurante, whe. wes | 5 A | | i i i c i rE He Niswddes ot ie r tf i de i 8 g JOHN C, SHEEHAN ILL IN BALTIMORE HOSPITAL rived in thie city yeoterteg wite and wae taken to the Johns Map- kins Hospital. e had been IN for some time and that none of the New York phyalclans whom ad conpulted bed been able to make @ satisfactory diag- nosis of the case, Mr. Sheehan is sixty-five years of age and @ brother of Attorney William F. Sheehan. For many years Sheehan has Rot engaged in active politica, He is re- ted to be a millionaire, MAKES REAL DAYLIGHT. Rays Like Sunshine. PHILADELPHIA, July 122.—A clailz that a newly invented light gives of rays the exact equivalent of daylight » made by Dr. Herbert EB. Ives of Phila delphia, an inventor, The contrivanc consists of an incandescent light with # reflecting mantle at the top, whies throws the light back through » series of delicately colored screens, Dr, Ives saye his discovery wih w espeetally useful ta various industries which can be carried on only ip sup light. He mentions the sorting of elgare the matching of artificial teeth, threads SS bee pete See et! Rt ee , eeeSL.

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