The evening world. Newspaper, August 15, 1913, Page 3

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mal * SOAR. SMR tlhe: SCs ERS "OWA" INLETER [as WOMAN INFE IFTER TDDR TRON ASKED HH TO MARRY HER ihe: suiditn'Be to’ Be Miss Krill, ‘Him “Baby” and Said ;She'Had “No Divorce.” BX . STATEMENT, NOT CLEAR. Bapert Testifies He Found Morphine i in Stomach of the t _ Dead Physician. Gly Aug. 15.~Testimony that vas found in the stomach of ie Tron, and e@iso in the wae found near’ his body was of- tetany when the preliminary ex- of Miss Emma E. Krill, pro- furse and sweetheart of the ‘dootor, charged ‘with his murder, whe renimed. » AN. Mamiton, of Auburn, chemical fpembiet, “thetited ‘tiat he analysed the 9 of Tron's stomach and also The aine glass, finding 6-100tn of a of morphine im the stomach and 37- in the glass. ing of a eensation was created whén a 'fetter was read purporting to ‘ee from Miss Kitii to Tron in which @@ mentioned obtaining a divorce. It whe the first intimation that the pretty om ver married. ald that they did not con- the etatement proof that Miss Krill @ver married, saying that she prob- feferted to a divorce for the effect tii dtacement might have on Tron. Two re read,in which the writer eon tb marry her, and Hamil- Bete quatitying as a handwriting expert, Miss Krill wrote them. ‘Whe letters were introduced by the efter o hard fight by the defense. ) Great tead: “Sly Dearest Baby—You pust pardon py sSelay writing you, as I had no reese of you, so I inclined wast until you were settled. So you wottial? Well, my dear, if you (VER me to come with you you will Pahave to wait until I can arrange things. aire not a red cent. I need so many ; you want me to look like a and'not a beggar when I come Mow ‘couldn't you be satisfied if @tayed here until! Christmas, Now, Reaven's sake, wait and see how u'are going to make out Of course u knéw how things are. I am only ppoor ‘girl. “Of course in time to come TH beve a little something. “You say you care for me now and whtil you get on your fest I will te tise to you there. You are so difer- Tdom’t understand you, you may y mae, , eam: 1. dearly love you, re my only dear baby and it Na ki me if anything would part and 1. have no divorce in the first place. Feourse I could get one later, but ember, miy dear, the time I came I was no use to you then, but tere than in New York. 1 would love teothke a@chance at that. Well, now, \ dear; if you will wait for me I'll youre if you do say about Christma: that will soon come around and 1 don't think I am asking too much, me ‘you will walt. Now, let me from you by letter. Your telegram Couldn't answer as 1 did not get dno money, safe at the ether end or not. and kisses mm your only, PMMA," "ho wocond letter was as follows: “My dear Bally: No doubt you are appresatee about my vacation, but ar you are not half-as muoh an 1 + 4 We are so terribly buay here they would not let me go. | get my va- n I guess in September some time, Well, it you only would aay come down we will get married I would be the pleat girl in the world. Now tell me i@ your néxt letter what you intend to @. If you don't care for me to marry fow, I am not going to stay in thiv tonger. I am in a hurry now. An- efor and let me know something. “As ever, Emma." 0 letters In connection with a pho- thétaph of a young New Yorker, intro- Jest evening, have proved the cards of the State so far. An effort to introduce postal cards written jm the same hand as an inscription on the ghotograph Catled to-day, pi ein With lo’ LMARDWICK, N. J., Aug. 16.—Walter very went to water his cows to-day. b was attacked by one of them and gored until he wes unconscious, Mrs, rge Pettit went to his aid, armed ith a pitchfork. The cow drov: away twice, but she returned to the and might have lost her lite had dot her husband come to her assistance managed to keep the infuriated at bay. Mre. Pettit dragged Ervery { safety. He may recover, ae you say, you make out better | It you} IS WOMAN TS WOMAN INFERIOR TO MAN? + + Woman Wobbles in Making Up Her Mind THE | BVENING. WoRLp, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, .1918.. eer rweerereenenne ee aytighte Wi by The Prean Pulet! 1918, by ns Press Publish Because of Centuries’ Lack of Practice ornra MIND swiss done about it. 80 one woman buys a new.gown, take: It ho and tries on and is back at the shop next day with the request that she be permitted to exchange it for a fircless cooker, Another ac- cepts the thousand and first hat she is offered, only to return a week later with the announcement that she wants to trade it for an electric van. ;|}8OME OTHER QUICK AND RADI- CAL CHANUES. Another coaxes her husband for siz months to take heron a trip to Kurope and then at the last moment of parting from the poodie exclaims, “Oh, Tom, don't ‘as wo. I just can't bear the thought of leaving my hon Another takes lessons in. singing only to dis- cover that her real tajent,is for play- ing the mandolin, Another says wouldn't wear one of those slit skirts for anything in the world, and ten ‘min- utes later reproaches her husband with the fact that she hag to dress like a dowdy because of his ol@ faghioned Ideas about the slit that every lady wears. We have .all seen . women, let: fifty trolleys, go by while they debate the pros and cons of taking an open or a clesed car, We have seen them devote twenty minutes to ordering « luncheon and then send back their order for something’ else. * It's true, too true, Mr. Aristophanes, that It takes a woman twenty minutes to make’ up her mind and then it won't way made up.’ But what can you ex- pect? It's such a short while since acquired a mind or'at least was ad- mitted to possess one. You won't @néd, I think, that women who are self supporting suffer from « lack of positiveness, Any profession or employment which carries with it the necessity for many and quick decisions soon eliminates the wobble from the feminine mind, @ wobble insopar-- able from mental and manual sub- ovdination ama which ceases with i. Letters of Evening World readers fol- low: ANOTHER “WHO KNCW8" TAKES UP THE ARGUM' . Dear Madam: Your question in re Woman's Superiority" is highly in- teresting, and the letter trom “One Who Knows’-is as highty amusing. ‘The writer tells us of a married woman ‘whose husband tequires as much care children.” 8hé not only gives him this maternal love and atention, but does the cook- ing and housekeeping, makes said husband's clothes and. stil haa a0 much superfluous intellectual energy that she dashes ‘aucceasful” songs sort o ‘between ely assumed fen the logic of thts letter that it wes | | | Twave T WANT A MAT AIAROR INSTEAC OR THEE SH! as FROM YRS TO NO TEN THOUSAND ones “(Mental Muscles Weak From Too Much Corseting in Steel and Whalebone of Masculine Ideals,’’ She “‘Dwells in State of Chronic Indecision.” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “If woman {s the equal of man intellectually why does she find it so difficult to make up her mind? Don't you know that on questions no more important than the choice of a washday or the lettering of her visiting cards she {s Hable to change her intention twenty times a day? She buys a dress at a bargain for $10 and then spends $10 more taking it back and exchanging it for some- thing else. But I need not enumer ate the instances of her extraor dinary bobbliness of soul. Just answer that one question. Why can't women make up their minds, if they have any minds to make '‘ARISTOPHANES.” Why can't woman make up her mind, Aristophanes? The answer is too easy. She can’t make up her mind because she has been resigned for several thousand years to having it made up for her. Her mental muscles are soft from disuse, weak | from too much corseting in the steel | and whalebone of masculine ideals of what she should be and do. The soul wobbliness of which you complain is widespread, and whatever its causes, something undoubtedly should be Many’ women dwell in a chronic state of indecision and the pendulum of their thoughts swings from, yes to no ten thousand times a day. are some thoughts along the line: Firet—Popular songs do not require any injellect at all. Any little jingle will do if set to “catchy” music, and the public, which makes a song pop- 1s pot educated to appreciate what is known as real music, Song writers abound by the dozen, and tome of “popu- songs and till there would not be as much Intellect required as Beethoven, Mozart or Wagner expended in writing a single bar. For over a hundi years about twenty women hat udying music to one man, yet there is not one masterpiece known to publish- ere or musicians that has been writ- ten by a woman. Where are the female masters in music? Second—Successtul. popular eong writers make from 9,000 to $25,000 . year and do not needto cook, k house or mend their Rusbands clothes unless they want to. Third—I have recently goné over forty-seven programmes of music given by New York orchestras, and th total number of compositions ts how many of these ae- lected gems were written by women? . The above mentioned prodigy should introduce her songs where they can ve heard. Fourth —Her superior int should have g! her better J ment in selecting @ husband. There are hundreds of men !n New York well alle to marry and not only pay their own tailor but give the wife a liberal allowance for cooking, how keeping and her own dressmaker bills and yet they are looking for women with only enough brains to make a happy home and keep {t, but they sigh in vain. ONE WHO ALSO KNOWS, Dear Madam: I am a woman and, like Gulliver, feel bound hand and foot because df ‘adverse conditions. Woman has not had time to think, or has not learned to think. But to- day a vast army stands ready equipped, both mentally and phyel- cally, to walk shoulder to shoulder ith man, and they will awake their fect Soon the world wil’ see a new type of woman, as God meant her to be, full of courage and power and love. To-day conditions all over the world point that way, Now she sees her- self in a glasa dimly, but soon to face, and in this new era man will learn self control and woman will have time to think and work, and she will not only create art but new race of men. We shall have one Jaw for man and one law for woman, and they two shall be one as God intended them to be. MRS. G Heat Kills Four tn Kancae City, KANBAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 15,—1ou men died from the effects of the neat bere last night, and « ung womaa Waliten ‘be-@: Womaa, and here died at Topeka Ing Co. (The New York Evening World. WATE MY NeW WAT = CAN'T YOU CiVa wen Men Loew a WkOCREN UE ASIA, PRIEST WHO WED | “NSS, NEHA S VANL SOUGHT Vigorous Efforts to Find Dennis J. Driscoll Whose Wife Wants Divorce. Efforts are being made to locate the whereabouts of Dennin J. Driscoll, formerly a@ priest of the Church of the Blessed Sacrament at New Rochelle, whose sensational marriage to Miss Marie Nienaus, daughter of the noted sculptor, Charles Henry Niehaus, has been moved for annulment before Jus-! tice Mills in the Supreme Court at} White Plains. The priest has dropped from sight, and though every effort has been made by the Church and Attorney Henry G. Heath, the young wife's counsel, the t trace of Driscoll ended abruptly about three months ago. At that time he was seen riding in a Broadway cer in uptown Manhattan. He wag in or- dinary citizens’ clothing, The man who recognized him, a New Rochelle friend ff the Niehaus family, tried to follow the car and shadow the priest, but lost him. ‘The report that Driscoll had again entered the sanitarlum at Mount Hope, Baltimore, where he waa confined for some time before his atartiing marriage in December, 1911, found to be false, Attorney Heath said to-day that ‘the Mount Hope offictals knew nothing of Driscoll's whereabouts since his first de- Parture from that Institution, Other sanitariums have ben searched without | avail. One report had {t that the priest had entered a monastery to do life long penance, but the Church records hold no account of such an act, In the absence of Driscoll, Juntice Milla granted the right of service by ublication, Papers were also served! to-day on Frank S$. Whalen, a real es- tate dealer at No, 13 Park Row, and a brother-in-law of the priest. ‘This was a matter of form as Whalen and his | family are as much in the dark an to Driscoll’s whereabouts as any one, they | contend, It will take sixty-two days be. fore wervice by publication can be con- sidered accomplished, whereupon Jus- tice Mills will take info consideration the petition for annulment of the mar- riage. This action is based on the ground that Driscoll wan a lunatic at the time of his marriage and thereafter, Much documemtary evidence and the deposl- tions of members of the clergy ansociat- ed with the former priest will be offered to support jai. It will be contend- ed that Miss Niehaus was carried away by the need of a sympathising friend and adviser during troubles in her fam- ily and that ten days after the marriage | whe left Driscoll and has had nothing to | do with his since. tn hin was found axphyxiated by gas | Kast One Aare ana 101 get TO EXCHANGE WOMAN CHAWoR (= * Ninth Article of a Series. THIS GOWN FoR A PIABLESGS COOKER | PAIN® TWENTY ONE ELECTROCUTED, TWO DYNG, AUTO RNS GH POLE Live Wires Fall on Wrecked Car—Tires Save Others From Sudden Death. One man was killed and two mortally injured when a big new automobile crashed into an electric light pole at Hudson Boulevard ami Walnut atreet, Weat Hoboken, at 3 o'clock this morning, ROSEVILLE TRUST | Angry Depositors Urge Legal [examiners discovered that the company | to protect their intereats to-day, Seven- NISHED TREASURER WHOSE ACCOUNTS SHOW | $300,000 SHORTAGE. | VICTIMS PLAN TO INDICT DIRECTORS Steps To Hold Officers sais ee LOVE BEHIND” ‘Disclosure of Smith’s $300,- 000 Shortage Attributed to Revenge of Man or Girl. WRECK. Depositora of the Roseville Trust Company of Newark, whose treasurer- secretary and virtual boas, Raymond 8. Smith, vanished Wednesday, when dank had been looted of $900,000 or more and cloned the institution, took the firet step ty-flve, many of them women and girls, held a meeting in the Roseville Auditor-| _ lum, That their action would result almost certainly in scandal {nvolving some of Newark's foremost business men did not deter the depositors, whose Anger againat the Board of Directors giowed at a white heat. Clifford McEvoy who in said to have 940,000 on depontt in the closed trust company, was elected temporary ch man. The meeting closed with the pointment of a committee of five to ob- tain legal advice for the depositors, who formed an association, This conclusion reached only after Mr. McEvoy and other depositora had made charges against the directors with criminal negligence for their failure to attach the possessions of Mr. Smith. “When they @ot there with a writ of attachment érom the County Clerk,” he cried, “they found that employees of the Oakland Motor Sales Company had removed at least half a dozen automo- biles, which could have been attached, to another gurager” Smith hes an Newark and Orange. Mr. McEvoy scored the directors and added: “There Is plenty of evidence that this gross mismanagement existed before the looting of the compa: is well an in the conduct of the directors He sald a director had told him de- positors probably would not get more than # of & cents on the dolla he advised the meeting to tnke steps to hold the directors personally re- sponsible. itn up to ua to restrain every director | With whom he was a uaiverend, taver, from disposing of a single personal] ing Bank. Robber,” and always drew annct,"” Mr. MoKvoy sald, ‘rom him a smile and a friendly word. DECLARES DIRECTOR WITH-| smith In-the.son of Thomas J. Bmith DREW $14,000 IN TIME. Charles C. Lurich, one of the direct- ors, entered the hall and Mr, McEvoy shouted that it was Lurich who was reported to have withdrawn $14,000—all of his depostt—on the day before the company shut down. Lurloh dented this, saying he hadn't withdrawn a cent, and then pleaded, futilly, for the depositoge, to post; ine action until the bank examiners had made a report, How the State official happened r of the depositors te how turned are; William J. Bannister, William T. Benjamin, Worthington H. Ingersoll, William F. Kelm, Charles C. Lurich, Clinton F. MeCord, G. Row- land Monroe, William W. Woodward, Frederick Kilgue, George &. Krug, Harvey Mott, John B. Scarlett, Eimer H. Sexton, Edward D, Dunn and James B. Bannister, How the money disappeared from the bank ie still unexplained and it te not known now whether or not any other than Smith is suspected ag being in- volved, The investigation, however, has developed one fact. That ie that Smith was of temperament usually supposed tw be those of treasurer. He is between thirt: and forty years old music teacher in this city, quarters at the Granard con three rooms which are of to have s interests, Smith wan the Newark mand Orange agent for the Oakland automobile, owned a garage and auto supply business and an ice business, He waa the constant companion of men with plenty of money and leisure, and his automobile was alwaye at the disposal of friends for a joy ride. Bank officers smiled grimly today when they learned that small boys in Smith's netghborhood, Orange National Bank, of hoe ye bis father wan President. was cer of the Second National ‘Bank of Orange from 1901 to 1908 and from 1608 to 1909 was a member of the Orange Common Cound. He helped oceans the Roseville Trust Company |. it is sald, took the largest piock of stock. In a report filed June 4 the company claimed assete of $1,000,604 and deposits of $702,975. The report showed surplus of $80,009 and undivided profits 000, with @ pald up capital of The car, travelling at a speed of about sixty miley an hour, carried the broken pole fifieen feet to the sidewalk and ‘brought down the electric light wires, leaving the Boulevard in darkness. ‘The dead man, supposed to have been Paul J. Parriodt, thirty-seven, of No. 114 Summit avenue, Jersey Clty, was partly electrocuted, All that saved the other two from being killed by the live wire was the fact that the rubber tires on one side of the machine held the wire down in such @ way that the men were protectea. The accident occurred at “dead man's curve’ and under an electric ight. The Policemen in vicinity sald the car appeared to be going at such speed th: chauffeur could not turn it in time when he @aw the curve ahead, It demolished the heavy Might pole near the ground ‘and, hurling itself fifteen or twenty feet farther across the side- walk, turned over and pinned all three occupants ‘underneath the debris, the pole falling on top the car, One of the West Hoboken policemen formerly was a lineman and succeeded in untangling the wire ao the tmprisoned | men could be rele 8 were soon on the Parrlodt dead He had been crushed as well as badly burned by the live wir ‘The other two men were unconsctous. | founa they to the North Hudson Hovpita! at Ws hawken, They are David Montagnon,| address unknown, and Alexander P, Me- Gill, thirty-two, No. 48 Belmont avenue, Jersey City MoGill wax owner ana driver of the! ar, which he wan in the habit of racing, | ceording to the police, His kill at the | ateerig wheel had long kept him from | accident when travelling at high! apeed, He is @ son of the late Dr. Join G. MoGill of Jersey City, # prom. inent phyaclan who died two months ao leaving him considerable money, | and a nephew of the late Chancellor Alexander T, MoGill of the New Jersey ‘ourt of Chancery. Before inheriting the money he hat demonstrator for an automovile concern, and About a year ago wes in an accident in Newark In which his car collided with a troiley and came ai killing His wife and fi to-day to husten to Parriodt, the dead man, Is understood to have come from Paris a snort time ago and Montagnon |s believed to have come from St. Louis, but papers ind cated he had been pees his mail in Carne| N Tw ntyfourth street, to-day He had Montagnon «« ‘ wn St | been separated from his wife for two Toute also, a i iM months, and recently @he had him tee gu and tb te q pantera ‘fore the Dometic Relations Court, and) jiet iy supportid ov tv fact tant Maga gvtained an order for her support. The! frequently wan ‘alled | by agents to body le at the Mariem Morgue Gomoneteate care for test driving, | Anaistant | Banking and Insurance, who is in com- isan vinit the trust company was a m until late thie afterngon when a rumor gained credence that » love affair in the company had been at the bottom uf the investigation, An officer of the bank an da girl stenographer were saul to have fallen in love and to have beco ne 40 wrapped in each other am ti caus comment in the company, At any rate, id so inure of the Trust Company hd Banking Department J Ht ‘cooking te Spetaing end sad digestpie with with LEA«PERRINS' SAUCE THE ORIGINAL WORCESPERSHING each Wan apked to resin ant immediately, It was pointed out thia afternoon that either ong probably had been in a po- sition to know constderably concerning the conduct of the company's affaira and irl gave a word of warning to the State Stews, Bankine Department in revenee. Se Sete Ses Sein see DIRECTORS VOTED “FULL CON. p pap poss ie FIDENCE” IN SMITH, Sold by Grocers Everywhere The by the fact that, three directors were warned by the State Banking Department, when an examiner found « 3,000 loan which he characterized as “ at leant. At tl time the directors, by unanimous vo pressed ‘full confi- SS dence in the treasurer and retained him in his position. Smith has not yet been accused of theft. The police are not looking for him, but the bank offictals are, and how anxious they are to find him was ri vealed when L. Rt, Vredenburgh, Spectal Deputy Comimtanioner of OF THE MOVING STATRWA bank, admitted to-day absence the Investima ton was practioally at @ jetill, 1 wish he were here,’ complained Mr. Vredenburg. ve are constantly coming upon tangles in connections with oans which, it 1# beginning to seem, | an pe atraightened out only by Smith, In the event that Smith ts really a | fugitive with good reason to keep out of the hands of e bank oMcials, this | need of his presenec puts in hin hands ‘a ntrong weapon with which to conduct mand at the that in Smith’ Can You negotiations for bis return. Do ‘The directors of the company == the Puzzles Constipatign ” EX-LAX J nue BOOK? ‘MITCHEL BOMB and began his banking career in the SOON TO EXPLODE IN CUSTOM HOUSE: Will Cut Down Force and Save $250,000 a Year But Is Warmed. Jonn Purroy Mitchel, United steeds Collector of Customs and Fusion cam didate for Mayor, is preparing to off~ plode an efficiency and economy bom in the Custom House. it will blow owt pared show reductions of $20,000 year. ‘The action by the Conector @4 to Rave two fold aoe ae: axotomn: caevtebe: 24 The Collector to havi: ences With heads of Custom reductions in employers He Is also in commu: dent Wileon and T cautioned him to think of the effect em hie Mayoralty campaign if he explodes the bom before election. It may be dangerous to turn out of office in the midst of a close campaign @ hes Of political office holders whi sey wih be taraed Wee grenpsaee herenta into active and bitter opponents, Mr. Mitchel is leaving town to-day for over Sunday to confer with aome et President Wilson's close ee ad- visers on what course he should pursue, > Lee Angeles Gets K. T.’s. DENVBR, Aug. i—Loe Angeles has | been selected as the meeting place fer the thirty-third triennial conclave of bier Knights Templars in 1918 Sa ey Those of us who remain at heme solace ourselves with iced ‘Tvose CEYLON TEA White Reve Coffen, Ouly 38¢. a Pound Jack's hen ot ise: ated flere a degree a only bad found af a = of ceeophionsl

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