The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1913, Page 18

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ESCAPED CONVICT FOUND RIDING IN SING SING SHAFT | Murderer Kaede | Discovered | In Prison Building After 24 Hours. ONLY GOT 25 FEET AWAY Search of Goods Cases Made in Thorough Hunt by Warden. Sonn Kilbride, the Sing Sing convict ‘who escaped from his guard yesterday atfernoon, waa found at 3 o'clock thia afternoon, was found at 9 o'clock this dullding in which the shipping depart- ment is located, He was d red by guards who had been searching steadily for him since he was reported missing, there being no doubt in the mind of Warden Clancy that ne had been unabie te got outside the walls of the prison Kilbride ie-eerving a sentence of from twenty years to life for murder. Kilbride’s hiding place wax not more than twenty-five feet from the spot where he was last seen by the guard in charge of the detail of convict to which he was asrigned. He had climbed up the alrshaft as far as he coul nd was dislodged by Kuards, poked him out of his eras Hiding place with a long pole. As soon as Kilbride was discovered, y. were released for There was none exercis of the di cape of « a few weeks ago, Kilbride missing when Huah ry, @ Keeper, began to count hix twelve charges in the shipping depart- ment yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. He told Warden Cla who ordered a search inside prison wal The m: mot found, and the four packing cases which had m sent that afternoon to the freight station were found intact, So that it was certain he had not es- caped by that means. At 6.05 o'clock the prison whistle began blowing at two- minute Intervals and a big crowd from collected outside the walls. jo trace of Kilbride was found any- Waere, nor did his companion remember egeing him move away. All ofMfclals, Dowever, believe that he ts still witnin ‘the walls. Kilbride te thirty-eight years old, 5 feet 7 Inches tail, weighs 130 pounds, and is of slight complexion. He shot John Kelly of Goose Hill, Brooklyn, Ju: 5 1985, Killing bim instantly. The qu was over Mrs. Kelly, whom Kilbrid. mired, Kilbride's first bullet struc! Kelly, who thrown herself in iront Of ber husband. She recovered, ALLEGED BANK BANDITS CAPTURED IN COURT ‘Two members of the gang that in al- Jeged to have been following cashiers and from banks about the Bowery and Bond street were arrested to-day. ‘They got away from the detectives who captured four of the gang last Mon- day, but Mey, were sern seated in Jef- ferson Market Court when the four Were araigned torday. They #aid, they Were Joseph Caccia of HE MARRY YOU oprright, 1013, by The Press Vu he PCHe UP Love MESSAGES FROM THE FOUR QUARTER? OF ThE ‘WORUD* ” “Pansy Selected Her Mate Because She Knew the Moment She Met Him That They Were Made for Each Other, and Besides That He Had Brown Eyes-- She Detests Blue-Eyed Men. Why did you wed answer are only a day old. for a laugh, even as every married if this prehistoric jest would not lose For emotionally man ta just @ human Wireless station picking up love mes- sages from the four quarters of the alobe, and it's not until some moro oF less attractive person sehds him 6 O 8 matrimonial signal—for # ways manages to convince him that she doen not care to live unless he makes her his bride-that he learns any din- crimination at all, And even that doesn't always last. ONE WOMAN'S ANSWER TO THE QUESTION, the Granting, therefore, that most men street and Tony Jaube marry because certain women make up Bust sires, their mindy to marry them, there atill “Detectives Watson, Ward, Slevin and Oliver have been accompanying Miss Alta Glantz, cashier for J, Welmberg of No. 9 University Place, to and fro: the German Exchange Bank, at Bower and Bond street, for seven weeks, They six men following her day thought | oni Attempted to capture the entire Francisco Marco, Antonio Lut tro Tontillo and John Scarfori , but the other two en Tontillo and Lubeisetta were con- tehing $1,000 from 4 from a bank HUSBAND NAMES DOCTOR. Rookkeep o yay of Naw Dr. Leopoldo de Medina, a well known Yeiclan of Philadelpoia, who ts watd to have acquired considerable fame in Spain as a scientist, Was named as co- yespondent in a suit for absolute 1) vorce filed by Charles H, Mell, a book- keeper, against Anna ©. Hell of No. 40 ont avenue, the Bronx, in the Supreme Court to-day. In the complaint Bell, Sues for Divorce and! remains the problem involved in fem: inine selection, One woman says In answer to the question, "Why did yon wed your husband?" “I knew from the Very first moment we met thai we were made {gr each other.” Well, of course, | We all know it the first moment we meet. It's not the first moment, but the last that is realy determining. In describing aiMeulties of his friend Ferdl- nand Karle the other day, Mr. Alexander | Harvey sald that the attitude of every woman who meets that notable and ex- ceedingly peripatetic husband Js “a week ef Ferdinand—and then oblivion, Gould anything be easier? no sane women faces matrimony with ouch debonais ocasualness, For matrimony means not ‘s week | Of Perdinand—aend then oblivion,” then another week of Ferdin or Joby or Thomas, as the case may be. If trial marriage should ever become | ® factor in social life the diMeulties of | Matrimonial choice would reach their |Arreducible minimum, It's the fact that JHU Are choosing @ mate for life—some who alleges that Dr. de Medina is also one to live with when you are gay ant known ae F. D. Moulin, declares that a when you are grouchy, in Your mood Thy 3) and Bt thi year, the physician of roses and of ashes of roses, that Bhi Mra Bell registered at the V Hakes marriage a provlem {aria Motel, No. 1150 Broadway and vce eupled artment together Last May Mra Bell brought suit for separrtion against her husband and won Mt: alny the custody of the year-old daughter, Catherine Starr Hell, Bhe charged her husband with crueity, wut in his complaint Med to-day Hell ays that the cruelty consisted of lan- Bupee used “in pleading with his wile HW AN eifort to break up the relations Between her end Dr de M In addition to & decree of divorce Hel oeke that be be given the custody of hie daushter Thomas M, Rowlet Ro. Nassau stiect Met the plain’ tor Bell weight- te the only way to learn to swim, some to throw you overboard and ey trust to luck and the survivai of the fittest. Anyhow, to any man or Woman not yet committed to @ matri- monial ehol mend this profound reflection of Machtavelll “The cts on a danger- OUs enterpriae pursue it and de alw 4 woman who chosen fol- ASKED TO. Dear Madam: 1 married my wife because she asked me to marry her. Every other married man who wits the truth would admit the sane thing, 1f he dared, A man could be moderately happy with er any 00d looking woman wi aot @ os By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Why did he marry you? T= questions which The Evening World has asked its readers to furnished me with the obvious and facetious reply, “I married my denly to concede the truth underlying it, and if we were to say: “Ye, certainly, in ome way or another we all propose to you. Why | shouldn't we? It matters very much to us whom we marry and you know it doesn’t make any particular difference to you!" \ ME MARRIED BECAUSE HE was| your husband? Yet already a number of men have | wife because she asked me to.” They | say this jokingly, of course, yet it 1s; doubtful if they could find a better Treason even were they to give to the subject that solemn deliberation which they reserve for the depres- sion of the market, the rise in the temperature, the tennis champion- ship or the baseball score. ! Surely the oldest matrimonial joke {se that which turns upon the as- sumption that it 1s women who pro- pose marriage. Our father, Adam, who, I believe, conversed familiarly with his menagerie in the Garden of Eden, must have turned often to the embled animals with the remark, ‘When Mrs. Adam asked me to marry her"—and paused expectantly son of Adam does to-day. I wonder much of its point if women were sud- suffragette. He knows It, so he lets the girl do the choosing. It's the dest A CONTENTED HUSBAND. CHOUSE BROWN EYES IF YoU WOULD BE HAPPY, Dear Madam: I knew from the very first moment that we met that my husband and I were made for each other. I know that with no other man in the world could I be so happy, and I am gure he believes that I am the one woman in the world for him. We are both brown- eyed people and our friends think it {s strange that we should have chosen each other instoad of our Physical contrasts, But 1 have al- ways disliked blue-eyed mon, They are cok’ and cagey and calculating, They make a wom do all the courting. I never knew a blu man yet who didn't wife did all the courting. band says that the brown ple are the fools of the world and o all the loving. My advice to men and women both is: If you want to be happily married, choose brown even, PANSY, pon eee MAN WHO SHOT ROOSEVEL John Schrank, New Inmate of In- sane Asylum, Owns New York Property. John Schrank who shot former Presi- dent Theodore Roosevelt as the Colonel was leaving @ hall in Milwaukee where he had made a polit: Ja slightly rising temperature, { The Vatican physicians have advised a SUED ON BIG MORTGAGE '« wt October | THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,: U WED YOUR HUSBAND DID YO Second Article of a Series bitahing Co. (Lhe New York World), ‘When His Girl Asked Him to Marry Her Contented Husband Chose Her for a Wife 1$ © MUMAN WIRELESS STATION © EACH OThER® —T ane the City Real Estate Company, and the latter concern brought suit against Schrank to foreclose on the mortgage. According to affidavits submitted with the complaint, Schrank has never an- swered letters addressed to him at the Wieconsin asylum in which he was asked If his uncle had any other living kin besides his nephew. Supreme Justice Donnelly signed an order directing attorneys for the City Real Estate Company to serve summons in the case on Schrank by six weeks’ publication in local Journals, ———- POPE IS AGAIN ILL; DOCTORS ADVISE REST, Suffers From Hoarseness and Head- ache, but Greets Pilgrims From Milan, ROME, Sept. 4.—Pope Plus X. is again suffering an indisposition, recalling the Serious {lines through which the aged Pontiff passed last spring. At the Vati- can it im sald hia present trouble in light and due to a cold, but It has brought on hoarseness, headache and HELD BRONX BURGLARS WHO OVERLOOKED $500 AFTER ROBBING FLAT 's Charged With Violation of Sullivan Law. Joe Salerino, twenty-one, of No, 20 East One Hundred and Fifty-firat street, Bronx, and Joseph Tolosl, nineteen, of No. 25 East One Hundred and Fifty- first street, were held by Magistrate Harris in the Morrisania Court for bur- lary in $2,500 bail. Tolont was also held without bail on a charge of violation of the Sullivan lew, He had a calibre revolver, fully loaded, when rested this morning by Detectives V ner and Wickman Mra, Vencenza Pilla of No. 320 Kast One Hundred ard Forty-eighth street had been shopping this morning, As she was near her house on her wi t Tulosl, who spoke to her time tn his life, although knowing him by sight for She found her flat had been robbed and property worth about wo was my eg. EB ‘thing in the war topsy turvy. The thieves, had failed to find $500 in a alle @ clot Detectives Wagner and Wickman were assigned to the case. They found Tolos! at a poolroom No. 3% East One Hundred and Forty-ninth street. Detective Wickman saw him making a suspicious movement as if he were complete rest. His Holiness, however, insisted upon keoping engagements he had made for to-day, and he received in audience inal Ferrart of Milan, who headed a body of Milanese pilgrims. The Pope afterward appeared before the pligrims themselves and welcomed them to Rome, The general condition of the Pope is good, according to the doctors to-day, ‘They think that, although he ts troubled jby an occasional cough and some ca- he will be able easily to over- by the favorable climatic tarrh, tel A ae ES put him under arrest. “It's a good tthing you got me fi NEW DESTROYERA FLIER, | -roiost xaid when the detoctiven f se the revolver, “If you hadn't got 1 have filled you full of holes,’ ve the name of Joe Salerino mplice after confersing to ed Mrs, Pilla's home. The Crate ® Record, SWINEMUENDE, Germany, Sept. ¢.— The Russian torpedo boat destroyer 'Novik established a record when sie 47.3) having rob detectives found Salerino at his home and placed him under arrest | cal speech, was named defendant to-day | yin a suit to foreclose a $13,0% mortgage on Improved property at No, 43 Kast Court. The papers in | Northern Asylum for the Insane at nebawo, Wis, where he was committed after the shooting, was also Known as John Flammang, and is a of Dominick Flammang, who died Feb. 1, 1911, in New Yori, leave ing wn estate valued at more than $15,000, | | Being the only surviving kin, Sehrank Was left all the property in his uncle's Will, Which was Med for probate on | Maren 17, 1911, Schrank and nis uncle lived ina small Mel at Central avenue and street until Schrank began to follow Roosevelt around the country, He had lived with his uncle stce he was ax years old. In 198 Viammang was hard up for money and he mortgaged his Highty-fret str with the Title aad Guaranty Cohipal which later assigned the mortgage to 2 Fighty-flrat wtreet tiled in the Supreme | the wult reveal that! Schrank, who is now an inmate tn the, | attained a maximum speed of 37.8 knots pe me ae rapid Fg mene | on her trials here yesterday, Her ay-|\iny at No. 3% Mott avenue, last Aus erage speed over the measured mile was | gust, About a hundred dollars worth of 37 knots, The WAS DULL in| goode Were taken from this house. A Gerinany, burn is rot fitter | number of pawn tickets were found in with emokestac! Salerino's pockets. Don’t Poison Baby. - RTY zhane 490 almost every mother ht her child must have ‘ CARBO! um to ‘to make it oli DROPS TOO MAN hide tt THERE IS NO WAKING, have ean ile or woes ith has heen m ai ning opium are ised, aa aala yer Hie pamee z Syrups,’ eto, a should not an 7008 shld ‘chifiren ‘yihaut not you oF your phy hy ekcian om CS, et bone the mlenceare D medi fo to be given Gontary x t property for ts Gamal, Canton shways bears the slgnatare of a | Principal of Pair Arrested Also)? about to draw a revolver and rushed 19) 1918. HOW SULZER FUND Rs DIXON GETS (WAS SPENT, TOLD BY; $4,150 AND STOPS. TREASURER LEHMAN NVCARREN SUIS :°. Received $17,000 in Subscrip-| Wife of Brookiyn En Enoch Arden tions and Advanced $5,500 | Accepts Compromise in Case More, He Says. Against Late Senator. MUCH FOR PUBLICITY.|/SAYS MONEY WENT SHY Mr. Richards Asks Some Perti-| Plaintiff Denies She Named nent Questions at the Fraw- ley Committee Hearing. Boy to Extort Money From His Father. Herbert H. Lehman, the banker of By 2 compromine effected out of No. 16 William street, was the principal! oie within the past two weeks, Mré. | Witness before the Frawley Legislative) wai Alice Dixon, wife of Dr. W. A. Committee which started In to-day to investigate the Sulzer direct primary ‘campaign in the Council Chamber in the City Hall, Mr, Lehman took the stand after Edwin Gibbs, Assistant Secretary of the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company had produced the accounts and deposit | slips of the Primary Campaign Commit- | tee and also @ statement and deposit | slip made out in the name of Willlam | Sulzer. | Mr. Lehman, in answer to Eugene | Lamb Richards Jr., counsel to the com- mittee, sald that he was treasurer to ‘the primary campaign committee, and Jas such had received contributions of Dixon, who sued the late Patrick H. McCarren, State Senator from Brooklyn for $25,000 alleging breach of contract, receives $4,150 upon an agreement to withdraw three suits which she instl- tuted against the Senator in the Su- preme Court. Papers dixclosing the terms of the compromine were placed on file in the County Clerk's office to-day Mra, Dixon, clatming to be the mother of the “only living image” of the late Senator, whom she named Patrick H McCarren jr, alleged in each of the sults filed by her that the dead Senator cid not keep his part of an agreement to care for the boy. | $17,084.40, “He sald that he had advanced ee one ss aa4 the papers relate, the sum of $5,500, which was not Pal@ | patrick Mecarren Jr. was born in back, Counsel probed into the disburse | jrooktyn, ments of the Sulzer committee in the | primary campaign, and learned from the | witness that $1,100 had been turned o to the publicity committee and that | | $414.76 had been paid to the Waldorf for | | the entertainment of the Governor and | his party, and further, that Daniel J. | Dugan, State Committeeman in Albany, | had received $700 to meet the expenses | | of a primary rally In the capital. It wi also brought out that several publicity men had received a weekly salary of $50 | and an expense allowance of $50 weekly to promote good will and publicity throughout the principal cities of the! Bt Particular emphasis was laf@ on the printing bile paid by the primary cam- paign committee getting out the Gover- nor's message on direct primaries Counsel showed that by the testimony of Mr. Lehman the committee had pala) several printing bills to J. B. Lyon reafte Sai Nee Pitcaiieery iba orator | | to the Sulser fight. Prominent names the press and the bille/on the lst were Henry Morgenthau, charged to the Executive Chamber, | 1.000; Herbert H. Lehman, $1.00; Ralph this conneetion Richards, Pulitzer, $500; Herman Ridder, $230; | William Randolph Hearst, $0; Louis F, Josephthal, $00; Judge Devoe F. Hodson, $500; Vincent Astor, $00; Will- E. Leffingwell, $250; Thomas Mott ne, $100; Francis Lynde Stetson, 60, and a friend, through Frank M. Patterson, $30. alleges, she was living with the Sena- tor, believing herself to be his lawful | wife, She understood, It is set forth. that as her husband, Dr. Dixon, had disappeared for five years, McCarren considered him dead and that he was free to wed the doctor's widow. WITH NATOR. In 1906, came th» revelation that the doctor was a second Enoch Arden, for he turned u» very much alive and weil, Learning of this Senator McCarren, it fa alleged, promised to support the child under the following conditions: During the minority of the boy the! | Senator wae to pay $100 a week to the! mother for the maintenance and sup- port of the child; 000 toward fur- nishing @ no e for the baby; $100 « f me for the Mr. brought to the attention of the chair- man that section of the Constitution which prohivite a State officer from spending moneys not appropriated tn lar: the Legislature. | Or Mr, Richards «ald the Legisiature had | appropriated only $1,000 for the Gov- ernor's printing, but that the State had| The committee adjourned, subject to been made lable in excess of 87,00 over | the call of the Chair. Mr. Frawley he appropriation. ked Mr, Richards to let him know Mr. Lehman, at the request of Mr,| to-morrow when he would be ready to Richards, read the Ist of contributors | resume his examin’ For Girls 7 Ad Autumn styles in spparel especially designed for the the younger set by leading foreign and American modist ites. School Dresses I | eponge, challis, shepherd checks and plaids, regulation Russian and long waist effects. Others t more elaborate are of velveteen, crepe, wool, corduroy, novelty ks, chiffon and Debutante Dresses Developed in novelty and plain silks, velvet brocades and chiffon cloth, with trimmings of furs and flowers, sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Misses’ School Coats New models, of cheviot, zibelines and boucle | | cloth, many showing the long waist in Misses' Dress Coats Interesting styles in corduroy, novelty plaids | eee ere ee i | some wil iste, | Golf Caps in checks Smart Hats for Misses and Girls Many original models, in beaver, velour and velvet, from the famous designers of hats for Mouton, Groult and Poiret, FetvorRemetndt me Valves Jacobean Teme, | with bright colored linings for r children. Wide brimmed soft crowned Taffeta Hats, in black, relieved by brilliant touches of color on roys; many impo and astrachan, Glengary and French Berets suitable for girls as well as boys. School Shoes for Boys and Girls Closest attention has been given to the design. ing of these Shoes for growing boys and girls, with a view to cultivating the natural beauty lines of the feet. The assortment is complete, comprising Button and Lace Shoes, regular and high cut, in tan voy, ‘The services of a competent nurs@ were ty be fornisined as long as the me needed then condition imposed upon Mrs, Ho Wee that che Hid keep the ex vely and ty Hoi a manner woul Feet cred t upon the Senator, aecoreg Ther was aie toward bis vent, the ‘the fleet suit in which these @ legations © set f was for $100,000 da Te fur unother 800.600 represented hla done to the childs through the lack of funds to provide ay good education for fim. In sult No, 3 tt is alleged that the mother and chit were damaked to the extent of $90,000, 4 because of the failure of the Senator to Provide for hin alleged son's general) eure. SAYS BOY WAS NOT NAMED TO to the Senato: ra state sult EXTORT MONEY. “ Denial of the charge that she named, the boy Patrick H. Mocarren jr. fot the purpose of extorting money the Senator {# also made Mra. D on’s complaint. She aileged that chili Was not named until after ator MeCarren acknowledged him his son. She lenies that she mis: represented herself to be the widow uf Dixon for mercenary reasons, When Senator McCarren died, sults were brought against his and the executors of the will, Samuel 8. Whitehouse and Se iy v. Haggerty, AMERICANS IN TC IN TORREON SAFE Consal Hanna Denies Stz cuted by WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Consul Han; na at Monterey reported to-day there Was no truth in the story that Americans had been executed by a Fed- eral Mexican general at Torreon, Am were safe as late as Aug. 81. Consul Hostetter at Hermosillo reperts the Governor of Sonora ‘a offering pro- tection to Amerigans who wish to re ain. en WILSON NAMES JERSEYMAN. ay ASHINGTON on this afte Te be Ministe Birch of New de To be Minister to Roumania, and Bulzaria—Charles J, Sept. 4—President nominated rtugal—Thomas tl. tol Servia Vopicka of VERMS OF ALLEGED CONTRACT J Illinois. To be United States Attorney, North- ern District of New York—John H. Gi son of New York. 'Are Your Teeth in in Bad Condition? falantiticalty Protect ath and” Throat and Preserves the Teeth eight drops in warm water. Se etal? Reirang” Price $0 Cents. All Draggits. No Reliable Druggist Will Otier a Substitute GEO. BORGFELDT & CO. NEW YO! CHICAGO _SAN FRANCISCO STERN BROTHERS Forty-second and Forty-third Streets, West of Fifth Avenue Announce their preparedness to fill all Apparel requirements For College, Seminary and School offering a wide selection of authentic styles, in superior materials, at customary low prices. For Boys e very large selection of high grade Creat ae Paris, Berlin and the le of America—comprising only all woo! fabrics, done into styles contemporary with the countries from which they come. All Knickerbocker Suits are made with two pairs of trousers. New English model Norfolks, patch pockets— box and others with knife plaits, for boys 7 to 18 years. Russian and Sailor Blouse Suits for the smaller ys, some with unique color effects at collar; exceptional quality serges and cheviots. Imported Cavalier Suits of corded silk, in white, py and purple, for dress occasions: sizes 2 to yt Hats and Caps japlatds, tweeds and felts. Velour Alpine Ha checks and rough mixtures, cordu- novelties in velours, felts | brim and lining. | and black Russ‘a calf, patent leather, vici kid, j \ English School Hats of felt, in various practical | white canvas, nubuck buckskin, Dancing i! shapes; also many other new and attractive Pumps, Dress and House Slippers, Skating an ' effects shown for the first time this season, ~~ Storm Shoes at very attractive prices.

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