The evening world. Newspaper, September 11, 1913, Page 20

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a shciteeniba PAW AND MAW DAY 18 PAWS BIRTHDAY, Mm GOING DOWN TO THE TEN CENT STORE AND GET HIM SOME THING. EN CENT STORE, PLL PUT THIS TWENTY DOLLAR BILL WHERE MAW CAN'T Miss LT. Now pie GET A AN’ SHE SPEN LT. TUM, TEE TUM TUM; APPY BIRTHDAY HUSBAND! © YOUNG VANDLA2).T SLARTS. ’ Robin butmer bm Goud o,.esay Thyash Mather Mate. Hm. Cormetian Vane bi" im yesterday f Vanderolt told TI bulove fo DIbess, Was at yo ths Jeaving| disease, by the boat train th was now practically well agala, re ‘The youth’ @emed in excellent ‘aa gueher pale | 2 RCE Te NT T | Fugitive’s New Lawyers Ask Court to Release Him as Megally Detained. WARRANT IS HELD BACK. | Jerome Ready With Charge of Conspiracy Should Deci- sion Free Slayer. { | COLBBROOK, N. H., Sept. 1—The firet engagement on United States soll in the fight 40 return Marry Kendall Thaw to Matteawan will not take place until to-morrow. By mutual consent the attorneys for Thaw and Jerome, Special Deputy Attorney General of New York. agreed to postpone Thaw's arraignment in court until late this afternoon, and then have the hearing adjourned until to-morrow. | Thaw ts held on a charge of conepir- jacy, lodged against him by Bernard Jacob of Lancaster, a lawyer retained neveral days ago by Jerome against Just such @ contingency as has de- veloped. There was no charge against him when Sherif? Holman Drew too’ him into custody yesterday, but Jacob arrived late in the evening and the formal charge was made. ‘Thaw should have had a hearing this morning, but Magtetrate Carr was busy and when he waa at liberty Thaw's lawyere had agreed to a postponement. The hearing before Carr is not regarded as important, since it is believed gen- ly that Judge R. N. Chamberlin of juperior Court will have to pass on the merite of his case before he can be remanded to jail, pending the arrival of extradition papers from New York or be eet at liberty. Jerome and Franklin Kennedy, Dep- uty Attorney-General, are for elther contingency. Judge Chamberlin remand Thaw, their course will be comparatively easy, though they wil have to combat @ writ of habeas corpus which Thaw'e lawyers here are prepared to ask of Judge Chamberiin. HOLD CONSPIRACY CHARGE AS | ALTERNATE RESORT. | Thaw's first demand was for his fa- | vorite legal resource, a habeas corpus writ, He retained Merriam Shurtleff, brother of W. L, Shurtleff, Thaw's counsel in Coaticook and Sherbrooke, and also Thomas F. Johnson. At frat he Inateted that a writ be asked at once, but his lawyers pointed out to him thé danger of tnii case for many days in Sherbrooke, they believe t Thaw ie safer in charge of Sherif? Drew than he would be were he at liberty and they cau; welled delay until Judge Chamber! had rendered hie decision. @hould Judge Chamberlin liberate ‘Thaw, Jerome's task will be compil- He Intends to ask for the return of Thaw to New York on the und that be ie am escaped lunatic, but if 'Thaw were liberated he would be forced to serve on him the conspiracy warrant which John Lanyan, a private a tive in Jerome's employ, has been tying In his pocket ever since the New York forces invaded ada. Jerome would thus be put In the posl- tlon of asking for the return of an en- caped lunatic while hokling that luna- tle as @ responmible person on a criminal process. Taaw's arraignment before Judge chamberlin was delayed by @ heavy calendar, Thaw chafed under this de- lay. He was nervous, irritavie, and ei clted. His long auto journey of yeste: day had shaken him, and the swift mov- ing evenis of the previous iwenty-four re, houra had robbed him of his compo The absence of Jerome added to terror, He was In constant fear that he would be “kidnapped,” as be expressed it, THAW QUARTERED IN HOTEL, NOT JAIL. Thaw was not put in jail but wee In the Monadnock House, © Jerome also made bie head- quarters. Thaw retired before mid- Jninht und, fur from objecting to the | presence in his room of Deptuy Sherif |\turley H. Kelsea, he asked that guards be put over him. Two armed deputies accordingly dozed in rocking perties just outal he door, which wae A Ught was kept Durning In all night. Thaw was trentic the ha! when he learned of Jero: | “You must guard me, P | fnat man Jerome will kidnap a “We had no inkling of it,” ome, "To say the le it was high- handed, 11 was neither far to Thaw. @ lunatic, nor to the Stare of New York Moreover, It upsets the pr! ciples of justice based on the habeas corpus writ and I do not doubt it will result in more or lee@ scandal in Can- d . Kennedy said: “It wae contemptible an@ cowardly. Here is thaw, @ lunatic, turned loose with only the clothes on hie back, short of funds and with no meane of trans- | portation except the automobile he com- mandeered from @ newspaper man. ‘Thaw not a sane man. That has been proved ti nd again, and this made the mann hie deportation the more pitiable.’ ovement viest Dies ti eather Hyacinth Ruebor Superior of St. Stephen's Mvnusiery ut Groghan, N died early this morniug tin St Bra Hospital from heart dung)? 18s iw, . and was ordained July HE EVENING WOBSLD, Am was the; pei Father Rueberg was born in Werl, Germany, June 5, 1887, and became & menroer of the Franclecan order on From 107 to 1@ he was stationed Former Leader Attempted to Hurl Self Over Rail of Liner Imperator. BROTHER SAVED HIM. No Trace of Missing Congress- man Yet Found—Gone Eleven Days. ‘Though atill professing to believe that | “the Big Fellow” te “all right” and “in jthe hande of good friends,” friends of | Representative Sullivan are manifestly worried over thoir failure to finé any trace of bim since bie disappearance, eleven days ago. : It hee deen disclosed that Sullivan tried to thro imeelf overboard in ihe: Course of his Journey te New York ea the Imperator in July and wae nar rowly prevented by his brother, Patrick H. Sullivan, who accompanied him when he went abroad. It is nid alee that the “Big Fellow” was the object of schemes during his journey to rob him of all his property and that he actually Suffered a loss uf 90,000 at the bands of sharpere. “Big Tim's” haggard appearance and tired look of his brother when they arrived at the dock in Hoboken proved to all who saw them that they had un- dergone great mental suffering during the voya, Tt eo gald that Patrick Sul- Avan ecarcely slept throughout the voy- age, in hie efforte to keep a constant watch on hig brother trom the moment the latter disclosed the eulaidal! melan- cholla manifested when he attempied to jump over the Imperator’e rail FRIENDS KEPT BUSY CHASING FAKE CLUES. the tan, but with him was Joseph dulll- van, seventeen-year-old son of the late “Little Tim” Sullivan. Later William Galloway, a watchman employed at No. 24 Fifth avenue, ap- ed at the offices of William B. Elli- pon, Sullivan's counsel, and said he had een the missing man the night of his disappearance en Fifth avenue, near Twenty-sixth street; that Sullivan had ked him where the Hotel was; that he had said the ho! inted was probably the Prince George, in ‘Twenty-elghth street, near Fifth avenue, and that his questioner had gone In that direction. He sald he had known Bulll- van for yee Galloway's identification was found to be faulty. When asked to describe Mr, pparel he said the man wore ite black, WOULD-BE JOKER GETS BUSY ON TELEPHONE. Another clue that the family received during the day proved worthless, It came In just before 7 o'clock as Law- rence Mulligan, Sullivan's half-brother, was standing In the lobby of the Hotel Bt. Dents when some one insisted that he be called to the telephone. the other end of the wire. third streg. and Fifth avenue.’ Inquiry snowed that the message had ome from a telephone station mear the Ngan when the connection had been ns Mulligan, lke Patrick H. Sullivan, William B. Eltiaon, and others of the missing man's closest frien were plainly more worried yes- terday than en any day since It became ‘nown te had disappeared. All pro- feased to belleve would return in due time, Mulligan kept a fast automobile within easy reach all day, while the others spent @ good part of the time telephoning. ‘I'm not worrled about ‘Big Tim'” Mulligan late last said Mr. know thi ime that it would be ¢ for the person be !s staying with to tip ue off. Wherever he is | know that be ie In good hands, but those whom he Ie with should, t think, give us a line on what ts up.” Othera of the Sullivans w: inclined to think they never again would their chief in life. Along the Bowery the word passed that Sullivan would probably be found in Long Island Sound. “Tim was tired and decided to quit it’ was the explanation of the Bowery, Seana SUES FOR LOSS OF EYESIGHT. Schwarts Saye Compound Druggiet Gave Hi Blinded Right Optic. Herman Schwarts began an action in the Supreme Cou! Tnaac Blausteln, a druggist at One Hun- dred and Nineteenth sireet and Lex- ington avenue, to recover $10.0 dam- ages for loss of the sight of his right He alleges that .he defendant and nis employee failed to properly com- pound @ prescription obtained by schwarts from Dr. Edwin Terel, ‘Phe preacription called for 2 per cent of wreyrol, Schwarts says, and was to| Frank J. Farrell} ¥ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 STATEDENARDS © “BG TIM’ TRED Making Dresses at Home "THAW ASLUNATI | TODROWN SELF S|) ANDASCRIMINAL, ON OEANTRP esr From Original By The Evening MLLE. LODEWICK. jehed. The Articles Wee tm. DESCRIPTION. | A ostylien frock without any draping hardly seems credible, but no one can @eny the modishness of this design I am showing. From a normal arm size full | sleeves of plaid silk are gathcred into deep cuffe of the dress material, while’ the plain skirt, slashed at one side, Is gathered into @ crushed girdle of the plaid ailk, Any number of beautiful plaids may be found this season, for they have without doubt come to their turn of popularity, And they will differ from the old time plaids, for the new weaves of materials present some en- tirely new effects, Perhaps the most popular of piald materials iv soft taffeta, for it bas Wen decreed a most proper material for gfternoon and semi-evening dresses, while for trimming purposes It hae aiready gained unusual favor. Fol- lowing the isn | am showing & de- cldediy chic frock could be developed by using seal brown velveteen for the mai dress and soft taffeta plaid siik having Ines of cherry red for the sleeves and inch in diamet plaid to trim the centre front of the up the backs of the deep cuffs and the ‘side seam of the skirt above the wlash, This frock would be delightful for the wirl at boarding school and, velveteen is beautiful, a more service- tons frill at the Plaited tulle in rut plaiting of cream lace would be pi Although the back view of this does not reveal the button trimming, butterfly bow of the silk is sufficient. ANSWERS TO QUERIES. Dear ty. at @ hotel, where dancing will be en- joyed, and I appeal to you for a pretty ucaign for my gown, Am twenty-four years of age, tall, and rather alim, but well proportioned. I have a medium complexion with little color, and brown Miss L. D. ‘Dear Vagmion Malitor: ‘make # long coat for fall wear. 1 have ur and a half yards of stripe material be dropped into his eye three times day. He alleges on iiformation and belief that the compound deilyered him by Blaustely containe? 24% par cent. of py op arom whieh wa: ah, ‘tike sample. Am thirty-five years of nd do not want anything vo extreme tov practical) wear, Am medium bujlg, $ MRS Ju. R., although | Haven, Conn., Tam to attend a wedding in October | % World's eontinuce acrose the topes of the | Wiborg case was pliced In the hands! arms, Gnished with o brown velvet | of the United States District-Attornoy cording. Long, straight sleeves to prosecute the Wiborge for falling to Wide at the betton with turn PACE Ldeciare thelr gods. outlo Gaishod with 0 cording e004) ( rrank ff. Wiborg, who ‘s rated of a have ss fur buttons ee caees man of large wealth, camo from Ci preg bln Phooey thea adirager Rage cinnuti, where his fain'ly ix closely as- fveut. Make Taft famillos evel candles ftgllecrceet oer former President Taft named | ¥ Lepage plleadpored pe. [Charles Nagel, of St. Louis, as Seo are pod —— retary of Commerce and Labor, Mr idl waist Nybeinedladhcctng Wiborg was appointed to aselat him. | Geode anisned ord |The Wiborgs have a country home at | ing to placed. NEW HAVEN TRAIN - SIDESWIPED AND 200 GET SCARE White Mountain Express Dam- aged by Freight—Passen- gers Are Lucky. {Bpectal to The Evening World.) 1.—Thi HARTFORD, Sept. Mountain Express of th sideswiped by a freight train five miles h of Wallingford at 11.6 o'clock it night. No one was hurt, but two girdie, Also button meles three-quarter | hundred passengers who felt the bump can be covered with the| piled out of the express to the edges of the track, The baggage car and the t from round cut neck to sirdia and | passenger coach at the front of the train were scraped and broken. Only a few minutes before at West the White Mountain train was held for seven minutes after a ould ‘serge or | Signal delay, for the rear-end Ponda aaa vine but-|to cateh up. The wait was enough to n the color of the dress. The | startle most of the nervous passe! Neck could be of self colored | out of their berths and ‘effect or @ dainty {rattle of the sideswiping brought the rest of them to the platforms, it dress| Whe alot lite t freight went on thelr way The first two cars of the Were splintered below the windows. ‘The only explanation given to passen- jomething stuck out in that ehouldn't.” —<>——— SNAKE VENOM AS CURE was thi @ freigh! 1913 (Special to The NEW ORL John T. Jones shortly anounce | cov ‘aia and cancer. of No thal \forty patients here free to prove hin {claims, The reported cure 1s a blend of and ‘wnake venom \grain is admit: jané moccasin venom | the blend. ‘ed. Brening World.) ANS, La., Sept. 11.—Dr, Orlea: he red a complete cure for tuberculo- He ts now treating 1-100th Rattlesnake | e included tn e jam and With Gas} pixty-aix year a farmer saloon keeper, was found dead ‘Kindly advise me of @ styiien way to] to-day in dia furnished room at No, | Oakland, showed 164 Orange street, Newark, N. J. end of a gas tube was in his mouto, the other end being attached to a gas Ji Neuresek had an arm amputated some| secretary lane’ thme ego because of blood poisoning. | nosed as rheumatism of th He had lost hia business and was de- apoasent CUSTOMS OFFICERS Designs PUT WIBORG CASE. | | UP TO PROSECUTOR Twenty Trunks Brought In by Mother and Daughters Are | Technically Seized. | UNPAID DUTY IS $3,000. Frank B, Wiborg, Husband! and Father, Is Rated as Man | to-day technically the contents of the twerty trunks brought here from Burspe inst Friday on the Mauretania by Mre. Frank B. Wiborg, wife of the former Aatistant Secretary of Com nersg nid Labor, and her three daughters, ihe! Misere Sarah 8, M. Hoyt and Og! Whoa. Tt wae oald that tne appraisers of te Custom House found undeclared | Goods tn the trunks tne tity of which | would be about $9,000, The ortzinal cost | ef these goods was about $5,000, but @s moat of them have been w thelr valuation ts not pinced 80 high Duty Will be ansemsed on them at the home ‘and not the foreign value of the articles, When customs inrpectora at the pier found mistakes in the declarations mate by Mra, Wiborg and her daughters and by the appraisers at the public stores, It was thought that the Wiborgs had Merely forgotten to list ali their fore Ign purch ‘ause of the large number they had made CASE TURNED OVER To U. 8, DISTRICT-ATTURNEY. | Following a three di examination | Aud pricing of the goods, and quent report by the appraisers, a ing was heid to~lay at the ¢ House. The result) was that L. 1, and @ residence | East Hampton, in elty. Frank Wiborg and his friends were shocked by the decision of the Customs officials, At the time of the detention of the trunks, Mr, Wiborg was reported as saying that the matter would be immediately adjusted and was not | Worth mentioning. | Mra, Wiborg is a sister of Mra. Coi- | | mate Hoyt of New York. Another sis-| ter wus the wife of Gen. Nelson A.) Miles. Mrs. Wiborg was a niece of the! | | late John Sherman KAIGER ADMIRED THE DAUGH.- TERS OF WIBORG. In 1905 whe and one of her daughters were presented at the German court, but ft is sald that yearn before for- mal presentation the Kaiser had ox- Pressed admiration for the Wiborg fain- fly, eapectally the daughters, The Ger- man Emperor is reported to have sale “If the Wiborgs are typical American children, other Amerts ny hi'dren must have been grossly maligned.” Miss Olga Wiborg as engaged to Lord (0 an usher at the wedding of Lord Dec to Miss Vivian Gould, daughte George J, Gould, Lord Cainoys avir- rled Mies Mildred Sherman of this city, —<—___—. GRACE GUSGENHEIM-WAHL. IN GHIGAGO TO TESTIFY Former Wife of Millionaire Going Before Grand Jury to Be Heard i on Divorce Conspiracy. CHICAGO, Sept, 11.—Mrs. Grace Guggenheim-Wan!, divorced wife of William Guggenheim, smelter million- aire, arrived here to-day, accompaniod by a New York attorney and was to go before a Grand Jury to testify volun- tarily concerning the alleged collusion ot ‘akeman express “Accept my slicere ath of your distingul te. ot only the city and country at large wii) mo and share your # ag an honest and -ourag: and in the performace dutles on the bench, and In the « Mayor, he gave conkelentions atte will | dis- hae publis lee of tion of al ory,” eateries ! Secretary Lane BERKELEY, Fe of the Interi Tuesday while revte who ing 4 continued | ment to-day bur his brother, a phyales Wepwed on vade in " One | other of $21,900, in transit trom thts ot |to banks in Savannah, Veléeste an yesterday. Word of the rebbery Giecovered some articies that had vot however, the second packago been declared at all, the two trunks opened and thie too was found to haw® were technically “held for examination | been looted. | Port from them. company oMciala here refused to $71.00) In transit. | contained when it left New York and conspiracy ch she was! ed a decroe Benbelm in| frovy her Lome in the night, . i - >. Mins Moneshun, ¢ | Glynn In Regrets, way ehor and killed ALBANY, N.Y. Het. I-Acting Gov, [fs she had cage Glynn sent the following mevsage to|™ » Anat bed fallen te Mra, William J. Gaynor love with the youngs woman whileyete tending ner t ties GALVESTON i 5 A §e> of rat [has iallen here, Water iu the strestp stopp teas for an ‘leat nlaht, to duty which will perpetuate his mem: | fan Inslyin that tre patient must havel $71,900 1 CAH STOLEN FROM SAFE OF EXPRESS Two Packagés From the Chasg National Bank Looted in Transit. ‘Two paokn@es, one of 950,000 ond <% Brunswick, Ga, were stolen tem @ portable safe of the Adame Bagram Company on an Atlantic Coast fap. train somewhere between Jersey and Savannah, where the train tolexraphed hero to-day. ‘The money was shipped trem by the Chase National Bank. The 000 was for delivery to the Ba' ‘ Bank. The other sum wae to have divided among banke in the other Sanuet C. Miller, Vice-President O the Chase National Bank, tm charge ivreney movements, sald to-day hiv bank had shipped « large of currency to banks in Georgia { the Adams Express. a “If this money has deen stélen,”. sald, “and Is not recovered the loa fall, not upon the bank, but wpew express company.” Mg Mr, Milter sald that the 90,00 geal age was only one of those In the ment made vy the Chase Ni declined to give further detada, Bach package was sealed and in the supposedly burglar preof There was nothing to indicate tus there had been @ robbery cnt @e $00 package wes opened. The eenle seemed not to have been disturbed, With the discovery of the frst ipt. Carles Mackay of the Aé@am® Exprese npan; sald he donbeed there had been any robbery, “1 haven't heard of one offdialg, | though IT have heard that @ robbery occurred south of Washington, all I know about it. Everything of Washington is in the jurisdiction @@ the Southern Express Company. aod © couldn't do anything til we got & We haven't bad suc! a report.” MAVANNALL, Ga. Sept, iL—apregy / to-day the yf W. F. McGauley, Press nna Bank an@ True’) ‘ma the lone of the S90 it was shipped from Ni York Monday on train No. 8 of tho st line, und should have reached here veaterday at 6 A. M. The Southern Express Company hurried officers to Ravannah. W, Hockaday, general manager of the com> Dany, and a reprenentitive of @ dete tive agency from Atlanta, reached @a> Vannah to-day and began work on the case, The name of the exprese a> senger was not made known hére. The seals on the outside of the sted trunk or safe, It 19 sald, not show that they were tampered wih, but the sealed envelope in which the money wbout been onened, Re AT18 SHANGED AFTER HS MOTHE FALS TO SWE HM Parent of Arkansas Youle Tramped State With Petition —Near Gallows at End. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark, Sept. Davis, eighteen yaa here telay fo: of Miss Nellie Moneyhun, hie (ene hey He went to the scaffold protesting ini Omer hanged Da moi miles through . Who hid walked mem ‘orthwest Arkansas clze boy's sentence to Ife imprisonment, ined with the Come { demned man until midnight. When the sentence was carried out she was @ute side the aca‘told Inclosure, In her work of « and nt son in her ato, ned several hundre@ nutures to the petition tt was stol ort i st teat Gives bri 1 mace to thy absolute rest until his strengin iMness has et has had touches of it at intervals for te gene, , dips = Aepewded tv

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