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|) NEWMAYOR SIMPLE Wife of ves, NV HIS HOME LIFE \ «, York” Pleads for the Old- New Her > AND LOVES HS DO Little Suburb Home of Daugh- * Ca Where He Is Stopping, Guarded by Police, kik WIFE FAVORS DIGNITY. ' ~~ New “First Lady of New Fashioned Women. RELIGIOUS BATTLE OF PARENTS STOS FERAL OF BABE Father, a Jew, Insists on Jewish Rites, to Which Christian Mother Objects. s if if] E : ! H i be | i it 3 : i i it f i A q@rowd of several hundred persons @tood around the home of Allen Krick- @an, No. 1% Springfield avenue, Irving- to-day. Policemen of Irving fewark, in which city half of the Krickman home and most of the ack yard stand, were on hand to keep the crowd in order. Within the house lay the body of William Krickman, the seven-meathe- 014 son of Krickman, a Jewish dry- goods merchant, and his wife of four years, @ Christian, who was Mise Mary Walker. Kirckman declares that. his gon shall be buried by the Jewish ritual in the Jewish cemetery in East Orange Mrs. Krickman 1s equatly ‘Insistent that the baby shall be buried in the Clinton cemetery in Irvington, and the bitterness which dif. ference in religion has caused has in- volved half the town. Krickman 6a; Ms wife | i i j te i | i al He Aa ii § zs s r “> 3 7 i z x =z tel 4 z o z 5 °o efit st 2 i pI if i i 3 : according to the Jewish Mre, Krickman declares hyeteri- cal'y that she never made euch an agreement. ‘The little chap died yesterday in the Bal Hospital in Newark, and where @ téw moments before both parents had knélt~ together at the child's. bedi tiiey now rose to wrangle with other over the disposal of the smal! remains. Krickman rushed to 9 Jewish undertaker and ordered him to care for the body. Mra, Krickman employed an undertaker of her own, and as he reached the hospital first she got poe session of the body of her little son. All arrangements had been made for the funeral yesterday, but Mrs. Krick- man found when she sought a burial perm if Newark that one had been Granted to her husband and the Irving- ton authorities refused to iss! nother one, Krickman, frantic at the prospe:t of an unorthodox burial for his son, and not certain that his wife had not got a burial permit also, rushed to :he house with a crowd of friends. Chief of Police Green of Irvington’ gent several men to the house, but even under thoir Protection Mra. Mrickman feared ‘o leave the place. Krickman and bis friends kept guard ef night and this morning, determined to get possession of bis eon, Krickman demanded admittance to the house, Mra, Krickman refused to let him in and the father seized an axe and tried to chop down the door, The fropt door, which Krickman attacked, te in Irvington, So, while the Newark police stood idly by, the Irvington men grabved Krick- man and locked bim up. He was bailed out at once, The Health Departments of Newark and Irvington were notified of the situ- ation, but they declined to take any what my husband does and the | tion at present, though they announced of the city éo that I may 4i8-! that they would hold Krickman re- use them with him, and I try to ke9P | sponsible for the proper burial of the > everything he is intersted In. |i). ginoe Mrs. Krickman cannot get @ permit for the funeral this means { Tew I can entertain him tm the eve- | | ning by knowing something about (Bet | nat eventually her husband will have his way. ‘most concerns bim outside our According to Mrs. Krickman, there ‘was no trouble over the baby’s burial until ber father-in-law, John Krick- aman, insisted that his @on bury the baby under the Jewish ritual, Until then, said Mre. Krickman, Krickman hed made no objection to her plans for the funeral, — Jamaica, ¢ section of newlyweds. Hor dark hair, avorn close about the tem- ples, affords @ pleasant contrast to her eyes of blue. She attended @ convent fn Brooklyn, as did her mojher, and was married to Edward Schell of No. 676 Fifth street, Brooklyn, on the 30th of last October. The ceremony wes attended by the late Mayor. Mrs. Schell !s very proud of her father and believes he will be as good ® Mayor as he has been @ father, She 4 034 fashioned in many Biine etruck the key- etandards when ehe gave her first in- terview following the news of Meyor Gaynor's death. “I know, of course, that the public figs the desire and right to know about P'up Bow,” she said after expressing her gorrow over the death of one who was 8 \\ friend as well as an associate, indicating ) that Rereatter she will be a true ‘frst lady of the city.” Mrs. Kitpe ts of Irish parentage, and ber modesty proves most attractive to one who talks with ‘the gray-haired little woman. PEELS KEEN NEED FOR DIGNITY OF WOMEN. “Lat me aay that I feel, above every- «thing, the need for a strengthening of the oid modest dignity of women. They do not have to be old-fashioned, but let them return te the beauty end charms af modesty. ° fon gorry that. o many of the {, weiien ef to-day scoff at thie sacred . ‘4s for myself, the civic in- fluence ‘I shall wield will be wielded right af the home, " aiways tried to attend to my home a@airs and to make my family | fe@ that home was the best place of f home will not be to him the place he‘ loves most.’ | ‘@ Delleve al women should take an Interest in their husbands’ affairs, but 1 @@ not think they should argue about Anything that my busband may Delleve that of theirs. recd the dally papers and keep up i whied j “NEW “FRIR@T LADY” SAYS SUF. FRAGE 18 ONLY A FAD. Then Mrs. Kline branched off on af- felre of the day and condemned ai frege, calling it @ “paselng fad.” She agid that she thought the modern dress of women wes vulgar and shocking, t hut believed that reforms would soon come. ae takes the news of her husband's . in rise to world-wide fame promi- neges very calmly and her chief feeling facems to be that of grief because of the death of the late Meyor. (U "Mle tnvended dining with yy he eailed, but he told us that » waiting until he returned so . might enjoy visit as much ‘he would like to,” she said of Mayor Mra. Kline wes the daughter of @ contractor who came to Brooklyn from Ireland, As Mise Fraa-| prominence and. she Je extremely anx- cep Phajon she was very popular be-| ious that “Bully” shall not be taken to fore her marriage in 1886, City Hall when Mayor Kline moves 4 Mayor's daughter, May, is one| back to his Brooklyn ho it No, 238A tbe headsomest riung rides in |Ceriton aveniay Fi rath is not very startled over her eudden | York’s New Mayor, Daughter and Son-in-Law SAD HED MARRY HSOHN DAUGHTER, NRS. ARTA SHS Multi-Millionaire Also Declared; in Affidavits to Have Boasted of “Small Harem.” = Mutr repiled, according to the affidavit, adding that the detective could go back to Martin and tell him “this was one Scotch woman he could not buy.” + At another time, still according to the aMdavits, a detective tho gave the name of Charles Bill, called at the Muir home and said he was in the employ of Martin and was sent to get Mra. Martin @runk, if he could, take her to dinner and then to @ hotel, eo that her could get evidence against in Egon Von Novelly, who was associated in business with Martin, declares in an TEE SVENING WORLD, FRIDKY, ) | out before, according to Chairman Lavy, hut Mr Culler ingited that he tatked to Vugene t bards, counsel for SEPTEMBER 12, 1913. the Prawle nmittes, about the mat- INTO STOCK DEAL Chairman Levy eaid that thie board would alow that tie $19.00 and $600 pald to the brokers were campalgu contri wutions. “The day after Mr. Sulser gave you $900 on Doc. 4id you gtve him 100 shares of ©. C. enked Krosel, “ Yeu" eald Witness Filer, Q. DA you ath nave om Cc. C. ©, 0 Bmelters and 10 Southern Pecifict’ A. Yo Q. true that on Deo, 9, 191%, Qtr. | @alser owed your firm $40,261.68 against | @hweh you held that stock? A. Yess . np | @ DIA you on June 16, 1913, recelv TALK OF GBRRY CHECK. | any money on thie account? a Yes, we Got one per cent. dividend on Smeitere from the company and @ check for 6,000 from A. W. Gpriggs, @ former Gov- ernor of Montana. @. On July 26, 1913, Mr. Sulser owed Signed an Order in Her Name Authorizing Transfer of the Shares. Impeachment Managers Want to Know Whether the Com- $9.7 which was pald by T. 2M. thal? A. Yes moore Gave $5,000. 9, ve you an order written ey Ofr. authorising you to Co over the securitics to Mr. Josephttalf & Tea, we have Q. Did contribute te the Sulser you campaign fund? A. Yea, Documentary proof of Winiem @ul- f@’s stook transactions was produced SPSS SST LLUMINATING GAS” Pea “aanger a cea" GEN AS CAUSE. OF HH WOMAN'S DEA & Fuller, ide an erder signed by William Bulser ‘ ‘Mrs. Bulser” di Conflicting Newspaper No- tice Not Explained. Governor. Walter Halliday, secretary to Robert L. Gerry, on being recalled to the wit- Ness etand this afternoon, ald that during the recese he had got in tele- nhone communication with Mr. Gerry at Delaware Lake, and ¢ Gerry sent word that he would town and teatify before Managers any time after Monday. Aside from the effort to And out whether Commodore Elbridge T. Gerry went cable orders for a $6,000 contri- bution to the Sulser campaign fund, the managere heard the testimony of Daniel Brady, dretber of “Diamond Jim.” ‘When Daniel Brady was called te the stand by Mr. Krevel, he admitted send- iny check for $100 te the Sulser cam- paign fund. Q. Do you know that your check ever Got to Mr, Sulser?” A. Ob, yes, because 1t came back. Q. When was it destroyed? A. After the impeachment of the Governor sev- eral weeks ago. The stub was destroyed also. PHILADBLPHLA, Sept. Mr. and Mre. King had a residence at States and Pacific an Atlantic City newspaper structions to publish it just as written, which stated that bn e permitted the certificate to be seen day ‘My mother had four beye and taught ting gas.” Beep away trom polities and sie ade affidavit that Martin spent from §15 to $2 a day on Frances Martin and her chum, Mre. Emma Roach. “he latter, Von Novelly saya, is also known as Emma Riddell, “ Roach called every day at Mr. Martin's office,” the atfidavit sets forth, nd took her to lunch, She was tting a divorce from her husband and Mr. Martin was assisting her. On one occasion Martin told that a harem would guilt him. Ber'¢.s the woman that called on him, one In Connecticut called him on the long distance phone." Von Novelly swears that Martin's in. come Will be $2,016,000 within three years. J. H. Vandenburg, a bond hold the Martin Company, tells of going w lunch with Martin and Mrs. Roach and that during the meal Martin suggested that Mra, Roach take a trip with him to Bermuda. FIND GIRL'S DEATH DUE TO CRIMINAL OPERATION Coroner Defers Arrest In Martha Washington Hotel * Case, After 4 lonethy inquiry to-day into the death at the Hotel Martha W: ington on Tuesday of Miss Margeret Bissett, Coroner Winterbottom en- nounced that Dr, McAllister, the au. topsy surgeon, had found that death had been caused by @ criminal operation but that until further investigations had been concluded no arrests would be ordered. The Coroner gave to @ de- tective for inves! en a batch of | ters and telegrams addressed to th dead girl by a man, which were found in her baggage at the hotel. Dr. Arthur J. Schneidenbach of No. 51 Bast Seventy-eighth street and Miss been in| M. Rutherford, @ trained nurse from Hill's registry on Weat One Hundred xth street, who had treat. In an attempt to collect allmony from her husband, Samuel G. Martin, a multl- millionaire mining promoter, with offices at No. 1270 Broadway and scores of min- ing claims in Colorado, Mrs. Mabel Eloise Martin to-day filed sensational affidavits with Justice Delaney in the Bupreme Court. Among charges which she and bu ness associates of her husband mal are: ‘That he told Mrs. Martin he wag go- ing to wed his own daughter by af vious marriage. That he hired detectives to lure her inte @ trap and furhished them money to buy witnesses, SAY8 HE BOASTED OF NEED FOR SMALL HAREM, ‘That he provided clothes for two women and told associates that he couldn't get along without @ emall harem. That he threatened to send Mrs, Mar- tin to an Insane asylum as he told her he had done with the former Mra. Martin, That he took other women to luncb- eons, bought expensive gowns for them and ordered every one out of his offices when the women came to visit him, That he compelled his wife to sleep In the ®ubway and in Central Park end when she complained, he told her al had “slept too often on the prairies in South Dakota to be afraid." Mrs, Martin ts the daughter of Cireult ft Counct! Bluffs, Ta college, and the wife sits Lawrence Martin, her hu band’s son, who {is at school to spv on her, Last month she brought sult for a separation, and her attorney, Michael Martin® Dolphin, has court eVery week pressing the claim for allmony, The affidavits containing iasett priar #0 the serious charges were not revealed ent m lonethy until to-di examination, Both denied that they y. “EVERY WOMAN AND MAN A|had acen the dead girl before her final CROOK," HE 18 QUOTED, Ihe Mrs. Martin declares that her hus- my band labors under the hailucination that | POSSE CAPTURES NEGRO members of his family are degenerates. WHO ATTACKED CHILD; POLICE FEAR RIOTS “Every woman is bad and every man ® crook unt!! they prove they not," is one of the pessmisiic utterances at- - tributed to Martin in the affidavit. D, 1, Sept. 12—Tercea, ar SPRINGE She rays that he told her that he] \iing, a ten-year-old white girl, was nted to marry Frances Martin, whom this afternoon attacked by a negro Mrs. Martin cla'ms is his daughter by @ former marriage, as she (Mra, Mar- th) was getting too old. After reciting that she had been con- stantly shadowed by detectives she says she met two of them in front of her home, No. 8 Went Twenty-sixth street, and they admitted they were followin« her and apologized and complimented her. Experiences with private detectives, who offered to buy testimony from her {f It was favorable to Martin and re- | flected upon the wife, is one of the statements made by Mra. Jesste Muir, lena, Mi ana Ae N wero ot who owns an apartment house 10/1. interurban electri shed into Brooklyn where Mrs, Martin lived, thelr auto at ® crossing two miles north “ase .you trying te Bribe met” ee SOD oe y limite, A posse of citizens Kly formed on learning of the aaiili captured the negro, Charles Bant and he te being held under heavy rd of poll Authorities tried to suppress the facts because of the fatal rlote in 1908) which brew out of @ eimflar assault, poh TWO KILLED IN AUTO SMASH, CARMBL, Ind, Sept, 12.—Wiiliam Waltz and his wife of Noblesville, Ind. were instantly killed ai compan- OR. BRODER CAN'T REMEMBER ABOUT HI8 CHECKS, Dr, Juliue Broder of No. 18 Past Sixteenth street had been inatructed to produce checks and stubs drawn, in Octover, 191%, But the physician eaki he did not have the checks or stubs with him. He declared he was not & business man and did not make out studs, as he depended eolely on the bank statements Q. Have you the cancelled vouchers returned by the bank? A. No. I destroy them after a few weeks, Q. Do you recall drawing @ check for $1,000 in October, 19187 A. No. I don't remember, I never get more than $2,000 in the bank. The phyalcian admitte. bad érawn several checks of $100 or eo for the Tammany Club in ¢he Tenth Assembly District. Q. You expected to be appointed State Superintendent of Fealth? A.J 414 Q. Did Mr. Silser promise you the place? A. No. He never promiged, He said he would see what could be done when !t came to him. TRYING TO LOCATE WHERE ABOUTS OF ROBERT L. GERRY. Wallam Halliday, secretary to Rob- ert L. Gerry, was the next witness. He Reatified that Adjt.Gen. Hamilton, prior to his appointment by Sulzer, hed occupied @ confidential position tn the office of Elbridge T. Gerry at No. #6 Broadway. “Mr. Halliday 4i@ not show any tnclination to tell the whereabouts Gerry left wn before process servers arrived at his office ‘The Assembly managers falled to get any information from the witness es to whether Robert L. Gerry had given Sulser @ check for the campaign Chairman Levy tried to Gn@ out whetber Adjt.-Gen. Hamilton had au. thority to sign checks for Robert L, Gerry, but the witness did not know, Melville B. Fuller of the brokerage firm of Harris and Fuller, where Gov, Sulser bought his "C. C. C." and Bouth- ern Pacific stock, repeated the teati- mony he had previously given to the Frawley investigating committee. It was his firm that criticised Gov. Sulzer to make good at a time when the market was weak. DETAILS OF THE SULZER DEALS RETOLD ON STAND, Mr. Kresel gummed up for the wit- nem that the frm on July 10, 1910, was carnying @0 “C. ©. C.," 900 American Smelter and 100 Gouthern Paoific stouk. Mr. Fuller said his fem had paid eo Protest feo of 61.44 on a note not made by Sulzer aut handed by him to Hi ris & Fuller, The note was not honored at the Gallatin National Bank, where the brokers had an account. the end of February, 1913," asked owed your firm $49,837.67 ¢or which you held $0 C. C. C., 29 American Seneltars and 19 Southern Pacific?" “That appears correct," said the wit ness, "On Noy. 18, 1912, Mr. Sulzer came into my offce and personally handed me ten $1,000 ollle—or $10,000," Q. Was election day in 1912 om Noy, 5? A. Yea. Registrar Glenn. “BiG TIM” LOSER BUT BANKRUPTCY (Continued from First Page.) Incompetent estate,” the estate will dwindle to nothin fice @ few days before M the application a smith we could not have papers before our cla! aides, I have courts that seems to aust tentio! his finding later. Mr. Goldemith w from Bulltvan. repit customed to We have, ho hi nine investi lative pra of the House, ices secret caucus and secret work. The Delicious Lazative Chocolate yb bbe» a) CONSTIPATION ind bows romot "ind Blank Spaces in Certificate and i. |@perta! to The Evening World, | henley « reed. aeatn| POLICE 8 and the cause of death was written acoomplloee—her King was aocidentally asphyxiated or | dismembered and Gistributed ip not. The certificate was filed by County | Hudson River, Physiclan Torringtom, acceréing to STORY 1S DENED time for the bank to apply to the Court for permission to sue in the regular way./gponsible for the condition in which “There are hundreds of thousands of @0on aa herself al dollars in claime pending against this] trang m = ae lorney con- tinued, “‘and if all were paid a8 the |aiparent to the gir Dank proposes to get its payment the| she was approaching motherhood. They ht to our of-|ionger have her continue in their ser- Sullivan | vice, salled for Europe, and tf we had made| with mortification and made cautious jeated by Mr. Gold-| inquirles of ber mistress to determine Justice Donnelly announced that he would read the decision and announce asked by an Evening World reporter if any word the restraint that he has not got ac- nd will show up in due no informa- nation from the Ways and Means Com- mittee last night by introducing to-day a resolution to have @ committee of te and reform the legis- He announced his action was the be- nning of @ campaign against the committee For - Constipation EX-LAX' in North Bergen whom she could ova sult; ehe did not see her sisters te ask their advice, But ten days ago ahe laf her employer's home in Mew Jersey. saying she would go to one of het Gintera’ homes tn New York, The girl has not been eecn since, I | waa not until one of the sisters, growing ‘e and reading of the finding of tions of @ woman's body in th Hudeon, confided her feare to York policeman, that word of thes | Grcumatances came te Headquarters. Yesteriay Detective Wood brought from the Hoboken morgue the chemme |whtch had been found wrapped about the upper portion of the trunk and showed it to one of the sisters, who was familiar with the garments the Minaing girl had purchased upon her ar- fival here, To-day the same garment Gelivered to Detective Bennett of the Hudson County Pros: cutor’a office, and by him taken to the home of the missing girl's former employers. STORS THINK PARTS OF BODY WOMAN IN JERSEY IS BEING WATCHED ~INRIVER MYSTERY Had Male Accomplices, It Is Believed—Death Followed Criminal Operation. | | EXPECT ARREST SOON. —— i |Police Believe They Have Se- | cured Real Identification | chitneot_ahey, having come tt i Now of Dead Girl. feel confident of iMentitying the frag mente of the trunk positively, tut the Detectives in New York and neighbor- ing New Jersey towns who have been trying to solve the mystery of the Hud- fon River murder have progressed oo St Fd i jer, EF & Washington, which occurred tn Atiantio| try, who had City on Tuesday, was reported this afternoon to have been caused by “tilu- minating gas," and not from heart dis- vant in the home o! CHANCES, IN USING POSLAM NAME GUPPRESOED UNTIL AR RECT 16 MADE. The name of the victim, the detectives at Manhsttan end Wee hawken Headquarters, has been ewp- pressed until definite action againet the ife is taken. This much can be eald—that she has three sisters liv- ing in New York and that they heve s the detectives of Inepector Fau- staff information upon which the it activities have been based, As much of the story ae can be printed the present time carries this young immigrant to the home near North Bergen. Thei took service immediately efter her arrival from Ireland without having seen all of her kin in this country, who are acattered through the greater city.’ The man re- Leas than @ month ago it became employers -het The girl seemed ov | the inevitable, P @ decision by tho higher tin tue cee. DIO NOT ASK ADVICE OF HER Bt fe mot believed si ( rated ‘witb g single rele Sold in Two Sizes: wb Meshincat storee or Binwer ate , PILGRIM MPG, CO., 37 E. 28th St, Ne¥. harsh purgatives, they in- ure your bowels. Te he tect remedy, Huare Not caly hes a standard, bw Yieg Fuh and pre pic Bo hgh me 116 at night bring cer- ae relief. Get a box of Frose CEYLON TEA to-day at any up-to-date Drug Bt or send Loma to How Any Woman Can Remove Fuzzy Growths (Tee Modera Beauty.) Many beauty shops use a delatone aste. for removing hair from the nce, neck or army, a it is more satis | factory in every way thi tric needle. Enough of thi delatone and water is mixed into a| aste, and apread on the hairy sur-| ce for # minutes, then removed and ith it comes every bit of huir, After is washed it will be firm and i |