The evening world. Newspaper, October 1, 1913, Page 3

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COURT OFFICERS TOHOLDHERSON Defies Judge and Police and Refuses to Take Boy ¢ to Court. ARREST IS THREATENED. Put Youngster in Asylum and Then Decided to Take Him Back, { Hi A tall, brown-haired woman quarts the door of a tenement flat at No. 416 ‘West Forty-firet street. When @ etran- ger knocks she opens the door cautiously and then blockades the doorway with outstretched arms. Beyond that dingy threshold are three children. A boy, fourteen years, the image of hie mother, is the little leader of the brood, and when he hears his mother's voice growing loud it’ warning to get the kiddies out of sight, for ‘se man talking to mother at the door may be-THE LAW. THE LAW—Why, that's what stands * vetween Mamma Lizzie Hirsch and the fourteen-year-old-boy, that's what she’ been defying for months until she has reached the point where ths terrors of Jail fail to fill her soul with fear. Hasn't she already disobeyed THE LAW and {t's most powerful agent—the writ of habeas corpus, one of the orders of the the bulwark of man's liberty. ia an order of court signed by Supreme Court Justice Gavegan adjudging her guilty of con- tempt of court and ordering her arrest. REFUSED TO BRING THE BOY TO COURT. “Produce the bedy of Wiliam Henry Hirech in court or go to jail" the writ of habeas corpus commanded, But what is @ writ of habeas corpus against When the writ was into her hands by @ process she said she wouldn't go to court with William Henry's body—not if she had to go to jail for the obedience. document in her id and closed the door on the process server. Eight years ago, whcn William Henry was six years old, Mrs. Hirsch found that she had more than she could take care of, what with working out days ard nights and keeping the house in order. So she placed William In 6t. Chriato- pher's Home, signing @ paper which re- Maquished ber control over the boy for- ever. Last July the mother love in her as- werted itself. Wilil is now fourteen years old, a big, ress boy for his looka like his mother, real Willian escaped from the home, and from an invisible source money was Biven to him and he got to the home of mother, and he has been there ever 8 And then she rumpled the HEAD OF HOME TRIES TO GET BOY BACK. Superintendent James F. Connelly of the home frowned upon the boy's *® escape, believing that if he did not empt to get the boy back to the .n- stitution it would set @ bad example for the other boys in his charge. Overtures were inade to the mother looking to her voluntary relinquishment of him again and when the agreement she had was exh!>ited to her she laughed at it. ‘Then Mrs. Connelly instructed his attorney, Lemuel Skidmore, to sue out a writ of habeas corpus for William. ‘This legal a waa taken, the writ was granted, ‘served on the woman and she refused to take notice of it. When the court found that it's great power had been defied an order for arrest and incarceration in jatl w fesued to be @erved unless she pro- duced William Henry in court. It was too rainy to-day to r of arr rve the upon Mrs, Hirsch, so she had one day of respite. Neverthe- less the document is in the records of Special Term, Part I. of the Supreme Court. Mr, Skidmore, the attorney for 8t. Christopher's Home, said this morning that the case had been started, not to prosecute Mre. Hirsch, but to cement the laws of the institution, SISTER'S STORY STOPS MURDER INDICTMENT Grand Jury Hears Girl and Decides Ryan's Brother Died Accidentally. Albert Ryan of No. 47 First place, ‘ooklyn, who eccidentally stabbed and killed hia brother, Daniel, on last Aug. 26, was disoharged to-day, the Grand Jury refusing to find an indictment inst him after Matening to the t timony of the young man’s sister, Mary. Mary sald hat Albert, who is about twenty-three years old, had taken her to @ party on the night of the killing and on their return she hed prepared @ little lunch for them It was about midnight, Albert stood beside the table, a knife in hie hand, and about to cut some * bread when their brother, Daniel, twenty-aix, entered. He had been drinking, the girl said, and @t once be- wan to Upbroad Albert. Daniel worked himself into @ rage and rushed at Albert. He flung himself ‘on tis brother, and the point of the knlie entered his breast, killing him almost Instantly, Albert ran into the tirect and gave himself up. ‘The Grand Jury decided that Danie! had met hie death largely by accident. ic New Trabe Treaty With Japan v 10, Oct, dost te understood bere ONG and the United WIRED BERTHA Dragonfly Hats, Butterfly Draperies and Mandarin Sleeves Flutter. BATHROBE GIRDLES TOO Models Exhibiting Up-to-Date Features of Gowns Ad- njired by Women. Dragonfly hats, butterfly draperies. Mandolin sleeves, bathrobe girdies, the Moat audacious of slite and the most demure of grandma's shoulder capes— these are a few of the up-to-date fea- tures of woman's dress, according to Miss Joan Parke, artist and fashion ex- Dert, and the young women who are appearing in “Miss Caprice. Mise Parke and her living models gave a fashion conference for women at the Casino Theatre y. ‘day afternoon, De Wolf Hopper was ths only man Dresent, and he slunk out of sight after rebated Mi Parke. He sald he was always bashful in the pret Dresence of “Everyone is considering clothes,” be- fan Miss Parke, “and as a vehicle, a medium. of art there is nothing all of us have that is quite #0 close at hand. ‘The braoder view of the sartorial mis sion is, I think. the reason that so many More people are taking clothes seriously —and #0 many more serious people. Time was, and quite in my memory, when dress was considered @ frivolous subject, even an impolite one, and the badge of cleverness for women was to be shockingly dowdy. BUT IT IS NOT THAT Way IN THESE DAY! “This scorn of the value cf clothes te no longer sympathetically viewed by the world. “We are certainly in the swing of @ big dress movement, real his- torical period, as much so as the hoops of 1860, and it hes drawn More people into line than any since that date. ‘Moderna mode expresses a new life, startling ideals, and it recklessly appropri- ates any useful means of expres- sion. Women sre upstanding, and Batrammellead by 8 constricted ‘Waist line ang voluminous fowing skirts. The figure is as undis- guised as a man's figure, and there is @ free lightness of movement as if the body re of no weight. ‘The sodden manners of the past have fallen completely away. “I Knew a man once,” Miss Parke broke off with a smile, “who sald thi as a child he never knew women had feet. A child of to-day could not escape the knowledge, And think of the change of attitude toward aesthetic physical training in the last few years. An ap- peal has been made in all the public schools for a more sound physical de- velopment. The body has been digni- fled and exalted. Much that we used to call modesty we now know to have been the result of unclean thinking. “In the modern art of dreas the ex- pression of the ego is the first concern, That personality which clear and definite plain sailing. There are many such definite, clear-cut figures which stand out always dominant, in- tensely individualized and perfectly pressed—never eclipsed—in a garb which seems one with themselves. TWO ALL IMPORTANT QUES- TIONS TO BE ANSWERED. “Dress is not so simple a matter for the evanescent personality, for the woman whose individuality seems to shift constantly, The chameleon woman confronts @ real difficulty in tempts at sel guide is contained in the questions, The firat 1 ‘What element in my personality do I wish to express?’ The second it, ‘What expression can I best sustain? The determining force in dress is indeed the ego, from first to last “No artist creates; he only res So in gown ylea, But there ai As far aa the complete effect surpasses in value the fabrics used, so far does it approach creation. “In the gowns from ‘Misi which you are about to see, eine fine demonstration of the vigor and fertility of the American talent. But you will note the strong influence of the Orient, Persia, Turkey, Arabia. In t modern anatomy you will see a very vivid revitalising of Botticelil's sup- posedly unreal women. Edmund Du- lac, the latest great tion in tifuae trath has widely influenced the cos- tumes of to-day, and also, in this coun- ranges. Capric Says Expert, Showing Live Models on Stage DRAWN AT THEATRE BY ELEANOR SCHORER. try, John W. Howard Pyle. “Fhrough all modern dress you will feel the modern swiftness and movewment., The fying aspirations Of to-day are expressed in the winged, pinioned gossamer effects of gauze veined and ribbed with wise, Bven the bate are types of this influence, The entire costume Seems to ne dancing and fluttering to some rhythm.” And then the beautiful gowns actually danced and fluttered over the stage, pausing only long enough for Miss Parke's admiring comments, — ~ PANORAMA OF BEAUTIFUL DRESSES ON THE STAGE. First came a many-flounced frock of white chiffon, a snowy billow wreathed with narrow blue ribbons and viol and small rosebuds. It was followed by another white frock with an overakirt of wired chiffon and trimmed with gilt- tering sequins, The skirt was rather deeply slit at one side. A gown came next which Miss Parke pronounced strongly Turkish, It was ® combination of white and yellow, with transparent chiffon sleeves open on the inside but extending far below the finger tps and ending in a tassel. There was) @ deep girdle with this costume, and a wing-like head-dress of white ostrich plumes. What Mise Parke dragonfly hat followed shortly. It was constructed of black lace stiffly wired, with a tall black plume at one aide. White and gold made a favorite :olof combination. There was @ charming dress of white lace and hand-painted yellow silk, and anotler of yellow satin with @ short overskirt of white chiffon in graduated panels. A huge yellow bow in the middie of the girdle finished off the front. THE TALLEST SLIT OF THE EX- HIBITION, The taliest slit yet appeared in a white and blue frock. It— the slit—went well above the knees in front, and gave @ full view of blue silk shoes laced buskin fashion over blue silk stockings. An- other novel costune of orange crepe and chiffon showed a panel train hanging from the shoulders and ending In a tas- sel. One side of the corsage of thi dress was of black lac ‘The very newest thing in sleeves for an ovening gown is to have one long sleeve of black velvet, reach- ing to the wrist, while the other arm is left entirely bare, A salmon pink satin costume had a fine example of the old-fashioned lace shoufder cape, or “bertha,” which Miss | Parke especially kes. This costume showed another of her favorite features, the narrow black ribbon pencilling every outline of the drapery, Then came t raven gown, ail in black and white ac- cordion-pieated chiffon, with a raven painted, larger than life size, on the front of the skirt and @ huge red flower at the belt. A fluttery white gown had a butterfly Alexander rnd the late outlined in silver beading on the front} of the corsage. There was one hand- painted yellow chiffon frock which had & perfectly good crinoline attachnfent, edged with narrow black velvet, Sev- eral gowns showed sashes tied low in front and ending in t girdle of a bathrobe. pens ey DIED UNDER A TRAIN, ed man was killed under @ west-bound Pennsylvania railroad freight train near the Geneva street crossing, wark, N. J., early this morning. to Holle's morg note in @ pocket leads to the suspicion led the} THE KBVENING WORLD, WEDNBODAY, OOTOBBR 1, 1918. “MOTHER BARS OUT | Modern Dress Is Like a Breath of Fresh Air, re ESE eF Pact. /ADFOOT COAL WALL BARS WAY OF MAN sk DAYS IN NINE Pit Prisoner Talks t Talks to Wife and Children Through Pipe and Digs to Save Himself. CENTRALIA, Pa., Oct. 1.—The res- culng party at the Continental mine of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company which Is trying to reach Thomas Tosh- esky, the miner who was entovbed last Friday, arrived to-day at a point which shows that forty feet of s0 coal and rock would have to be cut through to enable them to crawl in and release the imprisoned man. Tosheeky is undergoing the terrific ordeal bravely in his isolated little Prinon 100 feet below the surface, Fre- quently during the day he conversed WALDO, INVETCATING WONT PREFER HARES = = SK ORIENTAL Gras an adjoining chamber. a blanket was pushed through HURLED FROM AUTO | INGRASH, WOMAN DIES IN AN HOUR Chauffeur Swerves to Avoid Other Machine and Hits Trolley Car, Mra. Harriet F. Cush, twenty-two years old, of No, 135 Went Sixty-ninth street, was bounced out of an automobile and fatally hurt when the machine In which she wan riding wan grazed by @ trolley car at Jackson and Steinway avenues, Long Island City, early to-day. An hour tater she died in St. John's Hos pati The machine that figured in the tra- gedy i owned by Marcus Munalil of No, %3 West Eighty-ninth street. It was being operated by his chauft Robert Harris of No, 26 Graham av- enue, Long Island City, Mr. Munsiil told the police that he had given Harris permission to use the car during the Cush and her husband, Marry Cush, were on the back seat. There was another couple, Mr, and Mra, Alber | Brooks, In the automobile, and Harris \made the fifth passenger, ar the machine was driven through rh w | the Harris aighted @ wagon ant endeavored to swerve out of path, The trolley car was coming toward him also and the automobile shot diag- onally in front of It. The manoeuvre was almost successful, as all but the) rear Wheels of the machine got past the The fender, however, struck the | fear wheels of the automobile « xian: ine | blow, causing It to bound to one side. rt Ww. M . of Effects of Aato Accident. Robert W. Miller of Rutherford, who was injured In an auto accident on Terrace avenue, Hackensack, late last night, died in the Hackensack Hospital this morning without regaining con- aclousness. He was Vice-President of the Rutherford Progressive Club and with other Progressives, Edward Elsen- acher and John F, Tygert, was on his way to attend the reorganization of the Progressive County Committee when the accident occurred, His compan- fons were uninjured. The auto turned turtle when It atruck a i@rke the roadway at a dangerous cu the same apot the late Assistant Prose- cutor, John 8. Mackay, and met with serious auto’ mishaps. Mr, Miller waa a coppersmnith on West Twenty-elahth street, thin city. | INTERESTS OF WOMEN SACKVILLE-WEST’ DAUGHTER MARRIED IN LONDON TO-DAY. NOT SAFE WITH MEN, | SAYS HIGH CHURCHMAN ees Legislative Inequalities So Long in Force Prove Statement, Says Dean Welldon. SOUTHAMPTON The custody of wi safe in the hands of man, a A declaration » to-day at the re- sumption of the Church of England Congrom by the fight Kev, James Woelldon, Dean of Manchester. The contention that they, were safe In men's y was disproved, he asserted, by 1 intative Inequalities which for toa} KEEPS WORD 10 WED WHEN MOTHER WINS SUIT FOR FORTUNE The Honorable Victoria Sac! ville-West Becomes Bride of English Diplomat. LONDON, Cct. 1.<The Honorable View toria Backville-Went. only daughter of Lord and Lady Sackville-Weat, who was made an heiress by her mother's sone ational fight for a large part of the fortune left by the late Sir John Mure ray Scott, was married to-day at Knole | Park, Seven Oaks, to Harolt Nicholson, the youngest son of Sir Arthur Nichale son, former clerk of the House of Com mons, naw Ambassador at St. Peterse burg. The ceremony was performed In the private chapel at Knole Park, the Sack ville remdence, the Bishop of Rochester officiating. The affair was a great sor | clety function, attended by most of the Prominent persons in London soclety, There were about six hundred pres ents, the most important of which was a case of Jewelry from Lady Sackvitie, which i# valued at @ price considerably exceeding $0,000, The dirde's parente also gave her @ set of Russian collection of old liver and @ old English furniture. The \ouple started at once for Keypt, where @ part of their honeymoon wilt be spent as the guests of Lord Kitohe- ner. Among thore who eent presents were: The Duchess of Marlborough, Lady Ibingdon, Lady Dufferin, Waldort As tor, Mra. Anthony Dr Mra. Harcourt, Mra, Corneltua Vanderbilt, Mrs, Harry Higgine end Lady Ran- dotph Churchill. It wan during the celebrated laweult in which her mother was fighting for her right to @ barge part of the estate left by Scott and said to amount to several ions that Miss Sackville. West announced that If her mother won the sult an Interesting engagement would follow, or neveral weeks the sult occupied us attention of the London preas and bie, and when it was announced to- 4 y that Lady Sackville-Weet had proved her right the daughter made public her engagement to young Nich- olson Her parents promptly denied it, but the daughter held tenaciously her intention and won pgainat all op- position, The bride is extremely pretty, amd during the lawsuit her photograph was | published in nearly every paper tm England, At this time she was referr~ to, dn the newspapers, as the "Kid~ and was an important witness, tor her mother, She has pinged several poems, and a volume of her verses, will shortly be given to the The bridegroom holds small posl= tion In the British Legation at Cone stantinople, where he will take bis | bride. So Doctor Patients roving. Both the surgeons infected Monday by contact with their instruments dure ing operations were reported this morn- ing to be improving, though not yet out of danger. Dr. Emil Boehm Is at Belle- vue, where the doctors are trying to ward off pneumonia, which ts his moet serious peril at present. Dr. Robert Morrison, head of the faculty of Will jlamaburg Hospital, rd - The Famous Chocolate Laxative EX-LAX Relieves Constipation Helps Digestion Blood Pure Ex-Lax is a delicious choco- like the{ of them ius. wgree t+ open tin at headquartess in order to prove hit ownersiilp | Sergeant Owen Keegan and Pollee- iman Louls Gray, who have been on duty in Chinatown, are still under ine Ja vestigation, Chrages may yet be brought against one of them. | said at the Commisisoner's offi JUDGE ISSUES WARRANT FOR ELEANOR SEARS SALEM, Masa, Oct. 1—A warrant for the arrest of Eleanor R. Sears, @ Boston eociety girl, was isseud to-day by Jutze George B. Sears because of ver failure it was to appear to anawer a charge of oper- Ating an Unregistered automobile, The Judge toll Chief of Police Woodbury of | Beverly to go out and find Mise Seare It is understood Miss * decited to attend the Brockton Falr Horse Show to-day, The automobile which Mine Sears alleged to have driven in regintered in that the man may have deliberately walked to his death. It provides for the Gisposition of ing and ie gigned “James ‘the name of ‘Harold & Vanderbilt of New York, who has been abroad on his yacht eince the middie of July, mee a ae Se will be closed until Saturday morning Mr, Norman L. McCutcheon, mes McCutcheon & Company 5th Ave. and 34th Street announce that their store on accourt of the death of only son of Mr. James McCutcheor: Se ea : | World Ads. Will Help You Out of Many a Difficulty if late laxative recommended by physicians as a mild yet pos- itive remedy for constipation in all its forms. Ex-Lax has made thousands happy. A 10c box will prove its value —at all druggists. . ‘He leaves a widow and four daughters, | long a time had determined the relation ray ne to him yesterday he feels lof the sexes, ooth in the political ana more comfortable, He sald wate Killing Roy wi ie moral spheres. Transfers Iespestor Laliey tol arociue ecm the coottaa’ wher wn Motor ‘Temels Se a raccanaiiared ie (nibs 10 ‘ prison was beginning to grow damp,| Herman Friedlander, a young chauf- lesx than a apiritus) error to atm at) the Bronx, Capt. Tierney | white the atmosphere vas becoming | feur, of No. 311 Haat One Hundred and the assimilation of women to men. The >; heavy. Unleas he ts soon rescued he| Fifty-aixth street, was held in $5,000 chivalry of man toward woman was to Brooklyn. may perish for want of fresh alr, min-| ball by Coroner Shongut in the Bronx only # half learned lesson, relared, ing experts say. to-day to await the inquest on the body otherwise how could the ment of Neaor avery time he talka Toshenky | of Max Chatkowltz of No, 760 Trinity a law against white slavery have by c . ‘asks about his wife and four children. | avenue, who was Killed at Cauldwell delayed until the twentieth century Police Commtanioner Waldo had tn-| Te nexu the rescuers. to tell hia wite}avenue and One Hundred and Fifty-| oo ae *pector Lahey and Capt. Tierney be-| to worry as little as possible, aixth atrest last night by an automobile | # ride, fore him from 9 o'clock this morning | Mrs. Toshesky and her four children | truck. | Pah until 3 o'clock this afternoon. In com. | talked to the entombed man thin Fore. The boy an roller skating with Taldor | Wags tes % Wi ol z ‘rin: avenue and , ;Pany with Deputy Commissioners Mc-|theip words of encouragement, The Nhe eanipaninek A eae took jay. The bride ‘Kay and Newburger he questioned them | mother and little ones have established | loaded with crates of chickens, on which searchingly regarding conditions In headquarters in the old workings, and| wore three men, atruck him, knocked Chinatown, Tlerney was suspended by , they will walt there until the one dear| im twenty fect and ran over him, the Commissioner last Thursday on the to them is either rescued or hauled| truck, which was without light | dixcovery that there were a number of | from the chamber dead. not stop, The boy was tak fully equipped gambling houses in the| Toshesky surprised the company of-| Lebanon Hospital In an automobile by ldistrict covered from the Ellaabeth | ficials to-day by announcing through the| George Nonsinger of No, S11 Kast Ono street station, He was transferred to| pipe that he had @ pick and shovel in| Hundred and Klghtieth street, but died the Greenwich street station, the chamber and that he would start]on the way. His skull was fractured, When the session was over the Com- | digging in an effort to assist his re: Detective Sullivan could net find any | missioner announced that he had ! cuers. a who had noted the iicenae number dropped his plan to put the Inspector | The oMclals were more than pleased to| on the car, but learned that @ truck | {and Captain on charges. Lahey was {hear this, as they belleve it will induce| driven by Friedlander had made de- | |transferred to the Bronx and Inspector | sleep. In addition to this it will give the| liveries of poultry in the neighbor: | jWaketleld was moved from the Lonx miner something to occupy himaeit with, 4, He found the chauffeur at bis to the downtown district, Tierney was| Ly listening at the top of the pipe the| father's wholesale poultry store at sent to the Vernon avenue station in|rescuers could hear Toshesky laboring| Park avenue and One Hundred and Brooklyn, and Capt. Van Wagner was| vigorously. Just before noon the miner| Fifty-siath street moved from Vernon avenue to Green- | shouted up the pipe telephone and a SS 5 ETT wich street, for food, He said his work had TO INSPECT NEW HOTEL. ‘The defense of the two ofcera against |him a wonderful appetite, Ph K h the charge that they had not carried |immediately sent down suine liquid foud eeps e the Chinatown gambling housea on their | A number of mine inspectors from spected lists" was that, though the| various anthracite districts are assist- Places were fitted up, no gambling had | !n® in tho Work of rescue. OMclala of | 1 train of five compartment . Sada AWS been going on In either of them so far | the company said to-lay that Tosheaky ali filled with prominent New ¥ f ECLA as Laney and Tierney fad been able} May be taken from the mine by nigaie | society folk, will leave the Pennsy! 1 ‘ preety to find out. ‘The excuse, the Commis. | falls Lrogrees Is slow, < thero ig con-| tation at G08 this afternoon for the ews ral y [sioner waid, did not impress him, but| Sant danger of additional fails Jf coal| New Grenebrier Hotel, at White Sulphu EHocou Si id he was not able to break through tt and | and det Springs, W. Va. The party will be in “ax We. W The pubite v4 P sar re he Plaza ATi THOURDE VE bent Wiaitarthe Tasmectee Nida ieliz ten tb case hae at) ohare of Fred Sterry t beat : ac ousands of people to the mines | Hotel. mag ene Cemtain she Renal ‘of she During the uy penis Nered about! ‘The Greenbrier, also under Mr. Sterry's aes 7 the deserted breast from which tne! management, Was opened to the publ IN ALL ITS F cH Aer aul reas he J Porn HR pscuers are working and It Was necen- thin week, The hotel, costing $1.10), hang ron Liven conPLAINS ] ' Headquatters for. a ( vl! sary for Mine Inspector O'Donnell to| ts sald to be the most elaborately deco BAGUADIAES: (00 PAS LERCHO ‘S| order the space aroind the shaft royed| rated and furnished resort hotel tn fall safes Seve been thined ocr to] oem lapiericss | tne property rk. The Comaisstoner ‘ | wants t » what ty in them and any “Every ‘Knock of Opportunity Is a Boost! a Some say: “Opportunity knocks but once in a litetime.” But you ought to read World ads! They show thousands of ope portunities every day to work, hire, buy, sell, rent, etc, under the most favorable conditions, 155,138 WORLD ADS. LAST MONTH -- 81,601 More Than the Herald, Opportunity offers that make for economy, prosperity and the manifold comforts of life. You Will But Let Them. 4

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