The evening world. Newspaper, October 3, 1913, Page 2

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Ooo bb obese WASALLHEGAVE "ai Man Sued for Divorce Tells on} Stand of Mectings With Co-respoident. SISTER ACCUSES WIFE. Says She Saw Her Kiss a Nobleman’s Foot in Switz- erland Hotel. (Ppectal to The Kvening World), $ WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Oct, 3—Har- $ 14 D. Johnston, manager of the Colo-| 2 nial Life Insurance, who ts being sucd for an absolute divorce by his wife, Mre. Harriet L. Johnaton, in which her stepmother, Mra. Anna Richardeon, | named as co-respondont, resumed the witness stand this morning before Bu- preme Court Justice Arthur 8, Tomp- kine and denied he had ever hugged Mra, Richardson. In telling of his friendship for Mra, Richardson, Mr. Johnston on cross-ex- amination told how Mrs. Richardson visited his flat at One Hundred and Geventy-ninth street the day before Thanksgiving inst year and loft him « turkey, @ roasted chicken and the gen- eral makings ef a good time, When] > asked “Who ate this meal?” Mr. John: | J ston sald: “I did alone. , “Wasn't Mrs. RicharJzon there?" “No, no.” * Mrs. Richardson, the co-respondent, | was in court to-day for the firat time. | > Bhe 1s a pretty brunette and wore al» Stylish fall suit, Her husband, Mr. e Richardson, sat some distance from his | &¢*-#-44%-8-4- woeverereereer: 890-060-9-40-000 wife, but there was no sign of recogni- Sn ANS LDP TOWN 5 WORSHPERS HURT DURNG IEMISH SERVE (Continued from First Page.) Mr. Johnston was asked these ques. sat aay tran.” | DYNAMITE BANK SAFE, Q. Did you ever hug Mrs. Richardson A. No, never did. Q. Did you ever k' her? A. Yes, Ka ] IN the same as I did my sist Q. Where did you meet Mra, Richard- won generally? A, At apartment, stores, inseam terminals and otner places. Q. Who made the proposition that you |Capture One man and Use meet her? A. Either one of us, Q. Did she call you on the phone? A.) Hing as Shield Against Gun ‘Yea, quite often. . » . Did have any business ensage- TE , ae Weak coasie vee a bone thls Fire—Wound Marshal. Woman two or three Umes a week? A. No. @. You generally separated oo Mra. LITTLE ROCK, Ark, Oct. %—Holding Richardson could be at her hotes at/at bay the residents of Ful on the 0 P.M.? A. Oh yes. Iron Mountain ratirond in i @. That was ao she could be home in Younty « onday, #ix band bed time to meet her husband? A. 1 don't | OUntY early to-day, six bandite rohbea know. the bank of Fulton of $0 in nnies, Mr, Johnston declared that hie r after trying in vain to dynamite the tlons with his wife became somewhat |!ner "doors to the bank vault, City) trained inst year when hia wife came | Marshal Tom Logan of Fulton, waa from Europe after being abroad for |*H0t and neriously wounded, robe Date ithe, bers used a citixen, whom they had} “" walked down the gangplank 10 |captu to shield them from. bullets i et,” anid the witnens, “and whee ie Ser Wacaho inds are scours 2 tebk off my hat to speak to sevdral | it aaaness Jn purmuit of the bandits Jadies my wife told me in he awant 1 phe robbery ‘almost duplicates In. de- Volos to put my hat on and cover UP i iaiy the dynamiting and robbing of the BS crisis neanton, Mea,| PUM State Bank at Dardanelle, Ark jeder Six exp! lyn Weeks, slater of Mr. Johnston, rit aagiycerine were heant bythe ree Sook the witnes stand in favor of her deity as the robbers attempted to blow brother and testified to the friendliness \ t hawk “ merase Gchratcn Enh an Ttllan ope the Inner doors the ba vault eo Sefore Roink to the bank the men had| Mebleman while she was travelling in| oven into a hardware store and stolen rifles and ammunition. Micctkeen Wadovice Roc ek, at Vee | THE explosions awake the eltizens, vey, Bwitserland, by Mra, Johnaton, The | 8° trmed and hurried to two noblemen stopped at the wame hotel | Ne hank A Satan eae Reeet@ Sire, Joumston Gad coon, armed sentriew a aks and tn empting to cayeure one of them was GAVS SHE SAW HER HUGGING) One rent the eltizens opened \ NOBLEMAN. fire on the bandite and a pitched vattle| On Easter Day, in 191, Mrs. Weeks aid the two Itallun noblemen, Mr Sobueton and herseif, drank wine ee hans is ha up ana | EWOLISH WOMAN WINS song. Gwitzeriand, the witness declared GOLF SEMI-FINALS _ she eaw Mrs. Johnston sitting on the lap of the Marchese, ‘Walle in st, Croix, Ora, Weeks teati- | Miss Dodd Meets Miss Harvey To- jawed thi ol 3} Mas slaithune hive bo wee te gra morrow in Final for the dad injured his foot while bobsled- Canadian Title, Ging. In describing the foot kissing ep!- eode in St. Croix Mra, Weeks said: “The| MONTREAL, Oct Marchese was lying in bed and Mrs, |Dodd, the English champlon, de} Johneton was massaging the foot. Then | Miss Florence Scott of Hamliton, the Marquis ‘Kiss the foot and |in the semifinals of the Ca make it wi women's golf championship tournament “And she kissed 11," continued Mra, [to-day by 7 un and 6 to pay. Mine leeks,“ Yodd'a opponent in the final to he played beg ‘And then the nobleman sald} ic morow will be Mes Florence Hare b py ; vey of Hamilton, who defeated Miss 2“ You kiss tt, too, und I ald ‘I will) Violet Pooisy, Victoria, B.C. by win not, I don’t have to do as she does." |ying the « pith hole after the game ‘Tbig made the Marchese and his cousin, [had been all mine 8! hy the Duke, angry. “taser when J knocked at the Mar- | BABY BORN, 1N | AUTOMOBILE, chese’s door I found Mrs, Johnston in his rourn smoking a cigarette.” Stork Wins in Race F a s mn to Hospt CLAMP FOR “LID CLUBS.’ TIPTON, Int., Oct 3—Pauline Mas in the automobile of Dr, M Leals Crusade. a Against “Lid Clubs” in Bt. Louls, by filing quo warranto proceedings againat| W. ‘omen in the stat the St. Louis Club, the Missouri A Club and the Brewery Workers’ Associa- ton of Missouri, to compel them to show why their charters should not ve re- voked, The St, Louls Club Is a social organisation of wealthy St. Loulsans and the Missouri A. C. is a social and logist at Quarantine and athletic club combined. siding authorities in the U @ince the Bunday and 1 o'clock clos-| stutes on cont Jaws bave been enforced in St. Louis|his home at } so-called “lid clubs” bave|Island, to-day. ae Bla gad Daca care old, train and got off here. end Dr, Edwin Candee Ballwin __ THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, | OCTOBER 8, 1919. HUBBY DECLARES [Jury of Rich Men Hearing the Case of Schmidt, ASISTERLY KISS Who Slew Girl, and a Snapshot of the Priest To- Day ‘The Bvening World by a Stas Photographer.) —T. P. Shonts, Vincent Astor, eaten ie Lal td Weir, Edwin Marston, Charles Dickery, ree eee eee ‘ieeitiny Photographea f From Left to Right 2 HEHE CoP ELE PIDDVHOPID SHE GOGIST PPP PIGFAD HSE FT PTH HG 99 96-4 a een ‘RANCHER HELO HERE MAYOR WON'T AS GHOUL, FIREBUG Grave, Burning Body in House to Get Insurance. His Letter Reproaching Wife for Marrying Hired Man Leads to Arrest. | | Arson, grave robbery and attempting |to defraud a life Insurance company are charged against Arthur F. Hughes, a rancher, of Forsyth, Rosebud County, | Mont,, who was arrested in a Park Row saloon this afternoon by Detectives Len- non and Brown. The gist of the accu- sation against Hughes is that, with the Assistance of his wife and a farm hand named Elliott, he stole from the grave the corpse of a rancher named Craig, Placed it in his own home, set the house on fire, skipped out and left his wife to collect $5,000 insurance on the ground that the charred corpse found in the ruins of the house was his own, Hughes admitted his identity at Police Headquarters. He also admitted that he knew the corpse cé Craig had been placed in his house before the house was set on fire, But he denied stealing the cofpse or setting the house on fire or profiting by the transaction. FEARS LYNCHING IF TAKEN BACK WEST. “If I'm taken back there charged with robbing Craig's grave,” sald Hughes, “they'll tear the Jail down to take me out and lyngh me." The ranch house of Hughes was com- Pletely destroyed by fire on the 6th of last March. Mrs. Hughes and Elliott, the farm hand, swore that the un- recognized remnants of a human form found in the ruins were those of Hughes and that he had been burned @ similar view and Mrs. Hughes put in @ claim for $8,000 life insurance with the Montana Life Insurance Company. The case took on great interest for the insurance people when, a month after the fire, Mra Hughes married Elliott. She and Elliott were promptly WITT FPOPHC DDE DD OLE! FETT was hardly atanding room any place in llery men and wom- close packed, their heads bowed In pray: WORSHIPPERS “SEE SECTION OP GALLERY FALL, a few minutes « o'clock when the intoning of the interrupted by @ sharp crack, Startled folk on the floor raised thelr | heads in time to see a section of the thirty feet long on the south- east corner of the hall suddenly drop on the heads of the scores inassed under it. Instantly the: had gone down with the flooring of the 'y vainly strove to get their feet under them and make their way to the doors behind. Those beneath the mass of broken beams and splintered chairs screamed to those on top of them to for thelr agitation forced downward with greater weight the heavy pile of wreckage. Rabbi Tannenbaum called to his peo- ple to be quiet and not to crowd to the doors lest there be a crush there and For a time the congre- Bation was deaf to his appeals, and omen trampled each other and those pinned to the floor in thelr efforts to get out to the street. One of the first fear maddened wor- to worm his way out of the hed to the Aearest fire alarm nd turned in @ call for the en- Trucks Nos, 26 and 13 and En- kines Nox, 53, 91 and 68 responded to The passage of ‘he fire appa- ratus through ¢he streets but added to tho excitement, 2,000 PERSONS GOOLDLD9O9 0900000000 0-6-9- 14-0 9-9406-06.9-9940-490-99O09-0000 KELLOGG MIGHTY SORE A WEARIN’ 0’ THE GREEN Pot of Paint Tumbles on Him From Trust Building and Suit and Temper Are Ruined. More things than stocks dropped in,the financial district this afternoon, others was a quart can of green paint, which fell from the roof of the Unton Company's bulding at No. Broadway, struck a cornice one floor above the street ana spilled its entire contents upon Daniel F. Kelogs, former financial editor of the Sun publicity representative for J, P. Mor- SAVES ANOTHER BOY, BUT WILL DIE HIMSELF Brooklyn Lad Fatally Hurt Push- ing Child from Auto's Henry Kaufman, eleven years old, of 60 Graham avenue, Brooklyn, who was so badly hurt in his effort to save the life of Howard Ott, six, of No, 2 that his death is hourly Zz Driggs avenu' expected. The Ott boy w the street before his home. mobile of Dr, Henry Seeley of No. Tenth street was approaching, driven When the machine awerved to avold (he child the youns- ster became confused and ran in the wrong direction, Kaufman reached tno boy in time to bush him out of the way, but was him- Mr. Kellogg, suddenly illuminated by eye-burning color, had to dodge into the nearest haven of refuge, which happen- ed to be Eberlin’s, until an office bo; sult of clothes, Mr, Kellogs’e remarks anent the cir- cumstance had no bearing on things many be hurt, there remain knocked down, brought him another by Policeman Ho was taken to a drug Brody and was there attended by Dr, Watta of St. ‘ine's Hospital. His right leg is broken, his face and hands are cut and bruised and he is seriously injured internally, ELEANOR SEARS PAYS $25 AUTOMOBILE FINE Warrant Held Over Her Three Days Fourth street station, the whole neigh: | On Charge of Running Car With- borhood was given up to frenmy and fully 2,000 persons jammed the ap to Clairmont Hall, Corcoran and his t) — MAJOR GEORGE MERRICK, ENGLISH AVIATOR, KILLED Army Aviator, Decorated for Brav-' ery in War, Meets Death When Aeroplane Collapses, SALISBURY, England, Oct. 3.—Major George Chariton Merrick of the British army aviation corps was killed while flying over the military ground at Sali bury Plain to-day. denly collapsed and crashed to the arth and the aviator was picked up dead, Major Merrick who was an artillery officer was forty-one years old and one of the most distinguished of the young- er officers attached to the general staft of the British army. war service in British India ard W Africa and had been decorated by t the distinguished Serv! y in the field. ——— GOES DOWN WITH FLOOR. JAM THE AP- PROACHES TO HALL. When these were followed by four am- lem and Mount Bina! » one of them filled with re- 1» from the East One Hundred and bulances from I =e out Bay State License. SALEM, Mass. eare, society belle, paid a fine of $25 in the Salem court to-day for operating an auto, sald to be Harold Vanderbilt's, without @ Massachusetts license, A warrant for her arrest had been !n the hands of Chief of Police Woodbury © days and he gave jast chance” to appear to-day be- fore making an arrest. BLOODHOUNDS TRAIL HER, THEN GIRL CONFESSES She Clipped He Her Ow Own Hair on! Then Blamed Two Men—Want- | ed to Attract Attention, © &—Police oMctals to-day used blood- | hounds to trace the person who clipped | the long auburn hair of Mise My Hamilton, a fourteen-year-old schoo! Tho bloodhounds followed the trall to Misx Hamilton and ashe con-| foamed the decd, Previously she had declared that her halr had been antpped by two men: ev her hair ino} attract ‘attention, Misa Muriel His aeropian through the press to reach the entrance ‘Then It was as much as a platoon of police could people back and the ambulances ‘Tho rumor that @ shocking accident |°f Beverly for t had resulted in great loss of life during | her & eervices quickly emptied other halls and lofts filled with celobrants in the vicinity, and these, too, peut upon the police i: > with frantic stablish @ line about He had seen much the Clairmont “a temporary dressing station ae ee tablished by the ambulan jurgeo! on the sidewalk outske the hall ane ‘arried oF assisted | there all who + out of the hall recetved firet aid, majority of those thus tended insisted going to their homes. 836 Bast One Hundred and Second street, Who euffered internal in- | Juries, was the only one considered very tilda, a girl baby with blue eves and Big Organisations Included tn St.| weighing eight pounds, was born toe : V. ture in Park Row, Workmen overloaded with sand and cement the temporary wooden floor on the third floor of the new bullding at No. 33 Park Row to-day and a section of the planking about t of Jerseyville, I, Neweomber. The mother, Mrs. Paul ST. LOUIS, Mo,, Oct. B—Cireuit At-| Marshall, axed nineteen, wae on her torney Harvey to-day opened what way from Noblesville, Ind, to Mont- characterised @ “war of extermination” |morencie, and was taken J on the were 30 men at work on the floor but only one went He ts Dominick Monasonl, of 162 Sullivan street and his in- After the last of the injured had been removed and the morbid crowds were | pushed away Capt, Corcoran started an Investigation to fx the respon n saw the young condition and called Dr. News hurrying her to a born, The building is being Polhemus Construction Company on! [the site of Johnny Meenan's famous |a section of which was virtually @ had fallen away, portion of ® second floor, left intact during remodelling of the building and supported only by thin jron rods depending from the celling of the third floor, or ceiling of the hall: cnarme of the Job, sald there but that the foreman of the overcatimated thi rum diseases, died at Wadsworth, Staten arrested, cherged with murdering Hughes and burning his body in order to collect the insurance money. They are still in jail. It appears that whatever part Hughes might have played in the plot he hadn't agreed to the marriage of the farm hand and his wife, use had come direct to New York from Montana and was working here as a longshoreman when he heard of the marriage. Forgetting that he was supposed to be dead, Hughes sat down and wrote his wife @ reproachful letter. In due course of time the letter fell into the hands of Sheriff William Moses of Rosebud County. The Sheriff wrote to Deputy Police Commisioner Dougherty, inclosing a copy of the letter and a photograph of Hughes. The photograph showed Hughes with one hand—the left—on his chest and it was an enormous hand. Lennon and Brown were sent out to pick up the Montana fugitiv LONGSHOREMAN FOUND IN PARK ROW 8ALOON, At the time Hughes wrote the letter he was working on the Clyde Line piers, But he had disappeared from there when the detectives took up his trail, They sleuthed along the wat front for some time before they landed @ clue, and the clue led them to the saloon in Park Row. Hughes entered the place about 1 o'clock. He ordered @ drink, and the detecti noted that the suspect had the largest pair of hands they had ever eeen and feet to match. Anticipating trouble, they nabbed him securely, but Hughes of- fered no resistance and readily ad- mitted his identity. Faurot had told him what was charged against him. Then he admitted know- Craig was a neighbor of Hughes as neighbors go out in Rosebud County, where ranch houses are miles apart. ‘The widow of Craig collected $1,000 lite insurance from the Montana Insurance Company and buried the body in a grave on her ranch. It was not until after Elliott, the farm hand, and Mrs Hughes had been arrested that the di covery waa made that Craig's body h been stolen, It did not take the author! ties long to assemble the fa: ing the Hughes fire after t! Katrina Anderson to Lawrence Kip! Bonner, grandson of Robert Bonner, the publisher. Mr, Bonner was gradu- ated at Princeton in 1911 an the banking house of 6pencer, Co. It was tl that he met And @ stenographer. Thelr en- gagement was announced The weddi quiet. HAVE YOU TRIED IT? the worshippers be Jearned that the gallery had been Ay overcrowded, the planking on which he piled le wae lorty-e ae | Quantities of material for con-| 4 Fine Salad D fa Fa within a, = Fr i Makes Hot and Cold Meate Tasty. ing by adding vinegar Grocery Masts UPSET REFORMS AND D SWMOLER MADE BY KE BY GAYNOR Westerner indi of Robbing] All Night rear Will Be} Granted Only After Rigid Inquiry. WAS IN PARK ROW CAFE.|LID TO STAY AS IT IS.) Cabaret Shows Must Cease at 1 A. M,, but Places May Not Close. Mayor Kline iasued a atatement from hin office @hortly before 1 o'clock to- day which he saff states his position as far as all night licenses are con- cerned “definitely and finally." The Mayor had talked freely and at length on the subject to the newspaper men, but preferred that he be quoted only on such statements as he would issue from his office, The Mayor's statement waa drawn forth by an article printed in a morn+ ing newspaper alleging that the town was to be thrown wide open, So many applications had come in for all night licenses that word had gone around a lot were to be granted. Th fhe Mayor says, will not be the case. He says, however, that those that may be proved to be necessary will be pa: upon after a favorable report by the in his sleep. A Coroner's Jury held} © Be rai The marriage is announced of Miss | month. | statement in full follows: ‘his is all rot. I have never said anything or done anything which would Justify such a statement. I have never y of the people to whom this ays all-night licenses are to be ranted. “I have seen a few men who came to intercede for a license for one or two places, and I have in every case aaid to them most positively that no new licenses would be granted until a careful examination had been made by the Police Department and I had re- ed @ certificate showing that the character of the place and of the ap- Plicant was beyond reproach and that there was an actual necessity for the Jon of the all-night restaurant in that neighborhood. “I have no intention whatever of changing the attitude which I expressed when I became Mayor of carrying out Mayor Gaynor's policy with regard to these places, “So fares the hotels and restauraiite are condgened where cabaret shows are carried 9, even if one or two additional all-night Meensés are granted to such places after examination, the caperey perteemence.must stop at 1 o'cloc! This is 6 positive rule and will be en- foresd, “This whole atory ‘e most unfair. The veiled imputation would be insulting if Any one who a cent to anybody to get one of these licenses would be a ehump. “The lcense granted for the New York roof garden 1g for to-night only. and was granted for the purpose of permitting @ complimentary dinner to ex-Preakient Roosevelt prior to his de- parture to South America, “When I came into offi twenty all-night licens Cation, ave Those expired on Sept. $0 and hav. been renewed. I have granted only two others, both of which are in Brooklyn, hi 4 They Cafe Raub, at Nos. 10 Nevins street, and Max Schneide! No, 686 Atlantic avenue, both of which were carefully examined in accordance with the policy which I have just atated,’ ———— Sweden's Crown Prince Coming Here. STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Oct. 3.— Crown Prince Gustave Adolph of Swe- den, according to present arrangement intends to visit the Panama-Pacific Ex- Position at San Francisco in 1915 and afterward to make a tour of the United States. The Crown Prince was mar- Special for Friday, Oct. Ce CHOCOLATE, FRUIT” AND ‘Beco! 4 Li J MILK CHOCO! ASSORTED Every fruit tha; th just mow, Peaches, re ries, Pineapples, Malaga Grapes, eten feet visnsed in cream, then ed | Dl CHAS AWAOLE a3 Ge dt St. } 83 Rerteuegs: | eaver LA Ya LEATHER GOODS AT POPULAR PRICES This Week’s Special MOROCCO 200 PIN SEAL HAND BAGS | STEST DERIGN, 8.00; SPECIAL FORMERLY $1 [MPoRTED rt jermam silver purses formerly 1431 BROADWAY ~ Sav. Your Safety "Razor Blades We re-char pen’ edge, at x» tie on Tol el eed cutomatically e neva, exchesive, process. Quality work. Prompt cervies. Sa oe Cutlery one Free. Bice ry Jonn’e Finca Broekiys. Interment at Calvary. REHOR—at Jithe temas OT Wrekott t. Manton TEENOM He wes 6 of Cooper Intermational Union of America, Local No 60, N. alee the Holy Name Society of St. Paul's Roman Catholo Church; he wae bora in County Wert Ire! ané io oar- vived by @ widow and two daughters, Mina and May. Interment ce Cometery. RAY—Suddeniy, on Thureday, Oot. 3, at his residence, 128 Rogers axe., ALEX- ANDER RAY. Notice of funeral hereaéter, HANDS UPI The greatest thief tn fiction Is Are ser: Lupin; Just as Sherlock Holmes A. fiction's chief detective. Arsene Lupin’s almost miraculous skill in eluding the law and his utter lack of caution in getting into danger have formed the theme of Maurice Leblanc’s most famous stories. The newest and by far the best series of Leblanc’s Arsene Lupin stories is just out. It “The Confessions of Arsene Lupin.” . “The Confessions of Arsene Li will dood serially in The Pred World, beginning Wednesday, Oct, & Remember the date, It means’ much Ho refused to talk until Inspector | Tied to Princess Margaret of Connaught to every lover of a good story. Special for Saturday, Oct. 4th VAN. CREAMED ALMONDS— In the preparation ef this teeth= some delicacy. we take the Al- im ta fection, aad richeat “ereatics a wast pee put up v a vet mare Bay: Sepa 54 BARCLAY STREET Corner West Broadway 29 CORTLANDT ST, Corner Cr | Street Park Row and HBAth Atreet end Brookivn Our Stores Open Saluriiay E Between Beekman & Spruce Sts, ae W. ( ore 2ith STREET “a ie) Hal Bie Just East of ith Avenue Comet Conte Sent" corned That PSE BiStirn, Jat hors sey REET ris $1 Open at Sy Peres vat 206 BROADWAY Corner Fulton Street af’, NASSAUSTREET

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