The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1913, Page 3

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$700,000 IN GEMS LEAD TO ARRESTS ‘Two Men Held in Hess W Thats That} Startled Society Folk at arragansett. —_—— “LAWYER AIDES SLEUTHS. Hunt for Looters Started by Agent of the Harriman Estate. Despite the skeptical attitude of Dep- uty Police Commiastoner Dguherty, who reluctantly arrested James Stewart and Hastings Wiley Mason on the aM- davits of two private detectives charm: ing the men with complicity in the $200,000 Jewel robberies at Newport and Narragansett Plor last summer, the Prisoners were held in %,00 bail each by Magistrate Barlow in the West Side equrt to-day when the two detectives told him their remarkable story, The detectives, former police detec- tive sergeants, James M. Armstrong and Daniel F. Finn were put on the vase by Charles Tegethof, agent of the Harriman estate, when the late E, H. Harriman's daughter, Mra. Charles Cary Rumsey was robbed of $75,000 of Jewels at Narragansett Pler last July. Armstrong and Finn to-day produced in court aMdavits tending to snow a #trong case against the two men inder arrest LAWYER CLAIMS HE SAW STOLEN JEWELS. One of the afidavita is from Hervert RN. Pinkham, former Judge of the Supeeior Court of Dututh, Minn, and & court practitioner, Pinkham lives at No. 189 Clermont avenue, He has a desk in the office of a lawyer friend at No. 20 Broad street. According to Pinkham, he defended Mason, who is a fireman in an apart- ment building at No. 6 West Ninet seventh street, & year or so ago on a forgery oharge. About six weeks ago, Pinkham tellx, Mason came to see him downtown and the two went to « table in the rear of George Lommell's cate and restaurant at Broad and Beaver utreets. Mason produced a large quantity of Jewels, Pinkham relates, and told him they were the proceeds of the summer resort robberies. He wanted Pinkham to take the whole lot, worth $200,000 he said, to Seattle and dispose of them. Pinkham says he refused, but took Mason to his home that evening, when Mason showed the Jewels to Mrs. Pink- ham, he says, and asked her to take them out west and dispose of them. This is supported in an affidavit from Mra. Pinkham. The detectives also have an aMdavit from ommell that he eaw Mason spread ® large quantity of Jewelry on the table in his cafe the day he was talk- ing with Pinkham, GEMS IN NEWARK VAULT, DE- TECTIVES BELIEVE. Mason, according to Pinkham, told him that Stewart, a janitor at No. #0 Manhattan avenue and a man with a Police record, had committed the bur- Blarien and turned the jewels over to Mason for distribution, Stewart, when arrested, said that Mason had told him he had the jewels, but thought it was Just a boast on Mason's part According to Detectives Armstrong and Finn, Mason is supposed to have put the Jewels in a safe deposit vault in Newark, They are trying to locate the vault before the two prisoners come up for a hearing Monday, oeseeneentpreeeremes F 10 Storles to Death. , George Zasuro, a laborer, was instant. Vy killed to-day by fal through @ shaft in a new building at No, 108-110 Weat Twenty-fifth street, He was hoisting planks when a pulley broke and carried him from the tenth floor landing. Dr. Kutil of New York Hospital pronounced him dead, Zavaro DISPLAYED IN CAFE | extent that hand. tal ternity which depr telleotual life, i ton stortes | TM Jcome victims natal infanticide, T asked hisn to ex a teacher may be absent from duty to was married and lived at No, Han- vock street, Should Not Be Perriitted to Be Mothers: SENTHOMENO a “These 800,000 reasons are the 800,000 children in the! schools whose studies are interrupted by the teacher’s absence, and who, while she remains away, must be taught by some one with a sub- stitute’s license unfit for immediate service.” Dr. Wile of the Board Says on the Other Hand: ‘‘Motherhoed cases constitute a very small per- centage of the absences of teachers. It is the height of folly to dismiss a woman with years of experience to put a greenhorn in her place.” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. By a vote of 27 to 6 the Board of Education of the city of New York Tm connection with this fight im which the issue was the penalisa- tion of maternity, it is interesting to mote how the five women mem- bers of the Board of Bducation voted. Miss Olivia Leventritt was favored Mrs. Peizotto’s retention. Of the four other women, Miss Draper and Mrs. Bamberger voted for Mrs. Peixzotto, Mrs. Alice Lee Post and Mrs. Ella W. Eramer ‘voted against her. It t@ also interesting to realize that by the statement of Abraham Stert man of tie Committee on Schools and leader of the majority which declared against motherhood, @ teacher may be absent from duty cause of neurast ING OPINIONS. Yesteriay I talked with Mr. Stern and with Dr. Wile, who represent the opposing opinions of the members of the Board of Education. 1 pointed out to Mr. Stern that nature haa penalized motherhood to auch an it Is quite unnecessary for any board of education to add to its pa, and I told him that in my opinion the effect of such action as the New York bourd has taken against teachers who are wives and will be to limit motherhood to the men- inferior, since no Intellectual woman will sentence herself to a ma- ves her not only of her means of livelihood but of her in- In the primitive woman the instinwt of motherhood may be so strong as to override all obstacles, but in the highly developed modern type, the woman with a working brain, the racial inatinct {8 not #o omnipotent. ization of motherhood means either that superior women will refrain from marriage or will marry and be- and accomplices of pre- have the measles but must be dis- charged if she remains away to have @ | have measles or muinps or neurasth Chatr- jementary be- ia, Measles, mumps, mastolde, scarlet fever, whooping cough or any known malac ‘she cannot «to and hope to retain her means of livelihood is to have a baby. RESENTATIVES OF OPPOS- The only thing mothers employer ta reapansihle for h Ployee's theft because he does not our action in making motherhe to me Just why a profe: inspiration and relax: decided this week that the maternity of a married woman teacher is a crime and dismissed Mrs. Bridget Peixotto of Public School No. 14, who absented herself from her duty on Feb. 3 last—a little more than two months before the birth of her child. Mrs. Peixotto has been a teacher in the service of the city of New York for eighteen years. In two years she would have become en- Utled to retirement on a pension, and during the eighteen years of her service to the city part of her sal- ary has been paid regularly into the pension fund. By the action of the Board of Education, therefore, the city of New York undertakes to do what the officers of any insurance com-! pany are forbidden by the law to do —it retains money for which it has given no equivalent value. In the years of her connection with the public school system Mrs. Peixotto has never been accused of inefficiency or neglect of duty. In eighteen years she has been absent just eighty days. These facts were given to me by Dr. Im 8, Wile, who led the fight in the board against Mra. Peixotto's dismissal. baby. His reply and the views of the minority of the board as expressed by Dr. Wile follow —+— MR. STERN TELLS WHY HE’S AGAINST.TEACHERS BECOMING MOTHERS. ou ask why a teacher may without fear of dismissal, but must » discharged If she hana baby? T answer that measels, mumps, ete., are the act of God and a teacher is assumed to have incurred them during the exercise of her function asa teacher, Having a baby, on the other hand, is @ private function, and does not come within the cognizance of the Board of Education, except as it entails absence and neglect of duty on the t of the teacher “The are 8,00 reasons why married women teachers should not be permitted to become mothers and continue their service to the city, These are the children in the sohools, whose studies are interrupted by the teacher's absence and who, while she remains a must be taught by some one with | a substitutes Hoense—a license which is given to women who have failed in their examinations and who are there- fore presumably unfit for immediate service. You say they are lable to the same interruption in their studies if the teacher has the measles. True, but we have by-laws which provide for absence for such a cause as measles, "may be presumed t the act of God. You say that a ohild js also the act of God and that & teacher whose religion tells her that the avoidance of childbirth ia a sin must commit that ain If she wants to remain in the e: Education, RULING DOES NOT PROMOTE RACE SUICIDE. “My answer ts that this matter t tween the teacher her own cona- clence, and does not ¢ rn the Board. It would be as logical te say that an him large wages as to contend that grounds for dismissal promotes race suicide, You must realize that teach- ing, unlike writing or painting, Is not fon wherein a woman finds fon In the work! Following is a list of aixteen of the &% first-cahin passengers on the Volturno, all of whom were bound for New York except Marriana Mrzygod, who was bound for Lackawanna: BUBIN REIMER, aged 20. MABRBIANA MESYGOD, aged 17. JEOSEL FARBER, aged 15. MODE TEPPER, aged 16. BERL TEPPER, aged 14 EMMA TEPFES, aged FABER TEPPER, aged 8. LBIBE SABFIN, aged 54. MICHAEL SABFIN, aged 47. ABMANDE ANTOING, aged 11. BEIX BIDENGEI, vie Halifez, Officers of Volturno. See W. FEDDON, day wireless operator. ©. 3, PENWINGTON, night wireless operator. — STEERAGE PASSENGERS BOUND FOR NEW YORK. F @ROSSMAN, BRUCHE. GROS GROs GROSSMAN, F' FREIME, o OTTO, PAULINA, ZGASLOWSK!, BEILA ZASLOWSKL RU SURANSKY LENCHIKY, IE LENCHIKY, ESTER, MAN, CHANE MAN, DWOIRE, TO, KATERINA, HEL, ABRAHAM CHBID, WOLF, SHEID, MARIAN, DIETSCHEID, CHANE. BALTASKA, HAMD, AN RABINOWITZ, PID CHASE, LA, "HES KKRAMS, MOSE. FELFHAM, LEISER, FEIFEHAM, HERSH, DEMETER, ROS BERG, MARY JO! MARYCS, MARY, LASOVIK, IBEL. LASOVIK, SCHMEN, DANONC, MAGDALENA, , Jobe, DANONC, BRONISLAWA, PLLAK, PANIE, PLLAK, MIKE. PLLAK, GOLDER, PLLAK, CHAME, FISSCHER, Joel ZADWEROSINA, NATALIA, ZADVEROS IGNATZ ZADVEROSINA, MICHAEL, ZADVEROSINA, LAWREN( ZADVEROSINA, PAUL. GIBOL KY, JAKOL, » ABRAHAM MAN, DAVIL) 0, AMIELA HOLDIN, ABRAMAM, STT, JOSE. ARD, WRLWEL. WIERARD, RIFKE WIRBAKD, ‘ WIEBARD, RARPNSKY, DAVID. Ik, TWOIKE | RELO, KAT RILANOVSKY, JOSIE. RUVIN, Eater. RITSIS, DAVID, RILOSINSKY, THE EVENING WORLD, Statement of Abraham § SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 800,000 Reasons Why School Teachers moan ‘tern of the Board of Education. . “4 os a4 ete et at ee ose awe } SULZER JURORS 10 uscuss CASE Will Meet Monday ¢ and Decide Fate of Governor Before They Adjourn. HIS EGOTISM UNSHAKEN Legislature Is Summoned for Tuesday to Hear Impeach- % ment Verdict. Samuel M. Williams (@ta8 Correspondent of The Rvesing ‘Worla). ALBANY, Oct. 11.—Seneatio: have been the developments of te: Sulzer's trial, even more sharp and dramatic scenes are planned for! next week when the climaz of the impeachment will be reached. Following immediately upon the con- clusion of the argumenta of counsel last night there was a scattering of Senators to thelr homes for the over-Sunday | ceam, All wanted time for study of the | evidence, for reflection on the arguments and some, perhaps, for political con- a AGRAWAM STE RN nerve-wearing |! fu! t has been my exper-d teachers who wish to continue in the service. told m@ that they prefer to stop working, b husbands insist that The main concern Of! the inart, | no ot help the probles New York, and these are,| from its moral asp tter served by the employ- ment of unmarried teachers, a rule, are more efficient greater concentration on ¢ has been no legal decision on this point, and we will be glad to have The Board was sustained in its ruling against the appointment or pro- n of married women and we ex- in this present be sustained could gt off who are married or who will be mur- ried. —_—~— DR. WILE DEFENDS MOTHERHOOD, SAYING IT IS “AN ACT OF GOD.” yphoid, scarlet fever and many of other causes of absence permitted by the Board of Education are not the act of God but the act of negligence. Motherhood in the perfectly natural con-|gayg BOARD HAS POINTED sequence of marriage and Therefore it 1s ridien- lous to say that the Hoard ts no more ¢ for penalizing mployer is lable very da! cannot do anything to prevent it. moral turpitude, ry ehtld-beearing for his em-| children, Tr ‘remain undesirable so long as the Board ot | finger of scorn at motherhood, Prenatal infant! Education haw piaced itself in that im- moral position, It in just an atupld to assume that teachers incur typhoid fever, mumps, &c.. In the em their funetions applies for leave ve sort of a teacher as drudgery tx t who resigns promptly upon her! Kind looks upon work as a dedication the schools of New York that sie should be forced from the service. FEW ABSENCES CAUSED BY MOTHERHOOD. “What Mr. Stern says about injury substitute teachers j{ are not Iminune to infection as at t to pupils through PASSENGERS AND OF FICERS ON WRECKED VOLTURN O BARBARYN, WLADYSLANE BRONIWLAWA HOGOSLAWSK 1, GEDUCH, PARASIIE GEDUCH, NIKOLAX + employed in cases of ilnexs of the reg- ular teachers. ‘They are taken from names low on the list, it Is true, Motherhood cases constitute a very small percentage of the absences of teachers, so to dismiss mothers will of the substitute! Moreover, apart} . it is the heteht | folly to dismiss a womag with years of satisfactory experience to put a er very om | Breonhorn in her place. No other State of the United States, no other country in the world has such @ reactionary regulation as that adopted by the ma- ‘jority of the members of the Board the other night. Apart from the lons to the schools of women like Mra. Peixotto, to whom the expertence of motherhood only added insight and ndernes#, we have to consider the ct of this ruling on other teachers Under the present by-lawa {t ia not @ crime for @ tencher to marry, Mother- hood at any period before the ac: birth In not a crime, In other word the day before the child ts born the pectant mother {a @ teacher in good val anding, and she can teach up to that if whe ao desires. The Board FINGER OF SCORN. "Mr Stern sald to me the other night the floor that the sight of an ex- ctant mother is very undesirable for that it must always uation t# the first to point the “To forbid motherhood surely promotes ide, and the Board of cise of as teachers as tt would to necapt motherhood ax a similar nee. Die teachers spend «few sof the twenty-four in Kehool, and ther all motherhood is netther a crime nor a disease, And that ty what the majority of the Board of Education —two married women among the num- ber—hav Brasp. BATKE, FRIEDRICH MILIKOWSKI, CHENK MILIKOWSKI, ITSIK + WICTORIA DWARD ‘K, LUDWIG WYCK, JOUN JURYOSAWA, MARIA JURYOSAWA, JOSEP JURYOSAWA, WLADYALAWA NTH, HENRIETTE NATH, BEDWIG TACSYNSNIEW, HELENA STACHYNSNIPW, BARBATA STACSYNSNIEW, LEON ATACSYNSNIBW, OCTAVAN ANTOSCHIN, WOISTLs DEK, MARIA SCMNEIDER, PISTA INEIDEM, ADAM | INEIDEM, MANDI | ZURACHOWSKI, NIKOLES ZURACHOWSKL, TAN N3KITSANK, MARIA, |} PARACHESAKSKY, BRON E PALACHESARSKY, ABKAM PARACHESARSKY, COHANE | PARACHESARSKY, JANIKIL | PARACHESARSKY, BA PARACHESARSKY, PERL ARSKY, BEILE LWEL, ALES, MARIA | KUTKOWSKI, RACHEL, These teachers have to be ANTOM. | | sultation before casting their final vot of guilty or not guilty. They will ré assemble in the Capitol at 2.90 e'clock Monday afternoon and almost imme- a ly go into executive closed doors. A late dict. Ac- 9, there will the court debate over th cording to the prenent be no interruption, hour, until they are ready to vote. Then the doors will be thrown open and ad- mittance given to the anxious watchers The clerk will cali the roll, ten times in all, once for each of the eight articles of impeachment and for the two forms of penalty provided, namely re- ™Moval from office and disbarment. There is likely to be a repetition of that other unuaual scene at the beginning of this case, when tho Assembly voted articles of Impeachment in the early hours of the morning after an all-night session. READY FOR SWIFT ACTION IN CASE OF REMOVAL. Roth houses of the Legislature have been called to meet on Tuesday In an. Ucipation of the Governor's conviction nd removal. If the verdict should be “Guilty,” there will be quick action in the Capitol. Acting-Gov, Giyan_ will take pousension of the executive offices. The People's Houre, an Gov, Sulzer was wont to call the Executive Mansion, is almont deserted to-day. All about It In an atmoaphere of uncertainty and anx- lety. There were no conferencen of emi- nent lawyers, no meetings of the kitchen inet, for the impeachment trial of the Governor is ended—al) save the ver- dict. Nothing remaina but the suspense of waiting for the re-assembiing of the court on Monday afternoon and the bal- loting that te to decide whether or not both the People's House and the ex- ecutive chamber in the Capitol must be vacated by the man who was there only @ fow months ago. Yet, otrange te cay, William Bulser is wot dewpondent nor o: cited. Mis manner, always eccen- trie; Bis sections, always unac- , conatavle; Bis amazing ogetiem, alw yo dominant, remain with him. Hin lawyers, who have performed pro- Agiour labora In his defense, have gone to thelr tomes for briet rest and re- cuperation. jon behind | sion, perhaps an all-night session, 18 anticipated while members of | rdiess of the Gnaccountatio things that he sald yor ‘ady Herrick, his chief counsel, : and old Roman 'n type, has aged years alnce the trial began. Ifarvey D. Hinman, a tall, lanky figure all wire sinews and nervy collapse, all on account of the efforta the: Governor as endeavor to assist and cq-operate with a client. . Is on the verge of made to manage and guide the nest, sincere lawyers It fo mo seoret that all who have come into contact with the Gov- ornor recently, merviee Bie own conneel, have nie strange mental seareds end that Pet geome egotiom which Mr. jerrick frankly confessed for him i yesterday's speech. Tt would be unprofessional for lawyers to reveal anything concerning relatkms of counsel and cilent, but tn the tant Aaya of the trial they openty stated that they were Inboring to ave the law, not the man, from political disgrace, Even the extre shall sald so much concernag in this Willlam Sulzer or the Governor a are with the supremacy of the law.” Mr. Merrick quoted the remark of Senator Lyman Trumbull, one of the hampiona of Andrew Johneon tn his Impeachment trial: “If you ask ma, Is thin man fit to be President, 1 won ay, No: bit T eannot vote to conv! him, mindful of my oath to be gulded by the law and he evidence,” Mr. Marshall has gone to New York for the intervening days. Mr, Hinman han retire? to his home fn Binghamtor juntit the time for the ventict, Mr. Pow has left for tis camp fn the Maine woods and will not be here at the finish, \Only Mr. Merrick, whose home ts tn Albany, remaina on the acene, Lawyers for the prosecution, too, ha for unexpected developm: FATHER IN-MAD RAGE HURLS BABY GIRL OUT Policemen in Small Room Before He's Captured. man in @ window of the recond story of the houne, child. half-cramed, was encountered. Hs Jumpet at Bracken, and the two went to the Moor, For full five minutes the four men stroggied In the little reom, and the police had to use thelr clubs before their prisoner was overpowered, the name of Joseph Rukszrwakt, twenty-five youre old, He said that he wan an Austrian, amd that he boarded With Joel Zrewaka ami nix wife at the Teresa and had ordered the boarder out of the house. Then Rukszrwakt rushed into the mM and amatching the girl | from her crib threw her out of the window. Tie child dled on the way to the | with murder |ALIENISTS cAN’ T AGREE The Dem sini Donald, Kirby and Weffendort, ay to deter santty the priest who confessed the murder of Anna A ler, tomday asiced trict-Atturney Whitman for further time for thelr examination, being unable to agree whether the priest was sane or of bis mind, the | Insane. The ri t was granted Dra Kirby and Dieftendort, KUTKOWSKI, AHIAM, RUB OWS PAIVE, +} DANI DLs KUTKOW Kt, HIWE, KUTKOWSKI, SMUT. ‘ KUTKOWSKI, JOINE. NIKATAWICS, MARIA, KIORAWOK FELIX, tHEEN [PERSTRLN, COROSCHEN, KUBUIS, FRODOR. MUAATRIN, DAVID. BURGHMAN, FLAIKA BURGHMAN, VEHONA, IN. JABLAWELKA, ROBALIA, JABLOWELK 4, HELE, JABLOWEIKA, PALA) JABLOWEIKA, VALENA, JABLOWDIKA, ANTON JABLOWEIK A, ROMAN, SKAKI sKUW UEDWE DEMITRY, ATY YUTKOWSKI, GEN YUTKOWSKI, FRANS. Steerage via Halifax, kK, NIKIT: ETRO. DMYTRO, CK JAN. {WANDOWSKI, JOSEF Il, ANTONIA, SUGA, JAN, BOUGNEGEAN, HENRI RUTKDWIOS, SIDORKA, | Thomas UL Bilis of N Third avenue, the registration the Twentieth A morning and exclain to the top of the inspect®s' table when Poltoem seventh street station entered he was pation he would give him atx mont! "| "HARD SEAT IN AIL FOR FLAG DEFENDER, A man who afterwarda sald he waa Uhs ‘Third av Kar store at ie, entered a ambly District, od. ‘Gentlemen, I'm an assistant Diatrict- thi Attorney and I want to know who tha) deuce put that American fag in the wins dow, That's not the place for it.” Jobn L. Smith of No, 29 Kant seventy- fourth street, Chairman of the Board of | Inspectors, toid the man he thought tne | law required that the flag be there, but the other replied "You don't know a He was engaged In tacking the flag n Clancy of the East Sixty. Kuo ndrinking. Hye maid) an for a bis grocery | [fem The Magistrate adjourned the tl Tuesday, remarking that 4 4 lied to him about his occu- workhouse. Thereupon Klis broke into tears. He & salesman, ne sald, a he | McKenna OF WINDOW TO DEATH Then Battles With Three Policeman Bracken was returning from duty at a Jewish synagogue at T o'clock this morning, and as he passed No. 14 First atreet, Jersey City, the body of a baby girl fell at his feet. Glancing upward, the policeman saw a Hraeken went tn a hurry call for an Ambulance and also for two policemen from the City Hull, A crowd gathered about the inanimate form of the child, whose aku!l was fractured and her tiny arma and lege broken. Bracken and the other two policemen ran into the house aa the ambulance left with the In the room the man, who neemed At the City Hall the prisoneer gave t xtreet house. The girl, Teresa, | eleven months old, he maid wan his. The latter had attempted to keep hoepital and Ruksarweki was charged | ON SANITY OF SCHMIDT! int District-Attorney Delehanty, who charge of tha prosecution of hmidt, and Detectives Cassassa and a conference this morns ing, at which the letters written by Schmidt to his victim, found in the Rradhurst avenue flat, were again gone over A woman, who says the is Mrs, Phil- lips of No. 19 Dupont et, Green- point, Long Island City, for several has has been seeking an interview with the alleged murderer in the Tombs, she claimed that she knew relatives of hia in Germany and wanted to talk with jim about them. Her request to see Schmidt was refused, Perfect biscuit perfectly produced Eternal vigilance is exercised by National Biscuit Company in the se- lection of the ingre- dients that enter into its products. a National Biscuit ° Company products are perfectly pro- tected by being packed in attractive small tins, in pack- ages withthefamous In-er-seal Trade Mark or in the famil- iar glass-front cans, a Wherever biscuit are sold, there you will find the per- fect biscuit of the National Biscuit Company. Each variety, whether known as crackers or cookies, wafers or snaps, cakes or jumbles, is the best of its kind. 6 Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT | COMPANY j Always look for that name To Restore Good Health The first thing to do is to cor. rect the minor ailments caused by defective or irregular action of theorgans of digestion and elimination. After these or- gans have been put in good working order by timely use of BEECHAM’S PILLS (The Lorgoct Sale of hey Medicine tn the Wert) better digestion results, and then the food really nouris! strengthens the body. The first dose gives relief and poh sleep, quieter nerves, and improved action of all the bodily o ans are | by an occasional use of Beecham’s | Pills, They give universal satisfac- tion and in safety, sureness and quickness of action Beecham's Pille | _ Have No blue mannish serge Le | ything about the, law, Get me # hammer and tacks, Ili jx this of $1.25 or write for MITCHELL THE TAILOR 1431 BROADWAY, New York. _ - a TT rl 4 ae

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