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VOGT WIFE GAVE. SIGN FOR ARREST. ASRNAL'S SLAYER SSays She Was in Constant Ter-| « for From Day He Mur- dered ‘Mme. Guth, LED HIM INTO A TRAP. Slayer, Who Was Shot While Resisting Arrest, Makes a Full Confession. Oscar Vogt, who ta in Bellewne Hon- Dita), suffering from @ bullet wound tn- . floted by a detective's revolver tast night, has confessed that he kitied Mme. Agnes Guth in her home, No. 8 West Bighty-fourth atreet, on Dea 8, and Vitterly bewatls the fact thet #& was hie wife who made his capture possible. Mrs. Vogt, by @ prearranged signal, warned Detective Norman Connolly that Vogt was approaching at Twenty-eeoond street and Third avenue lest night. Vogt resisted arrest and tried to slash | Connolly with @ razor. The detective fired two shots, the first at the ground The bullet bounded and landed in the thigh of George Palmer of No. 208 East ‘Twenty-first street. The second aboi struck Vogt on the side of the head and he went down. Lellevue surgeons! y he will recover. Mre, Theresa Vogt wae found by en World reported to-day at work the Kitchen of Pabet’s Casino in Harlem, where she is employed as a cook. She said sie slept soundiy last might for the first time since she read| in the newspaper that her hueband was! ® fugitive charged with the murder of| Shall Woman Propose Needn’t Be E: :barrassed, Says Miss Daviess ARRAN @\ PRESENT SHE FOLLOWS A SHYPOCRITICAL WINDING ROAD" D “Girls Must Claim the Same Right to Express Their Emotions That a Man Has, With No De- grading Hesitancy Caused by Embarrass- ment on Account of Their Sex.” “No Contortions and Contemptible Indirect Method of Attack, but a Fearless One That Is Theirs by Right, and Men’s, Though They May Not Acknowledge It.” ime, Guth. “(As goon as I road of the crime tn the| pers,” said Mra, Vogt, “I knew that) Oscar would de around. All his Ufs he has been depending on women for help/ when he wae in trouble. “I onme here trom Gwitserland six years ago and met Vogt four years @go while I wae working in a restau- in Hoboken. He posed as an ex- the Swiss army and talked a an estate to which be was He was working | later—as a cook, to play the piano halls. He waa lib- z ee arg i * a Vogt had killed my room only to I eleep nights at friend, Mire. Troger, at aooond street. 1 I knew he would Wednesday night I had things wm and I went to bed @clook there was a I went to the door. i! i : i ry & i th ® : gg8 ang us tor God's eake!’ he anid. you on my knees. I am in trouble If you help me get away eee me again, T will ili £ 3 . i ne 3 him to go away or I would for the police. I didn’t near again, bot I was afraid he was ‘watohing the house. The next morning Zelimbed down the fire escape and sent ‘ @ neighbor out for @ policerram, and tho n escorted me to the Third ave- station at Twenty-third etgeet when started to work. ‘When I got up here I told Manager Heuser and he telephoned to Deputy | Police Commissioner Doygherty that Vogt had been to my room. Then De- teotive Connolly came up and told me he had been assigned to shadow mo ays when I was on the street. 1 instructed to pull my handker- cheif from my muff and wipe my face if I saw Vogt approaching. “Everywhere I went that detective ‘as close by. I saw him on the elevat- train when I was coming downtown t and he was right behind me off at Twenty-tuird street, wn Third avenue to go tu As | approacied Twen- eet, Oscar stepped out of | 1 puiie mutt and began to wip must have recognized that Decause 1 saw him reach | pocket and whip out @ razor and then 1 saw the detective starting toward t turned and ran all the way to | Troger's. Av 1 Was crossing the | street { heard two pistol shots, Later | T heard that Oscar had deen shot and ae a prinoner in Bellevue and 1 weng | y to sleep the firat King a hos A ached Gi First ho told the dete wh him that he killed Mra Vogt, pital shot AND BLADDER Salts flushes Kidneys without injury; also neutralizes uric acid, ending Bladder irritation. Kidney and Bladder weakness results from uric acid, says a noted authority, The kidneys filter this acid from the blood und pass it on tothe bladder, where, it often remains to irritate and inflam casing @ burning, scalding sensation, set'ing up an irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging to seek relief two or three times during the night The sufferer is in constant d ; th water passes sometimes with a sensation and is very profuse: there is difficulty in voiding it. Bladder weakness most folks call it, sbecause they can't contro! urination, time h rif TRY ALITTLE SALTS IF KIDNEYS = By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “The longing, miserable, wait-until-e-comes—and why-doesn’t-he-hurry- | onl'Il-take-the-wrong-man attitude of women in general {s what I have| There are millions of lovely | All I have to do ts to go out and| find the right one, be gentle with him until he under- stands my mode of attack to be a bit different from the usual crawfish one employed by women from prehis- toric times until now, but not later; and the® domest!- taken a vow on my soul to do away with. men in the world. cate him in any way that sults me.” equality.” Since her first laughter-provoking success, “The Melting of Molly,” : She is a Southerner and an obvious bellever in the Southern philosophy which a Virginia friend once summed up for me as follows: “You jus’ don’ wan’ to take Ife too But Misg Daviess says that emotional equality is something ‘he Tinder-Box” ts a comedy written to avert Miss Daviess has been a blithesome chronicler. ser’ously!” more than a joke, and that ‘ tragedy. “Why tragedy?’ I asked. “Isn't Itt Usually possible for a woman to make Me @ man propose, even thoysh custo: forbids her taking on the Job directly?” | 1 Oavl ty t imas Miss Daviess's wide, frank forehead 28 AT her under any circumstan fe bandy | POn She's a8 sane and wholes contracted between the smooth bad! Kentucky farm where she epen even though he refused me. circle. wested In my next question, HYPOCRISY. “The tragedy is that woman stoops to This is the benign programme of the heroiue of “The Tinder-Box,” the newest book by Maria Thompson Daviess, in which the author advocates woman's right to propose, or, as she prefers to call it, “emotional | he wouldn't feel lke laughing at |_ It's delightfully easy to laugh WITH Daviess, but I can't imagine laugh- most of brown hair which make of it @ sem!-|o: the year, And as a successful author- |furmer @he ts not disqualified from pro- WOMAN PURSUES MAN WITH Posing on the grounds which I eug- A8 TO THE EFFRONTERY OF THE, Maria Thompson Vaviess wart Fox A PROPOSAL OR PROMPT HIM But we muat not do it any mor ut letting them know about it tt {an’t honoat, “Women must eolidify their love into Such @ concrete form that men can weigh and measure It, and deckle for themselves whother they want to climb en for it, or remain comfortable old bachelors, “When women proposes there will be almost no refusals, how- | In the past she has pursued man by o winding road and he has flod. In the future she will take the street called straight, and he Will either stand still or come half way to meet her. “For that matigr,"” Mise Daviess ob- Rerved, sensibly, "a man who proposes and is refused doesn't die, Then why should a woman? “When woman "LESSONS IN THE TOMBS ON HOWTO “BEAT” CHIR, Prisoner Back From Matteawan Said to Have Told Another to “Beoome Violent.” Detailed advice on “beating the alec- trio chair” by feigning insanity wan overheard by keepers in the Tombs to pass from Harrison Laux, a convict recently returned from Matt stabbed Police Sergeant MeNierney on A second avenue elevated September 28 last. ‘= on an emotional an asylum, to Frank Gorgont, who fatally train on On agcount of this, Deputy Commissioner of Corrections SONG WRITERS SN CHORUS OF WAL AT OURT RAL ‘Tell How They Paid $21 for | Music to Go With Their “Poems KELLOGG ON STAND. | Says He Took Their Money, | but He Merely Wanted | H to Aid Them. | | The divine epark, an fait by several ‘hundred verwifiers, balladists, Iyrists, duller of the rondel, the quatrain and | madrigal, waa smothered in the United) States | District Court to-day, Tt was truly @ ghame. Here they were, these hundrede of aspiring posts, young, old and tndifferent of years, male and fe- mate, feeling their aspiring feet in the foothtlia of Parnassus, hearing from @jar the rhythmic heat of Pegasuse winga And now all their hopes are dead because, they say, Robert B. Kel- loge did not keep faith Mr. Kellong in on/trial before Judge Grubd charged with houtwinking, mie- leading and over-encouraging these hun- dreds of poets, and, quite incidentally, using the mails to defraud Mr. Kellogg, be it known, Is or was In the muslc publishing bust He had, he says, an idea that he could make his own fortune and that of ull the poeta by setting thelr words to mus publishing them and advertising the product. He held up y pletures to the dream heavy oye of the poetic brotherhood and sisterhood Me inserted @ Uttle adv ent in vartous pub- Heations, 1 Song ma Wantel— We publish ‘ceptable manuscripts on lberal royalt: Write te for free booklet oni cata Kellogg Music Co., Dept, 2, 1431 Rrondway, | New York | AND POETS WERE BORN E'EN AT KALAMAZOO, And did the poets respond? ‘They did. Jitrom Emporia and son and Quinwett and Barbara, trom Miami and Po , from Kalamazoo and Waco, from Juares and Hopatcong they came ke the bubbiing brook, Ike the aurgini: river, Hike the tin: tide. Oh, yes, they did. When Mr. Kellogg opened his mati the next day he found himself famous. So he sat him down and wrote each of the poets that a foe of $21 would be Necessary to pay ¢he expense of com- Posing of music and publishing of the | here, felt dead when only twenty. I TE Ie THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER I7, rvre. \ .” Sure, if She Likes; ‘tn bis ly, IW SPEERMORF, Ht sh “w., Deo, 1t-—Sameel Bealmer, a young farmer living wife gave Birth te twing earlier than expected, Bealmer called w and, after acking excitedly that thi and feN with the message unfinished. rived he found the fattngeimee cerme Dom eee Somer wen bept i When the atork of, phyeician over the tel? qutokly, threw up his 4 woman neighbor ignoranee of the tragedy %\ the infants “La Grippe, Kerehu'" “It Bie Were Capping Your The Drunkard’s Home. @ Dear Old Skating Rink.” ly Cray Halred Sweetheart.” ‘My Withered Treasure.” ‘The Tramp's Last Dream.” Under the Old Man's Table Again” KELLOGG SAV8 HE WANTED T' AID THEM. Koiloge, a thin, chinless young ma took the atand In hia own behalf to-day after Acsistant District-Attorney Charles GriMiths had made ont a long case of unkept promises to hit poet ellents. ‘The defendant said he was twenty-nine years okt and had written hie first ew cossful music fn 1904, when he was He sald hia plan had been to write the mustc needed by hundrede of struggling verse writers who might otherwine not reasi thelr aims. Kol swore, in angwer to his torney's question, that he occasionally had complaints from customers, but that he always mollified the complain- ors oy rewriting thelr music for them until tt suited. | Kellogg testified to the manner in which popular songs are written. “You see, many of the most popular melodies are composed by men who are hot musicians at all, men who can’t play ® piano with more than one finger, but they have a gift of melody. Their meto- dies have to be taken and put into mu- sictanty aliape before there can be any of them.” KELLOGG TELLS HOW SONGS ARE BORN. Ketloge also described how he and his assistant, Harry Nelson, took the ac- cepted poems and carpentered music for them. Kellogg wrote the melody, he sald, and Nelson got up the piano ar- rangements, Often Nelson also did what Kellogg tormed “original work.” When the carpentry was done the two com- pared notes, agreed or compromined, and thus a new wong Was born, eee SAYRES GUESTS OF ASQUITH. White Ente: How Groom Imed by Heitiah Premier. 17.-Francis B. Sayre and his bride, Who Was Mian Jeasle Wilkon, with Ambassador Page, were luncheon guests to-day of Premfter Apquith at hia official residence 'n Downing street LONDON, songs. The succeeding malls brought | checks, money, atamps and other nego- | tlable matters, Also ihe mails began to be heavy with songs, pooms or what you will, ‘There were sad poems, giad | bad ones, wad ones, Alno there! for Instance, this | Dandelion. By Oo. DITTMANN. (March Time.) Dandelion, you’ fine | You come early in epringtime. | verywhere we go \ We find you high and lew, | Dandelion, dandelion, we do welcome) conquer,” she replied. ‘She has pur- PROPOSAL. {equality with man she need no longer| William J. Wright appealed today to res ed man with hypocrisy insted of with | “Don't you think ft a Bit cheeky,” 1/8 the passive recipient of his atten-| judge Awan in General Bestona for Gor} 7°"F* et bin thme that makes us candor, This 1s what I say to her: said, ‘for a woman to ask @ man to be | Hone against her will, She Is often! oni removal to Bellevue Hospital, ee “‘¥ou are to claim the same {her meal ticket the rest of her natural | F@nded as a heartless coquette because | Where he may be kept under observation (Refrain) right to express your emotions life? It's bad enough for her to rcvept | “he lets a man propose to her when sho! sq promptly did Gorgon! take the! Dandelion, we love you, yea we do that @ man has with no degrading § [such a bargain, but the situation seams | Ms no Intention of marry! advice, that night before laat he grabbat| You come early in the springtime, ao hesitancy caused by an embar- | Wcrse when she takes the initiative. she nity have tried in vain to dis] 15 the rung of a chair and attacked a you do. rassment on account of your sex. Mmotional equality must al. | courage him, while all the time he be-| keeper, He was subdued, but he made| You're the emblem of the felds, so you It 18 his dne and yours. Wo form ways be prefaced hy. economic | 1OVid Jer Colinas a maldealy device | hog gent of it re, : Of affection is to be withheld from equality, Of course, » woman's 10 ‘laa on." ell behaved, tt 19 | You're the queen of all this “T woulda' Gorgon! had been w aved, tt 18 wide wide him. When the time comes that | pride will make her refrain from t ave women do a) the} ie until Laux came beck from Mab world, you feel the mating instinct im you move toward any man, you are to consider it a sacred obligatio courtship, ae does her brother man, unti) ig financially independent and self-supporting. She does not | want to put herse.f in the position of & mendicant, “In (hat sentence," Miss Daviess no [her blue eyes twinkling, “les the ho’ of the denighted man who stili toward you. No contortions az: contemptible tn- st methods of attack, Dut @ foar- right and to flower and bushes,’ Feminist that Tho barbaric and senseless old conven- me tion that denies woman the right of selection, for which God has given her the supertor instinct, Is to be broken lems males. “But would ANY man,” the cli of the vine. A true vire would inever want—or ne adie—to huatic enough ‘did dollars instead of curls you perceive ian atau wows ast maaet| MOTHER TRIES TO KILL protested, ‘like being asked to be @ hus- Proposing any more than I'd have them do all concluded Mia Daviess, Dut each pureuit 4 f{ty-fifty basis? Men need not | fear that the time will ever come when they will cease to get the credit of | making Earth's wheels go around from the female inhabitants thereof.” The feminine voter is no whit more a] he feu, teawan. keeper with anything that came hand: After that a commission would be ap- | for @ time and later returned as cured, yet—ian't th to visualize? —>——_. would say that the man wae |aane at the time of the crime and free- dom would result, | Gorgon! will be taken to Bellevue and watched for a time. i én " cl ? tty | io Plante Bedeck Linen down, ‘To you i4 granted the wonderful |band? Don't you remember John Tan- SON WHILE HE SLEEPS Trop! chance to ‘prove that ft can be done, | Mera wild flight from the ardent Ann | The Hambu ican steamer Prins nd triumphantly, with no sac-|!m atv, Shaw's play? ils cry ig, Any Joachim arrived this morning from the a8 of wornanhood,' | Por which wo can sali to a Mae | West Indies and the South American “Y'd propose tf | found a man whom I wanted a8 @ husvand,’ Miss Daviess | adied valiantly, “And I believe | could Go It with such dignity and truthfulness ‘ed from wome him with the old-fashioned and deceits and evasion ered. of women play he capitulated at once, vourageoun! into your heart, and he will open his to you. both have opportunity other ‘Men are sensible ani business- Mike creatures, and they will soon see how much to their advantage it 1s to be married to women who have had am equal privilege with themselves of showing their pref- ARE TROUBLING YOU While it io extremely annoying and some- times very painful, this is really one of | the most simple ailments to overcome, | Get about four ounces of Jad §, ts | fi rom harmacist and take a table- ArabatGh IRR asa ok Water fore| @xences, ‘Them only can they be breakfast, continue this for two or three are from days, ‘This will neutralize the acids in 4 not compro- the urine so it no longer is # source of | ™748e#, Om the part of thelr wives, from lack of cholo irritation to the bladder and urinary or- gans, which then act normally asin. And (ue traditions of romance? 1 ‘Phe woman Pan screaming into the When your bowels are clogged, your] sweetens up your acid stomach, stops Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmlesy| »inted to the daughter of the most ro- Xitahen and hacked herself in the neck | stomach sour, and bed breath roves! sick headache and bloating and makes and is made from the acid of grapes and | mastec Section of America, with the knife, Edwin struggted out of | you are bilious and constipated, Ex-Iax| you feel fine. Your appetite returns, lemon juice, combined with lithia, and| ‘We mustn't any more lead men into hig room and threw himself on his| will relieve you quickly, without griping | ambition revives, and by taking Ex-Lax used by thousands of folks who are ake blinded by the overpowering mother. finally got the knife away | or pain, This pleasant ing, choco-| occasionally you maintain your good bject to urin disorders caused by fragrance romantic! ¢rom her and Mra, Lango collapsed. j late laxative is the latest and best thing| health. Hx-lax is perfectly harmless uric acid irritation. Jud Salts is splen- ve asserted firiniy, "The McDuffie made the run from the| out—a mild and gentle physic that|for grown folks and children, and tastes did for kidneys and causes no bad| will never come when a woman r Honpit even blocks away, in helps nature your body of its wastes, rag jahan that every one likes to take effects whatever, risk hanging over the ragged ed, st sixty sec te took five stitches | When you are sick and need physic, as Don't weaken your syetem with| Here you have a pleasant, effervescent heaven to hold on to the hand of ean most folks do, at times, you can get| pills and harsh cathartics. y Ex-Lax | lithia-water drink, which quickly relieves man. We must all keep the w led by Follceman @ohneider on a! °? from Ex-Lax without bad after} next time your bowels don't move right. | Dladder trouble, \ Grip on the creatures we charge of attempting suleiée, effects, It acts on the liver direct,| Price, 100, 5c and 50c, at all druggists | yyetan countey where men are pro- But that was because Ann disgusted trickeries When she came ott and honestly at the end of the ‘That ts the crux of the whole matter. Be franic, Let a man look freely thus encouraged Then you will! has since to judge each| onoly, 1 reference to a lifelong union.| Ernest, whe lives in a five-story flat at] Rica. se Ex-Lax oy i jeonat, looking like @ floating botanical B y_ Awakens in Time to Prevent Ecrask, aha | aks daked. oreictons Crazed Woman From Strik- with Croton plants, some of them eight ees jand ten feet in height, The brilliant ing Fatal Blow. foliage of the plants gave the cabing and decks a gala appearance and the Mra, Anna Lange, a widow fifty years|atmonphere of Christmas, The plants old, while suffering from temporary | were given to Capt. Tainow by a aberration, attempted tu kill her nine-| lic priest who han @ fine garden at Pore teon-year-old aon, Edwin, shortly after |{tmon, Costa ning o'viock this morning. Mra, Lange's husband died last May and the woman ‘of melan- | two sons, Edwin and With |No, 813 East Sixty-ninth etreet. This morning there was @ funeral from the! i} house next door, Mrs. Lange looked for some time upon | me crowds, the carriages and the hearse, Then she went into the kitchen and, taking @ carving knife, toward her son Ed@in, who w. The son aWakened in time to see the knifo above him, He put up Me arm to ward off the blow and was cut tn the right forearm. All he had to do, the keepers 4 Laux tok Gorgon!, was to become jolent without any warning and hit a pointed, declare the prisoner insane, he| Lucy Hradshaw, Kansan City, Mo, un- would be sent to Matteawan, kept there A Safe, Gentle Physic It Is a Pleasant Chocolate Laxative very No Pain,NoGriping. ChildrenLovelt, SOME OF THOSE WHO SENT POEMS AND $21. Some of Mr. Kellogg's clients and the titles of thelr immortal verses were name’; H. J. Beck, Troy, 0. "A Coos Parad ‘Mrs, Del), Blajok, Frankiya, ina., on @ wan Marr! . 7. B. Biancharé, Verdon, Neb, “The Church Charles F. Clark, MeGil, Nev., ‘What's the Use of Lovin’ You Haven't Got the Price?’ Miss Mand Goodhue, Indian Falls, Cal, “We Were Only Quesaing;” Merritt Gregory ef Morristown, ¥. J., “Every Hour of My Lite.” Some of Kallogs’s contributors wore original, to say the least. Here followe! 8 Hat of some of the titles of the Kellogg | ballads. Their authors live in every part of the country: “Hea the Bull Qoatt’ Moose Got Your Grtet.” For | eliminate s Every practical ciesares=.** |GLYNN SIGNS UM FOUNDED 18561 BROKAW B. MENS & BOYS’ CLOTHING HATS & FURNISHINGS) If the gift is for a man you may culation as to what will please him by shoppinghere. wr DROPS Bpeermo-+ yaician eome The are dning well. other was kept in ELECTION ILS ~BXLANS THEM Gowmor Says Three Measures AreQemocratic Pledge for | Bectoral Reform. ALBANY, Dee, All of the election Uitte pasmed extraordinary essston of the Lemisiater, including those pro- viding for the @imet election of United | States Senators, the Massachusetts bal- fot and changes @ the primary and general election lam, wore signed to- day by Gov. Glynn. He aatd he would sign the Werk- men‘a Compensation Dili tefore night. In ment regurding the eleetion laws the Governor aid: ‘My signature as Governor to these three measures marks the successful ac- lcomplishment by a Democratic Legts- Inture of each and every electoral re- form, in accordarice with the pledges contained tn the last Democratic State platform. “Among other things, this direct nom!- nation law prohibits the placing of any candidate upon the primary ballot who has not fled a petition with stgnsturer of @ cortain proportion of the enrolled voters. The number of certified eigna- tures of enrolled voters necessary te as follows: “For United States Senator or any office to be filled by all voters of the State, 3,000. “Wor New York City, 1,600; for Buf- falo, Rochester or any county or bor- containing more/than 260,008, 1,600. “For any office in /a county or ber- ough containing 2,00, 290, or any alty of the second olass or Congressional Dintrict, 000. “For any other cpunty or olty of the third class or of ‘any Assembly Dis- trict, 260, article of wear- ing apparel appealing to men of sensible Housécoats Gauntlet Gloves Mackinaws Neckwear Dress Waistcoats Suit Cases Fur-lined Overcoats Silk Hate Fancy Pajamas Travelling Kits Mufflers Brush Sets Sweaters Handkerchiefs $ (inemantnin Beer, Ales or Port December 15th, an 1913, both dates present a pack of SPECIAL IN HOUSECOATS OM CT NOT ToCustomers purchading our Bottled or through a Distributor, between LEMBECK @ BETZ, Eagle Brewing Company Jersey City, N. J. OUR POPULAR BRANDS American Club Boor Jersey Cream Af Half and Half judgment. Bath Robes Silk Shirts Fur Coats Canes & Umbrellas Knitted Waistcoats Club Bags Raincoats Opera Hats Tucked Shirts Razor Sets Gloves Dress Sets Indian Blankets Motoring Ulsters All up to our usual standard of excellence and moderately priced. 4 Pe Were $5 to $7 : \stor Place & Fourth Avenue ICE er, either directly d December 20th, inclusive, we will fine playing cards | ai