The evening world. Newspaper, January 20, 1914, Page 3

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& —_ a . \ ; A BURGLAR ATINKS “WOMEN, FLEES BUTISSHOTOOWN ‘East Side in an Uproar Over Chase of a Flying Thief. igtnia® McGEE’S FINE WORK. Commissioner McKay Is Much Piéased at the Policeman’s ~ Good Marksmanship, — A fleeing burglar who had assaulted four women and badly injured two ‘was shot and probably mortally wounded by Detective Sergt. Frank MeGee of the Clinton street station , im crowded East Broadway shortly be- fore noon to-day. McGee got his nan at a distance of about one hundred feet, putting a bullet through the left side of his neck. The burglar is Dominick Saboda, ‘who says he is a sixteen-year-old er- rand boy living at No, 68 Oliver otreet. ‘The start of the chase was at No. &1 Orchard street, a tenement with stores on the ground floor. Mrs. Julius Lavy, the janitress, passing through the hallway on the second floor saw the door of the flat of Mrs. Jennie ACKENBOS “To Say That Parents Should Correct :Chil- dren Only at a Certain Hour and in Specified Months Ie Not Only Absurd but It Is Dan- gerous,”’ Says Columbia Man. Boston Teacher Says 10 A. M.in uary and Feb- ruary Is Open Season for Punishing Naughty Boys. store on the ground floor, and Mra | calendar and the clock. Ads Ackerman, a tenant. The three ‘women are elderly, but they bravely ‘qntered the Siegerman fiat. There was_| fo one in sight. Mrs. Siegerman entered. It was plain that a burglar had been sur- prised packing up his loot. Mrs. @legerman went into another room ‘axid saw the feet of a man protruding “Here is the gonneff” (thief), she no “child-culture” orted. Gaboda wriggied out from under tbe bed with a jimmy in bis band. He pushed against Mrs. Siegerman, the little ones, if we use his verb), ed bised pei Ped lied re Test of the period, apparently, no haral The Geeing thief struck Mrs. Ack- a@rman over the head, knocking her Pensfless. Hoe felled Mrs. Levy with|/has reached the age of sixteen,” ‘his fist. Mre. Sachs, who had reached | counsels Mr. Lakey, ‘‘the net results the bead of the stairs, was struck|in mental and physical impro ‘with the jimmy and fell down the/will be greater than at any ‘atéps into the lower hall, Leaping|time chosen. Four o'clock in the wver her Saboda reached the street | afternoon should be avoided, as well By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. You have no right to scold Tommy until you have consulted doth the That is the very latest by-law for parents, as framed by Frank E. Lakey of the commercial department of the English High School in Boston. In recent years sund-y soaring intellects have scattered large bunches of reform the- ories over America, as balloonists sprinkle paper dodgers. But not even poison needle propaganda seems to me as utterly useless and visionary as most of the schemes for managing children. And for a lack both of scientific background and of ordinary common sense f Lakey’s brand. He seriously advances the idea that parents should admonish their children (or “appeal” to totalling an extraordinarily brief section of the calendar year. During the “Parents should make their appeals to boys at ten o'clock in the morning any day in January or early in February, and when the youth Says Dr. Quackenbos, ae, IN MARCH yet exploited has anything on Mr. at certain fixed times and seasons, ih word should sully a parent's lips. when it is needed—that is, the pun- the crime. When you whip a dog for Killing chickens you don't wait ¢ill two days after the slaughter. “Don't you think there is much ah- Ishment should immediately follow |i# grateful and affectionate it is par- N Teach Children Every Second Clocks Tick, Scoring Latest Theory UNDER PROBE IN + should make a point of undrese- ing little one and of putting It to bed herself, also of attend- ing to ite bath In the morning. “During the moments that the child ticularly receptive to moral sugges- tion. But this sympathetic condition of mind cannot be pinned down to any stereotyped hour marked off by : 5 TYHE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, DETECTIVE BRITAIN LEADS WORLD IN BUILDING OF SHIPS Germany Ranks Second and the United States Is Third in That Industry. Lloyd's quarterly report on ship- building, just ‘ssued, shows that there were under construction at the end of the year, exclusive of war- | \ a |Prosecutor Holds Boy Who Made “Confession” While He Conducts Inquiry. « | |SOME ONE WAS DUPED. | | Governor May Be Asked to | i Investigate Methods Em- ployed by Sleuths. SOMERVILLE, N. J., Jan. 20.—Al- though Paul Carl's “confession” that |he shot Monroe F. Bilis, wealthy lum- | berman, seems disproved now beyond a doubt, Prosecutor Frederick A. Pope declared to-day that he uldn't re. lease the boy at once aid did not know, in fact, when he-would set him free, “I am not aatiofied yet,” said he, “as to the truth or untruth of Carl's statements. It seems impossible that he should have shot Ellis, but if he did not, then I went to know why he said he did. J shall not act until I am entirely baci (ew at present I am not.” But if Mr. Pope doesn’t liberate Carl speedily the boy may be freed on a writ of habeas corpus, according to Banton Moore, of Np. 1 Liberty stre@t, New York, young Carl's coun- nel. He said to-da: WILL A8K GOVERNOR TO IN- VESTIGATE DETECTIVES. | “I shall not permit Carl to remain in | Jail 1€ I can prevent it. It seems to me that the methods employed to ex- tract this so-called confession from him should be investigated. It may be that the matter will be taken up with the Governor to see whether detectives can go to such extremes. I think the law has been violated.” The unexpected disproval of Carl's “confession” has upset every one con- nected with the case. There will be & meeting of the Board of Freeholders this week and it is known that they will ask Mr. Pope for a report on the case. The Prosecutor wants Carl within his reach until after he has made this report. John A. Roebling, the wealthy resident of this town who financed the detective operations, is concealing whatever feelings he may have over the unexpected turn of tho case, “When we, and by that I mean my- self and the Pinkertons, turned Carl over to the authorities together with VOTES FOR WOMEN BL WN SENATE SAT LAN Provision for Watchers Not What Suffragists Wanted, but They Are Satisfied. ALBANY, Jan. 20—The march of the suffragetfo hikers from New York to Albany bore fruit to-day, Senator Foley introducing a bill to provide for women watchers at election polls. Foley's bill does not exactly meet all of the women's demands, however. ‘They wanted women watchers effeo- tive at once, but Foley would provide them only when the woman suffrage amendment is voted on, which will be in 1915 If passed by another Legisia- ture Boveral suffragettes were at the session to-day working for various measures, Among them were Mrs. Harlot Stanton Blatch and her daugh- ter, Miss Nora Biatch Forest. They explained that avhile Senator Foley's bill might not exactly meet the views of the hikers, the Women's Political Union and the Women's Watchers’ Committee were satisfied with it. “We have the assurance of Lieut, Gov. Wagner, Speaker Sweet and other influential members that the bill will pass,” Mrs. Blatch said. FINED BECAUSE HER Doctor Blew Police Whistle After Row Over a Woman's Hat. Dr, Maxwell Braniér of No. 6 Manida street, the Bronx, was sitting besides Mrs. Loretta Harris, a drees- maker of No. 134 West Thirty-ninth street, in a westbound One Hundred and Forty-ninth street car and while he was reading his newspaper he was several times annoyed by the bunch of feathers on the woman's hat. It got into his eyes, Several times he ducked and then tried dodging, but unavailing. verbal protest to the owner of the hat and feathers. of Eighth avenue and One Hundred sought to make his protest more ef- fective by nudging the woman in the aide. At this she eprahg to her feet and began banging him over the head with a heavy folded magasine. Dr. Branner blew a police whistle and FEATHERS TICKLED MAN: His next move was a ‘When the car reached the corner and Forty-ffth street, the doctor TO SURRENDER, * AGAIN DECLA But Farmer, at Bay Statement Saying Ke “Holds the F \‘HOUSE WITHOUT FOOD \ IMobody to Care for : bre. 4 | | and He Wants His Wife Re= > - leased From Jail, °° 7 MAYVILLE, N. ¥., Jan. 30—Eiie ward Beardsley, the outlaw Summeie dale farmer, who has kept the authes> ities at bay for a week, to-day row, and Sheriff Anderson, with the terms, WINS HONOR AT YALE. William Jay Sehie@elin le Voted “Moat Perfect Gentleman.” c Li i 8 if } ite | i i and ran south. as the months of March, April and Policeman Morshauser of the Clin- | October, for boys and girls are at ton street station commandeered an|their worst mentally and physically @utomobile and took up the chase, |t that time. ‘Through Division street and Pike) WHEN BOYS ARE AT THEIR BEST AND WORST. such evidonce as we had, our connec- tion with the case ceased,” sald he to- day. “It is up to Mr. Pope now. I have implicit confidence in him if he sees fit to discharge Carl I have no criticism to make of him.” surdity in the educational coddling | clock hands. A boy is no better and and cosseting so popular at present?” |no worse at 10 A. M. than he is at I eeneetes 3 P. M. As for the alleged increase r. Quackenbos nodded slowly but |in the mischief of the mischievous emphatically, boy? between 3 and 4 in the ai Policeman Hoctor arrested the wo- man. In court the woman eaid that she thought the doctor was trying to “mash” her, that she had no idea he objected to her feathers, But ships, 642 ehips in Great Britain, with & gross tonnage of 1,970,065 tons. Of the number 603 are steel steamships and 22 steel sailing ships. Fourteen ships are being constructed of rein- “A child should ‘Joined in behind him, pelting him “The best boy is at his maximum at ten and eleven in the morning e~ study at the noon, an obvious explanation at once suggests it: Most youngsters get out of school at aboyt that time, and forced wood and three steamers of similar character. The tonnage is “But how about the detectives? Don't you think they deserve some criticlam?” he was asked. trate Herbert had no such thought and fined her $8, Flush the Kidneys 'st once with whatever they could grab from|at the corresponding hour in the time, whether about 13,000 tons less than that which when Back hurts or all their pent-up energy overflows, evening. The bad boy is at his mini- mum at three and four in the after- noen. ‘ “The mental life predominates in January and February. The boys ahd girls are lowest from the point of |view of good citizenship during March, part of April and in October.” In short, if ten-y old Tommy slaps his little sister's fa: Fourth of July, Tommy's mamma must wait until 10 o'clock on New Year's Day before they I” to him not to do it again. jeduce from the pushcarts lining the sidewalka. McGee and Lieut. Steinkamp took up the chase at Pike street and East Broadway. Saboda was headed for the plaza of the Manhattan Bridge ‘and had outdistanced his pursuers. McGee and Steinkamp had no chance to catch him, Morehauser’s automo- Dile was blocked by tpécrowd rnd) nave wae no policeman in sight on “He killed a woman,” shouted a! emall boy to McGee and Bteiukamp. “McGee is a crack shot. He fired his, gevolver in the air. Suboda leaped like @ deer and quickened his pu The next shot ae is [all feu rawl- M o that he in front of No. 9 t Broadway, i td be ears Een policemen came from all dj.| thinks the i ried over for six years until the January first when Tommy is six- teen. | “Perfect nonsense!” ejaculated Dr. | rections and they were needed to keep the crowd away from Saboda ‘gntil the arrival of an ambulance from Gouveraaur Hosni). He main- | tained that he was pot the burglar, 7 tained ‘Nas identifiel by many whe John D. Quackenboa, to my relief, taken part in the chase from |and, I am sure, to that of every sen-| Orchard street Seneinnt iS ible der, “The man who makes) 1 A BA Rs ed sh Beh ges y Dr. such statements is thoroughly un-| FY Se thera was Gangerowely hurt but scientific. I am personally certain Mrs. Ackerman and Mrs. Sachs are that there is no basis for the assump- | Gulfering from painful lacerations of tions which you have just shown me. ‘~~ o Now Dr. Quackenbos, beside beinx| ; the author of “Hypnotic Therapeu- | lp. the matter was reported, to! | Commalesioner McKay he exp) himeelt ly pleased. There have | tics,” which contains an interesting ebeen east side daylight|chapter on “Psychic P Ee tb lake'm medal on McGee |tausht for twenty years at Columbia University. He is also the son of a ‘successful school master, so he ts for his markamanship,” said the Com- ir. qualified to discuss intelligently the jebullient young idea. aM REAPPOINTED NOT ONLY ABSURD, BUT IT 18 TO SPECIAL SESSIONS ores ane reNoeRous: ‘s absurd to tell a boy that he ;ean atudy better in January than in | April,” continued Dr, Quackenbos. worse than absurd ‘a danger- jous, For is he not giv excuse to neglect his work during nine-tenths Morgan M. L. Ryan, Associate Jus- tice of the Court of Special Sessions, ‘was reapointed to-day for a term of tem, years by Mayor Mitchel. The ealary is $9,000 a year, Justice Ryan's|f, the year? term had expired the firat of the year, || "There probably are tive alight sea. Justice Ryan is a resident of New |gonal influences on children. Like all Brighton and has spent most of his lof us they are perhaps more languid, time on the bench at Staten Island, |!¢#8 inclined to physical and mental Wp in & Democrat. jexertion during the warm days of ‘The Mayor does not propose that | summer. And I hi noticed that the salary of Police Commissioner 08st Persone seem specially strong Temain at $7,500, He was asked |29¢ lively in the month of March. d ay if one of the suggestions in | That 18 doubtless because there is an Ihlg report on a cons ructive police extra amount of electricity in the eoraey. Wud, be a request for a higher | atmosphere, due to the cold, dry ty for Police Commissioner, weather. Any person who works in i pallove the aie of Police Com;)q isboratory will have noted this Mayor, “and I suppose that when | Phenomenon, Nees. Committee of the ee fe absolutely no reason imate gets steps will iy child should respond to a ope taken topeeriee an increase. mora} appeal in January more quickly at watch is recut than at any other season of the year. ip the veport, ... |The mired lof most persons. | being so badly prepared f ike studying. The training in will-power and con- centration should one of the most valuable results of school But nowadaye children run jarents, and teach vote themselves to pleasin; dren instead of parents, “Why are children no longer trained to perform dificult and un- Pleasant tasks?" Dr. Quackenbos questioned, on a note of impatience scarcely muffied any longer by his delightfully courteous manne: ‘You and I have to do things we don't like to do. We have to work when we'd much rather be playing. . It's the life Why are children at? A GOOD SPANKING 18 A GREAT) TONIC. If this Boston man used the fer- rule, as my father used to do, he would find that mental life predomi- nated in boys whenever he desired them to be studious!" “You believe in corporal punish- ment, then?” I asked, somewha‘ r+ | prised, for Dr, Quackenbos ts a cele- brated defender of the power of mind over matter, “I do,” he retorted, firmly. “Of course I am unalterably opposed to brutality, But I believe that thero are some boys on whom nothing but a whipping will make any impres- sion. I believe that on such youthn corporal punishment has an excellent effect, I myself can remember seeing may father whip a boy for lying, and resolving then and there never to tell another lie myself.” It occurred to me that the real point was whether the boy who re- ceived the whipping was cured of falsification, But I have never settled | to my own satisfaction my belief as regards corporal punishment, I only feel that nothing could induce me to beat a child. Feeling, however, is pot logic, Meanwhile Dr. Quackenbos was glancing again at Mr. Lakey’s ro- marks. “It he means that no moral appeal of any sort should be made to a boy before his sixteenth year, he might ae well omit moral training alto- gether, Of course it should begin at @ very early period. “Belence teaches that a mother ean mest succesfully appeal to the moral nature ef her child when che le performing seme | twetming- should take place orviee for it That le why che Le) | Found Under Her Cot in Basement ‘death was the first intimation to many “And how," Dr, Quackenbos con- cluded, with a final glanco at the clipping he held, “could a boy react from bei fine scholar in February to being an undesirable citizen in March? Such a reaction would not, of course, take place. But it’s no more impossible than the whole plan of discipline based on the clock and |; the calendar.” AGED WOMAN RECLUSE DIES ALONE OF INJURIES Nook With Four Ribs Broken, An old woman, who for ten years had lived alone in a little room in the basement of No. 328 East One Hun- dred and Fifty-fourth street, was found dead there to-day, Bo quietly had she lived that the news of her that anyone uccupled the tiny nook in the basement. Coroner's Physician Curtin found that the old woman's death wa: caused by the fracture of four ribs, but he doesn’t think she was attacked. She had nothing worth stealing. He thinks she fell down and hurt herself or, possibly, was struck by an auto- mobile and managed to drag herself home, tt oma She was known only ai Miss Emer- son. She seemed to have no friends, certainly received no visitors and would not talk even with the jani- tress, Mra. Bertha Ruskofsky, who collected her rent of $1 a month. She was found only by chance which led @ coal man, seeking an empty bin, to push open her door, The woman who, according to Dr. Curtin, probably had been dead for three or four days, lay under a small cot on which she slept. The room was filled with rubbish and the walls were blackened with the soot from an oll stove. There were many postcards, bills, receipts and twa insurance policies in the room, and on these appeared the names of May and Eva M. Amrkeim, It is believed that the dead woman bore one of these names, —_—_———_—_ was under construction at the end of 1912, Germany ranks n tain in the shipbui with 102 vesela und America follows with these forty-nine are enteen sailing vesscli ay ot far behind the United States, having forty-nine vessels under con- struction. Holland followa with for- France, thirty-nine; British thirty, ; Italy, twenty- teen; — Aust japan, fourtee: Belgium, _ nin Russ! to Great Bri- ing industry, ones MOEN, hree; and Greece, each one. In the United Kingdom there are thirteen battleships under construc- tion, one battle crulser and fifteen Nght cruisers. SEA SAFETY AGREEMENT SIGNED BY NATIONS United Gtates Is to Continue Con- trol of Service Protecting Vessels From Ice Perils. LONDON, Jan, £0,—The conven- tion drawn up by the International Conference on Safety at Bea was signed at the Foreign Office thie afternoon with considerable formal- ity by all the delegations except one, namely, Austria, which will sign to- morrow, The representatives of t Britain, the United States, Canada, Aust New Zeala: Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Bw den, Norway, Holland, Belgium ai Denmark were all present, The text of the convention contains seventy-four articles, important and among which ts the provision that an international service vat by the nations chiefly intere: the purpose of an ice patrol a observation as well as the destr tion of derelicts in the North At- lantic, It ts to be under the control of the United States. Thin service is to take over and continue the work done by the two veasela em- ployed by the United States in 1912- 13 in locating tee, in determining its limits to the south, east and weat and in keeping in touch with it as it moves southward in order that ves- sels inay be kept informed by wire- leas telegraphy of its position. _——— “10” FOR “10” BY “10.” Ten great authors will supply ten great novels in ten weeks to readers of The Evening World, Be- gins to-day. A compl vel each ee Order from jealer \d|tegard the money as well spent, “Tl will be time enough for that after we see how the affair turns out., I have no criticiam to make i sf of any one. I don't know how juch the affair has cost me, but I 1 should think it would be under $5,- 000, For months at @ time no de- tectives worked on the case and then again there would be three or four. They seemed to me to do faithful It wus sald that Carl was feeling very much better since his confession had’ been disproved and that he was elated at the prospect of leaving jail. Mr. Pope would allow no one to see him, however, Mrs. Grace Holly, Carl's aunt whom he accused of hav- ing inapired him to the agtack on Ellis, refused to see reporterh to-day. Mr, Ellis, who has stuck by her throughout the case, was elated over the disproval of Carl's “confession.” He paid: “T think now, just as I did all along —that this boy had nothing to do with the shooting, It has been despicable work all through. I think that not only was this poor boy duped but that John A. Roebling and Prose- cutor Pope, who perinitted these ar- rests, were the dupes of some one.” Cloths, Formerly $40.00 to Formerly $75.00 to $150.00, | OPENING SMART MODELS FO! learance Sale One-Piece Open Front Gowns, Of Serges, Corduroys, Velveteens, Taffetas and fy Afternoon and Evening Coats Reduced to AT VERY ATTRACTIVE PRICES FOUR AUSTRIANS HERE TO SPEND $8,000,000 Plan to Install American Phone and Telegraph System at Home. Four men who are to spend $9,000,- 000 for the Hungarian Government are in Now York to-day sightseeing. It is the first day of their visit to thie city and to-morrow they will get down to business, for practically all of the $8,000,000 is to be spent here. They are Baron Otto von Sejer, chief of the Hungarian Government Department of Telephone and Tele- graph, and his associates, Baron Jenoe von Kaiser, Baron A, von Bladder bothers. No man or woman who cats meat regu> which clogs the kidney pores so sluggishly filter or strain oaly part the waste and poisons from the bleed, . sick, Nearly all rhoumm ness, bladder disorders come from gish kidneys. Peractyanssky and Counsellor Beg-| of nard von Pasky. They arrived last night on the Austro-Hungarian iner Kaiser Frans Josef I., and‘are sto ping at the Hotel Arlington, No, 18 ‘West Twenty-ffth street, ‘The intend to spend several| Jad’ Sal months here, and. in Phil injure; mates» Chicago in Franciaco, the American party line | lithie-water drink, | w tem telephoning. The system ta to be in- stalled in Hungary and it ts prob- able that American equipment, pur- chased here, will be employed IMPORTER Announces Her FINAL hould take sow |A Suggestion to Commuters Some people who live in the suburhp either consider their hours of hy to and from New York as “lost® a divert them to the twiddling of t thumbs, which Is an unprofitable @g cupation, oe w here’s 9 very excellent plan that will serve you to a good pi Of course you want to read 7 Moret ing World before or during 20.00 25.00 «& 50.00 EXHIBIT R SOUTHERN WEAR $75.00. Reduced to Now, while jocmeying to the why not turn to the Morning Want Directory and look over the eral Housed otiere 60 work, ~ ent, IC. ised there? advert! n your travelling bail howe, vibe interestingly and pal hd "Fut put this) plan ‘ato. oflect. on morrow and see a derful field for occupation is ~ to you,

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