The evening world. Newspaper, February 4, 1914, Page 1

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“—~S <4 Fair add colder tonight; Tharaday clear and warmer. OMPLETE cB _THE EVENING WORLD "PRICE ONE CENT. SAW MISSING SCHOOLE IN ROW WITH STRANGE MIEN AT STATION NEAR HER HOME Railway Men Say Florence Lawlor Was Six Blocks ¢ From Own House. STARTED FOR HER HOME. _ Strangers Argued With Girl Who Pushed Them Aside and Boarded Train. Florence Barbara Lawlor, the high school girl who has been missing from her home,:No. 5619 Fifteenth avenue, Borough Park, since 8 o'clock | Monday morning, alighted from a) ‘West End elevated train at the Bay!| Junction: station at Sixty-second street and New Utrecht avenue, at -40.15 o'clock yesterday morning, , talked for three-quarters of an hour; with two men who met her there and | 3 then boarding another train, re-) sumed her journey in the direction of Park Row, aeserding to two men) ‘who watched the girl throughout the time she was on the station. The witnesses are the tower man and the transfer aent of the Brook- | lyn Rapid Transit Company, and they told George H. Lawlor, the girl's father, to-dvy that they could not be | mistaken in their identification, | The men described the clothing the Birl wore and her appearance and their recitals agreed absolutely with | the appearance and clothing of the} Lon the morning she left her home, A distinctive feature of her attire! Was a dark blue sport coat fastened , with vivid red buttons. ‘These alone | should be sufficient to make her con-! spicuous anywhere and they helped | fm convincing tho railroad men that | ft was Miss Lawlor whom they ‘watched. PHONE MESSAGE SAID GIRL WAS AT CONEY ISLAND. It Is a coincidence that at 3 o'clock ! this morning a man who did not give ‘his name called the Lawlor home on the telephone and told Mr. Lawlor + that he had seen the missing girl fonly tow minutes before near the Mardi Gras Hotel in Surf avenue, Coney Island. Though he had only , fast come in from an all night search Mr. Lawlor started at once for Co- ney Iviand, But he found no trace of his daughter or of the man who . Bad telephoned. At the time Mr, Luwior regarded Ube telophone message as the hoax of (Continued on Second Page.) = LIE PASSED IN CONGRESS. han St With a Hot Wrangle. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4.—The House was thrown into confusion this after- noon when She Me war passed during | ted upon hurrying the bill, nenett retorted. with ihe denunciation @f Manahan's statement In the turmol! that f re of | members were on .U t shouting recognition at the same time. Apol~ les were made by both principale and ler was restored. Enginand Sen: LONDON, Feb. Britain's @Malienge for the Dwight F. Davis In- ational Lawn Tennis Trophy, won year by the United States team, sent by mail to the United States forty-five, who supported herself by sewing, wax found dead from gas in the 7 Mttle room she occupied on the top floor i 335 Bl aiveet en neighbors who je HP nor toon und broke in the had become, disconnected from e fumes had ssphy: oea t eurly to-day | raced | joor. al PRESIDENT M. . COLE, WHO BECOMES BRIDE OF ALBERT STODDARD. GOOQDODHOGOODOGHGHODOOGOOHS) OO CO COC OD OG C St 5 ‘HELIKED HIS “BOSS” IN OFFICE SO MUCH HE MADE HER HIS WIFE jAlbert H. Stoddard Is Quietly Married to Miss Mabel Henrietta Cole. Albert Henry Stoddard, Vice-Prest- dent of the M, H. Cole Real Estate Company of No. 500 Fifth avenue, was at his desk this morning trying to get through an accumulation of papers, The desk of Presidett Mabel Henrietta Cole was locked, however. Miss Cole that was, Mrs, Albert Henry Stoddard that 1s, was at the Hotel Biltmore getting ready to go on a honeymoon trip with her vice- president. Mr, Stoddard, a handsome man of about fifty, admitted a little diffidently that he and the president of the company had gone to Jersey City last night and been married quietly in the presence of a few friends, “Circulation Books Open to All. World). NEW “YORK, WEDNESDAY, ~ SSO CH BML WINS FREEDOM FOR MILLIONAIRE SUITOR Rich Brazilian Says He Isn’t Worried About Breach of Promise Suit. Party Put on Record by Under- NOT SENT TO JAIL. Spent Night in Hotel, Under Guard—Miss Borden Shows His Love Letters. Octavio Guinle, a young man of y }a wealthy Brazilian family, sued by a beautiful Amertenn girl for $500,000 for breach of promise, sent his law- yer to Sheriff Grifenhagen at 2 o'clock to-day with $50,000 in cash to secure his freedom pending the trial of her action, Paul R. Gordon, Guinle's lawyer, carried the money in a plain satchel and counted it out before the admir- ing employees of the Sheriff's office 1 thousand ard hundred-dollar bills. Sheriff Grifenhagen said it was the largest deposit of cash bail of which he jhad ever heard, Mr, Gordon ex- plained that the cash had been ob- tained from a bank here on a tele- graphic order from Guinle & Co. of Rio de Janeiro, of which Octavio is the New York agent. They are bank- ers, exporters, importers and railway financiers, The rich Brazilian was spared the humiliation of being locked in the Lud'ow street jail last night. slept at the Hotel Knickerbocker, |and Deputy Sheriffs McDonnell and Zeitner kept guard over him. Mr. Guinle called up Sheriff Griffen- |hagen at 1 o'clock to say that he wanted his guards changed. McDon- nell and Zeltner, who has long been known on Park Row as “Wireless Louie" because of his resources for hearing of news events on the east side, did not Impress Mr. Guinle, he Jauid, as his social equals. ‘They were surly and unsociable, he complained, and would not take him out for a drink Sheriff Griffenhagen's only answer was to inform the millionaire that if | hin $50,000 cash bond was not depos- Ited by 2 o'clock the deputies would put him in Ludlow Street Jail, where he could not get a drink whether he wanted one or not At his office at No. 42 Broadway to-day Mr. Guinle said to an Evening World reporter: “Do I look like a man who ta worry- ing? Ihave nothing more to say than that this action does not bother me in the least. I slept very well last night, if anybody cares to know,” Uterhart! & Graham, lawyers for Miss Borden, said they had been in- structed to press the case with the jutmost diligence, Miss Borden had Jherself deposited the $5,000 in cash could be held for her in $50,000 batt, a | HAVE Employees in the office didn't know| SAYS THEY WERE TO anything about it and didn't even| BEEN MARRIED YESTERDAY. iknow that a romance was developing} According to her complaint, thy right under their noses, They knew| Marriage was to have been sol- that Mr, Stoddard was a distant! ¢mnived y ~ [cousin of Miss Cole and hai been o' idan » w her in running her great assistan the Church of Our Lady of A) big business since he went with the read for three Sundays, Her trous- company a year ago. Miss Cole, who caine here three or her m ago from Montreal, organs fazed the company after she had tried/and told her he had inheri Wall street speculation and decided 000 f om his father and another mil- that she didn't like it. From the first ; she had been successful, but the work was so confining that it affected her houlth and she called in Mr. Stoddard, four yer Five months ago she had pneu monia and then @ nervous break- down, She is still in poor health and the honeymoon trip will probably be short in consequence. Mr, Stoddard came into prominence when he acted as pageant manager Of the Hudson-Fulton celebration, He | had gained experience in such work | console me. at tho Mardi Grax in Now Orleans SAILING T TO-DAY. Kroonland, Antwerp.. Fiadiiets » Seimnemeie: sone: +12 M, 018 Me jseau, which was elaborate, has cost eh time and money, she says, jet Miss Horden last May $5,000,- lion from his father's partner, Miss Borden said she hud not ac- ted him when she sailed for! passion burned then: My Darling*and Sweet Mona: I am) crazy. I do not ow what to do | without you. I have been crying since | you left me alone without a soul to J ever loved In my life, I am willing lto do anything for you. Come to me and 1am sure I will make you happy. Darling, you are my love, my soul, 10 A. M.\ my lite. ‘I adore you, darling, Vv. Bie They became engaged, Miss STRICTLY FOR STATES. Organization Firmly Com-| which was necessary before Guinle| ) afternoon as he | rday by Father Shor- | s, where the banns have been | rope last July, and she exhibited | gave anoth this letter to show how fiercely mle [tae Nolan in the Centre Street Ce You are the only woman | DEMOCRATS KNOCK, "ee Girls, Who Disappeared One on Her Way to High School VOTES FOR WOMEN OUT OF CONGRESS; wood, Who Says Equal Suf- frage Is Not National Issue. | mitted to Policy of Local Self-Government. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4.—The Dem- | ocratic party was formally placed on | record to-day as opposed to national) legisiation conferring the right of sut- | frage on women by Majority Leader | Underwood on the floor of the House. Representative Underwood declared | he believed, with the party, that the | suffrage question was for the States, | and not the national Government, to determine. Reprenentative Lenroot injected the question into the House debate by asking Mr. Underwood if he would use his influence to have reported a resolution for a suffrage committee, an action which the Democratic cays. cus had refused to take. “Will the gentleman use his influ. ence to have that resolution report so that the House may vote on it?” demanded Mr. Lenroot. “I will not,” replied Mr. Under- wood, “because I am not in favor of it, If there is one principle my party stands for it ts local self-government. | If there is one single question that! ib the Democratic party Is committed to| it is that the franchise should be con- | trolled by the individual States." sae bool ee SLAPPED BY ADELE RITCHIE.| Process Server Got Surprine of Life When He Met surprise of his life this afternoon when, in attempting to serve Adele Ritchie, the vaudeville actress, with a summons, he received in return a switt! Girl Forced to Drive Officer to Hiding Place Where Two Slayers Are Caught. slap in the face. Adele had just emerged from the City Court Bullding in City Hall, after being examined in plementary proceedings, when Artz, armed with the summons in a court action brought by Edward ©. Ginsburg to recover $200 for merchandise, walked up to her. Way “Mra, Bell," he began, “here i a) Abrain summona for you." ‘The actress lost| no time, but turned on her anda second later her gloved planted inst Artz's cheek ‘The crowd walking through the park atopped to take a look, but before Arta! line, filled thei fully recovered from the shock Miss| proceeded to terrorize this quiet little place, Ritchie and her attorney had disap- peared In the direction of the subway. Ex-Assemblyman ‘Rearrested Just fire. ae He Gets Out on Ball, Ex-Assemblyman Harold J. Fried+ man, who lives now at No, 770 Avenue the passing of a worthlers tectives jare and Kaftus se dl h warrant inured last Dece complaint of Irving Michaels of th Irving Michaela Jewelry Company, of No, 65 sau street, from whom Friedman bought @ diamond pin wo: hi Friedman's father was with him and $1,000 bail when Maxie nt held him for examination Friday. ‘The lelder Friedman declared that his son fom the was out of his mindd, the elder jte in October, On J. je told her that hig mother ob- jected to the match, but that, no mat- ter who opposed 1, they ld be married. But later he said he | been notified that he would be ¢ owned by his family and bis firm un- lews he gave her up, you, Millions and miltions | Barden Lot funsaa," be wrote, “ceedbyy! | FEBRUARY 4, 1914. 16 PAGES » Ramee PRICE ONE Cunt: TERMS IN PRISON FLORENCE BAR SSSREE “|ARMY CAPTAIN IS NAMED FIRST cv HUNT FDR ma al Capt. John McClintock, Late of Philippines, Will Head a Secret Service Squad. Comminaioner nounced this afternoon the appoint. ment as First Deputy Commisstoner . John McClintock, Ho wiil begin hin dutien to- morrow morning and will have charge ously injured in a fire which destroyed + | a hotel at Kelleher, near here, to-day. | LAWYERS ARGUE THAT CONVIS- - brother, William, “bad men," came to |town Jast night from their home in the mountains of the inatructton and tnapection of the Maryland the uniformed force, ives with liquor and the Spanish war as a volunteer, being discharged with the rank of Major. He then joined the regular army as ]a second lieutenant, William Daywalt, a policeman, peceih Si eM se ordered them to leave, and in a sub- FRIEDMAN AGAIN ACCUSED, sequent altercation with Daywalt and| the chief of police the brothers opened One bullet killed Daywalt, other wounded Miss Susan McGrath, @ bystander. The men escaped, but the town was C, Bayonne, N. J. was arrested thin | aroused and, headed by Sheriff Walk- tthe County Court eh 4nd Curtis 4 in Brooklyn, where he had been re- Heeman, & posse | leased in $1,000 bail in a case involving in k. De-| midnight ) hail of bullets to Waynesboro a at daylight, and rose to the | rank of captain, resigning in 1910 The Captain wan in charge of the "| Luzon, Philippin the schedule of | Mr. McKay prepared for hix new fast | luties are two clauses which indica’ old bureau for the investi- | gation of the character of candidat Mt to thelr home greeted with a posse retreated I started out again The outlaws meanwhile I gone into hiding. hb Approaching the 18 Dec, 27 and wave a check on the inan hunters saw 1 orn Exchange Bank, which, accord. of the boys, jing to Mr. Michaels, came back direction of the hiding place | marked no funds Davies Waldo abollshed will be r and that Capt charge of a tablished | peside Lieut. Gov. Wagner, him for the Grand Jury, but upheld. © MeClintock will have | branch of the linen, and predicted that within a fow Rarnes home the » Barnes, sister) « bugsy tn the ein personal command of a nquad of men, and it these will constitute the sec which Mayor Mitehel spoke of org vehicle and urdered the «irl to drive ahead ) reached the hiding nes boys ran out buwey levelled ble gun at] the Curran Poti mitten developed the fact that sev 1 thomaelves to When t place the By ‘The re-establishment of the charac. au id thought important, Investigating Con ordered hin tar 14 Mr, | toad 1 to run and Davies fire tering his side. tally wounded bonne the| Ket on the civil service List . McClintock Is forty years old In the ean time the| and was born in Miwau Barnea| son of He fell mor- | mory MeClinte nto the Mutual Life In- 4 and captured hin dmitting killing surance Co Columbia and |tichool and, deciding to enter the dip- lomatio service, went abroad in 1892 POR RAGING GEE PAGE 10, = FOR BOSS CASSIDY, WILLETT, WALTER Seller and Buyer of a Judicial Nom- * ination Sent & Sing Sing fora t Year and a Half and Fined $1,000 Each. CASSIDY MAKES SPEECH IN DEFENSE OF BOSSES, Go-Between Walter Sentenced to the Island for Three Months and Fined $1,000—Plan to Fight Verdict. ” As a first step in their torward march to the cells in which basi must “serve time” for bribery, “Curly Joe” Cassidy, William Wi and Louis T. Walter jr. were this afternoon “mugged” and in accordance with the Bertillon system in Police Headquarters, Brookfya. This was about two hours after all three of them had been sem tenced by Justice Jaycox, Cassidy and Willett—respectively the seller and the buyer of a Supreme Court nomination in 1911—t9 a year and a half in Sing Sing and the payment of a $1,000 fine, ahd Walter’ ta three months on the Island and the payment of a similar fine. » There were twelve other prisoners at Headquarters—sent there | from the County Court House—and Cassidy and his fellow convicts had — to wait their turn to make their finger-prints and give their measurements © i for the police records. fe, ——<$—$—$—$$ . Willett went through it all with FIVE DIE IN HOTEL FIRE; |ocrioss'nunmneee to casey ane bin SEVEN ARE INJURED Victims in Minnesota Town Fatality Trapped in Room by Fast Spread of Flames. LEMIDJI, Minn, Fel -Five men lost their lives and seven were serl convicted Heutenant. But the fight for the Mberty of these three men has already beeil begun by their attorneys who will apply for an order to show pi. why a certificate of reasonable doubt | should not issue in their bebalg. Thin will be argued and will pet a stay, thu keeping the Boss, customer and his clerk out of cells for a time. The dead are Frank O'Neil! of Deer , Liver, Thomas Boyd, Chica M.| ‘The grounds for an appeal fey @ Kreis, Kelleher, and two others not | certificate of reasonable doubt as gee ~ Identified, ‘The injured have been |pared by Lawyers Elder and brought to a hospital here. in behalf of Cassidy and Walter All the guests were asleop when the | voluminous and cover the whole fire started and the victims were | from the time the original charge ras trapped in their rooms by the fast | made down to the verdict of the spread of the flames. It is claimed that the entire ee ing in@the Kings County WOMAN SENATOR IN ALBANY. | court was iegal. sins. Tho petition recites that the charges ? Mra, Helen H. Robinson of C were originally brought before Jus- jo Addrens ues Scudder sitting as a “ NY, Feb, 4—Bra. Helen Ring| Mu¥istrate in Queens snd Be Simms ee Moe eae om Coloneaa | Cassidy, Willett and Walter for the, \was extended the privilege of the flo: nd Jury, An appeal was taken of the New York Btate ate to-day 1 the Appellate Division held that: arrival she Was immediaiviy there Was not enough evidence » the dais and given @ seal «euinst Cassidy to warrant holding © TION WAS ILLEGAL, Legielators. ts In a short speech she congratulated | 3... « rudder as to the ot! we New York upon “Such an able bedy of lo her two, ‘Then the Queens County Gragd a there would be as able a ropre-| JU!) took up the case and refused aye nentation of women in the Sevnate, | indict either Willett, Walter or Cage —<— |sidy, Then District-Attorney Crep+ (7% STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. | s+» of Kings County took the case 9% 4% before a Grand Jury in his jurtedie. 12M. — |tion and procured indictments, The 1 P.M! lawyers hold that the Kings County om Grand Jury had no more ev! and studied in Letpsic, London and| than the Queens County Grand Jury. which refused to indict. TALK WITH RELATIVES AFTER HEARING SENTENCE, After the men were sentenced; Shortly before the Spanish war 1il- [Justice Jaycox granted them the Paris, He returned here and, changing his mind about t bought @ seat on the New York Stock Exchange, health caused him to sell it, of his courtroom for the purpose The Captain sald he owed his ap-|talking with their wives and other pointment to friends. He said he had] relations, For more than an bewt Te ye inet iiveaT in [they wore there behind locked Berk: | apt. MeChints ‘ nt, but said would take |tWo deputy Sheriffs keeping wash and ward, quarters here as soon as he could find them, ‘The sentences were imposed by Jus ge ed é

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