The evening world. Newspaper, February 9, 1914, Page 3

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PAYSICIAN SAW WOMEN ARB WORKING AS HARD AS Tht MON FoR THE PAM OPEN HIS WOUND roner Now Satisfied Dead Cotton Broker Mutilated == | : Himself. UVICIDE MADE, CLEAR. Drove a Hatchet into His Skull and Resisted All Efforts to Save Him. (Special to The Brening World.) When the Gates of the GREENWICH, Conn., Feb. 9.—Satin- that William A, Stedmun, the ‘ ing Op wealthy New York cotion broker, com.| Exposition Swing Open mitted suicide Saturday in his home hese by tho strange device of crush- ing his skull with the hammer-end of a hatchet and driving into the wound @ four-inch pocket knife, Cor- oner Phelan of Bridgeport to-day gave @ permit for the removal of the m bedy. It seemed ut first incredible to the Coroner and members of the ly that Mr. Stedinan could pos- at San Francisco There Will Be Displayed Women Farmers, Paint- ers, Manufacturers, Musicians, Teachers and Other Arte and ably have plunged the knife into his asin after his skull was fracturea | Crafts, Dr. W. L. Griswold, head of the Greenwich Hospital, who operated on Mr. Stedman when he was taxen| And There Will Be Women there late Saturday afternoon gave the explanation which satisfied the | Coroner that Mr. Stedman had Killed ahimecit. “Tore OPEN HIS WOUND BEFCRE THE DOCTOK. “While 1 was holding hia left arm lad the nurse was cleansing the dges of the wound” sald Dr. Gris- old, “Mr. Stedman wrenched his jand away from me and plunged it ito the fissure of his skull, in an @ffort to tear the wound turtaer ‘open. He then became weaker. He, counted up to thirty before he be- came altogether unconscious. The counting is explained by the instruc. tion given to him when he was put under ether before an operation for appendicitis a year ago. He was told then that when he could nO longer speak he should count so that the urgeons would know that he had lost_consctousness. ‘The man who had strength to/ - wrench his arm from me and thrust Police to Look After the Morals of the Show— And, by the Way, There Will Be No Midway, De- clares Mrs. Laura C. Munson, Who Is Work- ing Hard for the Fair. “The Panama-Pacific in all her There will his fingers into his brain long after of the tremen- his skull certainly | Gdtib-aavancp ia? the knife, I found the knife while probing the wound,” | woman in the TO BE BURIED BESIDE HIS FIRST co fifty years, er WIFE. Prosecuting Attorney Ross Brush and Police Captain r satisfied with Dr. Griswold’ p planation and dropped the case, funeral service will be held EB. ‘albot ex- ternoon by the Rev. | jompson of the Christ Kpls- {there never would C1 Church and the burial will be Panama‘Pacific Exposition it Colchester to-morrow beside the irancisco."” ody of Mr. Stedman's tirst wife. Mr. Stedman was found in the cel- y the butler, who heard « sliding of| in the furnace bin. Mr. Stedman in robust health physically, but been depressed mentally for sev- weeks. Mrs. Stedman and his wife under the care of a trained} Mr. Stedman was a member; Willl the cotton brokerage firm of|the phen M. Weld & Co. of No. 82 tbe t a's fairs. G. Collier, ther of Irirgation,” | farming in California, the Brooklyn W: forty-four years old. rue peemicove had occurred two Sotwithstanding the permit for the moval of the body Dr. J. 8. Clarke, dical examiner, submitted a report ‘Coroner Phelan of Bridgeport to- eaying that there was still some the Coroner should investigate. said that Mr. Stedman had been ound sitting up in achair on the seat which the hatchet with which his skull had been broken. Coroner Philaf wil! hold an inquest here to-morrow. jot eae SLAIN POLICEMAN BURIED. 'Funeral services of Patrolman Ed- 3. Murtha, who was shot and last week in front of No. 37 street when an Italian he was aud- out of his sleev through the in the first place?” I questioned. THE DAY. claimed, triumphantly, of the opening of the canal, “Out in Californi: ‘and women have working together. between the sexes ie our regular way of getting thin Eweniy- fret ete Brooklyn. on abaern peek ee and ay -Cpm Maan Godley, w ’ of the Brookly: stand shoulder to shoulde women are eager to help and the men just as eager to help. rch, we iy the Rev Father Duhrt; was in Holy Cross lice band furnished muate at ‘ceremony and during the passing of funeral cortege. ortures of Indigestion \Miseries of Constipation Quickly and Safely Removed by EX-LAX The Chocolate Laxative thy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. Ex-Lex in guaranteed to be efficient, géntle, harmless. 0 te Ree. WR Drove This) ‘Toy ts Teepe Drogaiete Marguerite Mooers Marshall. =xposition in San Francisco will be the first great world’s fair to show Modern Woman re- markable works. be complete and convincing proof FINAL ARGUMENT THAT WON “When the committee of San Fran- ciscans came to Washington to ask that our city might be given the ex- position, every single one of them brought his wife with him!” she de- “And those wives were just the final argument which induced Uncle Sam to put us in charge of the official celebration Mrs. Munson paused and a smile crept into her eyes and bent upward {building at the county fat Evils of Impure Blood Ex-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people “ee evesine§ “WORLD, 1 Women Will Rule at the Big Panama Fair; rear SI FUTHS STEDMAN TEAR “T¥omen Made the Great Undertaking Possible| SEE CROOKSLINED | es Re WiLL OT ES Awa at the corners of her mouth. She is a slender, fragile léking woman, with a crown of beautiful gray hair and a warm graciousness. “I am remembering how we women felt when the news came that San Francisco had the exposition,” she said, “A big flag lettered with the long hoped for announcement was swung out in the heart of the city. contribu- | And women stopped each other in the tions to industry, street and shook hands and smiled art, letters and the home will for the for the joy of it. first time receive proper notice. And | {this ts as it should be, for if it hadn't | tion the advice of the women was been for the San Francisco women eagerly sought, because of the belief have been a in their eye for beauty and @enic ef- in San fect. Theirs was the deciding voice “When it came to selecting a loca- ; which finally determined the selection ‘That !s how Mrs, Laura C, Munson joe the 625 acres which form a natural ‘of his home on the Meade estate sums up the part played by women |amphitheatre in the Harbor View which he leased three weeks ago, /in the staging of what 1s expected to|tion overlooking the Golden “ greatest of all America’s great | And She is of course, a| which is a soft, natural blending of Californian, born and bred. Her hus. | all colors, was suggested by a woman. band is one of the leading merchants { of San Francisco, while her father, | That is a committee of some fifteen has been called because jhe first introduced that system of Four of Mra, ‘s sisters are now managing in their native State, “But what grounds have you for saying that women brought it about ite. the exposition color ac! “Then there is the Ladies’ Board. Prominent clubwomen of San Fran- cisco, appointed by the President of the Exposition and closely co-operat- ing with the men directors, The dies’ Board 1s in special charge of the Woman's Building, one of the largest and best located of all the exposition structures. In addition, the directors are continually referring all sorts of matters to the board, ery one of the numerous problems for which a woman's judgment may be needed,” THE WOMAN'S BUILDING AND OTHERS. “Please tell me about the Woman's Building.” I urged, “The Woman's Building at the San contain every imagin: a: ‘epeci- men of woman's work, from a crocheted collar to an alfalfa farm. It will be a monument Modern Woman. The success of American women in business, in art, in the profes- ei in ecience, in politics, in the home, will be displayed to the world. Women farmers, teach- ore, portrait painters, etenog- raphers, nurses, home makers, writers, public officials, costumers, milliners, manufacturers and mu- cians will be exhibitors, and so many other women that | could not complete the list in hours.” “It will be rather different,” { ob- served, “from the traditional woman's > with ite tidies and patchwork quilts and flow. ere and a few hand-painted china plat "I ahould say 1¢ would be differ. ent!" mailed Mra, Munson, “There'll be several other bulldings opened along with the fair, which will really be ‘wome: bulldings,'” she continued, “They are the structures which make up our new Civio Cen- tre, They inolude an auditorium, an opera house, an art museum, at a mil- lon dollars apiece, and a brary coat. ing half a million, It was the wom. en's wish, backed hy the women’ votes, which brought these buildings into being. The auditorium will be on the fair grounds, at the free dis- posal of all societies and conventions that geajre it. It will accommodate: ‘| with offices in the Long Acre Build- AY, “FEBRUARY Y914.: a iaens UP IN OLD STYLE Deputy Commissioner Rubin Revives Method Abolished by Waldo in 1911. How THE Oven THE CD « WOMEN bl. nuws tha 5 (COveLY, t cn) Z. how HE women ARB TAKING PART IN OTHE Be FAR Ps THINKS IT GREAT AID. Gangsters, Pickpockets and Burglars Forced to Parade at Headquarters. After three years of disuse the dally masked line-up of detectives of Man hattan and the Bronx and the night’ grit of crooks took place at Police Headquarters to-day, both in Manhat- tan and Brooklyn. The custom of parading the criminals gathered in before the detectives, who can view them through the eye-holes of black masks, offectively screening i" faces frem the prisoners, is declared by Second Deputy Commissioner Ru- bin to be one of the most important alds -fmaginable to good detective work. “It's a criminal mart,” he salg. “The up means that every deter- tive who can be Legit ae ved has a chance to look o' Inala that have been Beiter it ‘aad knows them again when he sees them.” The lineup was abolished by Waldo in June, 1911, and veterans about seemed like old times when two hun- dred detectives from every precinct in the city trooped down to the Cen- tre street building and made for the syninaaium on the flourth floor, where the lineup was held, Peppl, the Headquarters bootblack, did _@ rushing business selling manks as black as his own polishes, No- body without a mask, with the ex- ception of the crooks, was allowed on the floor, and Inspector Faurot of the Detective Bureau saw that this tule was strictly complied with, The Second Deputy Commissioner took personal charge of the lineup and spoke to the men of the importance of possessing photographic memories for faces. Among the prisoners paraded before the masked line were Joe Brown, Monk Eastman’s former aide, who was arrested last night for pick- and Jennie Noss of Willet lyn, charged with steal- Jewelry and other articles from Jacob Wachter. When the line-up came back to Brooklyn’ Headquarters Capt. Cough- ln of the Brooklyn Dvtective Bureau had three burglars, two men accused of grand larceny and one lone pick- poche to exhibit to his seventy-five sleuths, The detectives were not maaked, but sized up the crooks with “plain faces.” In a few days, how- over, their masks will be rewtored. COLD SNAPPED RAIL, CAUSED TRAIN WRECK Railroad Company Blames Weather for Fatal Accident to Chicago, St. Paul Flyer. SIOUX CITY, Ia, Feb, 9.—One per- son was gilled and fourteen were in- jured when Chicago, St. Paul, Min- neapolis and Omaha train No. 2 was wrecked by a broken rail at Bigelow, Minn,, early to-day. None of the In- jured was believed to be fatally hurt. All the cars except one left the track. J .Bloomfield of Surprise, Neb, was the passenger killed. ST, PAUL, Minn, Feb. wreck of the Omaha-Twin City Lim- ited passenger train on the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha road near Bigelow, Minn. 186 miles south of here, to-day was caused by cold weather, according to a atate- ment given out at the office of the general superintendent of the road, “A broken rail, which had con- tracted and snapepd because of the cold, caused the wreck,” saya the POLICEMAN IS ARRESTED ON CHARGES OF GIRL Magistrate Reynolds Finally Issues Warrant on Miss Aesop's Complaint. Policeman Charles Hagen was ar- rested at his home, No. 455 Gates avenue, Brooklyn, to-day by Detec tive Walter Conlan on charges mi by Miss' Madeleine Aesop of No. 879 Bergen atreet. While the charge has been hanging fire Commissioner Mc- Kay has suspended Hagen and or- dered him on trial before Deputy Commissioner Godley Wednesday. The accused policeman was ar- raigned before Magistrate Reynolds, who issued the warrant in Adams street court, and was paroled in the custody of his lawyer, John 8, Ben- nett, for further examination, Miss Acsop said that on Jan, 24, while al was sitting in the Arcadian Hofvrau restaurant in Bridge atreet with Miss Mabel McGlynn of No. 786 Washing- ton avenue, at 11 o'clock at night, Hagen, who was not in uniform, asked them to have a drink, and on their refusal struck her across the mouth, cutting her lip. She rane complaint to Inspector Daly, referred her to Magistrate Heynolde, The Magistrate at first refused to issue @ warrant, but on reading the record of an investigation made by the Inspector, changed his mind to- day. — DISEASE BREAKS OUT - ON STRANDED FREIGHTER Vessel Flies Distress Signal and Doctor Will Be Sent Aboard. A string of bunting mounted the signal halyards of the stranded Brit- ‘sh freighter Queen Louise to-day while the revenue cutter Itasca and two wrecking tugs stood by her off the Squan Shoals off Manasquan, N. J, where she grounded early Satur- day in the fog and driving mist, hopelessly off her course, from Cs diff, Walesa, to New York. The sig- nal was epeedily made out to be: “Contagious disease among “The Ladies’ Board is arranging for the best women speakers and musicians from all over the country to bo present at the fair, and there will be @ continuous series of cone ferences devoted to topics in which women are specially interested. It ‘was we who brought about the erec- tion of the Inside Inn, the only hotel on the fair grounds especially for the use of associations and congresses. WOMEN HELPED TO PAY THE LLs. “Women have gone down into their pockets to insure the success of the fair, Every time the citizens of San Francisco had to vote on a bond issue, to be devoted to the exposition, the women, almost to a unit, voted in favor of it. “indirectly, they have done much for the exposition by making San Francisco one of the mmst hygienic and sanitary cities in the world. We have ng curb markets, and the in- spection of milk and other food is most rigid. Our visitors need not fear for their health. _ “We shall probably have a fine force of police women at the fair. And the women will take care that there are no objectionable and immoral features among the various shows and entertain- ments, Even the moving pictures will be carefully censored. "{ do hope great numbers of New York women will come to our «#x- position,” ended Mrs, Munson, “I want them to see what women can do in a community where they are completely free and equal, And East. ern men might gain some profit from this particular object-lesson.” The big Panama fair has a hustling publicity agent in Albert Dellevie, ing. MRS. CARLEY DIVORCED FROM STOCK BROKER Cousin Told of Seeing Husband the Strange Woman. Tt was rumored that tubonic plague} turned over on ita side. Sleeping pas- 7 had broken out among the yellow|sengers had no chance to prepare for M@. Irene H. King Carley was|men who tried to jump overboard|the shock. Kexcue parties were at once formed by the train crew and uninjured passengers, They succeed- ed in dragging many from the over- turned train.” a eieeeeaemneat Fire on French er Borden HAVRE, France, Feb. 9—Fire on board the steamship Bordeaux of the French Transatiantic line did damnue to the extent of about $20,000 to-day The vessel was lying in perme and all of her carxo had been disc she arrived here on To. a, having left New York on Ji awarded a final decree of divorer to- day from Francis (, Carley, member of the New York Stock Exchango and a brother of Mra, Oliver Harvi- man, Justice Page signe! the de- gree, which does not provide alimony, but gives to Mra. Carley the custody of their daughter Anno, Carley did not defen ia wife's nuit. y tifled that she and dant were married at Kidge- Bept, 28, 1906, by Bishop hey lived at the Van- ¥ time, and until Cariey left New York, last eur mer, they had a residence at Kast Fifty-fourth street, She the Court that she learned of her husband's fondness for a young wo- man known at a Broadway hotel shortly after whe left, Rufus H. King, Mra, Carey's cou- sin, of No, 142° West Forty-ninth street testified that he called at thi Hotel Van Courtlandt at about o'clock one morning in last July o found Mr, Carley in a suite with a woman who was not Mra, Wan not Mrs. Coriay, aT when the vessel grounded two days ago, but were driven back to the fireroom by the ships officers, ‘The Queen Louise carries no doctor, be- uf a freight ship and it te» likely that one will be sent out to hor, The ship's agente and captain do not despair of getting her off. cargo of 8,000 tons of tin-plate, from Cardiff, Wales, for New York, is be- ing M@htered my derrick tugs, and this evening at high tide two Merritt Chapman wrecking tugs and the Gov- ernment cutters Seneca and Ithaca will try to haul tho freighter into deep water All the hawéers for to ing have been broken, and the Sen: vame to New ‘York to-day for more. Getober, Lad CASTORIA Yor Infante and Chilcrea, The Kind You Have Always Bought » widow of Harry Hrooklyn lawyer, who $10,000 to ‘Trinity Corporation to found a breed line with his same stam ed on every loaf, dropped to-day. wort of tlement a sh er ee cee gs Cee tiasidinth | SUNDAY SCHOOL TEAC ‘HER FOR WHOSE SAFE RETURN PRAYERS WERE ep el 9.—The hen, gph tan CHATZAEIN. GAYNOR'S DAUGHTER, RECENTLY MARRIED, Hospital in Los Angeles on Wedding Trip. Mayor, at her home at No. Eighth avenue, the reported critical attack of sixteen-year-old daughte: pital suffering intense pain. at home, when she wap at! necessary, paper despatches, either sl family know, currence of the old trouble, and she has been taken to a hospital in only as @ precaution,” other physicians in consultation, to @ decision regarding the gravity the attack. _——— Fa Alta: OYSTER BAY, N. Walter J. Power, rector of Bt, nick's Catholic church and lon, friend of Colonel Theodore died last night in the rectory. stricken while saying high mass eleven o'clock yeate nd sank half kneeling and half sittin 1 a He was assisted Death C carried into the rectory, | faultless RESULTS where ORDINARY It's a harmless tq) ng cuticle. Bring "Int lide wit ete cna On Jquich tf OUTEX 10° weed, Particular | vrople and profemional manicuriste every | are CUTEX enthuslaste, A single | will make YOU one! bc and B0e | “Y All leet er found articles af vertised in The World will be ied at The World's Informa- ton Bureau, Palitcer Ballding ILL WITH APPENDIGITS Headquarters sald to-day that it| Mrs, Re reyes H. Isham Taken to No word had been received to-day by Mrs, W. J. Gaynor, widow of the 20 Brooklyn, regarding pendicitis suffered in Los Angeles, ‘al, by Mrs, Ralph H. Isham, her who was married ten days ago. Despatches from California said that the attack was very severe and that Mrs. Isham had been taken to the California Hos- “Those statements must be exag- gerated,” said Mrs. Gaynor to-day. “My daughter has been subject to chronic appendicitis in a mild form for two years, She had one attack at school at Briarcliff and others here ded by our family physician, Dr. Parrish. He did not advise an operation, and said that though in time one might be nothing had developed that warranted taking such a step. “I know that if my daughter were as il) as is indicated by the news- or Mr. Isham would have let some of tho It ts probably a re- The despatches from Los Angeles said that Mrs, Isham was in charge of Dr. Carl Kurts, who had called was stated that Mrs. Isham had pur- posely refrained from alarming her family until the physicians bad come ef Power at the Y., Feb. %.—Rev. Domi- a close oonevelt, jo" on the into the AES. FOR RETURN OF | MISSING: Gi Sunday School ‘Pgh in Tears, ; | When Supplication Is Made = for Their Teacher. For nearly a week a search Rag |been mado by the police and het jfamily and friends for Miss Henrietta ,Schatalein of No, 136 Skillman avente, Brooklyn, without result. It Was jcontinued to-day with renewed ef- |forts, stimulated by prayers for her jfeturn offered at the services of the , German Reformed Church at Avenue and Withers atreet yesterdag. | Minas Schatzlein, who was seventess years old, taught a clase of chilérem — ‘in the Sunday school. The prayers |” |wore offered at the request of Ber a {little pupils by whom she ie meek ” loved aad who are greatly trouble by her disappearance. Many of themg cried as the prayers were said. , The girl's mother cannot accoum§ «| for her absence from home except fee @ scolding given to her a week age Sunday. She went out to spend the "4 evening with friends and promiss® her mother faithfully she would Bp. © back before 10 o'clock, Her mothep waited up worrying for her until mie night, and, wrvaght up by her feasm, spoke to her very severely. “Oh, I am getting too old to te. talked to like that,” Mrs, Schatselp — said her daughter answered. “I ams going to find a place where I eam” earn my own living and have ailittie (J freedom to have a good time withems + being yelled at.” J She seemed, the mother sald, to have recovered her good spirits ale | together by Tuesday and sald mothe! ()) ing more about leaving home. @&e. kissed her mother goodby whea aie the ond started for the sewing class at. Y. W. Cc. A. at pedir: Nevins atreets, She was to have been from the clase of which Miss A, (a the instructor within a few When the class was walked with other girls, laughing chatting, to Nostrand avenue 2 Fulton street, where they left Ber.ts | 7 take a car to her home. No one whe | knows her has reported ome eo. since, a When Miss Schatsloin teft mother sald, she was dressed dark suit With a blue cost hat. From what the other Mrs. Schatsiein is of the opinion her daughter changed her hat leaving home. Miss Schat about & feet 4 inches tn height der and has dark brown hair dark complexion. She was music and was to have sung asad cert fi Ridgewood church to-mesp — it at It of Tell ir age at once and make Recipes in and on

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