The evening world. Newspaper, March 18, 1914, Page 3

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= LOVEFORMOTHER > AS LATTER WEES Childhood Show of Affec- tion Was Formality. THE JUSTICE IS AMAZED. Judge in the Separation Suit Shows Dismay at Girl’s Strange Attitude. Beatrice Kets, a sizteen-year-old Wedleigh 1.igh School girl, tossed her head on the witness stand in Justice Blanchard's Court to-day and declared that she had not loved her mother ince she was seven years old. When she kiseed and hugged her mother ® child ahd young woman, she said, | ‘ the did 20 “merely a: Feapect, not of lo ‘The attitude of the girl, who was Randsomely attired in a blue gown and white ‘polo coat and helmet hat, was emphasized during her testimony, Her mother, Mra. Hannah Katz, who is suing the girl's father, Henry w. Kats, a wealthy Broadway merchant, for a separation, sat within a few feet of the child. Miss Katz (pronounced Cates, she says) gazed frigidly at her mother, who sat quietly sobbing in a chair near the jury box. The girl is one of the four Katz children who have been in more than twenty schools in ten years because of the wrangle over their custody between father and mother. Mise Kats was called in connection with mother’s claim that the father Poisoned the minds of her children against her. Another daughter, Flor- ence, was waiting in court to testify, Stn another, Sybil, is martred and the boy, Leroy, in in school. ADMITS HER MOTHER, BUT DE- NIES LOVE. “You know this woman is your mother, Beatrice?” asked the lawyer. “Oh, yes,” returned the girl, undia- turbed, “And you still have @ child'a love for the mother who bore itt” “No, sir.” “You mean that you have not a Derticle of love for your mother?" “Not the slightest, sir.” returned the daughter, promptly and with evi- dent defiance. Mrs. Katz turned her chair about until her back was to her husband. Bhe gazed out the window into Broadway. As the tears rolled down her cheeks her daughter continued to assert that she had lost all love for her eince the mother placed her in an agyium in Philadelphia when she was @even years old. ‘But your mother told you she had mo money and that your father would gend her none and that she was com- Delled to send you there, didn’t she?” “Yoo; she said all of that, but I did Ret believe he! “But you wrote to her, cajled her ‘Dearest Mamma,’ and when she q@ame to see you tn school you kissed her and placed your arma about her neck, didn’t you?” SHOW OF AFFECTION WAS ONLY R ICT, SHE Save. “Yes, certainly, but I did 90 simply ‘te ehow my respect for her.” “Way hare you lest all love for your mother?” “Because ah» spoke il! of my fath- ‘eg, and because she never showed me the love that a mother should. She ti the schoolmasters where we temded classes about her domestic agtatre. She sald father was running about with other women and all that, yeu know, embarrassed us great: Sustioe Blanchard, who has heard weore than @en thousand separation eulte, wiped his forehead and sat im his chair in perplexity. witness then declared that in- @ matter of | le always told me to write to her | I did not obey," she sald. . Kats obari that her h teamé abandoned her several y; Lael msig.t ee See ae ROBERT GOELET.. $060-0-4-0.0-0.4-00060040005006 SIEGEL DEPOSITORS MAY SPEEDILY GET DIMIDEND IN CASH Court Orders Various Receiv- ers to Try to Reach a Com- Promise Agreement. To obtain, If possible, a dividend for the depositorm in the defunct Siegel! bank, Judge Hough of the United States District Court to-day directed that when the bids for the various! Siegel enterprises are opened on March % a conference shall be held by William A, Marble and Sheppard jr., receivera of the Siegel stores, and Henry Melville, receiver of the bank, to see if they can reach & compromise as to the final disposl- tion of the claims of the bunking and ‘antile creditors, such an agreement me it can court and may then, in its judgment, he advertised, xo that all the credi- tors may learn of it, This order was signed to-day, fol- lowing a petition submittel to Judge Hough by Joseph onbers, at- torney for the “of the stores. Mr. Rosenberg se) forth th various claims were asse} M tol by Melville against the ot and that there bad hb negotiations looking mpr of the claims, He further stated “It is desirable that a compromise be had to avold protracted and vx. pensive litigation and make possibie the prompt payment of a divi some amount to the bank deposito There can be no agreement untib the bids are opened, as the amounts properties will marked effect upon ment rs us Don’t Let Your Stomach Trouble You ‘When you fee! miserable, run down, and ent headaches it i pen Be have a bad taste in the mouth, coated @ sure sign that your stomach, liver good, thorough cleansing at once. EX-LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocolate “gy Abe} system in a natural, health will relieve your bowels of Manner, without pain or jin several hours your head will be clear and your eyes will sparkle. One 10¢ box of Ex-Lax is enough to convince you. Get ia at your drug stove today. 10c,,25c and 50, Society Woman Who Gets Divorce, Husband She Declares Was Cruel POPE OOGPDE ED O0TEDH0ESO04O900O 900005000000 000 John 8.1 be reached It is to be submitted to the undigested waste matter ‘ pformer attorney, in which ened bodily barm. TER BY | : Mas-ROBERT GOELET MRS. GOELET WINS DORGE SUT ON CRUELTY CHARGE Decree Doesn’t Mention Ali- mony and Agreement Terms Are Secret. NEWPORT, March 18.—Mrs. Elsie Whelen Goelet obtained a divorce from Robert Goelet before Justice | Barrows in the Supertor Court here at the end of yesterday's hearing, but nothing could be learned to-day of any alimony that might have been agreed on beforehand. Previously counsel had agreed on the disposition of the children. A de- cree accordingly was entered that Peter, two years old, is to remain in the custody of his mother until six, when his custody will be jointly be- tween mother and father. The other son, Ogden, now seven, is to be jointly in the custody of mother and father. The reading of depositions consumed three hours, The sult was not con- tested, but Mr. Goelet was represent- ed by counsel, Though every effort | was made to have the proceedings secret, Justice Barrows declined to hear the case in private. The law- yers, however, in a manner got around | the order. The depositions were printed and copies given the court and attorneys. James Collins, Mra, Goe- ‘s attorney, then read the tusti- in practically a whisper. d by the formation of @ St. rick’s Day parade just outside the court room. In granting Mra. Goelet’s petition for the divorce, Justice Barrows said: | “Extreme orueity may consist of @ language, ae violence, testi- inuous use of in- sulting vulgar and abusive language by Goelet toward his wife, accom- panied by numerous petty acts o ly calculated to annoy and embarrace i id accomplishing this result. ject has according to the testimony, a serious impairment of her health, and the conditions fully it the Court in granting this di- “MRS. VON GLAUSSEN EXPERT ON CELLS. Famous Prisoner Qualities as Judge of Conditions in Prisons Mrs, Ida von Claussen, twice de- ared insane by judges and twiee Hfound sane by Juries. qualities when she declined to return to Mat- teawan pending the ar motion for habeas corpus to be! > have been In Berlin studying heard next Monday German.” announced the twins in Mrs, von Claussen said she pre-|chorus while the chaperone frowned ferred one of the “Althy, vermin-in- {and told them not to talk to news. fested cells in the Tombs Prison ty paperinen in| ) hey bi Mati “pid you Tearn much man tho beat room they have in Mattea-| soca ¢he mhip newn report van.” Mrs. vou Claussen was found “Oh, we Warned a lot of the danidiest to be rational and capable of man- | German dances,” the girls replied. “The ng her ow lust fu k after she had been |Cecille of the North ¢ “FIGHTING PARSON” RESTS ON LAURELS AFTER FSF “*Twas Nothing,” Says Rev. Mr. Henderson of Militant Defense of a Cripple. HE WHIPPED A SALESMAN Brooklyn Clergyman Com-}She Is Identified This After- plimented by Magistrate for His Courageous Action, The Rev. ira W. Henderson, ath- letlo pastor of the Sands Street Memorial M. E. Church, Brooklyn, found himself receiving congratula- tiona of the sort that a successful “white hope” might expect when he sat down to breakfast In nis apart- ment at No. 61 Pierrepont etreet this morning. ‘ Mr. Henderson, who is of the gentle disposition of the most orthodox gentlemen of the cloth, was compit- mented by Magistrate Corrigan tn the Night Court last night for having taken a hand in a fight in Grand Central station when Joho Stern, « husky travelling salesman, knocked down and beat a crippled hat dealer, James Brennan, who had just arrived in the city from Danbury. Brennan has only one leg. ‘The fighting parson of Brooklyn ts a big man, and his red blood boiled last night as he stepped from a@ train in time te see an assault upon a cripple. “It seemed to me that the quarrel about the possession of a handbag was a poor excuse for the assault,” Mr. Henderson said to-day to an Evening World reporter. “The two men had some words and went to the baggage room. There the big and sound one knocked down the cripple, sending him unconscious to the floor. Stern did not step there, but began beating the prostrate man. “Of course I, just as others did, tore him from his victim. He broke away from us and resumed the assault. A third time he slipped out of his coat and tried to get at Mr. Brennan. Then he was roughly handled. He might have been harshly treated.” MINISTER'S SKILL WITH SEEMED REMARKABLE. ‘Witnesses told Magistrate Corrigan that the tall, well built minister han- died Stern with a akill that gave hint of boxing lessons. They sald that the battling parson used excellent footwork as well as clever fist work, but Mr. Henderson declined to admit to-day that the affair reached the proportions of actual fisticuffs. Visitors were calling on him, he sald, and the telephone bell was ring- Ing. If the story continued its rounds and there wag much further public: tion there was danger of his being transferréd from the Saturday col- umn of church news to the Bob Ed- ren page. Big as he is, and able as he ia to take care of himaelf, Mr. Henderson seemed extremely anxious to get under the ropes and retire from hia role of militant. Stern's two eyes were closed in some myatertous fashion, his nose was bat- tered and he acemed to have already paid fairly well for knocking down and trampling a cripple when Magia- trate Corrigan gave him the added punishment of ten days in the work- house, “You certainly made a good job of it and I congratulate you,” the Magia- trate said, addressing Mr. Henderson, “If there were more preachers like ists you this world would be a happier | place to live in.” ——— THE TANGO IS DOOMED! TWIN BEAUTIES SAY SO Daughters of Governor Fos, Back From Continent, Learned Just Lots of Things. There was one chaperon who breathed a deen, deep aigh of relief when the ateamsh'p Kronprinzessin nan Lloyd reached her pier at Hoboken to-day, 4 This particular chaperon had aw her jcharges the beautiful twin daughters 1 4% AN! Argt experi expert on prisons and cells to-day | tne affairs by w Sheriff's me of former Gov. Foss of Massachusetts, The two girls, Esther and Helen, nineteen years old, look so much alike that even the chaperon had diffleulty in telling them apart, This is not her abroad with them, for ir father sends them across th Atlantic every little while to become wieh Continental languages nen of Berlin in the world. are the beet dancers Over there the men pay an inmate of the insane asyvium at attention to the music, Here at home Maiteawan f ral months ‘the men pay more attention to the The Attorn eral’s offive will girl, ‘The popular dance in Berlin. ix oppose 2 regain her tib- the waltz. ¢ tango and othe: of ‘ison, from Mr the modern dances are dying out in York office, will popularity and they will die out here ose The habeas corpus proceeding She is under an indictment for writ- ing a@ letter to Charles Straus, her ne threat- The girls were asked whether their haperone, Miss Butler, had enjoyed herself. “Oh, you bet; with us,” they re; she had @ fine time ued. jdown and kill | Schumacher. flat “ally dy, HOLD CHAUFFEUR “OF MAIL AUTO ON HOMIGDE HARE | Driver Caught Hours Later on| Clue Given by Pursuing Autoist. . | VICTIM’S HEAD CRUSHED. noon as Elizabeth Riley, of City Hospital. J Frank Ode! chauffeur, of No. 174 Alexander avenue, the Bronx, was held by Coroner Healy in $2,500 bail | this afternoon on a charge of homi- cide. Detective O'Brien, who arrested Odell, saya he was the chauffeur in| charge of & mail truck which ran ® Woman at Fourth ave! and Twenty-sixth atreet at 7.40 o'clock last night, Odell admitted that he drove a truck loaded with mall up Fourth avenue past Twenty-sixth street at the time of the accident, but stoutly denied hat he had run over anybody. Witnesses of the accident say that the chauffour put on speed after run- ning over the woman. The victim of the accident wea identified this afternoon as Kilsabeth Reilly, forty-five years old, a laun- dress, who worked at the City Hos- pital on Blackwell's Island for five years. Sho left the hospital a few days ago to live in Manhattan and it is supposed that she had found « ome somewhere in the vicinity of opt where she was killed. The woman was crossing the street when the big mail truck, loaded to capacity, came tearing along on its way to the Grand Central Terminal, woman failed to see the tru until too late. Witnesses declared they could not see any effort of the driver to avoid her. The huge truck struck her, hurling her through the air, to fall under the wheels, which over her. Instead of stopping bis truck the bobbed increased Lis speed, leaving @ woman's mangled body where bad fallen. i . Charles King of No. 62 Pine street, who was in his touring car, saw the occurrence and ordered his chauffeur to chase the mail truck. The two |care 8 dashing in and out among the trat but the tour- of the bea laden truck, and slowly drew along: le. At Thirtieth streat Mr, chauffeur swung ahead of th eH e truck, intending to ‘pocket it ‘and force it to the curb, but the fugitive chauffeur kept on at full speed, pay- ing no attention to warning shouts, and Mr. King’s car had to pull out ‘on the verge of « collision. Mr. King, however, had le areful note of the license number id the Gov ment number of the truck, with which he returned to the scene of the killing. DIVORCE TESTIMONY SPOILS DAMAGE SUIT Woman Loses $30,000 Action When Railroad Attomey Digs Up a Recent Suit. | Her own defense in a divorce auit tried last week before Justice Crane proved the undoing of Mra, Mary A. Emery in a sult for damages tried to- day before Juatice Van Biclen in the Kings County Supreme Court. Mra. Emery sought to recover $30,000 from the Nassau Ratiroad Company for tn- | juries suffered in boarding an “L.") n at New Utrecht avenue and ninth atree Emery alleged that these in- juries are permanent and have made her the victim of neurasthenta, she described the injuries at length on the | witness stand, Counsel for the railroad company | sprung a surprise on the plaintiff by producing the records of a divorce | sult tried last week,-entitied Arthur L. Emery vs, Mary A. Emery, It was | admitted that the Mary A. Kmery who was defendant in the divorce sult | was the plaintiff in the damage suit, The evidence in the divorce sult showed that Arthur I. Emery in chief ‘engineer on a steamer plying between |New York and Porto Rico. He al- | leged that during his absences from home his place there was taken by. | Theodore If, Bicknell. first mate of a \steamer plying between New York and Galveston, Ricknell went on the witness stand and awore that he lived with Mrs. Emery while her husband wan away Mrs. Fiery on oath charged that her husband beat and kieked her, and on one orcasion punished her ao ae. verely us to inflict permanent injuries, causing neurasthenia. When her tea. timony In the divorce suit was read to the damage suit jury a verdict was |returned for the railroad company, CHILD STARTS A FIRE. Volice Stop Women From J inw to the Street, | While Mra Rebecca Schumacher was avleep in her flat on the third floor of | |the tenement at No 5% Kast One Hundred and ‘Thirty-fitth atreet, the Bronx, this afternoon, her fivesyeur-old daughter Gertrude found box of matches and started a fire in’ the? kitchen ‘The blaze spread rapidly and nile 1 Mra ehi vil were the clear tenants all look to the fire escapes and Hollcemen McGuire and Stevens were hep. bi nen VO Wanted to Jump, war confined to the little Gertrude's hair, which w Imoay completely | bene! v' burned ‘off her ‘" . ° mM | took place yesterday afternoon in the oe MARON 18, 191 Mrs. Philip Coudert a Bride Here; |(Nf Formerly of Opera Comique in Paris $O00099599099509900900000000000TS 2080 OO0ORTODIORD The marriage of Philip Coudert, a @on of the late Louis Leonce Coudert and @ nephew of Frederio R. Coudert, and Miss Odette le Fontenay of Paria, formerly of the Opera Comique, Chureh of St. Vincent de Paul, in West Twenty-third street. The bride, who wore a white gown topped by a black picture hat, car- ried lilles of the valley, and walked with Louis L, Coudert, a brother of HARD WORK IS SURE. RECIPE FOR BEAUTY, SAYS FAIR LILLIAN Women of Jamaica Hide Their Age Beneath Youthful and Pretty Backs. Mrs, Lillian Russell Moore, | matd and her husband returned this morning on the United Fruit liner! Calamares from a crulse through the| Went Indies and South American ports, Mrs, M ing as of yore in the early hours of her vked as charm- ore the sleety, snowy. rainy morning, Sho said she was proud that she was an American “No American can go to the Pan- ama Canal,” said the actress-news- | paper woman, “without being proud of the fact that he or she ts a native ‘ rw ean AOD eed By | AND SECOND BU KILLS MAD: BU opie Strange Attack on Wife Explained) Wounded Pal Tums Blood trickling down the face of a man who was poddiers in old clothes Rayard street attracted the of Detectives Foley and De 2 to-day. They took the man 91 Headquarters, where it wall that he had a bullet wound of) hie head. 5 He was recognised ds Schmidt, recently release@ a Bing, after serving @ term. of: for burglary. Schmidt sald. 8 abot last night in the fat of Ott ter at No. 587 East Twelfth Henry Carlson, alias “Crasy burgia! The arrest of Schmidt the mystery attending the in Ritter's flat. Ritter to in Hospital with @ fatal bulet Om in his neck. Mra. Ritter : home with a bullet hole al cheek and Carlson's bedy i'm Nimeelf in the hallwa; ter’s home after woundiag & Ritter and Ritter’s wife with end! let. The police theory ts that'C and Schmidt fought adout the spoile of a burglary. Schmidt says he was Ritter’s last night when C tered the Gat and fred a ‘The bullet creased his the bridegroom, who gave her in mar- riage. She had only one attendant, @ aister of the bridegroom, Mra, Har- old Perry Erskine, who was Mrs. Coralie Coud kine wore a chiffon, top; roam in violet and purple hues, and Coudert carried orchids. Norman J, was hia brother's beat man, and neutralize irri- 5 tating acids. , 1 . Brakine, a sister of the bridegroom. men won't work, so the women refuse to support them. The: enough ives and their to do to support them: children, “Tho women of Costa Rica are the most beautity in my peoplo. y' d pass it on tothe 2 remains to irritate orem! rex | ever saw H dder, obliging you te and are just the loveliest | two or three times diring in the world, f attr ‘The sufferer is in deal of attention among tho people of « waa on account of my light hair. They | there are just crazy about blondes in Costa Rica.” When the Calumares reached her pler in the East River Miss Dorothy Russell, daughter of the famous e Ufe. 1 don’ t is extremely ant times very painful, this be the most simple Get about four ounces of Jed our pharmacist and take o ul ino glass of water continue this for twe or will neutralise the acide in beauty, was on the stringplece, was attired in a green gown, “Hello, “rm ‘s next ma!" eried Doroth: at Hammerat ‘ow lovely,” suid ma, waving her {ohn ‘Downey, a hollermaker out of work, was a stowaway on the Cala- mares, For four days he was stowed in the stoke hole, when dragged to light was fatter than when he lett Coton, Somebody had been feedini him on bananas tn will probably go back to Colon unt his brothe he says, in a to hin assistan act I ip. Jed Selts ls inexpensive, ees is made from the acid of qeapapras lemon juice, combined with Mts is used by thoemads of Somme ree hath disorders water drink, bladder trouble. Two Men Hel Roam Knows Where. 7 | An unclaimed estate of $4.00 in cash of the United Staten Po my mind ame to Meht In the Surrogates Court - the canal in as great an achievement jo Kings to-day whe ws as the pyramids, and the people take | ‘Pisnot, executor, filed the will oe their hats off to every American HH. Hubbard, who died un They ought to 1 ‘The will dircets that the extate shall | a “ be equally divided between James 8. "Down in Jamaica T found the per Pe RCL eee SAD ee and William ubbavd, the Rockin Of Wain GOs ERP ABGYOR OF) so ce the tentutrin, and in the event Pie perpetual youth, Tam going to write | | ie oP Bi some stores about the women. The held in| women of Jamaica have the perfect a PSvETe Oy youthful back. From the rear you can't tell whether a woman is young or old. Her back is a8 straight as an arrow and, of course, more graceful This perfection of symmetry and beauty come from hard work. ‘There! is no question of suifrake in Jamaice The women do all the work “They break rock for the streets; they cut and carry bananas ‘The men | do no work at all ‘The highest wages paid to women are 47 « the majority of them get onty ; a day » men settle the question | & of suffrage by not marrying at all ‘They have children, all right, but they won't marry, Marriage is too ex- they think, Once they marry ve another mouth to feed. The ‘ aH CEYLON TEA. whouts be unk Tissot was Structed to pit the money in a hank and try to find the sons of Mra Ttun| White Rese Coffes, Ouly 3Saa hard i a | Heavy for Automobite | why sutt eders, DYSPEPSIA, Third offennes at auto speeding | {ROURLES comrl brought heavy finer to-day on two| Melitabin erates. hauffours: In the Yorkville Police | dred Wt Magistrate Nolan fined camitte | P3 thaffee of No. M7 Weat Sixty-eehth r ) ays in jail for run: nty-five miles an hour ntence Was meted out to laidore Al hum of Blghieenth five fallea a 7 West One Hundred. and street who wag a Ff run weaty>

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