The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1914, Page 3

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WITH THREE YOUTHS, AFTER COCAINE RAID pee onan Two Sisters, Missing From} Father's House, Show Ef- fects of the Drug. .L. CONNECTED. | ALL W Arrest of “Dope” Seller Brings | Ott Names of Twenty-five Harlem Women as Buyers. i} Two young girls and three youths, captured last night In a raid, were ' arraigned in Morrisania police court to-day charged with having cocaine | im their possession, The girls and two of the youths were held in $1,500 ball each and the other youth In $2,500 bail. Mrs. Mary Schumacher, who runs & furnished room house at No, 140 Brown place, the Bronx, notified Pa- trolmen O'R: and Ferguson at midnight that there was a disturb- | ance in progress in her home. In two rooms on the second floor | the policemen found Stella and Julia Selgel, sisters, seventeon and sixteen years old respectively; Michael Le: tera, eighteen, of No. 757 East One| Hundred and Forty-ninth stree’ George Smith, nineteen, No. 452 Con- | cord avenue, and Joseph Turphey, nineteen, of No. Bast Ohe Hu dred and Fifty-seventh street, all un- der the influence of cocaine. ‘ Cocaine tn boxes and bottles wore fdund in the two rooms oc the quintette, Many empty ned cocaine and Alne packages yard, having been | | wooden were found in tl thrown from a window @ girls are good looking, but| show the effects of the drug habit.! They lived with their father at No. 116 St. Ann's avenue until a few} weeks ago, when they left home and} he had been unable to get any t of them. The girls say they were taught to use the drug by Smith, who! rented the room in which they were found. | Chief Magistrate McAdoo fixed the bail in Smith's case at $2,500 becau: he has been arrested in cocaine raids before. All the prisoners aro of re- spectable Bronx families in comforta- ble circumstances and, with the excep- tion of Smith, have been addicted to cocaine only a few mont).s, Some twenty-five well-to-do young and middle-aged women of Harlem who find solace in drugs may have some anxious moments when detec- tves ask them to oxpluin why their names and addresses are on a list of cocaine buyers found in the room of Jobn King, alins “ ‘was arrosted at daybroak to-day af- ter a fierce struggle on the top floor of the apartment house No. 265 Hust One Hundred and Eleventh streot. King was remanded for trial by Magistrate Krotel in the Harlem court to-day, charged with traffic ing in forbidden drugs. en the detective, Frank eleston, foreed bias way into King’s room, he found the “coke runner” stretched out on bis bed sniffing cocaine, King leaped to his feet and grappled with the de tive and the two rolled over and over ‘on the floor until the sleuth silenced his adversary with « blackjack. ———— \ ALFRED HERTZ MARRIES. jetropol jetor of \ Takes Bride in Germany, BERLIN, June 6.-—Alfred Hertz, the German conductor of the Metropolitan Opera, who recently arrived in Ger- many, has just been quietly married in thia country to a young and beautiful Viennese concert singer. Mr. and Mra, + Hertz are spending their honeymoon ‘at @ suburban hotel on the shores of Wannsee, near Potsdam, in the hope m Opera of escaping the attentions of thelr many frignds in Berit, Mrs. ‘ta, who speaks English as y of age. The couple planned to kee thelr marriage more or less secret unt thelr arrival in America in August, a FREE BATHING SUIT PATTERN, ‘The latest style May Manton Paper for the making of a snappy Bathing im To-Morrow's Sunday World. Page 6, Second News Section.) Plan Your Bult will be given free for the coupon | (See | Vacation To-Morrow! When there will be printed about 2,000 announcements of country, seashore and mountain hotels and boarding houses In The Big Sunday World! Be sure and get these SUMMER RESORT announcements them for future reference, ) There will be a great demand for this vacation information and you will act wisely to Order the Sunday World in Advance! and keep RETIVGRISHELD, [Everything in Century’s Absence, Declares He Would Recog- nize the City, However, Despite Growth and Skyscrapers. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Suppose Rip Van Winkle had been living on the island of Manhattan In 1867, and had departed in the autumn pied by which came to so mysterious an ending. sleeping a score of years, his absence from New York had been prolonged for forty-seven summers and win- ters. Then in the York"—that is so there ever been huger mental jum The situation MISAMLNARSHALS fortygeven years of that year for his mountain holiday And suppose that, instead of month of June and the year of 1914 he might be permitted to enter again “little old New blatantly big new New York. Has a time and a place necessitating a p than that which this Anno Domin! Rip would have to take? {se not entirely imaginary. There has just arrived in America a hale and hearty gentleman ” of eighty-two whose last visit was paid to us exactly ago. He is George John Shaw- | Lefevre, Lord Eversley, who lives in Winchester, England. In one sense Lord Eversley {8 no Rip Van Wink! for he has kept thoroughly wide awake during tho last half contury. For thirty-three years he served in the House of Commons, and he was ono of its oldest members when he was made a peer, He became a mem- ber of the Gladstone Cabinet In 1892, and he has always enjoyed a reputa- tion as an orator. His friendship for America has been proved more than once; notably during the civil war when he was one of the few prominent Englishmen to come out openly in favor of the Union, He protested emphatically in Parliament when England permitted the privateer Alabama to escape to prey upon the commerce of the North.| SOME OF THE NEW THINCS HE) WILL FIND. And his present visit, andertaken at an age when most men do not will ingly stir outside the radius of an! armehatr, Is further testimony of his sympathetic tnterest in the United States. are some of the things Lord Eversiey will find in New York to-day which were un- med of at the time of his last two years after the close of the civil war: Skysorapers. rooklyn Brid Elovated railroa The Groat White Way. Taxicabs. Cable cars. The subway. Telephon ALL NEW YORK ABOVE FIFTY- NINTH STREET. And of course this Ist merely) scratches the surface of Innovation. “WAIT, MURDERER,” WIRES VILLA; “I'LL BE }| HERE,”’ SAYS HUERTA. VERA CRUZ, June 6.—Preatdent Huerta 1s now in dally communt- cation with Gen. Villa, according to a report brought here by a refu- eo, and the character and method of their communication are uncon- ventional, Villa, according to the report, recently sent one of his telographers within tho Fedoral lines, who tapped @ telegraph wire and sent to Huerta @ mossage in which Villa called his enemy varl- ous unpleasant names, and urged him not to hasten his departure from the capital, as Villa was very anxious to see hin before he left, “Do not run away from Mexico,” Villa wired, "Stay there, man whose hands are dyed with the blood of a martyred nation, I will be in the capital within sixty days, and 1 will cut out your lying tongue and give your body to the crows to eat.” “I'N be here," was the reply sent by Huerta, who gaye orders that any other messages from Villa be delivered to him immodiately, Since this order was issued Villa, according to the refugee, has not disappointed Huerta one day, MaRS pw |the view from the harbor was utterly | arching against the sky. jit” | [have seen are longer and wider, “I have had so iittie time In which to recaive impressions,” apologized Lord Eversley, when I saw him a few hours after he landed at the Hotel Ritz-Carlton, “I have realty done nothing since I arrived except to drive along Madison avenue and to at- tempt calling on three or four friends, all of whom I found out of town. “But I realized something of the changes from the moment I bed my first glimpse of your skyline. I have! been here twice before, you know.) the first time was in 1853, when I came over on thé sidewheeler Niagara, and nearly all of us were se Kk. At that time I met Longfellow, Emersqn, Lowell, Dana and other noted Amefi- ns long since dead, Fourteen years later I made my second visit, and I have a vivid recollection of New York in 1867, WOULD RECOGNIZE US IN SPITE OF CHANGES. “Not a single one of the tall moun- tains of steel and stone in the lower part of the city was then erected, and different from what tt 1s at present. On the east there were no briages| And yet even | if I had not known what city I was approaching I should have recognized Lord Eversley paused thoughtfully. He Is of medium hoight, thickset and @ little stooped. His hair and his close cropped beard are iron gray; his eyes brown, deepset and of a penetrating brightness, He does not wear spec- tacles and he looks a good fifteen years younger than his age. “New York has changed enor- and et it has not "he mused, “The streets yet their general character Is not so different from what it was fifty years ago. You were lively, bustling, crowded then, as you are to-day. You hurried then | and you hurry to day. “Of course I have only been through a very few strests, and, since it is summer, many people may be out of | town. But on Madison avenue, for | examplo, I do not think I saw many | more people to-day than I might have seen in 1867, | HORSE POWER FOR ALL VE.) HICLES THEN. “Transportation !s very different When I was here before you had no! ated road, no subwi no taxicabs, no automobiles. | There were only horse cars, carriages | and omnibuses.” “Where did you stay during that visit?" I asked. “At the no cable Clarendon," replied Lord now torn down, at Fourth avonue and Seventeenth street, once the atop- | ping place of the late King Edward VII. when he was Princes of Wales | “DT rec ct it stood in a sort of square. Yes, it was different | this," and he glanced smilingly | around the Ritz ccffee room, “For one thing, it bad no tolephone, since | apne: [lated netghbor But Bustling Crowds, Lord Eversley Finds CHURCHES DOMINATED WEW WORr) SHY UNE WW 1867 there wasn't such a York, or the world. “Fifty years ago New York stopped at Fifty-ninth street. There was no Central Park. Incidentally, | had something to do with th blishment of that park. A Mr. Ruggles, whom | met here and who was much in- terested in the founding of the park, wrote to me after my re- turn to England, asking infor- ation about the famous Eng- h parks. | gave him a great and 1 remember empha- sizing one point particularly. | id, ‘Make your park big enough.’ | was glad to learn later of the setting aside of such a large tract.” AND THERE WAS NO GREAT WHITE WAY. “Doesn't the modern New Yorker impress you as a different type from the man you saw here before?" I asked, thiaking of the enormous brew Poured into the melting pot since that time, But Lord Fiveraley repeated that he hadn't been here long enough to Judge, His remark that electric lighting was unknown at the pe of his lost visit recalled that ne in New New York's most boasted distinction, the Great White Way, was not In exist- ence fifty years ago, “You find us changed in dress and rance?" I interrogated finally don't notice women's dreas, laughed Lord Eversley. Curiously enough, since his Inst sojourn, the wheel of fashion has made an almost complete revolution. In 1867 women wore hoopskirts, | dangling curls in front of thelr ears and “waterfalls” behind. In 1914 has Appeared the minaret gown—a half- portion hoopskirt-—the fish-hook curl dangling beside the cheek, and even & slightly modernized chignon, But enough dramatic contrasts awalt Lord Eversiey. A person with an imagination rather envies him the next four days of his life. anmiaseieatippmasiiaoes BAND CONCERT FOR CHURCH, Military Drill Will Feature of Celebration. Grace Methodist Eptscopal Weat One Hundred and rth street, between Columbus and Asterdam ave- nues, will have # band concert Monday night in the street in front of the church. Police Commissioner Woods has issued a permit to close the street be- tween Columbus and Amsterdam aves nues between § and 10 o'clock, Victor's Florentine Band has been tompany K of ‘ ment i the at membs nen Be Another Chureh, is a Mater A company of ehureh w pop, peanuts and hot frankfurters. church is located in the thickly popu nod of the west Dr, Reiener church, ex- yeots that t wate a fr linesa in th ! we furnish thout if it Doctor Snaiin tor ¢ Among the pi German Lloyd Grosser ing to-day fe Glogau of Sy: International was Dr. Otto egat eto the Occupa- be held I t le 1 aployn breakers, Jute mills, mate ther tn eat: the health of ¢ a ines and ories and coal h fete impatr Will J, Dav etires To-Day. CHICAGO, June 6.—Will J, Dayis, the veteran theatre manager, will retire to- day after forty years of activity. HE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUNE 6,'1916. New York Changed in 47 Years | | | LORD EVERSLEY WAR NOTE SOUNDED. AT BG FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS Suffragists Are Seeking Recog-| nition and Chicagoans Want Another Office. CHICAGO, June 6—Under @ war cloud a whole lot bigger than a mere man's hand, the General Federation of Women’s Clubs began to-day the business of the twelfth biennial con- vention, ‘The war note was sounded lightly, but very distinctly, wheri the local biennial committee met in prelimin- ary session and decided ita intention of nominating Mrs. George P. Bass, Chairman of the local biennial board for a position on the national fode tion board. In this they ignored a precedent which bars the hostess city from seeking recognition or reward from ite guests and setting aside an un-/| written Federation law, providing that a State is entitled to only one| representative on the natfonal bonrd. Chicago is now represented by Mra. Francia D. Everett, and her re-elec- tion is assured, Almost as big as the political cloud 1s the disturbing suffrage cloud that hovered over the Federation General | Board meeting this afternoon, © Thin! board includes all of the executive officers and was presided over by the Federation President, Mra, Percy V. Pennybacker, a suffragist, Mra, Ru- dolph Blankenburg of Philadelphia, & national suffrage leader, and other | advScates of “Votes for Women,” took Part in the session, and though noth- ing appeared on the surface, the an- | tagonism between the suffrage and no-suffrago elements was plainly evident. “The Federation is not anti-suf- frage in any senso,” declared a! leader, “but our organization doesn’t | touch national issues, suffrage, poll- | tiea, prohibition or relixions; we are working for better living and better citizenship, but we are not using Politics to Kain these issues It is estimated that 20,000 women will attend the convention: the bag- kago mastem at the several depots report the arrival of 40,000 trunks, an evidence that feminiaisin hag’ no grudge against fashion, | Almost all the federation goneraln| are in the field, but the ranks will not | be completely filled until the first! formal session convenes next Wednes- | day morning. Oo | 1,000 ALBANY SUFFRAGISTS.' All Ready to Take stration T ALBANY, June 6 many parts of the State are here for a parade and masa-meeting to-night, The demonstration marks tho culmination of several months campnign to perfect @ local organization of suffrugiats, Almost @ thousand members, both men and have n enrolled and lead fare to-day that nearly all wo march, Among the leaders of the movement who were to take an netive part in the n were James Leo Lald York; George Foater Pea ‘ ¢ Saratoge Springs; Mra. ‘Kath~ Hi, Gavit of ‘albany and Mise Blais | Part tn Demon- p body erine L. Vandegrift of Denver, ~ FUN! WHATISIT? ONLY WORK SAYS GLO MOTHER 1 Sews Thirteen Hours a Day and Never Saw Park or Coney Island. Mra. Mary Minora, fourteen years old and mother of %& #ix-month-old biby, was back at work to-day, thir- teen hours of hack-breaking sewing jon trourers for sixty cents, She told the Industrial Relations Comminnion yesterday how she and her mother supported their husbands, who have been out of work @ long time, and her younger brother and the baby. ‘The top floor back of No. 240 Mul- berry atreet in the scene of thelr work and their home, They have three rooms, apotieasly clean, In one room, with mengre light from two back , windows, tho girl-mother and the el- der woman, who ts under forty, eit from 8 o'clock in the morning until 9 at night sewing on trousers, Beastde Mary fs the eri with the baby, Pietro Angelo, asleep in it, “I have been working as a finisher ‘}on trousers since I wae ten years ‘Jold,"" Mary told the Cammission. couple of years ago I could make $1 a day, and my mother could make §2, but now the work is so much hander and takes so much longer that we can make only about half that much.” She said her mother, with greater endurance, now makes between seventy and eighty cents a day, and if her husband and father, both eager to work during nine idle months, could only find it the family would be bountifully supplied with funds. Mrs. Minora’s testimony was given during an inquiry into condl- tions in New York in the men’s gar- ment trades and her story made such an impreasion that members of the commission purpose to visit the tene- ments and nee the “inside work” for themselves. The girl-mother’s delight was sur- passed only by her surprise when abe stepped from the stand and was handed $2 as a witness fee—more than she could earn in three gruel- ing days. Dangling tho money be- fore the eyes of the baby, whom she | had held as sho testified, she hugged the child happily to her breast. ‘The Minoga workshop and home was vintted to-day and the two wom- en were again at their endless work. Rosario, Mary's ten-year-old brother, is the only one in the family besides the baby who doesn’t work when there ia @ chance. He goes to school. Mary laughs when it is suggested that he too help support the family. “He in only ten,” she says simply. “But didn't you work when you were his age?" she was asked. “Yes; but Rosario goes to school.” And that ends it. Rosario would rather help, and he shoved up his sleeves to show great sore patches of sunburn on both arma. “I get that workiim on the roof,” he explained proudly, “I sit up there many hours trying to catch the birda, (He means the pigeons that fly about the roof). And I'd sell one if I ever got him. I take a pole and tie a rag to it and hope they will come and think it 1s another pigeon, But I've never caught one yet.” “We used to get more money—more than a dollar a day,” said the mother, talking yet not ceasing her sewing, “But now we don't get so much for many months, All of a sudden they tell us they can't pay us so muoh, and when we say ‘Why not? they say, “Never mind, take the work or leave It, we don't care; other women want it ‘ou don't.’ We take it.” at do you do to have some fun, asked tke visitor. ed. explained the vis " ghe aaid, “Did you ever see Central Park or go to any of the playgrounds?” No. I must work.” Md you ever go to the country?” hat do you take me for?” said Mary “T never go away from New T don't go out all day, because T must work, and at night, too, and [ am too tired when the trousers are done, Yea, I work all day Sunday, tor “Didn't you have enough trouble to etting @ husband get along without and a baby?” asks @ man who comes story. aT ike to hear Mrs, Minor! 'y “You,” says Mary, but adds: my buaband, so T marry him, SKIN GRAFTED ON WOMAN FROM AMPUTATED LEG) Two Persons Have Already Died from Efforts to Save Mrs. Hawkins, TOLEDO, 0., June 6—More than a square foot of skin from the am- | putated leg of Ellas Pavel, victim of an accident, wi to-day grafted by surgeons on the body of Mrs, Mary Hawkins, suffering from burns. ‘Two persons are dead following pao- rifices of cuticle in an effort to ave Mra, Hawkins, Her husband died of heart failure on the operating table. A nephew died of fright. More volun- ters could not be four When the situation was reported to | Pavel to-day the injured man «ladly ve up his severed limb, Bur; are bopeim the operation will be | @ee44 tad ao ae oad 22630-95090982990-996032590690606090000 5 14-Year-Old Mother and Victims of Industrial PDE PLED DEEL DEE 14 AOtDLOOEDEEFIF EE GOEOCOOOOSD ey oS A I avery « MRS.MARY MINORA and HER BAB. BBG 4-1 G4 SGOROID 440-484-049 SOOEH- ROOSEVELT A GUEST WITH MANY NOTABLES Ex-President Entertained at Lunch- eon by Former Minister of For- eign Affairs in France. PARIS, June 6—Colonel Theodore Roosevelt was the guest of honor to- day at a luncheon given by Gabriel Hanotaux, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, who had brought together to meet the former President of the United States a number of distin- guished persons. is Among them were Alexandre Felix Ribot, who bas been thrice French Premier; General Henri J. Brugere, who visited the United States on a mission for the French Government during Mr. Roosevelt's Presidency; General Charles Mangin, who has re- cently done brilliant military service in Morocco; Henri Baudan, the histor. lan; Kmile Boutroux, the sopher and academician; Louis Jaray, Bec- retary of the ‘an Com- mittee; Dr. Gustave le Bon, Count @ Haussonville; Ambassador Myron T. Herrick and Robert Wooda Bilinss, dayn since his Innuguration, on ac- count of the Cabinet crisis, President Poincare found time to reeetve Col, Roosevelt. Between political consul- tations he ve the Colonel hearty welcome to and congratulated him upon hi speedy recovery from the effects of his trip into the South American jungle. DISTINGUISHED COMPANY SAILS ON IMPERATOR Gay Throng at the Pier to See Last of Friends on Hamburg- American Liner. The Hamburg-American liner Im- erator sailed to-day for Hamburg with a big crowd of ocean travellers, A gay throng were at the pier to gee tho last of their departing friends, Among those who sailed was Miss Anne Morgan, Sho will be away for three months. A number of friends were at the ship to eee her off, and there was o profusion of flowers in her suite. Among those who bade her goodby were Misa Elaio de Wolf and Miss Elisabeth Marbury. Milton Aborn of the Century Opera Company, who is going to make ar- rangemente for foreign singers for hia English opera, was also a passenger. Mr, Aborn said that tt was impossible to get all the trained voices he need- ed on this side of the water, He will meet Gatti-Casassa and Andreas Dip- pel in Europe, and says that ho will have some surprises for the Century's patrons when he returns. Dr, Nicholas Murray Butler, Pros- ident of Columbia University, was another passeng With him wero his wife and his daughter, Miss Sarah Smith, painter, author and engineer, |also sailed, With him were Mra, F. Hopkinson Smith and Miss Marian Averill Clark, Charles Carroll of Carrollton and wife were other pas- ngers, Burton Holmes, of trave- jogue fame, also sailed, poles so FULTON IS LAUNCHED. QUINCY, Maas, Juno 6.—The United States submarine tender Fulton wax | launched at the Fore River Bhipyard to- day, The eratt was christened by Mrs. Alloe Crary Sutcliffe of Now York, « Kreat-kranddaughter of Robert Fulton, Who broke a bottle of wine across the vOW, Wi y on than Pulton |liverty « » the happiness the th.” Ive hundred gueste witnessed mn | Fulton ts the flrat vossel to be T na | built here with Diesel hoavy oll burn. | sergeanta, j ing engines and will act as @ “mother |anip” to ae flotilla, SCHUMANN HENS HUSBAND CALED “HONEY” BY RAL Him Out Walking With : Her Dog “Pluto.” CHICAGO, June 6—If Madame Schumann-Heink, who is suing her husband, William Rapp jr. for di+ vorce, is to attend the Wi . featival in Beyreuth, Germany, June 16, ag ghe earneatly desires, she must leave her case in the hands of her attorneys, for the defense has not yet begun. To-day was devoted to reading more depositions by New York wit- Nesses that Rapp was often at the apartments occupied by Mra. Cath- erine BE. Dean. Mrs. Elisabeth Hauk, who said she had often seen Mr. Rapp at the Dean apartment, replied to a question: “Ie Mr. Rapp fat or thin? by spying, “Not so thin—fust nice.” She also sald that sho had fre- quently seen him “out walking with Pluto, Mrs. Dean's dog.” Piuto, the dog, also appeared in the deposttion of Lillian Schmidt, daughter of the Dean apartment owner, who tel@ of being hired by Mark Harrisen, an actor, to take the dog out for exercise. ‘The girl testified she saw Rapp at the Dean apartment wearing an “pron and fixing the stove, She @e- cleared that Mrs, Dean asked Bim to buy some meat and calted him Ea ania ta Er showed’ me a letter trom Mr. Sho kissed the letter and I \- oi T did not see it. She let me read the letter, I don’t remember what it pelts ue it ended ‘Your faithful Mra, Annie Schmidt, mother of Lillian, in a deposition said kaew Rapp and often had seen bm about tne im leave edgly angh' tetas ta ng him leave ear! February, 19138, He waved to ‘ae morning.""eald Sivas seheasge, OO? G00D BICYCLE RIDER, POLICEMAN GETS TRANSFER Among ther Changes Lieut, Grossbeck Is Put in Command of Tratfic Squad, Capt. Fdward ©, Barnett of the City Inland police station was transferred jto the Wakefield station to-day be- cause he ts a good bicycle rider, Re+ cently Commissioner Woods deter- mined to mount every man in the lat- ter precinct on a wheel, and John J, McKoon confessed that ft would tax hin skill to ride a hotiey horse, ao he changed places with Ongt, Barnett, The Commissioner also transferred Capt. John J, Tappen from Trafile Squad B to Headquarters so that be might promote Lieut, Groasbeck to tho acting command of the Traffle quad In recognition of the Traffto handling of tramMo in the dry goode ‘district, Capt, Tappen ta on an ite definite leave of absence, though the. oretically in command, for Co: laloner Cropaay “broke” him, Wi reinstated him, and the courts, Airet javing ot reinstatement legal, now threshing out the matter, station ln Blinpson street, wicheater avenue, the Bronx, was opened to-day under com of Capt, Thomas Palmer, Palmer bas four Hewtenante, two of them mon, nine patrolm three " | policemen and alxty; it footmen,

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