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— \\ | | > HAUL OF DANONDS BACK ROM FRANCE “Miss Amethyst,” Who Got $250,000 From Maiden Lane Jewellers, a Prisoner, INSANITY ALLEGED NOW. Extradition Brought About After Her Lawyer Had Gone on Fighting Case. Mile, Antionette Bonner, the young Frenchwoman of flashing beauty and daszling charm who a little over a year ago was known to all the dia- mond traders of Maiden Lane as “Miss Amethyst,” the most success- ful broker of precious stones in all New York, came back to town to-day aboard the French Line steamer Rochambeau a prisoner and, acord- ing to the entry of the ship's doctor on the passenger record, insane. ‘With her was her companion in the alleged sensational swindles of last November, Joseph Brecker-Kislinger, @ thin and sallow-faced man, who looks though he might be an as- sistant floorwalker in a departme: store, but who, with “Miss Amethyst,” is charged with having engineered tice Would the theft of a quarter of a million Meyer dollars’ worth of precious jewels from Impetus. Malden Lane dealers. They travelled with WOetective-Lieutenant Summe! and Sergt. Deltech of Headquar as thelr oficial and legal chaperone: To just what extent Mile. Bonners “insamity" will carry before a court of law is something the alienists will have to decide when she faces the charges of grand larc lofiged against her and her companion by a half dozen or more jewellers. Cer- tainty her insanity did not begin to be apparent. Lieut. Summers sald to- day, until the last 1._:! barrier against her deportation from France had fallen and she knew she would have to come to New York and face the music. Perhaps Mile. Bonner is @ good actor, for to-day when she was escorted down the gangplank her flashing black eyes were tina tense, hard stare and there was an) Ophelia-like wildness in her beauty. | oye Mile. Bonner and Brzcher-Kislinger | ~~ have to thank the war in Europe for their journey to meet fate here. When they were first arrested in Paris on! May 6 and Lieut. Summers went over there with requisition papers their lawyers successfully resisted requisl- | tion and the Headquarters man had to return to New York empty handed. But when the war came this clever lawyer was drafted to the front and his successor was unable to persuade a French court from turning over the much wanted “Miss Amethyst” and her companion. London, Sole Socialist 'in Next | Congress, | Says: Justice Shou Shall Be on frage. resent Labor. York’s Social ciety. Meyer London is the: e sole, sol next Congress me East. things he told th be on the charge that he had failed to return jewels worth $1, him on memorandum. ks proved | that he, in turn, had given the jew- to Mile. Bonner and her partner, | a that they had disappeared. That led to an investigation, which re- yenled the fact that Malden Lane jewellers have lost $250,000 worth of kin; Mile. Bonner's career in Maiden MOTTE @ worming Jane was brilliantly daring. She first} The eugenists and other sober Appeared there about three years Ag0,| minded folks have already wished on vearing first rate credentials from . ¢ Qiamond merchants. in. Paris and| Poor little Cupid a choice collection of Rotterdam, and be; to do business | certificates and guaran! 5 in a small way, buying diamonds and | addition of the union card must be other, precious ‘stones “on memoran-| credited to Mr. London. "He ia as- dum” to sell to select customers in 5 4 the ap« society. Her manner was winning suey tee ares 2 vip netple and her beauty caught even the eye! Plication of ghe close of Lieut. Summers, the Headquarters |to matrimony. And so I asked him picket on guard at {he (deadline ’/why when I talked with him at his thrown across the Jewel Pipe eee at aha eeaaways mers used to be rewarded for his|0Mce at No. sue Sur by the most winsome smile. | OEFENDS IT AS A JOKE, BUT ‘With the pretty Frenchwoman| SHOWS ITS VALUE. rae ene eT ee iattiss | “It was a Joke,” he defended hiin- worked Brecher-Kisling- “ They established their credit. 40 | Lan Hon see 5 ae ecreene ByF fully that before long the; . re, 7 | had to talk on the subject that would t Interesting to them. , though | was joking when | euggested the union card as o certificate of admission to matri- mony, | will eay this: If every girl refused to marry ever; man who is not patriotic and bread minded enough to join a union, and likewise if every man ref to marry the girl who gems. | ould not produce her union card, Mile, Bonner at Headquarters attri-| the movement for social justice buted her mental collapse to the| and the betterment of all would treatment ahe and her companion had| receive a tremendous impetus.” received in the French prisons since Coat, their arrest. At the beginning of the Pig pes} broadly whee at aeons war, she said, they were taken from | Mr. London was serious now. Paris to Cherbourg, and for six weeks |one very distinguished exception, he they got nothing to eat but bread and|is the most scholarly looking office milk, Two weeks before they sailed | holder 1 have ever seen—this young they were taken to Havre, and there | man who was born in Russia and who the fare was worse~plain bread and |has made cigarettes at $1.50 for 2,900 water, Ambassador Herrick had in-|on the east side, He has the thin, tervened to remedy conditions once|clean shaven, sensitive face, with ils during their stay at Cherbourg, the!bony foundation strongly marked, woman said, but the improvement |that one finds so eften in & scientist continued but a short time. or a college professor. Under the Both she and the man brought back | penthouse brows are blue gray eyes, with her deny their guilt of the | forever lighting up with swift enthu- charges brought against them. slasm, usually tempered, I fancy, by One Ten Cent Box of EX-LAX The Famous Chocolate Laxative will regulate your bowels and relieve you of the miseries of Constipation If your stomach isn’t just right, if you have a bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, feel distressed after eating and have frequent headaches, just take Ex-Lax. This will tone up your 6 . aid digestion, promote bodily vigor and strengthen the nervous system. You will be surprised to see how quickly your energy, ambition and appetite will come back to you, 106, 25¢ and 50c a Box, at All Drug Stores, If Every Man Refused to Marry a Girl Who Could Not Produce Her Union Card, the Movement for Social Jus- Conservatives Are the “THERS 1s AY Sex ANTAGONISM cueses! Cecauie sue ts & MORE RESPECTED Receive a Tremendous Men and Women Who Believe in Social Id Work Together, and I the Side of Woman Suf- There Are Men in Congress to Repre- sent Railroadsand Trusts. I Shall Rep- I Have No Patent Medicine for New Health. Enemies of So- By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. The walking delegates will get you, Cupid, if you don't watch out! Meyer London says so, even if he does say it with a twinkle in his itary, Socialist Congressman-elect of United States, and, as with most other rarities, New York's got him. He'll be in Washington when the ets, to represent the side district, which made a chink last Tuesday in New York's Solid Meanwhile, Mr. London has just addressed 3,000 girl workers in white goods, and this is ene of the “When I go to Congress I will try to have a law passed under which no workman will be allowed to girl unless she has a union card.” the humor of which his wide, whim- sical smile is an index. For he has a ae an bumer, and he hasn't a led head—reform S Gonbiedie igi er though he un, “In Russia,” he continued, vigor- ously, “young men who are interested in social and revolutionary work never think of marrying girls who are not themselves interested in sim- ilar propagunda. And likewise girls who are laboring for a better social order will not become the wives of men who are ignor: of their cause or opposed to it. That 1s generally understood.” that's where Mrs. Bel- mont got one of her pet ideas,” I ob- served “You know she has suffragists to boycott marri: they are given the vote." WOMEN LEARNING TO Co.oP- ERATE, HE SAYs, Mr. London iled. ‘The way to bring about any act of social justice is for’all the men and women who be- li n in it to work for it together,” he ald. ialistes jong the first of the lead- w ere and othere—! yond doubt that together for the good of all. “L was proud of those. gir! Cooper Union the other night London added in parenthesis. looked so intelligent, and they happy faces too.” “Don't you think that women espe- cially need the influence of unions and of similar bodies, they are naturally such individua: omen will always be individual- lats, but they will also learn to see the rights of society a8 a whole, Dur- ing the last ten or fifteen years there [has been a wonderful coming to- | gether of men and women of every class wno want to better present con- ditions, Men and women of your own profession, which I consider the no- blest, the most powerful and the most ‘They had | dangerous, have taken a quite new | interest in social improvement. It can be accomplished only by men and | women working towether,” Mr. London. “Then you don't agree conservatives, who say that the en- trance of women Into civic and econ- omle Ife will set up sex antagon- jam?" Conservatives are the enemies of society,” Mr, London stated flatly. “l have always felt that an society is incomplete in whic + men and women do not meet on an absolutely equal focting. | was fortunate enough to have an un- uouslly intelligent woman for a mother. And before § ever thought ef declaring; myself & suffragict | ‘wae eenvi that wemen were repeated with the a + | extension, Sette en <Ith Just THe REveRse -sHE S “What are you planning to do at, Washington?” I asked. ese OF TOREADNOUGHTS ‘The points of Mr, London's tean' brown fingers met together. They | had been in almost continual move- ment throughout the interview, act- ing as verbal punctuation points. “I am going to represent labor,” he | said, There are men in Washington represent the interests of the| banks, of the railroads, of the trusts. Iam going to be the representative of the men and women who work. And I wish"—a note of real humility came } into the speaker's voice—"I wish the, bi m. | 1 children who in the factories of this I'm going to be on the of the women who are work: ing in shot factories, and of the men ‘ed in the com- tions. I'm there any one special thing that| you want to put through?” “I have no patent medicine for eo- ciety. I have no bill in mind which New York might swallow like a pill and then be in perfect social health ever after. Social reform must come as the world is roady f ended this amazingly mod- missionary. SUSPENDERS GIVE WAY; THIEF GETS TROUSERS Mr, Katz Thereby Loses $1,000 and the Combinations of His Three Safes. Upon retiring last night William Katz, a furrier and tailor at No. 123 Second avenue, living over his store, hung his trousers over the foot of the bed and fastened tho suspenders attached to the trousers to the bed clothes. In the pockets of his nether garment were $300, checks and pawn- tickets worth $700, and a shect of paper on which was written the com- | binations of the three safes in his store, Katz felt the bedclothes sliding at 4 o'clock this morning and awoke to see a man dashing for a window. The man had the trousers and the bed- clothes trailed behind, Leaping from | bed, Katz caught hold of the trailing bedclothes, with the effect that the suspenders gave way. The thief, carrying the trousers, got on a fire-escape landing, jumped to the roof of an adjaning one-story thence to the yard of a house facing on Seventh street and escaped, The trousers were found tn the hallway of the Seventh street) house, but the pockets were empty, ¢ The cutest and daintiest Favors are tainment. fore the European War enable us to of new and original Favors and Nove giving Day, Chri Year's, as well as Dances We take pleacure the “little things" Kewpie Bride CARMA iy : “ene EVENING WoRLD, 40 : WOMAN WHOMADE |New York’s Socialist Congressman- Elect Halt in Earnest on a Union Card for Cupid south. Thanksgiving Favors patronesses for the Thanksgiving Dinner or Enter- Our large importations received Just be- light to both hostess and guest. Individual all kinds of fun-makin B.SHACKMAN & CO. 5erstuvene’s “The Unique Favor and Novelty House PS Gree KY NDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1914, ONBOND OF $1,000 GNENBY STRAUS Lawyer Accused of Conspiracy Is Cool and Debonair in Court. THE UNION GIRL SMOuULD MARRY ONLY A UNION MAN lawyer Edward Lauterbach to-day Pleaded not guilty to the indictment LAUTERBACH FREE FIGHT AHEAD ON 2 =) WHEN THE SKIN —the pores need ‘soften the skin and make it they should. This in time causes wrinkles and cracking, Rub VELOGEN well into the it te al by the pores and le dryness te GOMPERS'S RULE IN LABOR FEDERATION Delegates of Miners and Gar- ment Workers Ready for War as Convention Opens, disagre Gotten rid of Use it liberally after washing the and hands nt—a very few tions will remedy the ton ie trouble—even jt more VELOGEN and tng dryni VELOGEN does not soll or stain—and ows no hal ; PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 9.—For the first time in half a dozen years the charging him with conspiracy with David Lamar, Street,” to wrong the members of J. P. Morgan & Co. Mr. Lauterbach will appear, two weeks from to-day, to continue his Dlea or to change it if need be, The charge grows out of the offort made by Lamar in February, 1913, to persuade J. IP. Morgan & Co. to retain Mr. Lauterbach am counsel. At that time the Steel Trust was ahout to be subjected to investigation by Federal officials, President Wilson publicly complained that secret efforts were being made to thwart the Investiga- tion. After @ time, it waa found, some calling himself A. Mitchell Palmer, representative in Congress from Penn- sylvania, and a close friend of Presi- dent Wilson, had called Lewis Cass Ledyard, member of the Morgan house, by telephone from Washington on Feb. u and advised him to retain Mr. Lauterbach counsel, if he wished to avert trouble in the in- vestigation of the Steel Trust. The United States Grand Jury indicted Lamar as the person who pretended to be Mr. Palmer. Four dayn after this telephone talk, it is alleged in an Indictment found by the United States Grand Jury, Mr. Lauterbach calied in person on Mr. Ledyard in the office of J. P. Morgan & Co,, and endeavored to proceed with the scheme. For this and other acts, the United States Grand Jury on July 81, 1918, indicted Mr. Lauterbach for con- epiracy with David Lamar. The indictment was kept sealed un- til last Saturday. when Lamar, trapped in Peacock Alley of the Wal- dort-Astoria, was arraigned in the United States District Court and held in $80,000 bail. Then Mr. Lauterbach, through counsel, promised to appeur to-day. Judge Rufus E. Foster took his seat upon the bench, Clerk William Leary Proclaimed court open and called “The United States against Edward Lauterbach!" ‘Within @ few minutes Mr, Lauter- SAW GREAT FLEET BOUND FOR PANAMA British Warships on Way to Pacific to Seek Revenge on Germans. From two independent -ources re- ports came to New York to-day of the presence in Southern Atlantic waters near the coast of the Americas of @ fleet of seven British dreacnoughts. The steamer Campista, in from Bra- zillan ports, reported that between Rio Janiero and Pernambuco she had passed the d. “nought fleet steaming The United Fruit Company's steamship Suriname, which got in from Belize, British Honduras, and Santi- Ago de Cuba, passed a fleet of seven British dreadnoughts on the morning of Nov. 6 when she was off the soutl..cnmost of the Bahuina Island Tho dattloships were coming from the northeast and seemed to be heading wostward into the Caribbean. The authenticity of the report brought in by the Suriname is in- sured by the fact that, besides all of the ship's officers, the battleships were observed by James Cavanaugh, & former Heutenant in the Britiah|the ples. That wil give me an op- navy, who is now a coffee and sugar! Mr, eee with 8 polite re ot planter near Santiago de Cuba. the hgnd at his nd, 1o not “It would be hardly possible for me| 804 emiled: 'Mr. Straus will go on to make a mistake in an observation! Judge Foster fixed bail at $1,000. Mr, of this character,” said Cavanaugh| Lauterbach re: to say anything to-day, “We raised the fleet about 7/to, the reporters. o'clock in the morning, At first we “All have to say,” was Mr. could ace nothing but a dense cloud Straus's reply to questions, “is that Mr. Lauterbach has a very big head, of smoke; then as we approached to within four miles of t! trangers we but his heart is too big.” ‘The bond was given immediately, could make out the lines of seven dreadnoughts. No, they were not broad head, keen brown eyes and a silvery Van Dyck beard, marched into the court room and up to the bar, closely followed by hin attorney, Henry L, Schurman, and his friend, Nathan Straus, the merchant and philanthropist, each of whom towered far above him. When Mr. Lauterbach was a leader in Republican politica he was often called “Bmooth Ei did not appear in the slightest degree et” on Saturday had grinned defiantly and stared gloomily with trouble-laden eyes, The debonair lawye: he proceeded to plead not ity quite as impersonally aa if he were speak- ing purely as an attorney for some one else. “And continued, “to give us two weeks in the “Wolf of Wall/ican Federation of Labor was se- Nathan Straus be- | veteran head of the organization will came surety in the sum of $1,000 that) be seriously criticized at the Thirty- bach, @ plump and tiny man, with a Certainly he ruffled as he stepped briskly forward miled as I will ask Your Honor,” he which, if necessary, we may change @ wave of rule of Samuel Gompers in the Amer- riously threatened to-day. The fourth Annual Session, which began a two-weeks’ session in this city to- day. ‘The delegates of the United Mine Workers, the largest single unit in tho Federation, with 400,000 members, |Garment Workers and various other |) organizations who are inclined to radicalism, openly declared that they |] | belleved present control of the organ- ization im far too conservative, While it is expected that Gompers and his associates in control will be able to retain their power, It was evi- dent from the outset that there would be much stormy discussion in the coming two weeks of meetings. The ®pposition is led by Duncan McDonald, secretary-treasurer of th Workers, and by the del from that organization. Although the European war was to be discussed in connection with the beginning of an international move- ment among workers forevor to end ‘was, the delegates were a unit in de- claring that strict neutrality would be observed. No speeches criticising or praising any of the belligerents will be permitted. And so far as possible the war itself was to be taboved. The convention met at 10 o'clock to-day with the usual perfunctory welcoming addresses. This afternoon the presentation of credentials oc- cupied a good part of t! ime. Con- testa were referred to the Committee on Credentials, and it Is expected the big fight in the Garment Workers Union will be fought out on the floor. Appearing in “ The Third Party,” wearing a aes Feather Hat, EST’S is a business, of course. Yet you have noticed how ‘‘different’’ it is from a mere buying-place? So many of our salespeople have been heresolong, and we have served so many of our patrons when they were chil- dren— , +tThat the ‘“‘different’’ at- mosphere may be due to this unbroken relationship. The greatest change in all this time has been in the line of expansion. We are serv- ing those children’s children, and also serving them. Best’s was known for so many years as ‘‘the children’s store,’’ which it was, and is, that we print an occasional reminder of our facilities for serving you. PA Avenue, Weat Bide, Corner of 380 Srret and Mr. Lauterbach, still unflurried, scout cruisers or battle cruii 3 they hurried away. were dreadnoughte of the latest pat- tern and they were going under forced! draught at top speed. From the course they we: laying I should judge they were headed for Colon, Cavanaugh added that the search for the mysterious German wireless station in the Caribbean, which had been relaying messages from Ger- many to this country and to the German cruiser Karlsruho, had nar- rowed down to the island of Hayt! and that it was believed English agents there would find the station. offer:d to our Sizes 14, offer thousands ities for Thanks- stmas and New Parties, Dinners, Suits of and other entertainments. in supplying " that give de- rics, this Turkey Hen OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & G Announce an Extraordinary Sale of Misses’ and Small Women’s Suits Taken from the regular Cheviot and other fashionable fab- tailored models, including some fur trimmed. Regular Values to 35.00 On Sale Tuesda, Misses’ Department—Third Floor 34th Street—New York 16 and 18 years, 8%, 84 and 86 bust measure stock about 250 Broadcloth, Gabardine, season's newest styles in November 10th See AR te we