The evening world. Newspaper, March 11, 1915, Page 6

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it ‘ to re bound FEE away in your 3 IW PICTURE jchant's ‘Wife Comiptimented by Court for Pressing Charge Against Annoyer. In sentencing Max Meyer, twenty- six, a chauffeur of No, 207 West Kighty-fourth Street to the work- house for sixty days as a masher, ‘Magistrate Barlow in the West Sido Court to-day congratulated the wom- ah Who caused his arrest and said more sh be dose to stamp out the ebnoxices practice. The complainant was Mrs. Tillie Toledo, wife of a merchant, of No, 730 ‘West Kad Avenus. ‘Mrs, Toledo testified she was in a picture theatre at Ninety-sixth Street and Broadway last night when Moyer took @ seat at her side. He continu- ally annoyed her. She rebuked him and he got up. Sho walked out after him and told one of the ushers. Traf- fie Patrolman Melia was called. ——— FOURTH WOMAN ALLERES SHE. WAS BETRAYED BY MAYO (Continued from Firat Page). eaemseny mined to carry further the investiga- tion of the causes which led to hig daughter's suicide. “T shall ask CMhief of Detectives Donnelly if he can give me anw clues to ‘Who was responsible for her death,” he sald. “As soon ‘as I got >| Back to Brookjya I shall see Assistant ‘United States District Attorney Bam- fi Reed. I have an appointment with im. I want to see if he can start investigation of the cane." wi THEATRE what ime we In one ot the lens prosperows| she knows to be Mayo'e, wan aa fol- of thie city. She is a young woman .of about twenty-four, pale of face but not attractive, “It was in 1909 that I went to work in the Mayo Radiator Company's factory,” whe said. “I had taught a class in the German Lutheran Sun- day School and I do not think I was ® bad girl Mr. Mayo was always very kind to me, as he was to all of the girls who worked in hin fattory. There was something about him which I canpot just describe—per- hapa it wan his kindness. He made every one do just what he wanted by being kind and good. SAYS ALL THE GIRLS IN THE FACTORY LIKED MAYO. “After I had been In the office a while Mr. Mayo and I became very good friends and I used to w: for him in the office after business hours. All of tho girls liked Mr, Mayo. Lots Waterbury and Lillian Cook's chum, Elien Wilson, worked there while I was in the © I heard Lois Water- bury had been in Mr. Mayo's employ since she was a little girl in short dresses. “It was in April or May of 1912 that I made a discovery which I at once disclosed to Mr, Mayo, I knew perfectly well what the future had in store for me, but when I told Mr. Mayo he tried to laugh away all re- sponsibility. When I told him, how- ever, It was no laughing matter, that 1 was in serious difficulty, he agreed to help me. “Ho gave me the address of a phy- sician in Brooklyn and sald every- thing would be ‘all right. About that time he got ready to go on a Journey and I became afraid of my- self, but he told mo that while he was away ho would atop and see the doctor and make all the necessary arrangements. TELLS OF VISIT SHE PAID DOC- TOR IN BROOKLYN, “Just before he left New Haven Mr, Mayo asked me to address an envelope to myself on the typewriter, ‘which he could use in communicating with moe concerning what the doctor told him. Hoe said he did not want! any one in the office to recognize his handwriting on the envelope.” § Here Miss Wahlera took from a pocketbook a worn envelope bearing the name of the Mayo Radigtor Com- pany and this typewritten address: “Miss Busie M. Wahlers, Mayo Radi- ator Company, New Ha Drawer No. 3." The ‘Buffalo, May Miss Wahlers y oO .f) continued, , and,, drawing a much- be handled sheet of paper from the en- velope, “this is what was in it when it came to me through the mail.” The lotter ‘sheet she produced bore the name of the Hotel Iroquois, Buf- falo, and the communication, written in pencil in a hand Miss Wahlers says ab come.cl Vite. sepia old pipe, or twisted i into a} ee ' The Pesfest Tobacco fer Pipe and Cigerette reason Ti ’s 20 healthful, whol and beneficial it’s made by the “Tuxedo Monent boro the finest, leaves of Kentucky Burley—mild, mellow and rich. 4 This famous process absolutely re- _ thoves all the bite and sting from the ‘uxedo can't bite yourtongue, no you smoke at all day long ‘Don't bother with Tuxedo imita- tions. Get the worth 1 Tuxedo. If it’s the other fellows’ imitating, it’s ' worth your insisting on! | YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Famous Green wa eubets 10¢ Ge The Mamiden 400 ond 002 in Gloss Homiden 50c end 90¢ TUE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY away on a vacation. lows: “Mr, (the name of the Brooklyn physician already referred to by Miss Wahlers) “wan out of the city. Get some one near to Ax up the matter soon, Go to Detroit to-night. ve “But 1 did nothing until Mr. Mayo camé back to New Haven,” Mins Wahlers went on, “He kept urging me to go to Brooklyn, and at last, on June 20, 1912, I aid go to New York, segintering at the Hotel Beimont in my own name. I had $100 with me, which I had taken from the cash drawer at Mr. Mayo's suggestion.” In verification of this journey and ita incidents Miss Wahlers produced & memorandum book wh said, she had kept track of she spent at that time. to the book the trip cost $13.95. “T stayed at the Belmont all night,” said the young woman, going on with her narrative, “and next day went to the doctor whose address Mr. Mayo had given me. He asked me if Mr. Mayo had sent me and when I told him yes he asked me whether Mr. Mayo was to blame for my condition. I refused to tell him, but he said Mr. Mayo had already talked to him about me. SAY8 MAYO TOOK GIRLS TO AU- TOMOBILE SHOW. “The doctor then explained to me that as his wife and child were sick in the country he could not attend to me and asked if I would not come back the next day, I replied I would, but as soon as I got outside the of- fice a cold fear came into my heart. Tt was .ot only the ¢.... of death—it was something else, I cannot de- scribe it. “I went back to the Hotel Belmont, remained there the night and the fol- lowing day returned to New Haven without seeing the Brooklyn doctor again. “Up to this time my mother had no idea of what had happened to me, but when 1 got homo I told her all about it, It hurt her terribly and sho cried. She told me ¥ must not think of going to a doctor about it, I had committed a ain, she said, and I must bear the burden of it, and it would all come out right in the end. After wo had talked it over I decided what she said was right, ; “I had wanted to leave the factory aa soon as I descovered my condition, but Mr. Mayo asked me not to go just then, as a new bookkeoping system ‘was being introduced in tho office and he wanted to ba sure it worked all right. “Every year Mr, Mayo used to make UP & party of the girls in the office and take them t the Automobile Show in New York, paying all their expenses at the hotel, But after I got Into trouble he left me out of the party. “In September,I left the Mayo of- fice and went'to my home, where I stayed so that no one should see me. I did/bot want the neighbors to see me until after the baby was’ born. ly mother told every one I had gone But very soon the neighbors saw the doctor's bugsy at the door and then they all knew. “From the day I left the factory Mr, Mayo 4id not see me. After the trip to Brooklyn I put back in the | aisturban cash drawer the balance of the $100 I had not spent, and the day I left the |' office, in September, Mr. Mayo gave me $100 for expenses, “My baby, Hazel Brown Wahlers, was born Jan. 26, 1913, right here in my home. Dr. C. B, Sandford, of No. 160 Shelton Avenue, was the doctor, ®| Lillian, They ther of my child, and that name was entered on the birth certificate, but this was not filed.” ' bors Say Body Was in May Cook's, Brockiya N Not LI ter in the Mayo case when of the Cooks went to their house at No. 22% Union Street, Brooklyn, to look upon the body of Lillian Cook when it came back from New Haven. Instead of seeing the face of the young girl they had known the neigh- ‘bors saw o1 they did not quite reoognise, ai at once the report spread that the body was not that of failed to take into account the fact that for a after she killed herself the girl's body had lain on West Rock undiscovered and subject to the weather, When the report was taken home to the Cook family to-day, Frank H. ‘ook, her of the dead girl, said: is no doubs in my mind, nor inds of her mother and sister, Laura, that it was Lillian. I saw her in the undertaking establishment in New Haven and I saw the clothing she wore. The identification was absolute in every particular, and my daughter Laura recognized the handbag found with Lillian as one she had given her.” Ever aince the disclosure of the facts surrounding Lillian Cook's death the Cook Leong 4 has been an-/ noyed by anonymous letters, some of them ar, taking Cook and Mayo to task for the girl's death. One that arrived for Mrs, Cook to-day, stated that if Mayo is not made to suffer for the girl's death both he and Cook would pay for it with their lives, Mra. Cook was urged to watch her husband carefully. At the home of “Mra. Dudley,” No. 646 Fourth Street, Brooklyn, a id who came to the docr to-day sal “Mra. Dudley says ahe has read the newspaper accounts of the Mrs. Mayo of Scranton, who says she is Mr. Mayo's wife, but has nothing to say about them.” MRS. MAYO OF SCRANTON, PLANS SUIT FOR $200,000. Mrs. Florence Mayo of No, 818 Sunset Avenue, Scranton, Pa. who! an she is the legal wife of Vir-| ginius J. Mayo, claiming he deserted her about fifteen years ago, an- nounced to-day she would immedi- ately bring sult against Mayo for $200,000 for herself and her three daughters, to prove her rights and obta insupport. She said she had re- in thi tained Frederick E. Scott as her at- torn That Virginius J. Mayo is her hus- band, Florence Mayo is abso- lvtely certain, She will submit the entry of her marriage from the De- artment of Health records of Bing- bre ton, N. ¥., in proof of her con- 1 i" ie i l lil li if i | | ; Hi ‘Thue from another autheritetive medical ion for use of Alterative has effected re- Its in numerous cases of pul: tubere (congu: ‘and ailied chronic affections of the throat and bronchial ea. In many inatances auch condl eppereatiy, have yielded completely to st, fe out of it, ask In case your druggist oF send direct to us. ert, him to order, Laboratory, Stern Brothers tend and 43rd Streets, West of BRth Avenue Are now showing very distinctive assortments of Men’s and Young Men’s Smart Spring Apparel «JN the new materials and colors for the coming season and in models ranging from the conservative to the most extreme, at the following moderate prices: ‘ Men’s Sack Suits, $18.50 to 40.00 Of special interest in the Overcoat Section are the London Made Spring Overcoats, . . For travel ng, steamer or motor wear. Shetland clo! spuns, tures, Also a Final Clearance Young Men’s Suits, . . (Sizes 31 to 36 only) In medium or light weight fabrics, in plain colors or mixtures; the coats are quarter lined, many with silk. most of Men’s Spring Footwear (THE newest shapes and styles are now being shown in oxfords, walking pump: and tennis shoes, also riding boots at moderate prices. | A Sale of Men’s Shoes On the Main Floor, Friday, will include Button and Lace models in patent leather, black kidskin, tan or black calfskin; sizes in- ., Formerly $5.00 to 8.00 a pair, at $3,50 ths and cheviots, plain grays, blues and mix- ' Men’s Spring Overcoats, $15.00 to 45.00 at $35.00 Made of coverts, home- Offering, To-morrow, of at $12.50 8, button and lace shoes, golf 4 Albert Spalding on the Edison | 7 : Hear the music of this renowned American violinist at the Edison Shop Concert Hall today. Hear him play ‘‘RondoCapriccio.’’ Then compare this with the actual perform- ance at his concert jn Aeolian Hall on March 13th. . Others on the program will be Anna Case, soprano; Christine | Miller, popular contralto; Emmy { Destinn, world famous dramatic} soprano. Edisons Wonderful] new instrument reproduces ' the human voice to perfection, but / its superiority over all other instruments ' stands out particularly when one compares ! the violin and cello work of the new Dia- : mond Disc records with anything that has } ever been heard in sound reproduction. Concert Today No Charge for Seats Cz We want you to come and hear ~ Special Program these great instrumentalists and fam- ous singers on the new Diamond Disc eres Edison. We want you to hear partic- ular! Spaldin; 's beautiful rendition of “Rondo Capriccio.” » by comparison with his concert work at Aeolian Hall, you can realize how absolutely true to the original is the reproduction upon the Edison. Note how perfectly the sweet strains from the artist’s violin vibrate from the Edison instrument. Note the fullness and clearness, the delicate shadings, exactly as in the artist’s own solo work. Then note Spalding’s playing. Close your eyes and tell us whether you can possibly imagine that it is not the actual violin which is being played. Italian Fantasia—Accordion Solo P. J. Frosini From Danlne Around,” Baritone Joseph A. Phillips ‘ Albert Spalding Auf Flugeln—Tenor,. Henrich Hensel “Rondo Capriccio”—Violin Albert Spalding SSSSSSSSSISTSY > GID, a | | I. - New York City detrei an eS pn Pb ies The Edison Shop (The Phonograph Corporation of Manhattan, Preps.) 473 Fifth Ave., | ‘

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